|
NIGHTMARE REMEDIES
HELPING YOUR CHILD TAME THE DEMONS OF THE NIGHT
Alan Siegel, Ph.D.
Excerpted from Dreamcatching: Every Parent's Guide to
Exploring and
Understanding Children's Dreams and Nightmares
by Alan Siegel and Kelly Bulkeley Copyright
Random House: Three Rivers Press © 1998
Our children do not have to suffer their nightmares
in silence, brooding about the lingering feeling of suffocation left by
the formless ghost or shuddering at the memory of the razor-sharp teeth of
a pack of wolves ripping into their flesh. There are remedies for even the
most dreadful nightmares.
Unfortunately, the raw terror that lingers after a nightmare may
accentuate a child's insecurity and bring on anxiety for hours or even
days afterward. It may even disturb their ability to sleep by inducing
insomnia, or fears and phobias about sleeping and dreaming. To help your
child restore their capacity to sleep and to harness the healing and
creative potential of scary dreams, we must help them break the spell of
their nightmares.
The silver lining of painful nightmares is that through the often
transparent symbolism, they shine a spotlight on the issues that are most
the upsetting, yet unexpressible for your child. Every nightmare, no
matter how distressing, contains vital information about crucial emotional
challenges in your child's life. To a parent whose ears and heart are
open, listening to the most distressing nightmares is like hearing your
child's unconscious, speaking directly to you delivering a special call
for help.
Most nightmares are a normal part of coping with changes in our lives.
They are not necessarily a sign of pathology and may even be a positive
indication that we are actively coping with a new challenge. For children,
this could occur in response to such events as entering school, moving to
a new neighborhood or living through a divorce or remarriage.
Using role-playing and fantasy rehearsals, parents can coach their
children to assert their magical powers and tame the frights of the night.
New endings for dreams can be created so that falling dreams become
floating dreams and chase dreams end with the capture of the villain. When
we give our children reassurance and encouragement to explore creative
solutions to dream dilemmas, we restore their ability to play with the
images in their nightmares rather than feeling threatened or demoralized.
These assertiveness skills carry over into future dream confrontations and
lead to greater confidence to face waking challenges.
SOPHIA'S SPIDER DREAM
Even very young children can learn to encounter and
overcome the threatening creatures of their nightmares. My daughter,
Sophia, mentioned her first dream just before she turned two. She woke
from a nap one day and spontaneously said "bird fly outside" while
motioning towards the window with her hands. Because Sophia had always
been fascinated with the flight and sounds of birds and airplanes, my wife
and I weren't sure if it was really a dream or just a fantasy. However, a
month later, Sophia woke up screaming and sobbing with a bona fide
nightmare about spiders.
The Attack of the Dream Spider
'Pider on Sophia...off Sophia's leg...Dad, no more 'pider please!"
While holding Sophia and comforting her, she
continued to sob, saying "Sophia scared". I reassured her that "Daddy will
protect you from spiders". I am going to teach you how to get those bad
spiders away from Sophia" She listened with wide eyes. "When you see those
spiders, tell them Go away bad spiders. Get out of Sophia's bed and don't
come back!" I emphatically repeated this anti-spider anthem three times.
Suddenly Sophia smiled a slightly mischievous smile. "Go away 'piders" She
said tentatively. She repeated it twice and smiled waving her hands as if
to motion the spiders away. She was significantly calmed and after a bit
of rocking and a short story, she fell back to sleep easily.
When Sophia woke the next morning, I asked her "Did you have any more
dreams?" She flashed a playful smile and said "piders!" and laughed. For
two more days, she grinned and said 'piders' when she woke. These
subsequent dream reports were probably fabricated judging by the
mischievous look on her face. However, within a few days she began to
report other dreams, mostly animals, some threatening and some friendly.
Sophia's dream spiders were more terrifying than anything in waking
reality. I took the dream spiders seriously by talking directly to them
and offering Sophia reassurance (both physical and emotional), a concrete
strategy for facing the dream creatures and follow-up to reinforce her
ability to break the spell of the attacking dream spider.
Children's Nightmares
Children suffer more frequent
nightmares than their parents and, prior to the age of six, nightmares are
especially common. As soon as your child can speak, he or she may wake
with a one or two word tale of a wolf or ghost. There is even speculation
among specialists in child development that the sleep disturbances of
infants in the first year of life may be wordless nightmares.
Nightmares diminish as children grow older, master their fears, and gain
more control over their world. A long-term study of 252 children showed
that five to ten percent of seven- and eight-year-old children had
nightmares once a week. By the time children in the study were between
eleven and fourteen, disturbing dreams were infrequent, especially for
boys.
