PlayOkay : child bereavement following parental loss

Children from the age of 5 are able to understand death. They have the ability to grieve but may sometimes choose to suppress this emotion to protect the adults around them to reduce the already overwhelming emotional loss in the family. This lack of grieving often denies the child a proper grieving...

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Main Author: Chan, Alicia Li Zhen
Other Authors: Ng Ee Ching Candice
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/141338
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1413382020-06-08T01:33:39Z PlayOkay : child bereavement following parental loss Chan, Alicia Li Zhen Ng Ee Ching Candice School of Art, Design and Media NgEC@ntu.edu.sg Visual arts and music::Visual arts Children from the age of 5 are able to understand death. They have the ability to grieve but may sometimes choose to suppress this emotion to protect the adults around them to reduce the already overwhelming emotional loss in the family. This lack of grieving often denies the child a proper grieving outlet. While counselling services and therapy are readily available for when children need support, it is not a viable option for everyone. For children who are not willing to open up to strangers, communication can come to a standstill, making progress impossible. Recognising that talk-based counselling is not for everyone, alternative help like play therapy which uses symbolic form to help children come to terms with their experience also prevails. This form of therapy, however, still requires the presence of a stranger which deters children who are uncomfortable to opening up freely and may thus be time-consuming. From interviews conducted on adults who were bereaved as children, it has been found that many did not attended counselling or therapy with reasons cited being that they didn't want to talk to people about it. This reluctance to speak to people denies the child the opportunity to externalize their emotions which can sometimes lead to depression and to the child using less adaptive mechanisms, such as denial, to get over the tough time. By creating a toolkit that uses the modality of play therapy to encourage the child to express their emotions in their own private space and fulfil the tasks a child needs to mourn a loss, we help children who are not comfortable in talking to people about their problem to still have an outlet to express themselves and grieve, therefore preventing the carrying of unresolved complications into the future. Bachelor of Fine Arts in Visual Communication 2020-06-08T01:33:38Z 2020-06-08T01:33:38Z 2020 Final Year Project (FYP) https://hdl.handle.net/10356/141338 en ADM16.20.U1630837K application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Visual arts and music::Visual arts
spellingShingle Visual arts and music::Visual arts
Chan, Alicia Li Zhen
PlayOkay : child bereavement following parental loss
description Children from the age of 5 are able to understand death. They have the ability to grieve but may sometimes choose to suppress this emotion to protect the adults around them to reduce the already overwhelming emotional loss in the family. This lack of grieving often denies the child a proper grieving outlet. While counselling services and therapy are readily available for when children need support, it is not a viable option for everyone. For children who are not willing to open up to strangers, communication can come to a standstill, making progress impossible. Recognising that talk-based counselling is not for everyone, alternative help like play therapy which uses symbolic form to help children come to terms with their experience also prevails. This form of therapy, however, still requires the presence of a stranger which deters children who are uncomfortable to opening up freely and may thus be time-consuming. From interviews conducted on adults who were bereaved as children, it has been found that many did not attended counselling or therapy with reasons cited being that they didn't want to talk to people about it. This reluctance to speak to people denies the child the opportunity to externalize their emotions which can sometimes lead to depression and to the child using less adaptive mechanisms, such as denial, to get over the tough time. By creating a toolkit that uses the modality of play therapy to encourage the child to express their emotions in their own private space and fulfil the tasks a child needs to mourn a loss, we help children who are not comfortable in talking to people about their problem to still have an outlet to express themselves and grieve, therefore preventing the carrying of unresolved complications into the future.
author2 Ng Ee Ching Candice
author_facet Ng Ee Ching Candice
Chan, Alicia Li Zhen
format Final Year Project
author Chan, Alicia Li Zhen
author_sort Chan, Alicia Li Zhen
title PlayOkay : child bereavement following parental loss
title_short PlayOkay : child bereavement following parental loss
title_full PlayOkay : child bereavement following parental loss
title_fullStr PlayOkay : child bereavement following parental loss
title_full_unstemmed PlayOkay : child bereavement following parental loss
title_sort playokay : child bereavement following parental loss
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/141338
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