Monday, July 5, 2010

Day 15: The More You Know

HODR recently started a teacher-training program during which local teachers learn Disaster Risk Reduction and about Trauma & Creative Therapy. The great thing about today’s training was it took place at the very first school that HODR built from ground up. What a beautiful experience to train teachers in a school that your hands built (well, not my hands, but someone's hands at HODR.)

The first two hours were dedicated to teaching about what causes natural disasters, what they are, and safety procedures for within the classroom. The second part of the day focused on learning about trauma and gaining tools for doing creative art therapy with students. When asked if any of the teachers had ever attended such a training or knew anything about either topic, the response was a unanimous “no.”

You take for granted that your school enforced a dozen fire drills each year or over exaggerated the importance of knowing where to go during an earthquake (even in non-earthquake parts of the world like Michigan.) Hundreds of miles away in a country peppered with natural disasters from earthquakes to hurricanes to fires, it’s hard to believe there are not safety procedures in place. They learned simple evacuation plans, the best place to take cover if evacuation isn’t possible, how to stop-drop-and-roll, and more. It was brilliant. Teachers have access to so many more lives than we could ever reach alone at HODR. Educate them and you educate so many more.

It’s interesting in Haitian culture how people respond to trauma. You can’t see the effects of trauma like you can a broken arm. So many people were hurt physically in the earthquake; that is evident when you look at them. So many more were hurt emotionally and mentally and that is not evident to the eye. Since they cannot see it, Haitians do not put any emphasis on trauma and it goes completely untreated. Like any wound that goes untreated, it festers, tares, and gets infected, and as time goes by it gets worse and worse leaving nasty scars that never heal. Do not for one second believe that it is any different for the emotional effects of trauma.

The teachers wanted direct answers about trauma; the exact signs to know a child is suffering from trauma. They wanted hard fast rules and black and white signals. But every child is different. And I had to explain with as much emphasis and passion and conviction as I possibly could that even if a child does not show outward signs of trauma it does not mean that they are not suffering from trauma. They survived a terrible earthquake that destroyed many lives of people they knew and crumbled their entire physical world. Whether they express it or not, these children are suffering from trauma – how could any of them not be?

We practiced a couple techniques for each type of creative therapy (art, dance, music, garden, and silent.) I made them all stand to partake in a dance. It was the first time I saw each and every one of them smile. I pointed it out, proving the point that dancing is good for the soul. It’s exercise and exercise releases endorphins, which make you happy. And when you’re happy you’re not thinking about all the things that make you unhappy. “For two minutes you can give your students a chance to get their minds off their problems. You can give them an opportunity to escape, even just momentarily, and for a little bit they get to be just kids. And every child deserves to get to be a kid now and then.”

Overall the teachers had some great questions, were thoroughly interested, and I pray they took some of what they learned with them. Imagine all the lives they can impact and potentially one day save just by being prepared.

1 comment:

  1. I can't believe all the rich experiences you are having and all the lives you are touching. You must feel like a million bucks. How beautiful, Angie. Each of my comments sounds redundant, I'm sorry! You'll have to teach me how better to express myself. I can only imagine your glow. I bet you look and feel different.

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