Most nightmares are a normal part of coping with changes in our lives.
They are not necessarily a sign of pathology and may even be a positive
indication that we are actively coping with a new challenge. For children,
this could occur in response to such events as entering school, moving to
a new neighborhood or living through a divorce or remarriage.
A good working assumption is that many nightmares in children are
reactions to upsetting events, situations and relationships. It is
important to keep in mind that often a stress such as moving to a new
neighborhood will be complicated by a chain reaction of other changes.
Nightmares will usually diminish in intensity and frequency as the child
and the family recover and cope with stresses such as a death in the
family or birth of a new family member.
Eight-year-old Brian and his younger brother Jake were not only moving
from the house they had always lived in, they were changing schools and
saying goodbye to school friends. After the last day at his old school,
Brian's family moved into his friend Colin's house for the summer while
Colin's family went on vacation. On the first night of sleeping in his
friend's room, Brian had a dreadful nightmare.
In tears, Brian woke and came running into his parents room, lamenting his
bad dream. "I can't stop thinking about the awful smell". Brian's mother,
Gina, gave him a sympathetic hug and invited him to sit down and tell the
whole dream. Sobbing slightly, Brian blurted out what he could remember.
Poison Gas
I see my friends Colin and his
brother Ross opening the door and going into a dark room like the room I
am staying in. I keep waiting over ½ hour but they don't come out.
Finally, I decide to go in and check on them. I smell gas and think it
might be poison gas. Suddenly I see them lying dead on floor.
Seeing Brian's distress, Gina wanted to reassure
him. "If someone is dead in a dream, does it mean they are really gonna
die?" " No, Brian, things that we dream about are important but they don't
usually come true when we are awake. Possibly this dream isn't about
people dying but about missing your friends after we move." "Yeah but it
was so gross seeing them dead and the gas made me feel like I was gonna
get poisoned too". Gina responded "That must have been a horrible sight. I
would have been scared too if I had that dream."
After a moment of pondering, Brian relaxed a bit and said "that room I am
staying in does smell kinda stinky." He had complained before bed that his
friend Colin's collection of old teddy bears smelled bad. Gina agreed and
taking the dream at face value, she suggested that they spray some air
freshener before he goes back to sleep. As she looked in the cabinets for
the freshener, Gina realized that Brian's dream went beyond a simple
reaction to the foul smell of the stuffed animals. She realized that she
and her husband had been so busy packing and preparing for the move, they
hadn't had time to really talk with Brian about his sense of loss and his
fears of the unknown.
Brian's morbid nightmare helped his mother understand his emotional needs.
As a result of the dream, Gina spent more time talking about the move with
Brian and his brother. The family took steps to keep connections with old
friends, and visited their new school during the summer to make it more
familiar. While in their temporary house, they also moved the smelly bears
and deodorized the room.
The poison gas was a response not only to the actual bad smell in the room
in which Brian was staying but also symbolized the dangerous sense of
insecurity Brian felt, moving from a familiar home and school and friends
to an unfamiliar and unpleasant situation. If death or grief is not a
current issue in the dreamer's life, death dreams frequently symbolize
loss or painful changes. For Brian, the dark room that swallowed up his
friends and killed them expressed his multiple losses as well as fear.
During a period of stress or family crisis, parents should expect more
frequent nightmares. Likewise, when a child suddenly has an increase in
nightmares, they are letting you know they are feeling overwhelmed and
insecure. You don't have to interpret or explain their nightmares. Your
reassurance and empathy plus some hugs are the first step towards helping
them restore their emotional balance.
Recurring Nightmares
Anyone who keeps track of their dreams and
nightmares will begin to notice recurring symbols and patterns. Studies of
people who have kept dream journals for as long as 50 years have shown
that certain animals or houses or people who appear in a person's
childhood or teenage dreams will still turn up when their hair is gray.
Your own personal repertoire of nightmare symbols may emerge early in
childhood, evolving and transforming throughout your life span. After
being stung by a bee when she was three, Annie began to have repetitive
dreams of being chased and bitten by bees and other bugs. While her
parents initially assumed that the bee sting experience was still
bothering her, they began to notice that Annie would get stung in her
dreams when other things would upset her; when her Mom went on a business
trip, when she temporarily lost her favorite doll, and just after her
brother was born. Her bee sting dreams had become symbolic of events that
threatened her security.
