A Child Unheard

A True Understanding

The I-Hate-My-Father Generation

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There is a generation in Africa and beyond that is utterly confused. Of course the word “confused” has a power to evoke some really strong feelings or reactions. But the confusion here is not of this generation’s own making – at least according to the way they look at things. It is their fathers’ fault that they are confused, or so they say and that’s the sad part about the so-called fatherless generation. Yes, they are really not that far off the mark, considering the fact that their fathers were largely absent in every sense during their formative years. This is an absence that came at a hefty price later on in their lives due to lack of mentorship, guidance and love from seriously committed fathers to their children. Much of this generation had fathers that were not available to provide the guiding light when their young ones were still just groping about in the maze of life as they fought to rid themselves of diapers to explore life beyond the comfort of their mothers’ bosoms. To them, there were no fathers in sight to tell them the plain truth about what is acceptable and what is not. As a result, schools and the negative portrayals on television were sought out by these children to fill the void and guidance they so desperately sought.
Sadly, there are many people who have grown up without their fathers and so they missed out on a very crucial stage of their emotional development that is too hard to recover in one’s adult life. Men who are prone to philandering could have been exposed to philandering habits of their own parents, some of whom left home in a hush to be with their mistresses allowing their children to witness this questionable behavior toward the women in their lives. Their ‘heroes’ just taught them something by observation that subliminally got stuck in their psyches, making them convinced that whatever they saw was an acceptable norm of the “wise” sages that all adults are to their young kids.

 
But let’s not veer off the mark here. Walking the tight rope of moral uprightness is a huge challenge these days. After all, we are all fallible humans who are prone to err anyway. But being a parent worth the venerable role also requires some responsibilities on adults’ part. Working with many youths, the problem of fatherhood has become so common it has failed the test of what is not deemed a cliché. Answers to these questions when posed to fathers who walked away from their wives and children never come in the usual Q&A format this young generation is so accustomed to. On the contrary, the answers provided by the parents normally breed more confusion that the young ones are left buried in even more confusion than ever before. And that’s where the whole concept of life in its ideal form gets lost in translation.
When this happens, the world is bequeathed a generation that is intellectually healthy, in some cases, but emotionally challenged to the extent that the word intimacy is now only understood in the context of music videos with semi-clad young ladies “leaving little to the imagination.” It is little wonder that the more mature adults see the younger generation as lost and confused. Such adults seem clueless that this could be a way these young people get themselves a fix (through addictive behaviours) to let off a steam following the raging battles within. This could be their young one’s way of getting some outlet to the anger and frustrations they feel and whose remedy seem to be nowhere in sight, even if they experiment with substance abuse, sexual escapades and to the privileged few, the most expensive cars and army of women and men swooning and cooing at everything they do. Of course, much of that fantastic life is a dream to most who are deluded to think that such fleeting pleasures can fill the yawning spiritual and emotional void within them.
 
After failing to find any thrill in life’s endless pleasures, they retreat to their shells of self-deprecating bitterness which mutate into anger towards the father who was never there and “mothers who married wrong men” who turned into their fathers. The chain of blame game continues and with it comes more experimentation with life through destructive indulgences. To this generation, the father is always bad, regardless of the fact that he could have been a victim of a long list of casualties that have fallen from the family tree and whose reproductive line is as dangerous a landmine of confused, embittered, reclusive and reckless young people who are hardly ready to face the challenges of the future.

 
It is the difference between emotional, spiritual and intellectual development that is responsible for the many tragically strange behavioural aspects of young people who are desperate to self-medicate through behaviours that fall way off the mark in terms of what we all would like the future global leaders and citizens to be.

 
Positive role models are in short supply these days. Men don’t know what to do perhaps because no one taught them right from wrong. They don’t even know what or who defines the right from wrong. That is why society’s moral compass has been skewed. The moral conscience has been muzzled by the murky reality of amorphous and directionless existence. Parenting is now a duty relegated to the media personalities who are themselves very uncomfortable in their own skins, struggling with one divorces too many and yet they are the ones looked at as role models by young men and women of this generation who are desperate for glamorous side of life at the expense of all.

Undoubtedly, people who make bad decisions are not necessarily bad, their repetitive social, emotional and physical faux pas notwithstanding. Their bad decisions just expose the deep-seated need for intimate connections and the fear to reveal their vulnerability to the entire admiring audience who buy into the veneer of self confidence – for some.
An emotionally developed individual is able to check themselves not only against self-destructive behavioural choices but also of others. That’s one aspect humanitarian agencies can help chip into to address the psychological aspect of needy children and youth, especially in the less developed parts of the world where such relief and humanitarian agencies operate. Otherwise we shall have a situation where emotional decision-making play a preponderant role in individual’s actions, thus leading to other avoidable destructive behaviours. Is that the world we want to bequeath to the next generation?

Author: Richard Arina

All children are born to grow

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A CHILD UNHEARD

Hand in hand

Together we will cross the line

From silence within

To a child heard

Let the music

Dance in my mind

To make me feel alive

  • All children are born to grow, to develop, to live, to love, and to articulate their needs and feelings for their self – protection.

