Tools for Detecting Field Wounds in Children
How to Identify When a Child’s Behavior Is a Signal of a Relational, Environmental, or Systemic Wound — Not a Personal Deficit
Purpose
To help you detect field wounds in children — the ruptures, contradictions, pressures, and incoherences in their relational environment that show up as “behavior.” These tools teach you to read the child’s signals as data about the field, not as evidence of something wrong with the child.
When to Use These Tools
- A child’s behavior suddenly shifts.
- A child becomes dysregulated in predictable contexts.
- A child is labeled “difficult,” “sensitive,” or “defiant.”
- A child is melting down, shutting down, or withdrawing.
- You want to understand what the child’s nervous system is telling you about the field.
How These Tools Work
Children do not create field wounds.
Children reveal field wounds.
Their behavior is the dependent variable.
The field is the independent variable.
These tools help you decode the wound by reading the child’s signals.
Tool 1 — The Behavior‑as‑Broadcast Decoder
What the child does is a message about what the field is doing.
Step 1 — Identify the Behavior
Ask: What is the child doing?
Examples:
- melting down
- withdrawing
- clinging
- refusing
- escalating
- shutting down
- becoming hypervigilant
Step 2 — Identify the Triggering Condition
Ask: When does this behavior appear?
Look for:
- transitions
- separation
- noise
- conflict
- unpredictability
- adult dysregulation
- boundary inconsistency
Step 3 — Identify the Field Wound
Ask: What does this behavior protect the child from?
Common wounds:
- chaos
- unpredictability
- emotional volatility
- adult fragility
- lack of structure
- lack of attunement
- relational inconsistency
The behavior is the child’s adaptation to the wound.
Tool 2 — The Nervous System Temperature Check
The child’s body reveals the wound before the behavior does.
Step 1 — Scan the Child’s Body
Look for:
- shallow breathing
- rigid posture
- darting eyes
- collapse
- fidgeting
- pacing
- freezing
Step 2 — Identify the Temperature
- Cool → regulated
- Warm → activated
- Hot → overwhelmed
- Burning → dysregulated
- Scorched → shutdown
Step 3 — Map the Wound
Ask: What in the environment raised the temperature?
The temperature rise reveals the wound source.
Tool 3 — The Field‑Mismatch Detector
Children destabilize when the field contradicts their needs.
Step 1 — Identify the Child’s Need
Examples:
- predictability
- quiet
- space
- closeness
- clarity
- slower pace
- sensory safety
Step 2 — Identify the Field Condition
Examples:
- chaos
- noise
- pressure
- adult urgency
- emotional volatility
- unclear expectations
Step 3 — Identify the Mismatch
The mismatch is the wound.
Tool 4 — The Adult‑State Scanner
Children react to the adult’s nervous system, not their words.
Step 1 — Scan the Adult
Ask:
- Are they regulated?
- Are they rushed?
- Are they irritated?
- Are they overwhelmed?
- Are they dissociated?
Step 2 — Map the Child’s Reaction
If the child escalates when the adult is dysregulated,
the wound is relational, not behavioral.
Tool 5 — The Boundary‑Integrity Test
Children collapse when boundaries are inconsistent or unsafe.
Step 1 — Identify the Boundary
Examples:
- bedtime
- transitions
- screen time
- leaving the house
- sharing
- chores
Step 2 — Assess Boundary Integrity
Ask:
- Is the boundary clear?
- Is it consistent?
- Is it predictable?
- Is it emotionally safe?
Step 3 — Identify the Wound
Boundary inconsistency = field wound.
Boundary harshness = field wound.
Boundary absence = field wound.
Tool 6 — The Safety‑Signal Reader
Children show you when the field feels unsafe.
Step 1 — Look for Safety‑Seeking Behaviors
Examples:
- clinging
- hiding
- scanning
- freezing
- hypervigilance
- controlling behavior
Step 2 — Identify the Missing Safety Signal
Ask: What safety cue is absent?
Examples:
- predictability
- attunement
- calm adult presence
- clear structure
- emotional containment
The missing cue reveals the wound.
Tool 7 — The Emotional‑Permission Gauge
Children wound when their emotions are not allowed.
Step 1 — Identify the Emotion
Examples:
- anger
- sadness
- fear
- frustration
- excitement
Step 2 — Identify the Field’s Reaction
Ask:
- Is the emotion welcomed?
- Is it dismissed?
- Is it punished?
- Is it ignored?
- Is it reframed?
Step 3 — Identify the Wound
Emotion‑punishing fields create emotional wounds.
Tool 8 — The Role‑Assignment Detector
Children destabilize when cast into roles they cannot hold.
Step 1 — Identify the Role
Examples:
- The Easy Child
- The Responsible Child
- The Quiet Child
- The Helper
- The Peacemaker
- The Problem Child
Step 2 — Identify the Pressure
Ask: What must the child do to maintain this role?
Step 3 — Identify the Wound
Role assignment = relational wound.
Tool 9 — The Field‑Trigger Map
Children show you exactly what the field cannot metabolize.
Step 1 — Identify the Trigger
Examples:
- transitions
- boundaries
- noise
- conflict
- unpredictability
- separation
Step 2 — Identify the Field’s Weak Point
The trigger reveals the wound.
Tool 10 — The Repair‑Readiness Gauge
Children cannot repair until the field is safe.
Step 1 — Assess the Field
Ask:
- Is the adult regulated?
- Is the environment calm?
- Is the child grounded?
Step 2 — Assess the Child
Ask:
- Are they reachable?
- Are they present?
- Are they breathing steadily?
Step 3 — Identify the Wound
If repair is impossible, the wound is still active.
What These Tools Reveal
- Children’s behavior is a field diagnostic, not a personal flaw.
- Field wounds show up in the child’s body before their behavior.
- Adult dysregulation is often the wound source.
- Boundary inconsistency and emotional invalidation create wounds.
- Children destabilize when the field contradicts their needs.
- Repair requires reading the field, not correcting the child.
Field Impact
Using these tools:
- protects children from misdiagnosis and blame
- restores the adult’s ability to read the field accurately
- reveals the structural conditions harming the child
- strengthens relational safety and attunement
- transforms “behavior problems” into solvable field problems
- supports the child’s nervous system, identity, and dignity
Children are not the wound.
Children are the signal of the wound.
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