Through repeating dream patterns, such as Annie's bee sting dreams, by
earlier traumatic events, they are later stimulated by current stressful
situations. Repeating dream patterns may also be influenced by disturbing
images from television and film (no one wants a Freddie Kreuger dream),
family fears, cultural stereotypes, myths, and religious beliefs and
stories.
What can we learn from recurrent dreams? They are often a warning of
lingering psychological conflicts. For example, children of divorce
frequently dream that their parents have reunited; abuse survivors are
often victims or perpetrators of violence in their dreams; and adopted
children intermittently dream of their birth parents.
Conversely, changes within recurring dreams may signal the onset of
resolving a psychological impasse. For example, a survivor of child abuse
who was making a therapeutic breakthrough in her emotional recovery
dreamed of triumphing over a shadowy, hostile figure that had threatened
and chased her in innumerable prior nightmares.
STAGES OF RESOLUTION IN RECURRING
DREAMS
Three stages of resolution can be
identified in children's nightmares.
Threat: In the dream, a main character is
threatened and unable to mount any defense. For example, he or she may
be paralyzed while trying to flee the jaws of a hungry ghost imprisoned
by aliens.
Struggle: Attempts to confront the nightmare adversary are
partially successful in fending off danger. An example would be
temporarily escaping a robber with a knife and trying to dial the phone
for help.
Resolution: The nightmare enemy, opponent, or oppressor is
vanquished and the threatening creatures are put in cages, slain, or
held at bay with magic wands, or otherwise disarmed.
In some cases, children spontaneously resolve a recurring nightmare as the
formerly distressing situations which caused the nightmares get worked out
in the child's real life. Bob had one such persistent childhood nightmare
that changed decisively with time. Although his father was not inherently
cruel and abusive, his stormy personality often led to outbursts of anger
that frightened Bob and his sister.
After his father's return from military service, Bob began having
nightmares about horrific encounters with a ghost-like monster in the
basement of his house. These ghost nightmares continued for almost two
years from when he was seven until he was nine.
At first the ghost dreams would leave him shaking in abject terror. As
time went by he would try to stand up to the ghost but as the following
dream indicates, he did not immediately prevail.
Screaming at the Ghost in the Basement
I was down in the basement in bed sleeping and it
was the terror of all terrors. I knew the ghost was around the corner to
the right between me and these stairways where you could get back up to
the house. I knew if I moved or made the slightest sound the ghost would
get me. I couldn't stand the tension so I finally decided I would just
yell and let the ghost come out and get me. I sat up in bed and screamed
as loud as I could. The ghost came roaring out of its hiding place and
jumped all over me and attacked me and I instantly woke up.
Bob woke up feeling simultaneously scared and
defiant. Despite the consequences, he was determined to fight back. He
later interpreted the threatening ghost as a symbol of his father's angry
outbursts.
When his father had returned from overseas, he had not only interfered
with Bob's special relationship with his mother, but had been punitive
with Bob as he tried to reassert his role as "man of the house."
Gradually, as Bob adjusted to his father's presence, he became less
intimidated by his father's moods and began to identify with the positive
characteristics of his father--especially his father's creativity with
tools and building.
Bob's gradually improving relationship with his father was reflected in a
breakthrough dream.
Dad Helps Me Float to Safety
I was at the top of the basement stairs looking
down. The stairs disappeared from under me and I was falling and falling
into the basement, terrified the ghost would get me when I hit the
floor. Just then I saw my dad down there. He turned on this blue light
and as soon as he did I floated into the basement and knew that I was
safe.
Bob's father who had been verbally harsh during the
months after returning from overseas had begun to soften and allow Bob to
work with him in his workshop which, happened to be in the basement.
Providing the blue light symbolized how his father had transformed from a
competitor for Bob's mother's love into a positive paternal role model and
protector. That positive change in the father/son relationship allowed Bob
to work out his recurrent nightmare.
A crucial factor in understanding repetitive dreams is looking at the
degree of resolution or mastery in the dream. As children mature
emotionally and intellectually, they gain increasing control over their
childhood fears and feel more confident in their ability to solve problems
and handle situations independently. This gradually increasing sense of
control is reflected not only in their waking achievements but in their
dream life.
The Four R's That Spell Nightmare
Relief
There are many potentially beneficial
nightmare remedies that parents, family members, and even siblings can use
to help a child break the spell of a disturbing nightmare and transform
terror into creative breakthroughs. In order to soothe the lingering
terror and banish the demons of the night, you must learn the Four R's
that spell nightmare relief for your children. They are REASSURANCE,
RESCRIPTING, REHEARSAL AND RESOLUTION.
