Friends in Need

  1. need
   

Education Feature
Friends in
Need
By Robert Seith
CWK Senior Producer
 

“I never
took into consideration that someone might just stop being
my friend because I got sick. I just thought some people were
better than that, but obviously some people aren’t.”
-Marilu Casajuana, 18-

Last October, doctors told 18-year-old Marilu
Casajuana that she had cancer throughout her body in her bones.

“[I] tended to think about what it would be like if
I did not survive, but mostly I just thought I will survive,
I will go through it,” Marilu says.

But would her friends be there to support her?

“Generally, I would say that teenagers will lose some
of their friends as supports,” says Clare Bez, a licensed
counselor who specializes in teens who have experienced trauma
in their lives.

She says that to a certain extent, that’s to be expected.

“Because they’re all involved in life and living
and that’s just too much of a bummer, and we don’t
want to focus on that all the time,” Bez says.

Marilu agrees: “If you just think things are going
to go for the worst, and all you think about is, ‘Oh,
my gosh, I’m gonna die, I’m never gonna make it,’
people don’t want to be around someone who’s so
down,”

She has bone cancer, and yet her friends stayed with her.

“It wasn’t hard to deal with it because she dealt
with it very well,” says friend Kristin Wade, 17.

Experts say that what parents need to know is that when children
get sick or lose a loved one, what drives friends away isn’t
the tragedy – it’s the way the child handles it.

“You need to stay strong. Let people know that you
need them. Don’t just think that you need to do it all
by yourself. You need people there to be with you,”
Marilu says.

When Marilu is with her friends, it’s the same
as always – a lively hand of cards, a game of pool and
plenty of laughs. These are small moments Marilu appreciates
more than ever.

“I really do think you need to live life for the moment
because you don’t know if today’s going to be
your day or tomorrow’s going to be your day,”
Marilu says.

 

Most children have peers
who are dealing with a trauma such as a serious illness, a
loved one’s death or the pain of divorce. However, many
of these kids don’t know how to express compassion and
empathy toward those who are suffering.

Empathy is defined as “the ability to identify oneself
mentally with a person or thing and to understand his or her
feelings or meaning.” Many developmental specialists
believe that children begin to feel empathy and compassion
in four stages, as cited by the National Parent Information
Network:

  • Stage one: The first signs
    of empathy occur during the first year of life and is characterized
    by the “global distress” felt by infants when
    they hear another baby’s cry, which may start a chain
    reaction causing every baby within earshot to start crying,
    too.
  • Stage two: Between 1 and
    2 years of age, “egocentric empathy” is observed
    in toddlers who sometimes imitate the distress of another
    child by falling down and whining when another child has
    done so.
  • Stage three: At about 2
    or 3 years of age, children begin to empathize with emotions
    other than distress. These emotions can include disappointment,
    fear, surprise, sadness, anger and enjoyment. This third
    stage of empathic development is referred to as “empathy
    for another’s feelings.”
  • Final stage: “Empathy
    for another’s life conditions” occurs later
    in childhood, at approximately 8 years of age. Children
    at this time have wider life experiences and a better understanding
    of abstract concepts that enable them to imagine the pleasure
    or pain of another person or group of people, such as the
    homeless or those in other parts of the world.
 

While your child may be may not be struggling
to cope with a traumatic experience, he or she may have a
friend or family member who is. Your child can help by demonstrating
compassion for these people. The American Psychological Association
offers the following advice for teaching your child how to
act with compassion:

  • Let your child know how much it
    means to you that he or she behaves toward others with compassion
    and responsibility.
    When you catch your child doing
    something that you think is thoughtless or cruel, you should
    let him or her know right away that you don’t approve.
    Speak to your child firmly and honestly, and keep your focus
    on the act, not on the child personally.
  • Role model compassionate behavior.
    If you are consistently caring and compassionate, it is
    more likely that your child will be, too. Children watch
    their parents, and other adults, for clues on how to behave.
    Keep in mind that if you say one thing and do another, your
    child will pay a lot more attention to what you do. The
    old warning “Do as I say, not as I do” simply
    does not work, particularly when it comes to teaching about
    caring.
  • Give your child books that promote
    compassionate behavior.
    Keep in mind, though, that
    kids – especially teens – don’t like characters
    who are “goody-two-shoes,” so look for books
    about ‘”ordinary” characters who perform acts
    of caring and concern.
  • Monitor what your child watches.
    A study at the National Institute of Mental Health found
    that children who see kindness on television tend to imitate
    it. For this reason, you may want to limit your child’s
    viewing of violent programs and encourage him or her to
    watch shows that promote ideas about caring and helping.
    While you can’t shield your child from everything,
    a little discussion can go a long way. Ask him or her to
    think about what he or she saw and to consider other approaches
    the characters might have taken.
  • Educate your child about famous
    altruists.
    Local museums can provide an inexpensive
    and enjoyable way to do this, as can television specials
    and books. Talk to him or her about who they admire and
    why.
 

American
Psychological Association

National Parent Information Network