In Graham's book Music, Nurturing Natures: Attachment and Children's Emotional, Sociocultural, and Brain Development, music explains to the reader how poverty, abandonment, and trauma can be associated with PTSD, PTSD, and how PTSD can develop into long-term psychiatric and even physical medical conditions. A child's neglect can affect them later in life and affect their learning, social, mobile and regular daily functions and activities. The music also shows the reader how early childhood experiences can impact the attachment between mother and child. Furthermore, although abandonment can occur at any time during development, children are more vulnerable due to their dependence on adults for survival. It shows the reader that neglected and traumatized children are often difficult to identify because they are afraid to come forward. From birth, children depend on their parents for survival and safety. Babies need this attachment to survive. Basic needs like shelter and food are things that all humans need; but infants and children, in particular, cannot survive independently without parents and guidance. Furthermore, as children grow, parent-child attachment is not only physical, but also psychological. Adults who care for children through unconditional love and acceptance provide positive living environments and self-confidence that help the child grow into an independent adult. Failure of this child-parent relationship, in the form of abandonment or long-term trauma, can have consequences for the child's physical and psychological development. The parent-child relationship is critical to a child's physical and brain development. In its most literal sense, “trauma” means a… middle of paper… growing up in a home where there is abandonment, abuse, and trauma often misses out on normal development with attachment and trust . Without that attachment and trust, neglected children are at risk and vulnerable to suffering physical, emotional, psychological, educational and interpersonal consequences and risks that can have a detrimental effect on the child's life and development and can develop into disorder from post-traumatic stress. However, under certain circumstances, if given the opportunity to bond positively with healthy adults, children can overcome even a brutal childhood and wounds. Finally, it shows how an adult or parent who is willing to become attached, trust, help, and work with a child can radically change the course of that child's life by acting as a counselor, identifying and solving problems, and also being present. at the wrong time. means of conflict and ultimately help the child succeed in life.
tags