Before, During, After Map

Making Sense Of What Happened Together

A shared “story” conversation that focuses on feelings first. Memory and truth can wobble, especially after trauma.

Before the moment
“Making sense” works best when it feels safe and curious, not like cross-examination.
What might be happening underneath?
  • Trauma can scramble memory. Under stress, details get fuzzy, time can feel distorted, and “truth” can shift.
  • A child may fill gaps with assumptions, or cling to one detail because it is easier than the feelings underneath.
  • Some children fear blame, so they rewrite the story to protect themselves, or to protect someone else.
  • For some, feelings are safer than facts. For others, facts are safer than feelings.
Support that helps
  • Set the tone, “This is not about getting you in trouble. This is about understanding what it felt like.”
  • Start with feelings first, “Where in your body did you feel it?” “What was the biggest feeling?”
  • Choose the right format for the child, talk while walking, drawing, Lego, baking, or side-by-side in the car.
  • For younger children, introduce a playful “pause and rewind” idea, we rewind gently, not to catch them out.
Gentle prompt
Am I trying to prove what happened, or understand how it felt? Feelings first builds safety.

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