How to Handle a Mid-Year Move
by Susan Dunn
Q: What's worse than moving?
A: Moving in the middle of the school year.
My family did it more than once when I was
growing up. I still remember some of the
incidents-being introduced in the front of the
class, having to share a locker until they could
find one for me, breaking into the
already-formed social groups, having the wrong
"accent".
Whatever the reason for the move, moving is
stressful.
While you're anticipating the new location
and the new job, doing all the paperwork,
showing the house, packing, and handling those
logistics, remember that your children are going
through the same stress only with less cognitive
understanding and no sense of control. If they
don't know what it's like to "be the new kid on
the block," they're about to find out.
The NCC says it takes as long as 16 months
for both adults and children to adjust to a
move.
Here are some tips for helping make the move
easier for your family.
1. Keep structure amidst the confusion and
disorder.
Tighten up on meal times, bedtime routines,
and other traditions that give structure and
stability to your family life. Stay home and
skip the babysitters for a while. Let some
important things remain stable while the earth
moves beneath their feet.
2. Expect regression.
When we're stressed, we retreat to former
times to regain stability. And our kids do too!
You can expect a newly potty-trained child to
relapse, little ones creeping into your bed at
night, more tears, maybe picky eating. Loosen up
on these things. They'll go away once things
settle down.
3. Acknowledge both negative and positive
feelings.
You, too, will be having them. There's this
you'll miss, and this to look forward to. The
old town had an amusement park, but this one has
a great children's museum. You'll miss the snow,
but now the beach is an hour away. Ambivalent
feelings are typical of any transition. Help
your child look forward to good, new things
while they say good-bye, sadly, to things and
people they'll miss. Share your joy in your
beautiful new home, and your frustration in not
knowing where the light switches are, or the ice
cream store.
4. Orient to the way your child thinks.
When we moved when my older son was 6, we
left him with my aunt and uncle while we went to
look for the new house. A naturally outgoing
child, he was upset until he learned we'd be
leaving the family dog there too. Children look
at things differently. In his mind, he knew we'd
come back for the dog. He was calmed. This is
akin to the nursery school teacher who told me
to bring a handkerchief and leave it with my
crying younger son. Not, she said, as a wubby,
but "because he knows you'll come back for a
personal item."
5. Be concrete and talk about details.
Help the child see what it will mean to them,
depending upon developmental age and
temperament. With a preschooler, let him help
you pack up a treasured item in a box, seal it
up, move it around in a wagon, then return it,
open it up and take the treasured thing out and
put it back where it came from. This is an
experiential lesson that what we pack up doesn't
disappear forever. Children are concerned about
their possessions, just like we are. Also they
displace their general anxiety onto something
concrete like that because they have no other
way to express it.
With a toddler, use the doll house and dolls
and toy cars to show what will happen.
Read books about moving.
"Mallory's Moving and her Monkey is Missing"
is a good one.
6. Instead of focusing on logistics, focus on
people and feelings.
The move will get accomplished. Take time to
deal with the emotional aspects and it will pay
off in the long run. It's a lot more important.
This is just one of many transitions your family
will go through, and how you handle it will have
repercussions in the future. All transitions
bring ambivalent emotions and fears and
fantasies about the future, which is unknown.
You'll grow through this as a family.
7. Make a trial run if you possibly can.
Go visit the new place with your children.
Show them where their new room will be (let them
decorate it if possible). Visit their school.
Meet the neighbors. Point out the "same things"
like the McDonalds. Look up sports and
scouts programs. Show them where the new movie
theater is.
8. Expect an adjustment period at school.
Children learn best in a comfortable
emotional environment, and a move is stressful.
It will take them a while to get acclimated.
Observe when you pick them up, or talk with them
to find out if they're making a satisfactory
social adjustment. According to research one of
the highest emotional intelligence competencies
is being able to break into an already formed
group. Be compassionate. Help them learn the
skills. (You may be going through the same thing
yourself!)
9. If not you, then who?
We've lost track of who brings the homemade
cake over - the old neighbor, or the new one.
Don't ask for whom the bell tolls -- let your
children choose a cake, bake it together, and
carry it over to meet the new folks. Or have an
open house and invite the other families over.
10. Saying good-bye precedes saying hello.
Let your child have a going away party with
their friends, and then a new party in the new
place. We moved a lot when my oldest son was
growing up, though usually in the summer, and
fortunately he had a mid-October birthday. By
that time we knew the names and faces of the
other kids in the class and then could have
everyone over for a birthday party and get him
well into the loop. Worked great.
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