Thursday, June 11, 2026

The Child Who Became What the Adults Saw

 

The Child Who Became What the Adults Saw

When Neglect Is Misread as a Deficit in the Child

There are children who are described early with words that begin to stick.

Difficult.

Restless.

Delayed.

Aggressive.

Withdrawn.

Unwilling to learn.

Brain-damaged.

Words can be necessary. They help adults describe what they see, seek support, and find appropriate measures. But words also shape the gaze. Once a label has taken hold, we easily begin to see the child through it.

The child is no longer a child who is struggling.

The child becomes a difficult child.

Not a child who has learned that adults are dangerous.

But a child who lacks the capacity for attachment.

Not a child who has never been given the opportunity to develop language.

But a child with severe language difficulties.


Sometimes the words describe something real. Children may have congenital differences, developmental conditions, illness, or brain injury. It would be just as wrong to explain everything through upbringing and environment as it would be to explain everything through the child.

But sometimes the diagnosis becomes a full stop before the story has been heard.

We ask:

What is wrong with this child?

Before we have asked:

What has this child lived through?

There is a difference between these questions that can change an entire life.

The Boy in the Cage

The psychiatrist Bruce Perry was once called to a children’s ward to meet a six-year-old boy. The boy’s name was Justin.

The staff described him as uncontrollable. He was aggressive towards anyone who came near. He threw food and faeces. He wore only a nappy, could not speak, and rocked back and forth while making small sounds in his throat.

They said that he behaved like an animal.

On the ward, he had been placed in a cage.

There was no proper social history. No coherent account of where he had grown up, who had cared for him, or what his days had looked like.

It was as though the boy had arrived at the hospital without a past.

But no child arrives without a past.

Justin had been born to a fifteen-year-old mother who disappeared when he was two months old. He then lived with his grandmother. When she died, he was eleven months old. He was left in the care of her partner, Arthur.

Arthur does not appear to have been someone who consciously wished to be cruel. But he knew little about children. He did, however, have dogs and understood how to care for them.

So he treated Justin in the same way.

The boy was placed in a dog cage. He was fed with the dogs. His nappy was changed. His most basic bodily needs were, in a limited sense, attended to.

But a child needs more than food and a dry nappy.

A child needs faces that respond.

Hands that lift.

Voices that speak.

Floors on which to crawl.

People to imitate.

Play, touch, rhythm, eye contact, language, and repeated experiences of the world responding when the child makes a sound.

Justin lived in the cage for approximately five years.

When he was two years old, Arthur took him to a doctor because his development was slow. The doctor found that the boy’s head was small and arranged for brain imaging. The scans showed severe cerebral atrophy. His brain resembled that of a person with advanced dementia.

The conclusion was that the boy had a serious brain injury of unknown, perhaps congenital, origin.

No one investigated how he lived.

Several doctors saw him over the years. They saw the child who did not walk, did not speak, and did not develop as children were expected to develop.

But they did not see the cage.

The Visible Child and the Invisible World

This may be one of the most fateful features of work with children: the child is visible, while the conditions of the child’s life are often hidden.

The child sits before us with their behaviour.

The home is somewhere else.

The history exists in rooms we have never entered.

The relationships do not necessarily reveal themselves in the consulting room.

It therefore becomes tempting to place the explanation inside the child.

The child is restless.

The child is aggressive.

The child lacks language.

The child has poor impulse control.

All of this may be accurately described. But the description does not tell us why.

When the surroundings disappear from view, the child’s adaptation may be misread as the child’s nature.

A child who has learned to remain silent in order not to wake a violent adult may be described as withdrawn.

A child who attacks before anyone comes close may be described as aggressive.

A child who constantly monitors doors, faces, and sounds may be described as unable to concentrate.

A child who does not seek comfort may be described as emotionally cold.

A child who cannot learn may be described as intellectually limited.

But perhaps the child is using all their attention simply to survive.

The behaviour may be problematic in the world the child now inhabits. But it may have been meaningful in the world in which it developed.

This is not the same as romanticising symptoms.

Aggression can harm others.

Withdrawal can hinder development.

Lack of trust can make help difficult.

But if we merely try to remove the behaviour without understanding what it once protected the child from, we risk treating survival itself as illness.

What Is Wrong with You?

The question “What is wrong with you?” does not have to be spoken aloud in order to shape an encounter.

It may be present in the assessment.

In the form.

In the report.

In the gaze that first notices the deviation.

Children sense how adults understand them.

They notice whether the adult meets them as a problem to be corrected or as a human being trying to live with something difficult.

A child who is repeatedly treated as difficult may begin to see themselves in the same way.

I am the one who ruins things.

I am the one no one can bear.

I am the one who cannot learn.

I am the one who does not belong.

In this way, the adult’s description can become part of the child’s identity.

The child becomes what the adults see.

This does not mean that professionals should avoid describing difficulties. Children need precise assessments in order to receive appropriate support. But the description must never become the whole child.

We must be able to say:

This child hits.

Without saying:

This is a violent child.

We must be able to say:

The child has great difficulty forming trusting relationships with adults.

Without thinking:

The child is incapable of love.

Language can open understanding.

But language can also close it.

What Happened to You?

Another question opens another world:

What happened to you?

This does not mean that the child can necessarily answer.

Young children cannot tell their life stories. Some do not remember. Others lack the words. And some do not know that what they have lived with is different from what other children experience.

The question is therefore not only something we ask the child.

It is a stance we bring with us.

We investigate the history.

We ask who was there.

How the child was comforted.

What happened when the child cried.

Where the child slept.

How meals took place.

Whether anyone spoke to the child.

Whether the world was predictable or chaotic.

Whether the child lived with fear, loneliness, or pain.

Such questions do not make diagnoses unnecessary. But they place them within a context.

A brain does not develop in a vacuum.

Language develops between people.

Trust is formed through repeated experiences.

Self-regulation begins when someone else helps the child to regulate.

The child learns calmness by borrowing another person’s calm.

If this was absent, the child cannot simply be blamed for lacking the result.

When Perry Saw the Cage in the Boy

When Bruce Perry met Justin, he tried to imagine how the world must look from the boy’s position.

He approached slowly.

No sudden movements.

No forced eye contact.

A low, rhythmic voice.

Food offered without demands.

Perry did not treat the boy as an animal. But he understood that Justin had learned about the world through a life among dogs and behind the bars of a cage.

He had to begin where the boy was.

Not where a six-year-old ought to have been.

This is a crucial difference.

Adults often measure children against what is expected:

A six-year-old should be able to speak.

A six-year-old should be able to eat with a spoon.

A six-year-old should understand instructions.

A six-year-old should be able to sit still.

When the child cannot do these things, the distance between the child and the norm becomes the problem.

Perry began somewhere else:

What has this boy actually experienced?

What does he perceive as danger?

What can his body tolerate?

How can contact be built without frightening him?

He did not enter the room demanding normality.

He entered with a willingness to understand.

After a short time, Justin took food from his hand.

Then he began to show trust.

This was not a miracle in the sense that everything suddenly became well. But it was a sign that something within the boy could still respond when the world around him changed.

The Child Was Not Empty

Children who have experienced severe neglect may be described as though something fundamental is missing within them.

A lack of attachment.

A lack of empathy.

A lack of language.

A lack of social understanding.

Some of these descriptions may be professionally accurate. But they can also create the impression of emptiness.

Justin’s story shows something else.

He was not empty.

He had been shaped by the life he had been given.

He had learned smells, sounds, movements, and ways of obtaining food that suited his world. He had developed, but in the direction permitted by the experiences available to him.

When the environment changed, the boy also began to change.

He came out of the cage.

He began to smile.

He listened to human voices.

Within a relatively short time, he took his first steps. He learned to eat with a spoon, brush his teeth, and put on clothes.

Later, he began attending preschool and lived a life more like that of other children.

This does not mean that severe neglect can always be repaired quickly. Many children carry its effects throughout life, even after receiving good help. The story must not be used as a promise that love alone heals everything.

But it does show that what had been understood as a fixed deficit within the child was, to a significant degree, connected to a world without human stimulation.

The boy did not merely have a damaged brain.

He had a brain that had not received what it needed in order to develop.

The difference is decisive.

The first understanding points towards a child who is fixed and unreachable.

