Before, During, After Map

Patterns Rather Than Incidents

Moving away from reacting to single moments, and toward noticing what repeats, what builds, and what slowly shifts over time.

Before the moment
When everything feels urgent, it is easy to treat each behaviour as a fresh problem. Patterns help us step back.
What might be happening underneath?
  • Trauma-driven behaviour often follows rhythms, after school, before bed, after contact, during transitions.
  • Individual incidents can feel intense, but they are usually part of a longer story.
  • Stress, fear, and unmet needs tend to leak out in familiar ways.
  • When carers are exhausted, the brain looks for immediate fixes rather than wider understanding.
Support that helps
  • Zoom out. Ask “When does this usually happen?” rather than “Why did this happen today?”
  • Notice patterns across days or weeks, not just difficult evenings.
  • Share observations with other carers or professionals using themes, not incidents.
  • Remind yourself that repetition does not mean failure, it means information.
Gentle prompt
If I looked at the last month instead of today, what patterns would I notice?

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