  • For their development , children need the healthy respect and protection of adults who take them seriously, love them, take good care of them, and honestly help them to become oriented in the world.

  • When these vital needs are frustrated and children are, instead, abused for the sake of adults’ needs by being exploited, beaten, punished, take advantage of, manipulated, neglected, or deceived without the intervention of any witness, then their integrity will be lastingly impaired. ACU the human condition is then in bedded in their human psyche.

  • The normal reactions to such ill treatment, injury, should be anger and pain; since children in this hurtful kind of environment, however, are forbidden to express their anger and since it would be unbearable to experience their pain all alone, a child unheard unheard is born, they are compelled to suppress their feelings, repress all memory of the trauma, and idealize those guilty of the abuse. Later they will have no memory of what was done to them, but a scar for a lifetime is left in the spirit and soul, and will emerge in many ways in later life.

  • Disassociated from the original cause, their feelings of anger, helplessness, despair, longing, anxiety, and pain will find expression in destructive acts against others (criminal behavior , mass murder,genocide  - Hitler, Stalin ) or against  themselves ( drug addiction, alcoholism, prostitution , psychic disorders, suicide).  A true chilling reflection of our modern 21st Century.

  • If these people become parents, they will often direct acts of revenge for their mistreatment in childhood against their own children, whom they use as scapegoats. Child abuse is still sanctioned – indeed, held in high regard – in our  society as long as it is defined as child rearing. It is a tragic fact that parents beat their children in order to escape the emotions stemming from how they were treated by their own parents. A Child Unheard book – a book of poetical imagination which reveals that the way we are, often stems from childhood and traits passed down from generation to generation.

  • If mistreated children – child unheards – are not to become criminals or mentally ill, it is essential that at least once in their life they come in contact with a person who knows without any doubt that the environment, not the helpless , battered child, is at fault. In this regard, knowledge or ignorance on the part of society can be instrumental in either saving or destroying a life. Here lies the great opportunity for relatives, social workers, therapists, teachers, doctors , psychiatrists , officials and nurses to support the child and to believe him or her. That the condition is ACU – and this message must become universal, not just kept beneath the tides of modern life.

  • Till now, society has protected the adult and blamed the victim. It has been abetted in its blindness by theories, still in keeping with pedagogical principles of our great-grandparents, according to which children are viewed as crafty creatures, dominated by wicked drives , who invent stories and attack their innocent parents or desire them sexually. In reality, children tend to blame themselves for their parents’ cruelty and to absolve the parents, whom they invariably love, of all responsibility.

  • For some years now, it has been possible to prove, thanks to the use of new therapeutic methods, that repressed traumatic experiences in childhood (ACU) are stored up in the body and, although remaining unconscious, exert their influence even in adulthood. In addition, electronic testing of the fetus has revealed a fact previously unknown to most adults: A child  responds to and learns both tenderness and cruelty from the beginning. ACU a human condition continues to be ignored, a timeless message, see the work of the late psychiatrist Frank Lake – Clinic Theology .

  • In the light of this profoundly simple message – ACU – even the most absurd behavior reveals its formerly hidden logic once the traumatic experiences of childhood no longer must remain shrouded in darkness. So from within we must truly allow, if you bring forth what is within you, what you bring forth will save you. If you do not bring forth what is within you, what you do not bring forth will destroy you.

  • Our sensitization to the cruelty with which children  are treated, until now commonly denied, and to the consequences of such treatment will as a matter of course bring to an end the perpetuation of violence from generation to generation.  ACU , the timeless message.

  • People whose integrity has not been damaged in childhood, who were protected, respected, and treated with honesty by their parents, will be – both in their youth and adulthood  - intelligent, responsive, emphatic and highly sensitive. They will take pleasure in life and will not feel any need to kill or even hurt others or themselves. They will use their power to defend themselves but not attack others. They will not be able to do otherwise than to respect and protect those weaker than themselves, including their children, because this is what they learned from their own experience and because it is this knowledge ( and not the experience of cruelty) that has been stored up inside them from the beginning. Such people will be incapable of understanding why earlier generations had to build up a gigantic war industry in order to feel at ease and s afe in this world. Since it will not have to be their unconscious life – task to ward off intimidation experienced at a very early age, they will be able to deal with attempts at intimidation in their adult life more rationally and more creatively.

The A Child Unheard Charity Foundation Trust, has now been established, the drive is on, to use every medium of communication, to allow everyone, across the Globe, to know that, there is hope, compassion, understanding, and love available to all, if one stretches out, grasps the message of ACU – a timeless – profoundly simple message. Then change can be born in everyone.

Education and intelligence have their roles to play, but their importance is strictly limited.

It is the heart that is the key so that our innocent eternal child is always in communion with his Father.

Then we will not or cannot lose contact with life

A CHILD UNHEARD IN EVERYONE TO BE FREE

A legacy. to be left, in my lifetime.