The second points towards a child who may still respond to new experiences.

The Brain as History

We sometimes like to think of the brain as an organ that either functions or does not function.

But the brain is also a history.

It is shaped through what the child experiences repeatedly.

Safe faces.

Calm voices.

Touch.

Play.

Fear.

Pain.

Unpredictability.

Absence.

What is repeated creates pathways.

A child who continually lives in danger develops a brain prepared for danger.

This may be a strength within a threatening environment. The child notices small signals, reacts quickly, and sleeps lightly.

But when the child later enters a safe place, the body may continue behaving as though danger is near.

The adult sees overreaction.

The child experiences readiness.

The adult sees poor impulse control.

The child’s body is trying to survive.

The adult sees resistance to closeness.

The child is protecting themselves from something that once caused pain.

This does not mean that everything can be explained by the brain. A human being is more than their nervous system.

But knowledge about the brain’s capacity to change can help us understand that experience settles in the body, and that new experiences can also create change.

The child does not only need to know that they are safe.

The body must experience safety, again and again.

When the Diagnosis Conceals the History

A diagnosis can bring relief.

At last, there is a name.

Parents, teachers, and helpers may understand more. The child may gain access to rights, support, and treatment.

Diagnoses are not the enemy.

But they can become dangerous when they are used as complete explanations.

A child receives a diagnosis related to attention difficulties.

Sleep problems, fear, and chaos at home may then disappear from view.

A child receives a developmental diagnosis.

A lack of stimulation or severe neglect may then be overlooked.

A child is described as having an attachment disorder.

We may then forget that the child’s mistrust could be an accurate response to adults who truly were not trustworthy.

The diagnosis describes the child.

The history explains how the child arrived there.

We often need both.

But if the diagnosis causes us to stop being curious about the child’s life, it becomes a lid.

The child is reduced to a category.

What is unique disappears.

The professional must therefore continue asking:

What does this diagnosis explain?

And what does it conceal?

The Moral Danger of Placing the Fault in the Child

When the problem is placed inside the child, the surroundings are more easily released from responsibility.

The school does not have to ask whether the child feels safe.

The family does not have to be examined.

The institution does not have to change.

The child must be treated, regulated, and adapted.

This can acquire moral significance.

The child becomes responsible for reactions created within relationships over which the child had no power.

A child who has learned violence is punished for hitting.

A child who was never met with language is criticised for lacking words.

A child who was ignored is described as attention-seeking.

A child who has experienced adults disappearing is blamed for clinging to or rejecting new caregivers.

Again, boundaries must be clear. Violent behaviour cannot be accepted simply because the child has been exposed to violence. Other children and adults must be protected.

But the boundary must be accompanied by understanding:

“I cannot allow you to hit.”

And at the same time:

“I know that your body reacts quickly when you become frightened. I will help you.”

This is different from:

“There is something wrong with you.”

The Adults Who Did Not See

It is easy to read Justin’s story and ask how the doctors could have failed to investigate his home.

How could a child come into contact with healthcare services several times without anyone asking where he lived?

How could a severely underdeveloped boy be sent back to a cage?

In retrospect, the failure seems obvious.

But perhaps the story should first make us cautious about our own gaze.

What are we overlooking now?

Which explanations do we take for granted?

Which children are returned to environments we have not investigated carefully enough?

Which symptoms do we treat without asking what they protect against?

Professionals always act on limited knowledge. No one sees everything. And it is easy to be wise afterwards.

That is precisely why we need ways of working that protect against our blind spots.

A social history.

Interdisciplinary collaboration.

Home visits.

Conversations with several caregivers.

Observation over time.

And the basic curiosity:

What does the child’s world look like when we are not there?

When Neglect Does Not Look Evil

Arthur may not have described himself as someone who abused a child.

He gave Justin food.

He changed his nappy.

He took him to a doctor when he became concerned about his development.

Perhaps he believed that he was doing the best he could.

This does not make the neglect less serious.

But it shows that harm does not always arise from conscious cruelty.

Children may be damaged by adults who lack knowledge, capacity, support, or understanding.

A person may mean well and still cause grave harm.

This matters because we often search for the evil person.

If no one appears cruel, we may underestimate the situation.

But the child’s needs are not determined by the adult’s intentions alone.

Care must be assessed according to what the child actually receives.

Does the child receive protection?

Contact?

Stimulation?

Comfort?

The opportunity to develop?

An adult may lack harmful intentions and still be incapable of providing adequate care.

This is painful to acknowledge.

But the child cannot wait for the adult one day to become better at meaning well.

Beginning Where the Child Is

A six-year-old who has lived in a cage cannot be treated as though he merely lacks discipline.

A child who has never learned safety cannot be commanded to trust.

A child who has not developed language cannot be punished for failing to explain.

Help must begin where the child is.

This sounds self-evident, but it is difficult in practice.

Adults often begin where the plan is.

The school begins with the curriculum.

The institution with its routines.

The therapist with the method.

The foster home with its expectations of family life.

The child is expected to enter a world that already exists.

But traumatised and severely neglected children often need the world to move slightly towards them first.

The pace must slow down.

Demands must be adjusted.

Contact must come before correction.

The adult must ask:

What can the child tolerate now?

What creates distress?

What may offer a small experience of mastery?

How can we repeat safety until the body begins to believe in it?

Beginning where the child is does not mean remaining there.

It means making further development possible.

Safety Before Learning

A child who lives in danger is preoccupied with danger.

The child watches faces.

Voices.

Doors.

Movements.

The child assesses who is angry, who will disappear, and when the next unpredictable event will come.

There is then little room for letters, numbers, and new concepts.

Adults may interpret this as lack of motivation.

“He does not want to learn.”

But perhaps he cannot learn at that moment.

Not because the ability is absent, but because the brain is using its resources for something more fundamental.

Am I safe?

Will someone hurt me?

Will I be abandoned?

Will I receive food?

The child does not first need stricter demands.

The child needs a world calm enough for attention to become available.

Safety is not a reward the child receives after behaving well.

Safety is the condition that makes regulation, learning, and participation possible.

The New Experience

A child who has lived with neglect does not change simply because they are moved.

The old world remains in the body.

The child expects the new adult to fail.

For food to disappear.

For love to be withdrawn.

For touch to cause pain.

For rules to change without warning.

The child may therefore test the new world.

Hide food.

Destroy things.

Reject care.

Lie.

Steal.

Attack anyone who comes close.

The adult may experience this as ingratitude.

“We give you everything, and this is how you respond.”

But perhaps the child is investigating:

Will the food truly be here tomorrow?

Will you remain when I am difficult?

Does care depend on my behaving well?

Can I trust that this world is different?

The answers are not given mainly through words.

They are given through repetition.

The meal comes.

The adult returns.

The boundary is set without humiliation.

The conflict ends without the relationship disappearing.

In this way, the child may slowly receive new experiences.

Hope in What Can Still Be Shaped

Justin’s story is dark.

But it also carries hope.

Not an easy hope that says all harm can be erased.

But a hope that human beings can continue to be shaped.

The brain is not finished.

Relationships can gain new meanings.

The body can learn different rhythms.

Trust can grow where once there was only fear.

This hope carries obligations.

If we believe that the child is simply like this, our efforts easily become management.

We limit the damage.

Endure.

Lower expectations.

But if we understand that the child has also become this way through experience, we must ask what new experiences we can offer.

Music.

Play.

Movement.

Rhythm.

Touch on the child’s terms.

Language.

Predictability.

Repeated care.

Not as random activities, but as building blocks in a new relationship with the world.

The Child Is Always More

Even the best historical understanding can become a new form of reduction.

We may move from saying:

“The child is difficult.”

to:

“The child is traumatised.”

That word too can begin to stick.

Suddenly everything is interpreted through trauma.

The laughter.

The anger.

The school difficulties.

The friendships.

The child becomes the trauma story.

But a child is always more.

The child has temperament.

Interests.

Humour.

Will.

Abilities.

Vulnerabilities.

Some things are shaped by experience, but not everything can be explained by it.

Seeing the history does not mean turning the child into a product of history.

It means understanding more without closing the child down.

The child is what has happened, what is happening now, and what may still become.

Seeing with Two Ways of Looking

Perhaps the professional needs two ways of looking at the same time.

