Children will read our anxiety as our belief that they are unsafe, incapable, and not ready for brave.
A way to move through this is to remember the power of ‘and’. Make space for their anxiety – you don’t need to get rid of it – and their capacity for brave.
Because as long as they are actually safe:
They can feel anxious and do brave.
They can feel unready for brave, and be ready for brave.
They can wish to avoid, and they can stay (or not be taken home).
They can be angry, anxious, and push us away, and we can look after them through the feelings without avoiding the brave/ new, hard/ important.
We can wish for their anxiety, anger, sadness to be gone, and we can be with them without needing them to be different.
We can believe them (that they are anxious, scared, angry) and believe in them (that they are capable).
When we hold their anxiety and their capacity for brave in equal measure and with compassion, we can show them that their anxiety doesn’t cancel their brave.
‘Yes, this feels big, and I know you can handle that feeling. We’ll handle it together.’
‘I know you want ‘out’ and we’re doing this. It’s okay to be angry, or sad, or anxious about this – I can look after you through all of it and school is happening. I’m not taking you home.‘
‘I’m not going to do anything that gives you the idea that I think you aren’t capable, or brave, or able to do hard things. Yes you feel anxious and yes you are brave. Let me show you.‘

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