Helping
Families with Toddlers When Parents
are Deployed
Supporting
Toddlers During Deployment
Development
and Toddlers
Toddlers
are incredibly complex, one minute in a battle of defiance and the next
minute wanting to snuggle in your lap. They have immense energy, a need
to be
physical, a desire to be grown-up, and an urge to test limits. Caring
for toddlers in a
group can be exhausting. They require caregivers to have the
problem-solving ability
to figure out who had the truck first and the patience to say for the
hundredth time in
one day, “use your words,” to a child who is
grabbing a toy from
another child.
Environments
for toddlers need as many “yes’s” as
possible including the use of safe
structures that support large muscle development. Nurture toddler
desire for
independence by giving choices whenever possible. For example, say,
“It
is time to eat
lunch. Would you like the red cup or the blue one?” Do not
say, “Would
you like
lunch?” because skipping lunch is not an option for the
child.
Caregivers
need to use their intuition to discern the right moment just before
play
deteriorates to change the pace of activity. This is the time to bring
out new materials,
turn on music, or suggest different activities that engage and interest
the children.
Toddlers
want to feel grown-up and helpful. One way to do this is to give them
manageable responsibilities and ways to help you.
How
Caregivers Help Families Cope with Deployment
Before
the
Parent is Deployed
Ask
the deploying parent if there is anything you can do to support their
family while
they are gone. You may want to ask the deploying parent about their job
so that you
can talk to the toddler about the parent and what they are doing.
Take
pictures of the deploying parent and toddler and put those in your
classroom.
You can make a small book of these pictures to look at with the child.
Reassure
the parent that the child will miss them, but that children are
resilient and
the child will be okay. Remind the parent to communicate with the
toddler while they
are gone. It is more important for the child that the parent stays in
touch, than what
they actually say.
While
the
Military Parent is Away
Toddlers
love daily rituals and will protest if they are changed. Rituals
provide a sense
of security for children. Caregivers can develop rituals that include a
child’s parents
such as simple songs that use family members’ names. Such
daily rituals
are important
to help the child think about the deployed parent.
The
child may regress after the military parent is deployed. There may be
toileting
accidents, thumb sucking, or whiney behavior. This is a
toddler’s way
of saying, “I
miss my parent”. Treat such behavior calmly, it will pass.
Also, let
the parents see that
you treat regressive behavior calmly. This demonstrates to the parent
that this
behavior is not a cause for alarm.
The
caregiver may notice that the child has more fears than before. This is
normal for
this age. Increased fears seem to go along with increased independence.
Treat fears as
real; they are real for the child. Help the child and parent address
them so the child is
comforted.
You
can also help the child by your support of their parent. Is the parent
okay? How
is their stress level? Do not forget you may be the last adult they
talk to at the end of
the day. Take the time to check in with them as they pick up their
child each day.
Refer them to help if necessary.
Reunion
of
the Family
The
military parent and toddler will need time to adjust to each other when
the parent
returns. The relationship has been on hold. If the child is difficult,
explain that a
child’s difficult behavior is giving a message. Children have
to say
‘no’ at times to
establish their independence. It is a phase that will not last forever
and is very
important for the toddler. Remind them that negative behavior is not
personal, but
comes from within the toddler. The calmer the parent stays the better.
This is not the
time to get into a struggle of wills.
Caregivers
can point out a toddler’s likes and dislikes to the parent,
such as a
favorite
toy or how the toddler likes to climb. Describe the toddler’s
abilities
to the parent.
Also, be sure to ask the parents what they notice their toddler enjoys.
Exchanging
information helps the returning parent get reacquainted sooner.
The
toddler may ignore the returning parent; that is a way of coping with
change. You
can reassure the parent that this will pass. Encourage them to enjoy
watching what the
toddler likes to do.
Caregivers
can honor the job both parents have been doing. It is not easy being
alone
with a toddler. It is also not easy leaving your family and child that
you love to do
your duty. Reunion is a good time to appreciate one another again and
you can help
them do that.