One sees the difficulties clearly.

This child cannot speak.

This child hits.

This child cannot manage school.

This child needs extensive help.

The other sees the child behind the difficulties.

What is the behaviour trying to express?

What kind of world made this necessary?

What exists here that has not yet been given the opportunity to develop?

The first protects against naivety.

The second protects against reduction.

Together, they can make help both realistic and hopeful.

We should not pretend that the damage does not exist.

But neither should we turn it into the child’s final identity.

The Child Who Became What the Adults Saw

Justin was long seen as a child with congenital and irreversible brain damage.

The adults found what they expected to find.

A small brain.

A lack of language.

Atypical behaviour.

Minimal development.

Everything confirmed the image of a severely damaged child.

But no one saw the life that had shaped him.

When Perry changed his way of seeing, the question changed too.

Not:

What is this boy lacking?

But:

What has he never received?

Not:

Why does he behave like an animal?

But:

How would a child have to adapt when treated like an animal?

This did not remove the child’s need for treatment.

On the contrary, it made treatment possible.

If the problem lay only in a damaged boy, there was little to be done.

If the boy carried the marks of a damaged caregiving world, a new world might begin to leave different marks.

The Decisive Question

When we meet a child who is struggling, we still need to ask:

What is the child unable to do?

What must be assessed?

What treatment or support is needed?

But we must also ask:

What has the child experienced?

What has the child lacked?

What has the child had to learn in order to survive?

What is the behaviour trying to protect?

And what new experience can we offer?

This is not only a professional question.

It is an ethical question.

Because the way we understand the child determines how we meet the child.

If we see deficit, we will correct.

If we see wickedness, we will punish.

If we see weakness, we may lower every expectation.

If we see adaptation, we may become curious.

If we see pain, we may offer care.

If we see possibility, we may begin to build.

Children are not only affected by what adults do to them.

They are also affected by what adults believe about them.

A child who is met as hopeless learns something about the future.

A child who is met as dangerous learns something about their place among other people.

A child who is met as more than their symptoms is given another possibility.

That is why we must be careful with our gaze.

The child may become what the adults see.

But through new encounters, the child may also discover that they are more.

More than the diagnosis.

More than the behaviour.

More than the neglect.

More than the life that has so far brought these things into view.

And perhaps healing begins precisely there:

When an adult sees what the child has not yet been able to show.


And perhaps healing begins precisely there:

When an adult sees what the child has not yet been able to show.



Author’s Note

The story of Justin is drawn from Bruce D. Perry and Maia Szalavitz’s book The Boy Who Was Raised as a Dog: And Other Stories from a Child Psychiatrist’s Notebook—What Traumatized Children Can Teach Us About Loss, Love, and Healing. Through a series of clinical narratives, the book shows how early trauma, neglect, and the absence of safe relationships can shape a child’s development, but also how new and repeated experiences of safety, rhythm, and human closeness can make change possible. This essay also draws on my own experience from many years of work with vulnerable children and families, and on a fundamental conviction that a child’s behaviour must be understood in the light of the life the child has lived—without reducing the child either to their history or to a diagnosis.

Reference:
Perry, B. D., & Szalavitz, M. (2017). The boy who was raised as a dog: And other stories from a child psychiatrist’s notebook—What traumatized children can teach us about loss, love, and healing (Rev. and updated ed.). Basic Books.

Barnet som ble det de voksne så

 

Barnet som ble det de voksne så

Når omsorgssvikt blir feiltolket som en mangel ved barnet

Det finnes barn som tidlig blir beskrevet med ord som begynner å feste seg.

Vanskelig.

Urolig.

Forsinket.

Aggressiv.

Kontaktfattig.

Lite lærevillig.

Hjerneskadet.

Ord kan være nødvendige. De hjelper voksne til å beskrive det de ser, søke hjelp og finne frem til tiltak. Men ord gjør også noe med blikket. Når en betegnelse først har festet seg, begynner vi lett å se barnet gjennom den.

Barnet er ikke lenger et barn som strever.

Det blir et vanskelig barn.

Ikke et barn som har lært at voksne er farlige.

Men et barn som mangler evne til tilknytning.

Ikke et barn som ikke har fått anledning til å utvikle språk.

Men et barn med alvorlige språkvansker.


Noen ganger beskriver ordene noe virkelig. Barn kan ha medfødte funksjonsvariasjoner, utviklingsforstyrrelser, sykdom eller hjerneskade. Det ville være like galt å forklare alt gjennom oppvekst og miljø som å forklare alt gjennom barnet.

Men noen ganger blir diagnosen et punktum før historien er blitt hørt.

Vi spør:

Hva feiler det barnet?

Før vi har spurt:

Hva har barnet levd med?

Det er en forskjell mellom disse spørsmålene som kan forandre et helt liv.

Gutten i buret

Psykiateren Bruce Perry ble en gang tilkalt til en barneavdeling for å møte en seks år gammel gutt. Gutten het Justin.

Personalet beskrev ham som ukontrollerbar. Han var aggressiv mot dem som kom nær. Han kastet mat og avføring. Han hadde bare bleie på seg, kunne ikke snakke og gynget frem og tilbake mens han laget små lyder fra halsen.

De sa at han oppførte seg som et dyr.

På avdelingen var han blitt plassert i et bur.

Det fantes ingen ordentlig sosial historie. Ingen sammenhengende fortelling om hvor han hadde vokst opp, hvem som hadde tatt vare på ham, eller hvordan dagene hans hadde sett ut.

Det var som om gutten hadde kommet til sykehuset uten fortid.

Men ingen barn kommer uten fortid.

Justin var blitt født av en femten år gammel mor som forsvant da han var to måneder gammel. Deretter bodde han hos mormoren. Da hun døde, var han elleve måneder gammel. Han ble overlatt til hennes kjæreste, Arthur.

Arthur skal ikke ha vært et menneske som bevisst ønsket å være grusom. Men han visste lite om barn. Han hadde derimot hunder og forstod hvordan han skulle stelle dem.

Derfor behandlet han Justin på samme måte.

Gutten ble plassert i et hundebur. Han fikk mat sammen med hundene. Bleien ble skiftet. De mest grunnleggende kroppslige behovene ble på et vis ivaretatt.

Men et barn trenger mer enn mat og en tørr bleie.

Det trenger ansikter som svarer.

Hender som løfter.

Stemmer som snakker.

Gulv å krabbe på.

Mennesker å etterligne.

Lek, berøring, rytme, blikk, språk og gjentatte erfaringer av at verden reagerer når barnet gir lyd fra seg.

Justin bodde i buret i omtrent fem år.

Da han var to år gammel, tok Arthur ham med til lege fordi utviklingen gikk langsomt. Legen fant at guttens hode var lite og lot hjernen undersøke. Bildene viste alvorlig hjernesvinn. Hjernen lignet hjernen til et menneske med langt fremskreden demens.

Konklusjonen ble at gutten hadde en alvorlig hjerneskade av ukjent, kanskje medfødt, årsak.

Ingen undersøkte hvordan han bodde.

Flere leger møtte ham gjennom årene. De så barnet som ikke gikk, ikke snakket og ikke utviklet seg slik barn skulle.

Men de så ikke buret.

Det synlige barnet og den usynlige verden

Dette er kanskje noe av det mest skjebnesvangre ved arbeid med barn: Barnet er synlig. Livsbetingelsene er ofte skjult.

Barnet sitter foran oss med sin atferd.

Hjemmet er et annet sted.

Historien finnes i rom vi ikke har vært i.

Relasjonene viser seg ikke nødvendigvis i undersøkelsesrommet.

Dermed blir det nærliggende å plassere forklaringen i barnet.

Barnet er urolig.

Barnet er aggressivt.

Barnet mangler språk.

Barnet har dårlig impulskontroll.

Alt dette kan være riktig beskrevet. Men beskrivelsen sier ikke hvorfor.

Når omgivelsene forsvinner fra blikket, kan barnets tilpasning bli feiltolket som barnets natur.

Et barn som har lært å være stille for ikke å vekke en voldelig voksen, kan beskrives som tilbaketrukket.

Et barn som går til angrep før noen kommer nær, kan beskrives som aggressivt.

Et barn som alltid følger med på dører, ansikter og lyder, kan beskrives som ukonsentrert.

