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Sunday, 27 October 2013

Tips for How to Prepare for a Storm

About this time last year, I wrote about my memories of the Great Storm of 1987. As a child I was pretty oblivious to the fact that a storm was about to hit. However, with the news that a storm to rival the Great Storm of 1987 is apparently currently on it's way to the UK, as a parent, with the responsibility of the kids to keep safe, I wanted to know how to prepare for an event of this kind - just in case! Most of the UK news sites are advising the public to "be prepared", but not really giving any information on how to actually be prepared. Hopefully the storm won't be as bad as predicted, but in true Girl Guide "Be Prepared" style, I took to the internet to find some good tips for being prepared for a storm. Most of the best tips came from US sites, who are used to having storms, floods, hurricanes and the like, and so here are some tips for being prepared. Feel free to pick and choose which ones are relevant to you.
  • Stock up on household essentials such as canned goods, toilet roll, perhaps nappies, bread and milk, so that you have something to eat if you can't leave the house for a couple of days.
  • Stock up on torches, batteries, candles & matches which may be required in the event of a power cut. 
  • Check your house insurance covers what you need it to, & know where your documents are.
  • Locate other valuable & precious documents, and place them in a plastic bag or metal box, ensuring that they are high off the floor and easy to locate.
  • Ensure that mobile phones and electrical devices are charged in case power is lost and home phones may not charge if power goes out.
  • Have a stash of cash for emergencies available in case cash machines or debit cards aren't working,
  • Have a plan in place to move furniture to a higher location if your area is prone to flooding.
  • Cut back branches from over hanging trees on your property if possible.
  • Secure garden belongings, rubbish bins, and anything which could potentially fly around and cause damage. 
  • Avoid unnecessary travel - don't try and venture out unless it's an absolute must. 
  • Consider where the best place for your car to be parked is. 
  • Try and locate if possible, a room in your house which is free from external windows and doors, and designate it a "safe room" for your family to shelter in should the need arise. Failing that, an internal cupboard if the need were to absolutely arise. 
  • Have an evacuation plan in place & a bag with clothes and essential items for each person ready to go. in the event that you have to evacuate your property..
  • Secure windows and doors and keep internal doors closed if possible to minimise damage.
  • With the current generation's reliance on technology, try and have something prepared such as perhaps colouring pads and pencils, or a board game, to keep them occupied should power be lost to the house. 
  • If you were feeling very prepared, you could fill the bathtub with water, in case water is cut off. A bathtub full of water will last three days and enable toilets to be flushed and water to be available. 
  • Most of all, stay safe and don't take unnecessary risks to go and rescue outside belongings.
Do you have any more tips for preparing for a stormy weather front?

Friday, 18 October 2013

Autumn Days


For the past few days I have had the song by Phil Collins "I can feel it coming in the air tonight" in my head, and whilst the song has nothing to do with the seasons, I have certainly started to feel the throes of autumn coming in the air recently.

The nights are becoming colder and really misty. As we left the kids school from parents evening the other night I was hit by the delightful smell of wood burning fires coming from the cottages - which always reminds me that Autumn is here. At home we have dusted off the slow cooker and have started indulging in home-made soup and stews to try and ward off the autumn bugs which seem to be rearing their heads. We are also in the midst of our yearly routine of preparing our house for the colder weather which comes around again so quickly each year.

The kids have been reminding us that Autumn is here too. Although it doesn't seem five minutes since the summer holidays, last week was the kids Harvest Festival at school where we revelled in all of the autumn produce which filled the church (well - the tins of tomatoes and beans, and packets of cereal which make up harvest offerings these days anyway). We also sang that well known Autumn classic song "Autumn Days" - you know the one which everyone used to sing at school. Did you used to sing it in primary school? If not (or if you did) Here's a reminder:


Whilst the trendier songs for Autumn and Harvest Festival now include songs about "collecting 100 conkers" and "broad beans sleeping in a blankety bed", for me "Autumn Days" will always will be one of those seminal songs that reminds me of the joys of Autumn and would probably feature in a soundtrack to my younger years.