Reassurance is the first and most important dimension of remedying
children's nightmares. This includes "welcoming the dream" with special
emphasis on physical and emotional reassurance, which will calm your
child's anxiety and help them feel safe enough to give details about the
nightmare and be open to further exploration.
Everyone has nightmares and no one has to bear the pain without help.
Reassurance quells the post-nightmare jitters and allows you and your
child an opportunity to discover both the creative possibilities and the
source of what sparked the nightmare that may still be disturbing your
child.
Rescripting means inviting and guiding your child to imagine changes in
the outcome of their dream by reenacting or rewriting the plot. Even with
young children, rescripting is most effective when it is a collaborative
process of brainstorming together. The most well-known form of rescripting
is creating one or more new endings for a dream using art work, fantasy,
drama, and writing.
Rescripting is like assertiveness training for the imagination. Ominous
dream monsters, demons, and werewolves can be tricked and trapped, tamed
and leashed, given time-outs, bossed around, and generally made less
intimidating. With parental assistance, the child with nightmares can be
taught to revolt and throw off the yoke of dream oppression by using
magical means such as fairy dust, a wizard's wand, Star Trektm "Phasers,"
special incantations and spells, or other handy tools of the imagination.
Very often developing and rehearsing solutions to dream dilemmas carries
over to increased confidence in facing waking conflicts.
One of the most enjoyable aspects of resolving nightmares is helping your
child create their own repertoire of "Magical Tools" for dream
assertiveness. These tools are limited only by your imagination and can be
inspired by your child's interests, current movies or television shows,
your families cultural background, books or projects they are completing
for school, and so on. Just as garlic or a crucifix repels a werewolf or a
silver bullet kills a vampire, some magical tools can be chosen to disarm
a specific character in a recurring nightmare such as a special spray for
ghosts or an invisible shield for gunmen. Other tools can be of the
all-purpose variety such as the old reliable magic wand, Luke Skywalker's
"force" from Star Wars or even trusty police tools such as hand cuffs or a
secure jail cell with the key thrown away!
Zoe, at age six, had occasional, recurrent nightmares of fire ever since
she witnessed the Oakland/Berkeley Firestorm when she was two years old.
The following dream was one of the worst episodes of this theme.
The Killing Fire
I was at my school and about six people came and
set fire to the whole school and it burned all the way to the Golden
Gate Bridge and they were going to kill all the kids and they only chose
to save my sister.
She woke from the dream in the middle of the night,
tearfully pleading for hugs and reassurance. She did not feel comfortable
or ready to talk about the nightmare at the time or even in the morning
before school. Because of her artistic inclination, she was, however,
intrigued with the idea of drawing her fire dream that evening and ended
up making a series of sketches with markers.
By talking about the elements of her drawing, the bright colors, the
architecture of her school, and placement of the Golden Gate bridge, Zoe
was able to begin exploring the dream through the medium of her sketches.
This led her to recall some of her earlier fire dreams and to ask a series
of questions about the Firestorm--how it had started and where she was
during the event. She decided she wanted to actually see the site of the
fire which was located quite near some friends of the family. At the time
of the visit, many houses had been rebuilt, but she was fascinated by the
fact that there were still empty lots and burned out foundations where
homes had been destroyed.
Like many children her age and older, Zoe did not want to discuss other
fears connected to her recent fire dream except to say that she had the
dream after watching a violent movie at a friend's house. Although she may
have had other worries at the time of the nightmare, her desire not to
explore further was respected by her parents. However her artistic
rendition of the dream, curious questions, and resulting visit to the fire
zone resolved her fire nightmares. Subsequent to her creative exploration
of this nightmare, she gradually became more forthcoming in reporting
upsetting dreams and even offering ideas about what caused them based on
the previous day's events.
Even chronic nightmare sufferers, both adults and children, have found
relief from relatively simple treatments and techniques. Vietnam veterans
with persistent nightmares have been successfully treated with
psychotherapy approaches that focus on resolving both the dreams and the
unresolved traumas that caused the dreams to continue.
There are a few areas of caution that should be considered with respect to
rescripting. The first is the use of violence in fantasy solutions to bad
dreams. Killing the nightmare adversary may not be the optimal solution
even in imaginary battles. Ann Sayre Wiseman, author of Nightmare Help
warns that suggesting the murder or destruction of a dream foe may subtly
encourage violent solutions to life problems and reinforce a tendency that
children are already overexposed to through television, movies, news and
violence in our society. On the other hand, encouraging creative,
nonviolent, assertion in working out dream battles, may lead to improved
and more constructive waking problem-solving skills.
