cover image Depressed Child: A Parent's Guide for Rescusing Kids

Depressed Child: A Parent's Guide for Rescusing Kids

Douglas A. Riley. Taylor Trade Publishing, $15.95 (208pp) ISBN 978-0-87833-187-1

Clinical psychologist Riley (The Defiant Child) tackles a difficult subject with aplomb in this keenly insightful guide for parents. ""For children and adolescents, the depressive state makes them feel like astronauts whose tethers have been cut, and they are drifting in space,"" he writes. He not only explains how to identify the symptoms of depression and the ""negative beliefs"" ""no one will ever like me,"" ""I am made of inferior stuff,"" ""death is an option,"" and so on that are so often at its core, but also provides tools for what he terms ""Planning the Rescue Mission."" Ten brief but thorough chapters cover the most common negative beliefs that trigger depression and such companion problems as substance abuse, prematurely intense relationships (what he calls ""miniature marriages"") that blindside adolescents when they come to an end, and suicide. Riley illustrates each point with case studies that offer readers a chance to learn from his dialogues with his patients. He suggests strategies for everything from closing ""the physical distance between you and your child"" in order to soothe and encourage them, to some particular lines of questioning for uncovering negative beliefs, to the crucial, often overlooked act of listening (""your ears cannot be fully open until your mouth is fully shut""). He also discusses when to seek professional help and how to step in swiftly and effectively in the case of a suicidal child. Riley's advice is commonsensical and sound, and the concrete tools he offers in this slim, practical volume provide a lifeline to parents of any child struggling with depression. (Mar.)