Parents and caregivers play a powerful role in shaping how children experience stressful or unpredictable weather events like hurricanes, flooding, wildfires, or other natural disasters.

When adults stay grounded and regulated, kids naturally take their cues from that steadiness. Even in moments of uncertainty, simple, consistent tools can help families feel more connected and secure.

 

Mental Health Practices for Parents & Children

The programming of Resources For Resilience teaches several practices that parents can use with children when storms stir up fear, memories, or anxiety. Practicing these tools regularly — not just during storms — helps build resilience over time. Kids learn that even when the weather is unpredictable, they have ways to feel safe, supported, and confident navigating whatever comes next.

Use Rapid Resets Together

Gentle tapping, humming, or taking a sip of water can help settle the nervous system. When kids see a calm adult using a Rapid Reset, the tool becomes even more effective. Kids need small moments of relief — play, laughter, and breaks from the heaviness help their bodies and minds recover.

Help Them Sense In

Curiosity goes a long way. This pulls their attention out of fear and back into the present, where their body can begin to settle. In particular, we want them to notice what feels good, comfortable, or even just neutral. Our nervous systems are already masterful at noticing sensations of discomfort or pain for survival reasons, but we want to help them shift the focus to the positive.

Recall A Comforting Memory

Invite kids to think about a favorite place, person, or moment. Remembered safety helps the brain shift out of a stress state and back toward calm.

Look For The Helpers

Pointing out neighbors, responders, or community members who are helping interrupts the brain’s threat response. Noticing safety and support in the environment helps the body relax.

Stay Connected

A calm voice, a cuddle, reading together, or a quick check-in can regulate a child’s nervous system faster than anything else. Connection is one of the most powerful antidotes to fear.

Normalize Their Feelings

Let kids know their reactions make sense. Reassurance helps them feel understood and supported. Phrases like these can help:

    • “I understand why you are afraid. I’m here with you.”
    • “Yes, this is scary. Helene was scary, too — and do you remember how we got through it? We’re even stronger now.”
    • “Everyone feels scared sometimes, and that’s okay. Our bodies are doing their job.”
    • “We’re paying attention. We’re ready to handle whatever comes our way.”
    • “Thankfully our nervous systems are keeping us safe.”

Process Together

Parents can’t prevent every hard moment for their children, but they can help kids by staying present with them and asking them simple questions about what they feel or need. Being open and honest in an age-appropriate way matters more than trying to shield them. They’re going to see and hear things, and what helps most is talking afterward and making sense of it together.

Practice Self-Compassion

Just like our children, most parents are learning as they go, and that’s completely okay. If we’ve never even been through something before, of course we won’t know how to do it perfectly. Every family will move through hard times differently, so giving grace and patience is important.

Wrapping It Up

Extreme weather can shake a family’s sense of safety, but no one has to navigate it alone. Resources For Resilience™ offers simple, practical tools that help parents and youth stay grounded and supported through fear, uncertainty, and recovery.

If you’re looking for ways to strengthen your family’s resilience — before, during, or after a storm — we’re here to help.

Explore our family‑focused workshops and our community trainings, and walk away with easy‑to‑use practices designed to restore calm and clarity for people of all ages. Together, we can help your family feel more prepared, more supported, and more confident facing whatever comes next.

 

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