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Ease the Transition of Moving to a New Home (page 4)

By Patty Wipfler|Julianne Idleman
Hand in Hand
Updated on Mar 17, 2011

Give the children time to get grounded

Once you are in the new location, get the children back to their regular routines as quickly as practical and reinstitute your schedule of Special Time. It will take time for the reality of the move to set in for all of you. As feelings come up, tell the children that they are welcome to feel sad or angry or lonely and you will sit with them while they are upset.

Listen to how they feel. Limit behavior as needed, but maintain an air that says all feelings are welcome. Let them cry or even tremble, sweat or shake. Children know how to get upset feelings out. What they require from us is attention and the safe warmth of our love and acceptance. Upsets pass. Feelings change. Letting children fully express an upset lifts the heaviness of those feelings and allows them to return to better functioning.

Let your children spend some time making friends with the new house and yard. When you feel they are starting to get comfortable there, play Hide and Seek in the new house and discover its best hiding spots together. During the first few weeks, spend time with the children just walking through the neighborhood. Get to know what and who is where. Help the children draw a simple map of the street you live on and write in for them the names of the neighbors and household pets you meet. This “ground time” will help them develop a relationship with the new place and its inhabitants. Keep looking for opportunities to remind them that they belong with you, in your family, no matter where you live, and that you are happy they are with you.

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