Et barn som ikke søker trøst, kan beskrives som følelseskaldt.

Et barn som ikke klarer å lære, kan beskrives som svakt begavet.

Men kanskje bruker barnet all sin oppmerksomhet på å overleve.

Atferden kan være problematisk i den verden barnet nå befinner seg i. Men den kan ha vært meningsfull i den verden den ble utviklet i.

Dette er ikke det samme som å romantisere symptomene.

Aggresjon kan skade andre.

Tilbaketrekning kan hindre utvikling.

Mangel på tillit kan gjøre hjelp vanskelig.

Men dersom vi bare forsøker å fjerne atferden uten å forstå hva den en gang beskyttet barnet mot, kan vi behandle selve overlevelsen som sykdom.

Hva er galt med deg?

Spørsmålet «Hva er galt med deg?» trenger ikke sies høyt for å prege et møte.

Det kan ligge i undersøkelsen.

I skjemaet.

I rapporten.

I blikket som først ser avviket.

Barn merker hvordan voksne forstår dem.

De merker om den voksne møter dem som et problem som må korrigeres, eller som et menneske som prøver å leve med noe vanskelig.

Et barn som gjentatte ganger blir møtt som vanskelig, kan begynne å se seg selv slik.

Jeg er den som ødelegger.

Jeg er den ingen orker.

Jeg er den som ikke kan lære.

Jeg er den som ikke passer inn.

Slik kan den voksnes beskrivelse bli en del av barnets identitet.

Barnet blir det de voksne ser.

Dette betyr ikke at fagpersoner skal unnlate å beskrive vansker. Barn trenger presise vurderinger for å få riktig hjelp. Men beskrivelsen må aldri bli hele barnet.

Vi må kunne si:

Dette barnet slår.

Uten å si:

Dette er et voldelig barn.

Vi må kunne si:

Barnet har store problemer med å knytte seg til voksne.

Uten å tenke:

Barnet mangler evne til kjærlighet.

Språk kan åpne for forståelse.

Men språk kan også lukke.

Hva har skjedd med deg?

Et annet spørsmål åpner en annen verden:

Hva har skjedd med deg?

Det betyr ikke at barnet nødvendigvis kan svare.

Små barn kan ikke fortelle sin livshistorie. Noen husker ikke. Andre mangler ord. Og noen vet ikke at det de har levd med, er annerledes enn det andre barn opplever.

Spørsmålet er derfor ikke bare noe vi stiller barnet.

Det er en holdning vi tar med oss.

Vi undersøker historien.

Vi spør hvem som har vært der.

Hvordan barnet ble trøstet.

Hva som skjedde når det gråt.

Hvor det sov.

Hvordan måltidene foregikk.

Om noen snakket med det.

Om verden var forutsigbar eller kaotisk.

Om barnet har levd i frykt, ensomhet eller smerte.

Slike spørsmål gjør ikke diagnoser overflødige. Men de setter dem inn i en sammenheng.

En hjerne utvikler seg ikke i et tomrom.

Et språk utvikler seg mellom mennesker.

Tillit blir til gjennom gjentatte erfaringer.

Selvregulering begynner med at noen andre hjelper barnet å regulere seg.

Barnet lærer ro gjennom å låne en annens ro.

Hvis dette mangler, kan ikke barnet bare bebreides for å mangle resultatet.

Da Perry så buret i gutten

Da Bruce Perry møtte Justin, forsøkte han å forestille seg hvordan verden måtte se ut fra guttens side.

Han nærmet seg langsomt.

Ingen raske bevegelser.

Ingen påtvunget øyekontakt.

En lav og rytmisk stemme.

Mat tilbudt uten krav.

Perry behandlet ikke gutten som et dyr. Men han forstod at Justin hadde lært verden gjennom et liv blant hunder og bak sprinklene i et bur.

Han måtte begynne der gutten var.

Ikke der en seksåring burde ha vært.

Dette er en avgjørende forskjell.

Voksne måler ofte barn mot det forventede:

En seksåring skal kunne snakke.

En seksåring skal spise med skje.

En seksåring skal forstå beskjeder.

En seksåring skal kunne sitte rolig.

Når barnet ikke kan dette, blir avstanden mellom barnet og normen selve problemet.

Perry begynte et annet sted:

Hva har denne gutten faktisk erfart?

Hva oppfatter han som fare?

Hva kan kroppen hans tåle?

Hvordan kan kontakt bygges uten å skremme ham?

Han gikk ikke inn i rommet med krav om normalitet.

Han kom med en vilje til å forstå.

Etter kort tid tok Justin mat fra hånden hans.

Så begynte han å vise tillit.

Dette var ikke et mirakel i betydningen at alt plutselig ble godt. Men det var et tegn på at noe i gutten fortsatt kunne svare når verden rundt ham forandret seg.

Barnet var ikke tomt

Barn som har vært utsatt for alvorlig omsorgssvikt, kan bli omtalt som om noe grunnleggende mangler i dem.

Manglende tilknytning.

Manglende empati.

Manglende språk.

Manglende sosial forståelse.

Noen av disse beskrivelsene kan være faglig riktige. Men de kan også gi inntrykk av et tomrom.

Historien om Justin viser noe annet.

Han var ikke tom.

Han var formet av det livet han hadde fått.

Han hadde lært lukter, lyder, bevegelser og måter å skaffe seg mat på som passet til hans verden. Han hadde utviklet seg, men i retning av de erfaringene miljøet tilbød.

Da miljøet forandret seg, begynte også gutten å forandre seg.

Han kom ut av buret.

Han begynte å smile.

Han lyttet til menneskestemmer.

I løpet av kort tid tok han sine første skritt. Han lærte å spise med skje, pusse tennene og ta på klær.

Senere begynte han i barnehage og levde et liv som andre barn.

Dette betyr ikke at alvorlig omsorgssvikt alltid kan repareres raskt. Mange barn bærer skadevirkninger gjennom livet, også etter god hjelp. Historien må ikke brukes som et løfte om at kjærlighet alene helbreder alt.

Men den viser at det som ble forstått som en statisk mangel ved barnet, i betydelig grad var knyttet til en verden uten menneskelig stimulering.

Gutten hadde ikke bare en skadet hjerne.

Han hadde en hjerne som ikke hadde fått det den trengte for å utvikle seg.

Forskjellen er avgjørende.

Den første forståelsen peker mot et fastlåst barn.

Den andre peker mot et barn som fortsatt kan møte nye erfaringer.

Hjernen som historie

Vi liker noen ganger å tenke på hjernen som et organ som enten fungerer eller ikke fungerer.

Men hjernen er også en historie.

Den formes gjennom det barnet gjentatte ganger opplever.

Trygge ansikter.

Rolige stemmer.

Berøring.

Lek.

Frykt.

Smerte.

Uforutsigbarhet.

Fravær.

Det som gjentas, lager spor.

Et barn som stadig lever i fare, får en hjerne som er forberedt på fare.

Dette kan være en styrke i et truende miljø. Barnet oppfatter små signaler, reagerer raskt og sover lett.

Men når barnet senere kommer til et trygt sted, fortsetter kroppen kanskje å handle som om faren er nær.

Den voksne ser overreaksjon.

Barnet kjenner beredskap.

Den voksne ser manglende impulskontroll.

Barnets kropp forsøker å overleve.

Den voksne ser motstand mot nærhet.

Barnet beskytter seg mot noe som tidligere gjorde vondt.

Dette betyr ikke at alt kan forklares av hjernen. Et menneske er mer enn nervesystemet sitt.

Men kunnskap om hjernens formbarhet kan hjelpe oss til å forstå at erfaring setter seg i kroppen, og at nye erfaringer også kan skape forandring.

Barnet trenger ikke bare å vite at det er trygt.

Kroppen må erfare tryggheten, igjen og igjen.

Når diagnosen skjuler historien

En diagnose kan gi lettelse.

Endelig finnes et navn.

Foreldre, lærere og hjelpere kan forstå mer. Barnet kan få rettigheter, tilrettelegging og behandling.

Diagnoser er ikke fiender.

Men de kan bli farlige dersom de brukes som fullstendige forklaringer.

Et barn får en diagnose for oppmerksomhetsvansker.

