| See if the library has any simple, children's books about thunder
storms. Sometimes an explanation can help.
I had a similar thing happen a few summers ago. It took a couple weeks
for the fears to lessen and the night time routines to go back to
"normal". We found we had to be really clear on respecting the fear
but also firm on setting limits each night so it didn't snowball into
always sleeping with mom and dad, etc.
best of luck,
z
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| I agree about not minimizing the fear. Ask questions,
expain what you can, tell silly stories, draw pictures
about it and put smiling faces and happy plants drinking
rain water.
I had a dog that trembled for hours after a thunder-storm.
There was nothing I could do for him, no reasoning powers.
I approached thunder-storms the same way my parents did
(role-models). They were excited about them. Running
from window to window. Pointing their fingers and
shouting from excitement, who got to see the biggest one,
which window had the best vantage point. "Yippees" for
the biggest noise. Exclaimations galore, "Wow, did
you see that?" "That one split in two!" "That one
went sideways."
The family couldn't help but be excited. My parents
used to tell me it was God bowling (Yah, right!), but
I explain to my kids it is a cold cloud and a warm
cloud bumping into each other. It's the loudest
noise that nature makes. The first kid to hear
thunder now comes running with excitement to inform
me a storm is coming. Thunder; natures gift. We
sometimes go out in a rain storm driving to a high
spot to see the lightening in the distance. I guess
it's how you look at it.
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