First came the bad dreams.
Within days of witnessing her mother's death, the 2-year-old girl stopped sleeping, her relatives say. She then started having flashbacks to that night and hallucinated that she had blood on her hands that she couldn't wash off.
The girl had been staying with relatives since her 27-year-old mother, Raven Gant, was shot and killed Thanksgiving night in an apparent domestic dispute with the toddler's father. Randall Watkins, 41, was arrested at the scene and has since been charged with murder.
Many children who experience trauma go on to lead relatively normal lives. But in others, trauma increases the risk of depression and substance abuse and can lead to more aggressive behaviors in adulthood, research shows.
The toddler's behavior didn't surprise Abigail Gewirtz, a University of Minnesota family social science professor, whose research has found that kids also cope in ways that don't always make sense to observers.
"Sometimes, they see kids who've just lost a parent running and jumping and cycling and watching TV, and they think, like, 'Don't they care that they lost their mother?' " said Gewirtz, who serves as director of the U's Institute for Translational Research in Children's Mental Health. "Well they do, they just grieve in a different way."
Court records show that when a social worker interviewed the girl on Dec. 2, she showed no outward signs of stress.
"She had her hair nicely braided and was wearing clean, weather-appropriate clothing," the records said. "She appeared content with her environment and seemed connected to several family members at the home."