Da kan søvnproblemer, frykt og kaos i hjemmet forsvinne fra vurderingen.

Et barn får en utviklingsdiagnose.

Da kan manglende stimulering eller alvorlig omsorgssvikt bli oversett.

Et barn beskrives som tilknytningsforstyrret.

Da kan vi glemme at mistilliten kanskje er et presist svar på voksne som faktisk ikke var til å stole på.

Diagnosen beskriver barnet.

Historien forklarer hvordan barnet kom dit.

Vi trenger ofte begge deler.

Men dersom diagnosen gjør at vi slutter å være nysgjerrige på livet, blir den et lokk.

Barnet reduseres til en kategori.

Det særegne forsvinner.

Den profesjonelle må derfor stadig spørre:

Hva forklarer denne diagnosen?

Og hva skjuler den?

Den moralske faren i å plassere feilen i barnet

Når problemet plasseres i barnet, slipper omgivelsene lettere unna.

Skolen trenger ikke spørre om barnet opplever trygghet.

Familien trenger ikke granskes.

Institusjonen trenger ikke endre seg.

Barnet må behandles, reguleres og tilpasses.

Dette kan få en moralsk betydning.

Barnet blir ansvarlig for reaksjoner som ble skapt i relasjoner det ikke hadde makt over.

Et barn som har lært vold, får straff for å slå.

Et barn som aldri ble møtt med språk, kritiseres for å mangle ord.

Et barn som ble oversett, beskrives som oppmerksomhetskrevende.

Et barn som har opplevd at voksne forsvinner, bebreides for å klamre seg fast eller avvise nye omsorgspersoner.

Igjen må grensene være tydelige. Voldelig atferd kan ikke aksepteres fordi barnet har vært utsatt for vold. Andre barn og voksne skal beskyttes.

Men grensen må ledsages av forståelse:

«Jeg kan ikke la deg slå.»

Og samtidig:

«Jeg vet at kroppen din reagerer raskt når du blir redd. Jeg skal hjelpe deg.»

Dette er noe annet enn:

«Det er noe galt med deg.»

De voksne som ikke så

Det er lett å lese historien om Justin og spørre hvordan legene kunne unngå å undersøke hjemmet.

Hvordan kunne et barn komme flere ganger til helsevesenet uten at noen spurte hvor han bodde?

Hvordan kunne en sterkt underutviklet gutt bli sendt tilbake til et bur?

Etterpå virker svikten åpenbar.

Men kanskje bør historien først og fremst gjøre oss varsomme overfor vårt eget blikk.

Hva overser vi nå?

Hvilke forklaringer tar vi for gitt?

Hvilke barn sendes tilbake til miljøer vi ikke har undersøkt godt nok?

Hvilke symptomer behandler vi uten å spørre hva de beskytter mot?

Profesjonelle handler alltid ut fra begrenset kunnskap. Ingen ser alt. Og det er enkelt å være klok i ettertid.

Men nettopp derfor trenger vi arbeidsmåter som beskytter mot våre blinde flekker.

Sosial historie.

Tverrfaglig samarbeid.

Hjemmebesøk.

Samtaler med flere omsorgspersoner.

Observasjon over tid.

Og den grunnleggende nysgjerrigheten:

Hvordan ser barnets verden ut når vi ikke er der?

Når omsorgssvikt ikke ser ond ut

Arthur beskrev seg kanskje ikke som en som mishandlet et barn.

Han ga Justin mat.

Han skiftet bleie.

Han tok ham til lege da utviklingen bekymret ham.

Kanskje mente han at han gjorde så godt han kunne.

Dette gjør ikke omsorgssvikten mindre alvorlig.

Men det viser at skade ikke alltid skyldes bevisst ondskap.

Barn kan ødelegges av voksne som mangler kunnskap, evne, støtte eller forståelse.

Et menneske kan ville godt og likevel gjøre alvorlig skade.

Dette er viktig fordi vi ofte leter etter den onde personen.

Dersom ingen fremstår grusom, kan vi undervurdere situasjonen.

Men barnets behov avgjøres ikke av den voksnes intensjon alene.

Omsorg må vurderes ut fra hva barnet faktisk mottar.

Får barnet beskyttelse?

Kontakt?

Stimulering?

Trøst?

Mulighet til utvikling?

En voksen kan være uten onde hensikter og likevel være ute av stand til å gi forsvarlig omsorg.

Det er smertefullt å erkjenne.

Men barnet kan ikke vente på at den voksne en dag skal mene godt på en bedre måte.

Å begynne der barnet er

En seksåring som har levd i et bur, kan ikke møtes som om han bare mangler oppdragelse.

Et barn som aldri har lært trygghet, kan ikke kommanderes til å stole.

Et barn som ikke har utviklet språk, kan ikke straffes for ikke å forklare.

Hjelpen må begynne der barnet er.

Dette høres selvfølgelig ut, men er vanskelig i praksis.

Voksne begynner gjerne der planen er.

Skolen begynner med læreplanen.

Institusjonen med rutinene.

Behandleren med metoden.

Fosterhjemmet med forventningen om familieliv.

Barnet forventes å gå inn i den verden som allerede finnes.

Men traumatiserte og alvorlig forsømte barn trenger ofte at verden først beveger seg litt mot dem.

Tempoet må senkes.

Kravene tilpasses.

Kontakten bygges før korrigeringen.

Den voksne må spørre:

Hva tåler barnet nå?

Hva skaper uro?

Hva kan gi en liten erfaring av mestring?

Hvordan kan vi gjenta det trygge til kroppen begynner å tro på det?

Å begynne der barnet er, betyr ikke å bli der.

Det betyr å gjøre videre utvikling mulig.

Trygghet før læring

Barnet som lever i fare, er opptatt av fare.

Det følger med på ansikter.

Stemmer.

Dører.

Bevegelser.

Det vurderer hvem som er sint, hvem som forsvinner, og når neste uforutsigbare hendelse kommer.

Da er det lite plass til bokstaver, tall og nye begreper.

Voksne kan tolke dette som manglende motivasjon.

«Han vil ikke lære.»

Men kanskje kan han ikke lære akkurat da.

Ikke fordi evnen mangler, men fordi hjernen bruker ressursene på noe mer grunnleggende.

Er jeg trygg?

Kommer noen til å skade meg?

Blir jeg forlatt?

Får jeg mat?

Barnet trenger ikke først strengere krav.

Det trenger en verden som er rolig nok til at oppmerksomheten kan frigjøres.

Trygghet er ikke en belønning barnet får etter at det har oppført seg.

Trygghet er forutsetningen for at det kan begynne å regulere seg, lære og delta.

Den nye erfaringen

Et barn som har levd med omsorgssvikt, forandres ikke bare fordi det flyttes.

Den gamle verden følger med i kroppen.

Barnet forventer at den nye voksne skal svikte.

At maten skal forsvinne.

At kjærlighet skal bli trukket tilbake.

At berøring skal gjøre vondt.

At regler endres uten varsel.

Derfor kan barnet prøve den nye verden.

Det kan gjemme mat.

Ødelegge ting.

Avvise omsorg.

Lyve.

Stjele.

Angripe den som kommer nær.

Den voksne kan oppleve dette som utakknemlighet.

«Vi gir deg alt, og slik svarer du.»

Men barnet undersøker kanskje:

Er maten virkelig her i morgen?

Blir du værende når jeg er vanskelig?

Er omsorgen avhengig av at jeg oppfører meg pent?

Kan jeg stole på at denne verden er annerledes?

Svarene gis ikke først og fremst med ord.

De gis gjennom gjentakelse.

Måltidet kommer.

Den voksne kommer tilbake.

Grensen settes uten ydmykelse.

Konflikten avsluttes uten at relasjonen forsvinner.

Slik kan barnet langsomt få nye erfaringer.

Håpet i det formbare

Historien om Justin er mørk.

Men den bærer også håp.

Ikke et lett håp som sier at all skade kan viskes ut.

Men et håp om at mennesker kan formes videre.

Hjernen er ikke ferdig.

Relasjoner kan få nye betydninger.

Kroppen kan lære andre rytmer.

Tillit kan vokse der det før bare fantes frykt.

Dette håpet forplikter.

Hvis vi tror at barnet bare er slik, blir tiltakene lett forvaltning.

