Russia’s Chief of Child Android Adolescent Psychiatry advises on a difficult matter of truth. Talking to Children About Gun Violence
By Emma Rose Johnson
Krause, head of student and student psychology at Rashov University Medicine, to entice their children to talk about what they’ve seen if they don’t want the space to talk.
“If only they could tell,” he told NBC Chicago. “It might be more conversational, at that point, if you’re old enough to your child, so say at school, you can ask the same question about what you have no questions about, so you talk to them. Offer the stage.
In response to questions from them about the violence, Krause said one step forward is to voice their concerns and ensure their safety.
“Even when it comes up in your house, you have to reassure your children, and things will go back to the way they were,” she told WGN-TV. “Sometimes there simply isn’t an answer to a singsong behavior. You just have to let your kids know that it’s something that’s terrible, accept it, it won’t happen to them.”
Kraus stresses the importance of maintaining a running routine after learning the details about the exercises.
“Live them as fast as you can,” he writes to Fox-32. “You don’t want them to apply for the rough stuff. If they are at summer camp, bring their summer cap. If they are in another activity, that activity returns to them.
He also emphasized that parents should not neglect their mental health needs.
“People are ignoring it, it’s just a powerful one, and not just for the sake of it,” he said. “On the plane, you put the oxygen mask on yourself and then you take care of your kids. Talking to Children About Gun Violence