When the bullets started flying into the church, adults jumped up to protect children from the onslaught. Students tried to help too, shielding their friends and younger classmates.
Kids who lived through the Wednesday morning shooting at Annunciation Catholic Church in south Minneapolis experienced an acute mental trauma, even if physically unscathed, child psychologists and counselors said. Their parents will face their own challenges. Two families are reckoning with the fact that their children are not coming home.
“There is no wrong way to grieve to move through this,” said Mark Barden, whose 7-year-old son Daniel was killed in the Sandy Hook Elementary shooting in 2012 in Connecticut. “There is no getting over it, so all you can do is move through it.”
The path for each child and family member will be different, mental health professionals said. Parents may see their children act out in unusual ways, but those reactions are normal.
Officials at Annunciation Catholic School wrote in a message on Wednesday that “we will send further communication about support services available to us all at a later time.”
What to expect
The children who came home from Annunciation’s all-school mass on Wednesday likely will experience a broad spectrum of emotion: anger, shock, loss of a sense of safety, numbness.
Some children may not want to talk about it. Some will act out, even if they previously were calm. Others may regress by needing more attention or by wetting the bed, even if they have been potty trained for years. If those things happen, “just normalize it. Don’t shame, but also don’t alarm,” said Anne Gearity, a therapist who teaches psychiatrists in training at the University of Minnesota.
Parents should not pathologize their children’s behavior in the immediate aftermath either by labeling it as PTSD or any other psychological condition. Tai Mendenhall, a medical family therapist and professor at the U, said that research has shown that suggesting someone has a chronic problem right after a trauma can actually make it more likely that issues persist over time.