Vi begrenser skaden.

Holder ut.

Senker forventningene.

Men hvis vi forstår at barnet også er blitt slik gjennom erfaring, må vi spørre hvilke nye erfaringer vi kan tilby.

Musikk.

Lek.

Bevegelse.

Rytme.

Berøring på barnets premisser.

Språk.

Forutsigbarhet.

Gjentatt omsorg.

Ikke som tilfeldige aktiviteter, men som byggesteiner i et nytt forhold til verden.

Barnet er alltid mer

Selv den beste historiske forståelsen kan bli en ny reduksjon.

Vi kan gå fra å si:

«Barnet er vanskelig.»

til:

«Barnet er traumatisert.»

Også dette ordet kan feste seg.

Plutselig tolkes alt gjennom traumet.

Latteren.

Sinnet.

Skolevanskene.

Vennskapene.

Barnet blir traumehistorien sin.

Men et barn er alltid mer.

Det har temperament.

Interesser.

Humor.

Vilje.

Evner.

Sårbarheter.

Noe er formet av erfaringene, men ikke alt kan forklares av dem.

Å se historien betyr ikke å gjøre barnet til produktet av historien.

Det betyr å forstå mer uten å lukke.

Barnet er både det som har skjedd, det som skjer nå, og det som ennå kan bli.

Å se med to blikk

Den profesjonelle trenger kanskje to blikk samtidig.

Det ene ser vanskene klart.

Dette barnet kan ikke snakke.

Dette barnet slår.

Dette barnet klarer ikke skolen.

Dette barnet trenger omfattende hjelp.

Det andre ser barnet bak vanskene.

Hva prøver atferden å uttrykke?

Hvilken verden har gjort dette nødvendig?

Hva finnes her som ennå ikke har fått utviklingsmuligheter?

Det første blikket beskytter mot naivitet.

Det andre beskytter mot reduksjon.

Sammen kan de gjøre hjelpen realistisk og håpefull.

Vi skal ikke late som om skadene ikke finnes.

Men vi skal heller ikke gjøre dem til barnets endelige identitet.

Barnet som ble det de voksne så

Justin ble lenge sett som et barn med en medfødt og uforanderlig hjerneskade.

De voksne fant det de forventet å finne.

En liten hjerne.

Manglende språk.

Avvikende atferd.

Lite utvikling.

Alt bekreftet bildet av et alvorlig skadet barn.

Men ingen så livet som hadde formet ham.

Da Perry endret blikket, forandret også spørsmålet seg.

Ikke:

Hva mangler denne gutten?

Men:

Hva har han aldri fått?

Ikke:

Hvorfor oppfører han seg som et dyr?

Men:

Hvordan måtte et barn tilpasse seg når det ble behandlet som et dyr?

Dette fritok ikke barnet fra behovet for behandling.

Tvert imot gjorde det behandlingen mulig.

For dersom problemet bare lå i en ødelagt gutt, var det lite å gjøre.

Dersom gutten bar spor av en ødelagt omsorgsverden, kunne en ny verden begynne å gi andre spor.

Det avgjørende spørsmålet

Når vi møter et barn som strever, trenger vi fortsatt å spørre:

Hva er det barnet ikke kan?

Hva må utredes?

Hvilken behandling eller tilrettelegging er nødvendig?

Men vi må også spørre:

Hva har barnet opplevd?

Hva har det manglet?

Hva har det måttet lære for å klare seg?

Hva forsøker atferden å beskytte?

Og hvilken ny erfaring kan vi gi?

Dette er ikke bare et faglig spørsmål.

Det er et etisk spørsmål.

For måten vi forstår barnet på, bestemmer hvordan vi møter det.

Ser vi mangel, vil vi korrigere.

Ser vi ondskap, vil vi straffe.

Ser vi svakhet, vil vi kanskje senke alle forventninger.

Ser vi tilpasning, kan vi bli nysgjerrige.

Ser vi smerte, kan vi tilby omsorg.

Ser vi mulighet, kan vi begynne å bygge.

Barn blir ikke bare påvirket av det voksne gjør mot dem.

De påvirkes også av det voksne tror om dem.

Et barn som møtes som håpløst, lærer noe om fremtiden.

Et barn som møtes som farlig, lærer noe om sin plass blant mennesker.

Et barn som møtes som mer enn symptomene sine, får en annen mulighet.

Det er derfor vi må være varsomme med blikket.

Barnet kan bli det de voksne ser.

Men det kan også, gjennom nye møter, få øye på at det er mer.

Mer enn diagnosen.

Mer enn atferden.

Mer enn svikten.

Mer enn det livet hittil har fått frem.

Og kanskje begynner helingen nettopp der:

Når en voksen ser det barnet ennå ikke har kunnet vise.


Og kanskje begynner helingen nettopp der:

Når en voksen ser det barnet ennå ikke har kunnet vise.


Forfatterens merknad

Historien om Justin er hentet fra Bruce D. Perry og Maia Szalavitz’ bok The Boy Who Was Raised as a Dog: And Other Stories from a Child Psychiatrist’s Notebook—What Traumatized Children Can Teach Us About Loss, Love, and Healing. Boken viser gjennom flere praksisfortellinger hvordan tidlige traumer, omsorgssvikt og fravær av trygge relasjoner kan prege barnets utvikling, men også hvordan nye, gjentatte erfaringer av trygghet, rytme og menneskelig nærvær kan åpne for forandring. Essayet bygger også på mine egne erfaringer fra mange års arbeid med utsatte barn og familier, og på en grunnleggende overbevisning om at barnets atferd må forstås i lys av det livet barnet har levd – uten at barnet reduseres verken til sin historie eller til sin diagnose.

Referanse:
Perry, B. D., & Szalavitz, M. (2017). The boy who was raised as a dog: And other stories from a child psychiatrist’s notebook—What traumatized children can teach us about loss, love, and healing (Rev. and updated ed.). Basic Books.


After the Child Has Spoken

After the Child Has Spoken

When the Disclosure Becomes the Adult’s Responsibility

There is a moment when the room is no longer the same.

The child has said something.

Perhaps only one sentence.

“He comes into my room at night.”

Perhaps the story came slowly, with pauses, eyes lowered to the floor, and words spoken so quietly they were almost impossible to hear.

Perhaps the child said more than the adult was prepared for.

Before the words came, there was concern. Unease. A suspicion that something might be wrong. Afterwards, there is knowledge the adult cannot simply put aside.

The child has handed something over.

Not only information.

A secret. A fear. An experience that may have been carried alone for a very long time.

At that moment, responsibility changes.


Before the child spoke, the child carried both the event and the silence. After the child has spoken, the adult must take over the part of the burden that should never have belonged to the child.

This does not mean that the pain disappears at once. Nor does it mean that the adult can promise that everything will be all right.

But the child should no longer stand alone with the responsibility of protecting themselves, preserving the secret, or deciding what must happen next.

The disclosure has been made.

The responsibility now belongs to the adults.

The First Response

When a child speaks about violence or abuse, the adult may feel many things at once.

Grief.

Anger.

Disgust.

Powerlessness.

An urge to ask more.

A need to do something immediately.

All of this is understandable. But the child does not only notice what the adult does. The child reads the face, the voice, the breathing, and the body.

The child may have spent a long time imagining this moment.

Will you believe me?

Will you become angry?

Will you start crying?

Will you leave me?

Will everything become worse now?

The adult’s first response therefore matters greatly.

It does not have to be long or perfect.

“Thank you for telling me.”

“It was right to speak.”

“This is not your fault.”

“I will help you.”

Such sentences may seem simple. But for a child who has lived with threats, shame, or fear, they can open a new reality.

It was allowed to be spoken.

There is an adult who can bear knowing.

The responsibility does not belong to me.

I will not stand alone in what happens next.

What matters most is not that the adult finds the most beautiful words. What matters is that the response is true.

Children notice the difference between a rehearsed answer and a person who truly remains.

Being Able to Bear What Is Told

Children may hold back because they fear that the truth is too heavy for adults.

Some have experienced adults becoming angry or falling apart when difficult things are revealed. Others have watched parents, siblings, or helpers react with panic and overwhelming emotion.

The child may then begin to protect the person who is listening.

