Toward the end of the summer, I was seeing a middle-school girl
for a physical. The notes from a clinic visit last spring said she was a good
student but didn’t talk enough in class. So I asked her: Is this still a
problem for you?
I’m
shy, she said. I’m just shy.“Should I have turned to her mother and suggested —
a counselor? An academic evaluation? Should I have probed further? How do you
feel in school, do you have some friends, is anybody bullying you?
Or
should I have said: Lots of people are shy. It’s one of the healthy, normal
styles of being human.
All
of these responses, together, would have been correct. A child who is being
bullied or bothered may be anxious about drawing attention to herself; a child
who doesn’t ever talk in class may be holding back because some learning
problem is getting in the way, making her self-conscious.
So
you do need to listen — especially to a child who talks less rather than more —
and find ways to ask questions. Are you happy, anxious, afraid?
But
shyness is also part of the great and glorious range of the human normal. Two
years ago, Kathleen Merikangas, a senior investigator at the National Institute
of Mental Health, and her colleagues published a study of 10,000 older
children, ranging from 13 to 18 years old.
“We
found that about half of kids in America describe themselves as shy,” she told
me.
Common
though it may be, our schools — and our broader culture — do not always
celebrate the reserved and retiring.
Children
who are shy, who don’t raise their hand, who don’t talk in class, are really
penalized in this society,” Merikangas said.
I
have heard it said that temperament was invented by the first parent to have a
second child — that’s when parents realise that children come wired with many
of the determinants of disposition and personality. What worked with Baby 1
doesn’t necessarily work with Baby 2.
The
analysis of temperament has been a topic of discussion in pediatrics and
psychology for decades.
“Temperament
is the largely inborn set of behaviors that are the style with which a person
functions, not to be confused with their motivation or their developmental
status and abilities,” said Dr. William B. Carey, a clinical professor of
pediatrics at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and the author of
“Understanding Your Child’s Temperament.”
Shyness
reflects a child’s place on the temperamental continuum, the part of it that
involves dealing with new and unfamiliar circumstances. And starting a new
school year may be hard on those who find new situations more difficult and
more full of anxiety. What most children need is time to settle in, support
from parents and teachers, and sometimes help making connections and
participating in class.
If
a child is not more comfortable after a month or so, parents should look at
whether more help is needed, said Anne Marie Albano, director of the Columbia
University Clinic for Anxiety and Related Disorders. Treatment usually involves
cognitive behavioral strategies to help the child cope with anxiety.
All
ranges of temperament have their uncomfortable, or even pathological, outer
zones. Just as there are children whose rambunctious eagerness to participate makes
trouble for them in school or signals the presence of other problems, there are
children whose silence is a shout for help.
I’m
struck by the parallels between the ways we discuss shyness and the ways we
discuss impulsivity and hyperactivity. In both cases, there is concern about
the risk of “pathologizing” children who are well within the range of normal
and worry that we are too likely to medicate outliers.
By
this thinking, children who would once have been considered shy and quiet too
often get antidepressants, just as children who would once have been considered
lively and rambunctious too often get ADHD medications.
But
the most important question is whether children are in distress. Merikangas’
study distinguished between the common trait of shyness and the psychiatric
diagnosis of social phobia.
Overall,
about five per cent of the adolescents in the study were severely restricted by
social anxiety; they included some who described themselves as shy and some who
did not.
The
authors questioned whether the debate about the “medicalization” of shyness
might be obscuring the detection of the distinct signs of social phobia.
For
parents who simply want to help a shy child cope with, for example, a brand new
classroom full of brand new people, consider rehearsing, scripting encounters
and interactions.
“The
best thing they can do is do a role play and behavioral rehearsal ahead of
time,” said Steven Kurtz, a senior clinician at the Child Mind Institute in
Manhattan. Parents should “plan on rewarding the bravery.”
But
don’t take over. “The danger point is rescuing too soon, too often, too much,
so the kids don’t develop coping mechanisms,” said Kurtz.
Cognitive
behavioral therapy relies on “successive approximations,” in which children
slowly close in on the behaviors they are hoping to achieve. In that spirit, a
parent might arrange to meet another parent on the way to school, so a shy
child can walk with another and bond.
A
teacher might look for the right partner to pair up with a shy child for
cooperative activities in the classroom.
“Probably
the worst thing to do is to say, ‘Don’t be shy. Don’t be quiet,’” Merikangas
told me.
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