For some reason, I only have to hear the opening bars to Autumn Days and I am transported straight back to the drafty school hall at junior school - we sang that song a lot! I particularly remember being in assembly, singing "Autumn Days" with the sun streaming through the tall glass green-house like windows of the hall. I remember the smell of the freshly cut grass seeping through the open windows (they steamed up if you left them closed), and the cold nip in the air as summer started to turn to Autumn. The song also reminds me of that smell of a mixture of paint, plimsolls and stale school dinners which permanently hung around in the air at my school and is not dissimilar to the smell of my children's school. I remember my lovely music teacher plodding merrily away on the old piano,  and the rickety old projector with the hand-written words of the song on ageing acetate. I remember looking outside over the wood that our school backed onto and seeing Autumn literally transform the trees from their green pastels to rich gold, reds and browns. I also remember playing with the piles of leaves which filled the playground each playtime, and the excitement as the nights got darker and darker as we left school.

Sadly my primary school has been knocked down now to make way for a housing estate, but last week at the harvest festival, as we sang the song, I closed my eyes and saw a sea of red jumpers (our old school colour) shouting out "and a win for my home team" at the top of our voices. I always look back on my primary school days with fondness (mostly). I think that our kids don't realise how lucky they are to still be in them! "Autumn Days" takes me straight back to being about seven or eight years old again and remembering the promise that each new school year and each new Autumn used to bring, and also the excitement that the events of the close of the year bring.

Now as an adult, I think that excitement becomes quite child-like once again when you are a parent to young children and you join them in remembering the anticipation of all thing Autumnal such as Bonfire night, Birthdays and Christmas.

So a very reflective post from me for the start of Autumn!

What song reminds you of your school days?

Thursday, 10 October 2013

How can you help your child deal with friendship woes?

My kids have the luxury of going to a small school which offers great adult/pupil ratios and a fantastic learning environment, Unfortunately, one of the downsides of small schools is that pupils have a smaller pool of children to make friends from. When it comes to birthday parties, this makes life for parents fantastically easy. However, when it comes to friendship groups, things are not so easy as if you fall out with your friends, there is not many other places to look for new ones.

All children, especially girls go through phases of being best friends with their classmates one week and then not being best friends the next. With five girls in her year, I have always wondered how the friendship dynamic would work out, although it seems that children in small schools seem to mix more happily with other children from other years, rather than sticking to those in their own year as children in larger schools do. This week eldest has been coming home from school upset as her two best friends seem to have paired up and are leaving her out.

As a parent it's upsetting to hear that your children are not having a happy time at school. Although I well remember having friendship woes at school, I wasn't too phased by it. Eldest is a sensitive little sole and is taking the rejection by her friends quite personally. A bright little button, she finds it hard to deal with childish behaviour and doesn't understand why her friends have suddenly turned on her.

Although reassuring her that they may well be best friends again by next week, and that things will blow over and not to let it get her too upset, I am at a little bit of a loss of how to help her deal with friendship falling outs as she doesn't understand why her friends have suddenly decided to leave her out, (although I have a suspicion that it's because one child didn't like me picking them up on bad behaviour at my house recently).

What do you think? How do you help your children deal with difficulties in friendships in the playground? It's a fact of life that most children will go through this at some point.

Any answers gratefully received!

Monday, 7 October 2013

Spotting the Warning Signs of Abuse/Neglect in Children


Victoria Climbie. Daniel Pelka. Baby Peter. Hamzah Khan. Keanu Williams.

These are all names that we know so well and have heard talked about so often in the news. These are all names of children who have been failed by their parents or carers in the most unimaginable way. I'm sure those of us who are parents hug our children a little tighter when we hear the details reported of how these poor children suffered at the hands of those who were supposed to protect them.