“Perhaps it was not that bad.”

“I do not remember any more.”

“He is actually kind.”

The story is withdrawn in order to make the room safer for the adult.

This is a burden the child should not carry.

The adult must therefore be able to listen without making the child responsible for the reaction.

This does not mean becoming emotionless.

A warm face, a serious expression, and a calm voice can show that the story has made an impact.

The adult may say:

“It is painful to hear that this happened to you.”

But the child should not have to comfort the adult.

If the adult breaks down, expresses violent anger, or immediately begins talking about what must be done to the person responsible, the child may feel that the words have set something dangerous in motion.

The listener must carry the strongest feelings somewhere else.

With a colleague.

In supervision.

In conversation with another responsible adult.

The child does not need an adult without feelings.

The child needs an adult who can take responsibility for them.

Do Not Ask for Everything

Once the child has begun to speak, the adult may feel a strong need to understand the whole event.

Who?

What?

Where?

When?

How many times?

But the child does not necessarily need to tell everything to the first adult.

What has already emerged may be enough for other services to be informed and for a professional investigation to begin.

Further detailed questions may then do more harm than good.

The child may become tired and overwhelmed.

The story may be influenced.

Later interviews may become more difficult.

And the child may feel that more and more must be delivered in order to be believed.

The adult may say:

“What you have told me is important. I do not think I should ask you about every detail now. There are other adults who are specially trained to speak with children about this.”

In this way, the conversation can be paused without rejecting the child.

The child learns that the adult has heard enough to act.

There is no need to prove more right now.

This requires restraint. The adult must tolerate their own uncertainty.

We may not need to know everything in order to take the right next step.

No Promises of Secrecy

A child who speaks may say:

“You must not tell anyone.”

The wish is understandable.

The child may fear punishment, separation, being moved, or loss. The child may have been threatened into silence. Perhaps this is the first time the words have been spoken aloud, and the child immediately wants to regain control.

The adult may be tempted to promise:

“This will stay between us.”

But such a promise may be impossible to keep.

If the child speaks about serious violence, abuse, or danger, other adults must become involved. To promise secrecy and later break that promise may become another betrayal.

The child needs honesty, even when the truth is difficult.

“I understand that you do not want others to know.”

“I will not tell more people than those who need to know in order to help you.”

“But I cannot keep it completely secret. What you have told me is so serious that I need help from other adults.”

This may not be what the child wants to hear.

But it is true.

The adult cannot promise complete control over what will happen. But the adult can promise to explain, inform, and not disappear.

Telling the Child What Will Happen

After the disclosure, the system may begin moving quickly.

Telephone calls are made.

Meetings are arranged.

Child protection services are informed.

The police are contacted.

Decisions are made about whether parents or caregivers should be told.

For adults, this is action.

For the child, it may feel like chaos.

A secret that was previously contained within the child is suddenly travelling between people the child does not know.

The child therefore needs information.

What will happen now?

Who will be told?

Whom will I meet?

Where will I stay tonight?

Will I go home?

What will happen to the person who did it?

The adult will not always know the answers.

Then it is better to say:

“I do not know yet.”

than to promise:

“Everything will be fine.”

Children do not need false reassurance. They need honest predictability.

“I am going to call child protection services now and tell them the most important part of what you said.”

“Afterwards, I will explain what they said.”

“You will not be left alone while we work out what to do.”

In this way, the child can follow their story as it moves forward.

The child knows who is carrying it and why.

The Adult Must Remain

Some children experience many adults becoming intensely involved as soon as the abuse is disclosed.

The case fills the room.

The telephone calls.

The meetings.

The documents.

But the adult to whom the child first spoke may gradually disappear.

Perhaps other people with greater authority or specialist knowledge take over.

That may be necessary. But to the child, it can feel as though the first adult was interested only in the secret.

Once it had been delivered, the child was no longer needed.

As far as possible, a safe adult should therefore remain present through the process.

Not necessarily as an investigator or therapist.

But as a familiar person.

Someone who asks:

“How are you today?”

“Do you know what is going to happen?”

“Is there anything you are afraid of right now?”

The child needs continuity.

Someone who remembers life before the case.

Someone who can meet the child without always talking about what happened.

Remaining is a way of saying:

I was not only interested in what you told me.

I am still concerned about you.

When the Child Regrets Speaking

A child may feel relief after speaking.

But relief may quickly be followed by fear.

What have I done?

Now the family will fall apart.

Now someone will become angry.

Now I will have to move.

Now everyone knows.

The child may wish the words had never been spoken.

The story may be withdrawn.

“I made it up.”

“It was not true.”

“I do not want to talk about it anymore.”

The adult must meet this without pressure and without rushing to conclusions.

The withdrawal may mean that the first story was wrong.

It may also mean that the consequences became too frightening.

We cannot know simply by interpreting.

The adult may say:

“I hear that you are saying something different now.”

“Tell me what makes you want to take it back.”

But the child should not be persuaded to remain with one particular version.

Nor accused of lying.

The matter must be examined by those who have responsibility for it.

At the same time, the child needs help to understand that reactions after a disclosure can be mixed.

It is possible to feel relieved and afraid.

To want help and at the same time wish everything could return to the way it was.

When the Family Reacts

A disclosure affects more than the child.

Families may react with shock, disbelief, anger, grief, or division.

Some believe the child immediately.

Others deny it.

Some blame the child.

“Why did you not say something before?”

“Do you understand what you have done to the family?”

“That cannot be true.”

Such reactions can be deeply harmful.

The child may feel that the abuse was the offender’s act, but the family makes the disclosure the child’s fault.

The adult close to the child must therefore be clear:

It is never the child’s responsibility that an adult or older child violated them.

Nor is it the child’s responsibility that the truth has consequences.

The family may need help to understand this.

Caregivers too may have powerful feelings that must be carried somewhere other than in front of the child.

The child should not have to comfort a parent who is devastated by what has come to light.

Nor should the child be pressed to explain why they waited.

Children speak when they can, not necessarily when adults think they should.

“Why Did You Not Tell Earlier?”

This question is often asked.

Perhaps by police, family members, or other adults.

It may be intended as an attempt to understand.

But the child may hear:

Why did you allow it to continue?

Why did you do nothing?

Can we trust you when you waited so long?

The question may therefore deepen guilt.

A better question is:

“What made it difficult to tell?”

This shifts attention from the child’s supposed failure to the barriers the child faced.

Threats.

Shame.

Loyalty.

Fear of not being believed.

Lack of language.

Dependence on the person who caused harm.

The child was not free and did not choose silence in the same way an adult may choose to withhold information.

Silence may have been a way of surviving.

When the child finally speaks, it should be met as an act of courage, not as a duty performed too late.

The Child’s Sense of Guilt

Children may feel guilty even when they did nothing wrong.

They may have been enticed.

Given gifts.

Curious.

They may have had bodily reactions.

They may not have said no.

Or they may later have sought out the person who harmed them because that person also offered care and attention.

The child may interpret this as participation.

“Perhaps I wanted it.”

“I went into the room.”

“I did not say stop.”

The adult must help the child place responsibility correctly.

Children cannot carry responsibility for adults or older people abusing their power.

The body can respond without consent.

Dependence may cause the child to follow an adult.

Fear may make the child silent or passive.

This is not consent.

“It was not your fault” may need to be repeated many times.

Not as an empty phrase, but as a new understanding the child may slowly begin to believe.

The Child’s Ambivalence

The child may love the person who caused harm.

The child may miss them.

Want to see them.

Hope the family can be reunited.

This can be difficult for adults to understand.

They may want a clear picture:

The person responsible is dangerous.

The child is afraid.

Contact must stop.

But the child’s feelings do not necessarily follow legal or moral order.

A father may have caused harm and also been the one who read at bedtime.

A brother may have committed a serious assault and also been the child’s closest playmate.

The child’s longing does not make the event less serious.

It means that people and relationships are complex.

The adult must be able to tolerate this without making the child feel ashamed.

“You may miss him and still know that what he did was wrong.”

“You do not have to choose only one feeling.”

When the child’s ambivalence is allowed, the child does not need to withdraw the story in order to preserve love.

When Protection Involves Loss

After the child has spoken, protection may require major changes.

Moving.

Suspending contact.

Changing school.

Interviews.

