Relocation
Guide
Moving with
Kids
Moving
is seldom easy for either adults or children. But Everett is a great place to
live and we’d like to make it easier to get the kids excited about the
experience.
If
children are having difficulty adjusting to the idea of moving, parents can help
them put it in proper perspective. A change in houses or communities often means
an important step forward for the adult members of the family. The family moves
because one or both parents have a great new job or a big
promotion.
They
move because financial success has allowed them to purchase a bigger, better
house in a nicer neighborhood. They move because they can finally afford
bedrooms for each child and maybe a pool in the back yard. Nowadays, people
typically live in a house for about four years and then move on as their careers
allow. That short time span is only a small percentage of the lifetime for a 30-
or 40-year-old, but the same four years is half the lifetime of an
eight-year-old, and it includes almost all the years he or she can remember. To
kids this house may be the only home they have ever known. This is their house;
the place where they feel safe and comfortable and thoroughly at home. A house
is much more than a roof and walls to a child. It is the center of his or her
world. A move threatens to take that security away. The familiar friends,
schools, shops and theaters, the streets, trees and parks — all will
no longer exist for them. Everything will be different and they will live in
someone else's world.
When to Tell the Kids About Changing
Homes
The
impact of a move on a child usually starts about the time he or she first hears
about a possible move and often continues until the new house becomes home, and
memories of the previous place fade. Most teenagers see themselves as adult
members of the family and will probably feel they have been left out if they
don't hear everything from the first day. But it is probably not a good idea to
tell toddlers and preschoolers until they have to know. There is no point in
making them worry far in advance. Be sure to announce the move in a positive
way.
You
can do this by saying how proud you are that Mommy or Daddy's company has chosen
them to manage a new office in Everett. Talk about what a beautiful city
Everett is, how
good the schools are and how friendly the people are. Tell them about how nice
the new house will be. Ask them what the favorite things are in their lives now
and then try to recreate them in the new home. If the new house is too far away
to allow a visit by the entire family after it has been selected, show the
children pictures of it. Videotape it and include pictures of each child's new
room.
Since
children can quickly see the negative sides of most situations, parents must
plan to deal with their children's worries and fears. The children will leave
friends they may have known all their lives. They will leave behind their sports
teams, their clubs and their schools. They will have to start over in a new
place, making friends, getting accepted and fitting into different groups.
Younger children need protection from fear of the unknown. Listen carefully to
their concerns and respond quickly to allay their apprehensions. Find those
anxieties and address them. Ultimately, kids are fairly resilient especially if
parents respond with infinite patience and understanding.
How to Ease the Transition of Moving
The
best tactic is to get the children actively involved in the whole process. Don't
just promise to let them decorate their own rooms, take them to the paint store
and let them bring home color swatches. Let them shop for such things as
comforters, towels and carpets.
They
must leave old friends behind, so find ways to make that parting easier. Plan a
going-away party and let them invite their own guests. Take pictures of everyone
and make a scrapbook. If a child is old enough, send him or her out with a roll
of film and a camera with the assignment to photograph the views they will want
to remember. Some relationships will be extremely difficult to break and these
will demand careful, thoughtful consideration by both parents. How, for
instance, do you move a 16-year-old 1,000 miles from her steady
boyfriend?
Expect
that your children may be even more distressed after the move than they were
before it. The new house will not be beautiful the night after the moving van
leaves. The furniture may not fit the rooms. The curtains won't be up and every
spot on the floor will be covered. The children won't know anyone at school and,
if you move during the summer, they may have little opportunity to meet anyone
their age. They will need your help and you should plan to give them the support
they need. After the move, give each of them a long distance telephone call
allowance so they can keep in touch with the people back home who matter the
most to them. Buy a stack of picture postcards that show positive views of your
new community and encourage them to write good news messages to the friends and
relatives they left behind.
To
make new friends, make sure the children don't vegetate in front of the
television. Get them outside, where neighbors pass by. Have them pass out fliers
to do babysitting or car washing. Encourage them to participate in as many
school activities as they can handle. Get them on sports teams and into clubs.
If none of you are making new friends fast enough, throw a housewarming party
for yourselves and invite all the adults and children on the block.
If
serious emotional or attitude problems arise, help is usually available and
probably should be sought. Ask a teacher for help. Consider professional
counseling. Don't let a serious problem slide. Remember that the newness will
wear off. New friends will become old friends and best friends.
This
new house may become the family homestead your grandchildren will visit every
holiday. There will be discomforts, but in the long run, everything will work
out just fine. Optimism and planning are keys to a well adjusted family during a
move.
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