Showing posts with label thinking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label thinking. Show all posts

Friday, 15 October 2010

Blind Spots



Been thinking about Joe's accident, and how, talking to him, it was obvious that he had a complete blind spot about the safety of what he was doing. I was talking to Mum about it and she said that she'd heard somewhere that a teenager's brain changes so rapidly that certain parts of the brain (like the areas that assess danger) shut down for a while to allow other parts to grow, that it was a normal (though alarming) part of being a teenager.

And then this morning I saw a headline and felt my stomach turn as I read the details. This man had died being deported to Angola leaving a wife and five children aged sixteen to seven months. It was clear from the witness reports that he had been 'heavily restrained' on the plane and had lost consciousness and died. I turned on a news channel hoping to find out more but it wasn't mentioned. As the morning passed by I realised that it wasn't going to come up.

Almost every day I pass a road sign pointing the way to Yarls Wood IDC, and I wondered if he had been held there before being taken to the airport. IDC stands for Immigration Detention Centre, but its not spelt out. The acronym points to an ominous blind spot where immigration is concerned, in the media, in our lives. People are trying their best to find a safe place for themselves and their children and are ending up losing their lives. Down the road. In the depths of the Bedfordshire countryside.

Our brains have grown up. We've got no excuse.

Friday, 31 July 2009

pre-teen times...



The first weeks of the summer holidays, and impending birthdays, and a whole range of 'are we old enough to do this?' type questions have brought pre-teen parenting issues into slightly sharper focus recently. As something for the dim and distant future it always felt a bit scary, but as it edges closer I realise that it's a time when children really start to blossom into the people they are going to be and it's fascinating to see all the bits coming together; ideas being tried out and thrown away, interests coming and going, bravery tested, sensitivity dallied with, the whole process of working out whether your parents are cool or not (Tuesday - yes, Wednesday - no). It's a challenging and fast-paced time, for you as a parent as well as them and keeping up the communication as it all thunders by feels very important.

It made me think about the book that I first read as part of my teacher training which talks about Transactional Analysis and (very briefly and inadequately - see link above for more info) the idea that individuals are all made up of three parts; the Parent, the Adult, and the Child.
The Parent consists of a whole body of information and directives that have been 'passed on' to you in your early life in conscious and unconscious ways.
The Child part is the 'feeling' non-verbal part of your makeup which is also 'set' very early on in life as a response to your particular environment and experience.
The Adult part of you is essentially a computer which processes all of this data in the context of the present reality. The Adult decides what to do about things. The Adult is developed from a very young age, as soon as a baby is able to start making decisions and choices.

With some (many?) people the Adult part of them is undeveloped and their actions are a direct result of 'what they've been told' or prejudice (acting in their Parent) or acting as a direct result of their feelings of anger, hurt or fear in a fight or flight way (acting in their Child). The idea of the Adult allows a step back (or step up?), an opportunity to think and the possibility of building yourself freed from, but with the full knowledge of the benefits of, your past.

Another important point that the book makes is that the early position that every individual has is the 'I'm not O.K - You're O.K' position. This reflects the complete dependence that every baby experiences at the hands of an all-powerful being at the beginning of their life. The book goes on to describe how it is only through the development of an 'Adult' that an individual can change its position to an 'I'm O.K - You're O.K' position where transactions can be productive and creative. Holding on to the 'I'm not O.K - You're O.K' position causes people problems in relationships, their behaviour either confirming this position (which feels bad) or putting other people down (which gives temporary relief from feeling bad)

It seemed to me that my pre-teens were going through a particularly intense period of this kind of thing, but that it was something that all of us at any age could learn from. I'm re-reading the book(s), and talking to them about what Adult, Parent and Child mean in this context and hopefully will have some tools before long to talk about the journeys ahead - ours and theirs.