The second caution is about the limits of creating new endings for
nightmares. There is a misconception that using fantasy and magical tools
to create a new dream ending assures that the underlying problem that
stimulated the dream has been resolved. This may not be the case. While
impressive results have been obtained using rescripting to reduce the
frequency and intensity of nightmares, we must remember that nightmares,
especially recurring ones, are messages--even warnings--from within that
we are overwhelmed by a new situation, crisis, or chronic conflict such as
a custody dispute or marital conflict. When there is a persistent problem
in a child's life, we may need to go beyond reassurance and rescripting to
discover fundamental solutions to the life problems that set off the
dream. This leads us to the two final R's -- rehearsal and resolution.
Rehearsal is practicing solutions to a nightmare's various threats. Going
a step beyond the new endings or magical tools used in rescripting a
nightmare, rehearsal involves repeating the dream and its solutions in
various forms until a sense of mastery or accomplishment has been
achieved. This stage parallels the stage of psychotherapy called "working
through," where for adults, the insights they have gained need to be put
to the test--at first in the relationship with their therapist and
gradually by practicing new forms of relating with others and experiencing
themselves in new ways.
Resolution is the final stage of alleviating the haunting spell of a
nightmare. Discovering the source of the nightmare in your child's life
and working towards acknowledging and even correcting the life problem
that has caused the nightmares are preliminary steps. Resolution can only
come after a child feels secure enough (reassurance) to explore new
solutions through art, writing, drama, and discussion (rescripting) and
has practiced those solutions (rehearsal) with a parent or adult guide.
If a child continues to be curious about what is emerging from his or her
exploration of a dream, they can be encouraged to honor their dream by
connecting it to a person, situation, or feeling in their current life. By
keeping in mind the major emotional issues affecting your child such, as
the birth of a sibling or starting at a new school, parents can be alerted
to the probable sources of a nightmare.
Through the process of exploring, brainstorming, and rehearsing metaphoric
solutions to their children's nightmares, parents begin to feel more
secure in linking dream symbols to the current events and relationships in
their child's waking world. Nightmares emphasize to parents exactly what
is most difficult for their child and open up possibilities for resolving
important emotional challenges.
When to Seek Help for Nightmares
Whereas moderate nightmare activity may be a
potentially healthy sign that the unconscious mind is actively coping with
stress and change, frequent nightmares indicate unresolved conflicts that
are overwhelming your child. When children's nightmares persist, when
their content is consistently violent or disturbing, and when the
upsetting conflicts in the dreams never seem to change or even achieve
partial resolution, it may be time to seek further help from a mental
health specialist or pediatrician. Especially if there is no obvious
stress in your child's life, repetitive nightmares could also be caused by
a reaction to drugs or a physical condition, so it is advisable to consult
a physician to rule out medical causes when nightmares do not appear to
have a psychological origin.
Repetitive nightmares are often accompanied by other symptoms especially
fears of going to sleep, anxieties or phobias. Increased nightmares can
usually be linked to a recognizable stress in the child's life such as
absence or loss of a parent, suffering abuse or violence, marital or
custody disputes in the family, social or academic difficulties at school,
such as being teased or having an undiagnosed learning or attention
problem.
Nightmares are more often like a vaccine than a poison. A vaccination
infects us with a minute dose of a disease that mobilizes our antibodies
and makes us more resistant to the virulence of smallpox or polio. As
distressing as nightmares can be, they offer powerful information about
issues that are distressing your child. When children share their
nightmares and receive reassurance from their parents, they feel the
emotional sting of the dream, but also begin the process of strengthening
their psychological defenses and facing their fears with more resilience.
Gradually, a parent's empathic response to their child's nightmares can
break the cycle of bad dreams and transform intensely negative experiences
into triumphs of assertiveness and collaborative family problem-solving.
The above excerpt was reprinted with permission from
Dreamcatching: Every Parent's Guide to Exploring and Understanding
Children's Dreams and Nightmares by Alan Siegel and Kelly Bulkeley.
Published by Random House's Three Rivers Press. Copyright © 1998.
Notes
1. Ernest Hartmann, 1991.
2. The concept of "rescripting" was adapted from Gordon
Halliday, "Treating Nightmares in Children" in Charles Schaeffer, (editor)
Clinical Handbook of Sleep Disorders in Children (New York, Jason Aronson,
1995)
3. Alan Siegel, "The Dreams of Firestorm Survivors", in
Barrett, Deirdre (editor), Trauma and Dreams, (Boston: Harvard University
Press, 1996).

|