This weekend yet another case has emerged of another mother causing "wilful neglect" to three of her children including a four month old baby girl who died. Every time we hear these stories, we are met with assurances that serious lessons has been learnt and that the authority want to make sure this awful thing never happens again. Yet it keeps on happening.....

Time after time we hear about how the warning signs were missed, or people spotted something but didn't report it, or they had doubts about the validity of their concerns. We hear how one agency didn't talk to another agency. We hear how the parents/carers managed to talk the person around and sew seeds of doubt in their mind that abuse or neglect was actually happening.

Sometimes, like in the Hamzah and Climbe cases, these children disappear under the radar and perhaps failed by technology, the child's name disappears from the view of a GP's system or School register rather than a real person asking questions about why the child is no longer detected. Other times, the abuse is happening in full view of others, like in the Pelka case where the teachers were told by the parents that the child had an eating disorder, and they ignored the signs of the child stealing from a lunch box or eating scraps out of the bin.

It is easy do wonder how these warning signs could have been ignored when we have the full picture, but often, one person - except for the person abusing or neglecting the child may not have the whole picture.

So what is abuse? How do we know a child is being abused?

Well of course there are the physical signs - a child with bruising from being punched or kicked, perhaps burns, a child who is scared in the company of adults, or who divulges something. a child who perhaps plays up for attention, or who is very withdrawn to the world - and a multitude of others.

However, often those neglecting or abusing a child may do their very best to keep their secret hidden, and so the signs may not be as noticeable if you only had one piece of the puzzle.

There are also the contributing factors - it is hard to overlook that most children suffering from abuse or neglect come from groups of people living on the edge of society - those for whom English is not their first language, those who claim benefits or are on low incomes, people with a history of substance or alcohol abuse, those with mental health issues, a history of violence or depression. Those who have grown-up in environments with one or more these contributing factors are more likely to abuse or neglect their child as they may be unaware of what it is to bring up a child in a stable environment, This is a huge sweeping generalisation and of course abuse and neglect happens in many different places, but the evidence suggests that more often than not, these pre-disposed factors exist.

So those working in jobs who come into contact with children or vulnerable adults will have their own safeguarding procedures in place and should be more adept at spotting signs of abuse, but what about the general public?

Are we in a position to spot and report signs of abuse? There are systems in place such as calling the NSPCC or reporting via Social Services, but would small every day occurrences we witness trigger this process?

Are there warning signs which we are missing, or which seem so insignificant that on their own, they would not be a factor for abuse or neglect?

I'm sure we all have opinions about the way that other parents we know parent their children, and we may have witnessed children being parented or treated in a way that we don't agree with, but where do we draw the line? If we see parents or carers making choices that we think would be tantamount to some kind of abuse or neglect, is it our place to mention our concerns? Should we be making judgments about other people which could have life changing consequences?

Are there small signs that we have witnessed that we brushed off as bad behaviour - like stealing food from another child's lunch box? I have seen children do this - and brushed it off as bad behaviour. Recently I was involved in an event which involved serving food to children. One child came back for three helpings and was desperately still begging for more food saying that they were starving. Was this a sign that they are not fed at home - or simply a child not knowing their limits?

What about bruises? If we notice a bruise on a child, is this a sign of neglect or abuse - or are they just a little over zealous in the playground? My youngest is always covered in bruises as she is a real rough and tumble little girl. I can well believe that someone may imagine she were being abused if they didn't know her and the way that she likes to throw herself around.

A child not speaking properly, a child who never has their coat or jumper on, or who walks around in shoes full of holes. Perhaps a child who never does their reading homework or school homework, or a child who treats other children badly. Are any of these signs of neglect? Does a child who can't speak properly have a speech impediment - or did their parents never teach them? Does the child with no coat/jumper and holey shoes continually lose and ruin their own clothes to the point the parent refuses to replace them? Can the parents not afford to replace items, or do they just not bother about whether their children are warm? Do the parents work full time with no time to help with school homework and reading - or are they just not that interested? Perhaps they can't actually read or write themselves so can't help even if they wanted to. Is the school bully crying out for attention, or are they simply copying behaviour that an adult has inflicted upon them?