Medical examinations.

The loss of home, friends, pets, or siblings.

The measures may be necessary.

But they may still feel like loss.

The child may think:

All of this happened because I spoke.

The disclosure may then become connected to guilt.

The adult must be careful with language.

Not:

“Because you told us, you have to move.”

But:

“The adults have decided that you should live somewhere safer because it is our responsibility to protect you.”

The difference matters.

The child’s words led to action, but the child is not responsible for the decision.

That responsibility belongs to the adults.

Protecting Without Taking All Control

The child cannot always decide what happens after a serious disclosure.

Adults may sometimes have to act against the child’s stated wishes.

But even when the child does not have the final say, the child can still have influence.

Whom would you like to have with you?

Would you rather sit here or there?

Do you need a break?

Would you like to know what I am going to say before I call?

Would you like me to speak, or would you like to say something yourself?

Small choices can return some sense of control to the child.

This is especially important when the child has experienced others taking possession of the body, the boundaries, or reality.

Help must not repeat the violation in the name of protection.

The adult must use power carefully, openly, and understandably.

Do not hide what is happening.

Do not deceive the child.

Do not promise what cannot be kept.

The child must experience that adult power can also be used to protect, not only to harm.

The Story Should Not Be Repeated to Everyone

When several services become involved, the child may be asked to tell the same story many times.

To the teacher.

Child protection services.

The police.

The doctor.

The foster parents.

The therapist.

Each adult may have good reasons for asking.

But for the child, the repetition can be burdensome.

The child must approach the event again.

See the reaction in new faces.

Wonder who knows what.

Information should therefore be shared responsibly, and conversations should be coordinated as far as possible.

Not everyone needs every detail.

A safe adult can say:

“You should not have to tell everything to everyone.”

“The people who need information will receive it in a way that protects you.”

The child’s story does not become freely available simply because it has once been shared.

It must be treated with care.

Everyday Life Afterwards

After a disclosure, everything can become serious.

Everyone asks how the child is doing.

Everyone watches the reactions.

A quiet moment is interpreted as grief.

Laughter becomes a sign of coping.

Anger is understood as trauma.

The child may feel that they are no longer allowed to be ordinary.

But the child also needs everyday life.

Breakfast.

School.

Play.

Friends.

A television programme.

A walk with the dog.

A few hours when no one asks.

This is not denial.

It is life.

The child should not have to be “the victim” all the time.

The child must be allowed to remain a whole human being, not only the bearer of a painful story.

A safe adult can remain attentive without monitoring.

Be available without constantly reopening the conversation.

Ask:

“Would you like to talk about it today, or shall we do something else?”

Some days the child needs words.

On other days, the child needs freedom from them.

When the Case Lasts a Long Time

Investigations may take time.

The child may wait for interviews, decisions, contact assessments, or court proceedings.

The adults around the child may become tired.

Attention fades.

New caseworkers arrive.

The child may begin to doubt whether they still matter.

Responsibility must therefore be enduring.

Not only intense during the first days.

It must withstand months and perhaps years.

The child needs someone to remember appointments, explain delays, and follow up what was promised.

If the adult says:

“I will come back on Friday,”

the adult must return or explain why they cannot.

A child who has experienced betrayal notices such failures.

Healing often begins in ordinary things:

Adults come.

They remember.

They keep their word.

They do not disappear when the case becomes complicated.

Helping the Child Return to Themselves

Abuse can take much from a child.

Safety.

Trust.

Ownership of the body.

Faith in personal boundaries.

The disclosure can be the first step towards regaining something.

But only if the adults handle the story with respect.

The child must be able to experience:

My voice matters.

My boundaries are heard.

It was right to speak.

Other people can use their power to protect me.

I am more than what happened.

Help should not only carry the child through a case.

It should help the child return to life.

To relationships that do not cause harm.

To a body that can once again feel like their own.

To everyday life that becomes predictable.

To play, joy, and a future.

This takes time.

And it rarely happens through one decisive conversation alone.

It happens through many small experiences with adults who are different from the person who caused harm.

The Response of Recognition

Children who have been abused may have been treated with contempt.

Their bodies and boundaries were not respected.

They may have been excluded, made responsible, or treated as objects.

Shame says:

There is something wrong with me.

Help must answer with something different.

Contempt must be met with respect.

Exclusion with belonging.

A negative self-image with experiences of personal worth.

Shame with recognition.

Objectification with a meeting between subjects.

These are not merely therapeutic words.

They happen in concrete ways.

When the adult knocks before entering.

When the child is allowed to choose who sits closest.

When a no is heard.

When the adult explains what is happening.

When the child is not described as a problem.

When someone still invites the child to football practice, a birthday celebration, or dinner.

In this way, the child slowly learns that the world can also contain other experiences.

The Adult’s Responsibility for Hope

The child cannot be expected to see the road ahead.

After the disclosure, the world may seem more chaotic than before.

The secret is out.

Relationships change.

The system intervenes.

The child may feel that control has been lost.

The adult must then carry some of the hope.

Not as a guarantee that everything will be easy.

But as a belief that life can become larger than what happened.

“This will take time.”

“Some things may be difficult.”

“But you will not stand alone.”

Hope is not about decorating reality.

It is about remaining in reality with the child while still keeping open the possibility of change.

The Disclosure Is Both a Gift and a Burden

When a child speaks, the adult may experience the trust as a gift.

But it is also a burden.

The adult must act.

Tolerate uncertainty.

Work with systems that do not always function as one would wish.

Meet family conflict and resistance.

Perhaps remain uncertain about what actually happened.

It may be tempting to withdraw and think that others have now taken over.

But the disclosure creates an ethical bond.

The child chose, or dared, to say this to this particular person.

The adult may not be able to follow the entire case.

But the adult can make sure that the story does not fall between services.

That the child is not forgotten.

That someone knows who is responsible.

Receiving a disclosure means moving from being a listener to becoming a co-bearer of responsibility.

The Child Should Not Have to Thank Us for Help

Children sometimes express deep gratitude when they are believed and protected.

“Thank you for listening to me.”

“Thank you for looking after me.”

The words can be deeply moving.

But they should also make us serious.

A child should not really have to thank adults for doing what adults are obligated to do.

Listen.

Protect.

Act.

Remain.

And yet we know that many children have not experienced this.

Ordinary responsibility may therefore feel extraordinary.

The best way to respond to the gratitude is not to make ourselves into heroes.

It is to say:

“It should never have been your responsibility to carry this alone.”

When Responsibility Changes Hands

Before the child spoke, the child may have believed that the secret was their responsibility.

That the family had to be protected.

That the offender had to be protected.

That no one must know.

That the child had to survive alone.

After the disclosure, the adult must make it clear that this is no longer the case.

It is not the child who must decide who is informed.

Not the child who must secure evidence.

Not the child who must explain things to the family.

Not the child who must keep track of the system.

Not the child who must ensure their own safety.

The child should be involved and listened to.

But the responsibility must be carried by adults.

This may be the most important change created by the disclosure:

The child moves from being alone with responsibility for the secret to being surrounded by people who take responsibility for the truth.

After the Child Has Spoken

What matters is not only that the words are spoken.

What matters is the world the child meets afterwards.

Does the child meet disbelief?

Chaos?

Interrogation?

Blame?

Or does the child meet adults who can say:

I believe that what you have told me matters.

I will not pressure you to tell everything.

I will be honest about what I need to do.

I will explain what is happening.

I will not disappear because the case becomes difficult.

I will help you live on as more than what happened.

The disclosure is not the end of silence.

It is the beginning of adult responsibility.

The child has opened the door.

The child has placed something fragile and heavy in the adult’s hands.

The adult must then hold it carefully.

Not use it to satisfy personal curiosity.

Not turn it into the child’s only identity.

Not promise more than can be kept.

But act.

Protect.

Explain.

And remain.

For a child who has finally spoken, the most important thing is not only that someone heard the words.

It is discovering that the words found a person willing to take responsibility for them. 


For a child who has finally spoken, t

he most important thing is not only that someone heard the words.

It is discovering that the words found a person 

willing to take responsibility for them. 


This text is written after many years of professional work with children in difficult situations, and my lectures for students and professional workers in various professions. The illustrasjon was made by OpenAI/Chet/GPT