 

Profile of Arina Richard

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Name: Arina Richard
Date of Birth: 23rd Feb 1978
Education: Bachelor’s Degree in Business Administration
Occupation: Businessman in Kampala, Uganda
Experience: Has worked with and for various media organizations as an editor for over a decade. The magazines he has edited range from Christian, News, Fashion and Business, in addition to writing as a volunteer for several humanitarian organizations. His belief and faith is fellow man and unwavering commitment to causes that empower the disadvantaged shines through his every day work. He became part of the ACU when he was called upon to write David Russell’s testimony for the then biggest Christian magazine in East and central Africa where he worked as an editor.   
Arina currently owns a business run on the same model as ACUs’ cause-related nature. The main motivation for him is in being well positioned to help those in dire need.
“There can never be anything as fulfilling as being sold out a cause greater than our own selfish ends,” he often says. 

Extract form "The Integrity of the personality"

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The wish to return to childhood is, in most instances, a regressive wish - a desire to abrogate adult responsibilities and return to a state of dependence. But this wish may also have another aspect, to seek after the spontaneity and freedom of the secure child is a different matter and may, perhaps, be what is meant in the saying of Christ:  'Except ye be converted and become as little children ye shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven.' this is no regression to childishness, but rather an advance to such security and freedom with our fellow-men that we can be whatever we are and allow them to be the same.

Taken from "The Integrity of the personality" by Dr Anthony Storr (Honorary Consulting Psychiatrist to the Oxford Health Authority, and a fellow of the royal college of physicians )

 

Mark 10:15  See more....

'Except ye be converted and become as little children ye shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven' See more..

 

DEFYING THE STIGMA OF GIRLCHILD

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Situated just a few miles from the capital city of Kampala, Mityana is a district that is defined by its paradoxes. It is potentially one of the most agriculturally productive districts in Uganda yet ravaged by food shortage and biting poverty; has the biggest Anglican diocese in the country with Anglican-founded schools spread all over and yet it still has the most discriminative cases against girl-child education in the country.

 

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IN SEARCH OF HEALING THROUGH LOVE

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The world over, ACU-cases are replete. In Africa, ACU-situations are notably predominant among children in Refugee-camps; in Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) camps; child-soldiers; street children; slum children and among a majority of children in destitute households. Talking about HIV/AIDS orphans and children of single mothers or in the care of stepmothers would be like talking about yet another category of ACU-situations. One can’t simply cite CEDS [Children in Especially Difficult Situations] without having at the same time referred to yet another category of children falling within the ACU-description.

 

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A TRAGIC ACU STORY

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Denitz was the topic on everyone’s lips. She was beautiful to the core – at least in everyone else’s eyes. To them she was as spotless as they could possibly come. They waxed lyrical and almost exhausted all the known superlatives there are to describe a lady so haunting in her irresistible beauty. They were smitten!

 

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A Child Unheard (ACU) -A Human Condition

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 A Quest and A Mission
 
**The Quest  - What is A Child Unheard

 
The inspiration for A Child Unheard (ACU) had its roots firmly planted in the mind of the author of the poems  when he was but a mere sickly infant, although of course he was not aware of it at the time.
 
During a lifetime of turmoil and mental insecurity, David Russell has experienced enough of the upsets in  life to be able to fill several anthologies of his poetry but now ,in his middle years, he has decided to set out on a grand quest to help those who also had  similar fears to help them to explore their innermost psyches (ACU)  and develop  into people who can derive so much more pleasure ,faith, hope and love in life  than they could have otherwise possibly achieved without such positive input from his powerful poetry.

 

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A CHILD UNHEARD REFLECTIONS

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'The most important thing in healing is to move the heart. Once the heart has moved then healing has happened. When the inner emptiness has been filled with forgiveness, love and gratitude then that is healing.

 

David Russell's book moves my heart through the combination of gentle and touching photographs with heart-warming poems this book moved me by its beauty.'

 

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HONOURING OUR INNER CHILD

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 HONOURING OUR INNER CHILD

For most humans, an unconscious sense of being born with an inner wound prevails for a lifetime.

Often our parents were born with inner wounds.

We therefore become prisoners to life’s frustrations, continually searching for an answer to life’s meaning from the outside.

So from childhood struggles, through adult pains and hurts, we reach a point in life, where the pain becomes too much, our constant search for a meaning.

The point is reached, turn, we must, look within, and in solitude begin the journey of honouring our inner child. 

 We must all come to know that we are all made up of parts, each part capable of functioning as a separate little person.  The basic psychological problem for us human beings is to get all these parts to act together harmoniously.

 

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A Child Unheard story, written by a UK Doctor.

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The deepest needs of any human being are to be loved, accepted and valued. Sadly many people live with the pain of feeling that these needs are not being met. Sometimes it reflects their circumstances – experiencing a divorce, losing a loved one or experiencing hardship. For others the roots to these feelings go way back into childhood where their thinking and values are shaped.

 

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