What about a child with low self-esteem, who never speaks to adults? Often children who are being abused or neglected are frightened into silence - is this a sign, or is the child just very shy?

There seem to be so many situations where the truth could swing one way or another. For us as adults, it's easy to write what we witness off as the lesser excuse - especially if we always want to see the best in people. Are any of the signs mentioned above warning signs - or just the behaviour of typical children?

Parents or Carers who neglect or abuse their children typically either do it will fully or unwillfully

Whilst it is easy to consider the abuser or neglecter as evil, what if the person caring for the child doesn't actually realise that their behaviour is tantamount to abuse or neglect? Are they technically neglecting or abusing them if they don't know any different? Those who have been abused themselves may just project the behaviour onto their children that they were subjected to as a child as pass it off as "normal". It may be that the abuser/neglecter is so consumed with their own problems - whether it be domestic issues, mental health problems, financial issues or depression that they are not in a fit state to take care of their children. What about these situations for us as adults? Would we be urged to report these instances of abuse or neglect, or hope that if we kept quiet, things might improve for the adult and the child as the adult wasn't willingly trying to hurt the child.

Sometimes there are those in life who may simply not have the life skills to be good parents. Recently I witnessed some treatment of a child which I didn't agree with. The child who was much older than baby age was eating spoon fed baby food and drinking bottled milk, and coke . The child didn't eat solid foods, or drink from a cup, and was not toilet trained. They also couldn't talk. They were essentially being kept and treated as a baby - much like Hamzah Khan was. They were not played with or spoken to - they were more being helicopter parented to try and get them to stay in one place - without once directly addressing the child or paying them attention. I don't believe that those looking after the child were deliberately mistreating them. In their view, they thought that this was how a child of this child's age should be looked after. Is it my place to report my concerns about this behaviour just because I don't agree with how the child was being looked after? Was this behaviour abuse or neglect of the child's welfare?

What if we expressed our concerns and a child was taken away from their parents or carer? The psychological impact of this stress can have an impact and repercussions on children and their carers for life. Do we want to cause this amount of stress and damage on a whim? But what if we didn't report concerns and six months later the child was dead?

In my day job teaching antenatal courses, I teach a little bit about caring for a baby and how to care for a baby in the first year. I sometimes witness behaviour at reunions which I have concerns about, and whilst it is definitely not my place to judge or tell parents how they should and shouldn't be caring for their baby, what if these are the first seeds of neglect being sewn?

What if the passing glimpses of things that we witness are all pieces of the puzzle which could be forming a bigger picture? What if those small things that we brush off, are in fact the warning signs which are being ignored? Professionally, unless it was a real safeguarding issue, I would not be obliged to report behaviour I witnessed, but what about about my concerns? Should there be a confidential system in place to raise concerns?

I wonder if there is a system in place - a central place for professionals and non-professionals to raise concerns or musings of behaviour which are documented, but not acted upon as an isolated incident. If everyone was able to raise their concerns, without fear that they would cause unnecessary harm to the family involved, then perhaps all of these small concerns being fed in would reveal a larger picture that should be acted upon. Perhaps there already is a system in place. Is there one place where information is held centrally - or are all of the individual departments and care providers making their own reports, and never really sharing what they witness? When we as members of the public report concerns, are they added do the concerns of others, or kept as isolated reports?

It should be the responsibility of all of us to keep on top of the signs of child abuse - but how do we know what is child abuse and what is just different styles of parenting?

What do you feel the solution is? Have you witnessed behaviour which could have been an early warning sign of abuse or negelct? Would you feel confident to report it?