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Children's Mental Health Awareness Week - Your Voice Matters

Supporting parents with children's mental health for over 40 years, read our tips, techniques, and advice in light of children's mental health awareness week. 

Published: 30/01/2024

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Busy Bees

In the hustle and bustle of raising children, it’s essential to pause and consider the mental wellbeing of our little ones. This week serves as a reminder that just as we care for their physical health, we must also consider their mental and emotional development. 

Within this blog, we’ll explore some practical insights and strategies to help you navigate ways of supporting your child’s mental health.

From recognising signs of emotional wellbeing to implementing effective support mechanisms, our goal is to help families by empowering them with valuable knowledge.

Understanding Children’s Mental Health and Emotions

Mastering the skill of regulating emotions can pose challenges for children. Every day they are navigating a whole host of new experiences and situations, and learning to respond and interpret these can be overwhelming. In many cases, it can lead to emotional reactions that they haven’t yet learned to understand.

At Busy Bees, our range of ‘Be Calm’ activities are designed for you to use with your child to support them in learning how to manage strong feelings and emotions. What is most important for children to understand is that their voice matters and with this, any emotions they are feeling are something you can support them with. 

Be Calm Techniques

educator and child doing calm breathing technique

Be Calm and Breathe

These experiences focus on breathing, using breathwork and imagination to reduce feelings of upset, worry, or anxiety.

One approach is the Beach Breathing technique. Ask your child to close their eyes and imagine they are sitting on a warm, sandy beach. While doing so, invite them to breathe deeply through their nose and then out through their mouth, imagining that their breath is the waves rolling onto the shore. You can support what they are imagining by describing what you can see and hear on your own beach.

Be Calm and Active

These experiences focus on movement, using parts of their body and experiences to re-direct emotions.

An approach we suggest is a clap it out or stamp it out technique. If they’re feeling strong emotions, encourage your child to clap as fast as they can for 10 seconds. When the time is up, put your hands out in front of you and ask them if they can feel their fingers tingling. Or you could ask your child to stamp their feet as quickly as they can for 10 seconds and ask them what their feet feel like when they've stopped. 

Be Calm and Positive

These experiences focus on supporting children’s self-esteem.

My weather report is a method to encourage children to think about how they are feeling today and liken it to the weather, for example, they might be feeling sunny, stormy, calm, or bright.

This technique allows you to explain that even though we can't change the weather, just as we can’t always change how we are feeling, we can make sure we notice it and understand why which is important. Sharing how we are feeling with others can make us feel better if we are unhappy or worried. 

We have many other methods or experiences you can use with your child to understand their emotional wellbeing and to help educate them about how to manage their emotions, read more about our Be Calm approach.  

Other Ways to Support Children’s Mental Health

As parents, there are many ways you can support your child’s mental health. NHS guidance provides some other examples of techniques to help, which support the notion that Busy Bees feel strongly about – that every voice matters.

These include:

  • Listening to their feelings 
  • Staying involved in their interests 
  • Taking what they say seriously  
  • Supporting them through difficulties 
  • Encouraging their interests 
  • Building positive routines 

At Busy Bees, we have been supporting children for over 40 years with all aspects of their development, and this includes their emotional development. Within many of our nurseries, you’ll find ‘emotion stations’, which are available for children to go and use the resources available to help them explain how they are feeling to the nursery team.

Find and explore your local nursery, learn more about how we can support you and your child, and book a visit.