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Angry Kids Learn by Repetition

This installment in my anger in children series has taken a while to write, but here we are at last!  I began that series before my infamous blog crash, and am slowly catching up on things around here.

One thing that’s clear about teaching our children how to express their anger appropriately, is that they don’t just start behaving perfectly after one outburst, one chat or one consequence. Children learn best via repetition, especially when it relates to behaviour.

Children need the rules repeated many times

Children have so many things they are learning at any given time, and for the under fives, they will not be able to remember all the boundaries you’ve set for appropriate ways to express anger. They will need to to have the rules/expectations/alternative responses repeated to them many times in order for them to be able to take them on board and put them into action.

The rules will feel foreign to them at first. It feels so natural for a child to hit back at a child who has hit them, and really, what we’re asking of them goes against the grain for little kids. It’s important to stick with it and don’t panic or give up if it feels as though your child is thumbing their nose at what you’re saying.

I remember when my eldest daughter was four and having some explosive anger outbursts! I found myself wondering where I’d gone wrong, panicking that what I was doing wasn’t working and basically second guessing my approach. Should I try something different? Is she ever going to actually learn? I’ll tell you, kids may act as though they’re refusing to listen to you, but deep inside, they are! It didn’t take long for her to learn what was expected of her, and now we rarely have a problem with her reacting inappropriately.

Likewise, with my son who was four when I began writing this series and is now five, he is getting it! Yet I went through a stage where I felt as though he never would! We need to have some faith in ourselves, faith in our children and some good old fashioned persistence.

It takes time for kids to become aware of the reactions of others to their anger

When children are younger, they’re more egocentric. The main concern is for how they feel. As they mature and grow, they become increasingly aware of the feelings of others. They become more concerned about others too. The more we talk to our kids about how anger works and how it should be expressed, the more children begin to notice how others feel when they get angry.

My son, over time, soon came to expect others to cry if he hurt them, or become equally angry in return. He soon learnt that if he didn’t hurt others or break their property, he was still ‘allowed’ to feel angry and would even be praised for expressing it in a healthy way! Once he experienced this a few times, he felt much more safe in his anger, and it seemed that it had less of an over powering ‘hold’ over him. Children can become quite frightened of their own anger, as if it almost takes over them and makes them feel as though they’re losing control.

The best gift we can give our kids is the security of feeling as though they have control over their feelings, and not the other way around. They can feel angry and still believe they’re a good person, both during and after the feeling. This is far better for a child’s self esteem than knowing they’re taking their anger to a harmful level and feeling as though they are ‘bad’ because of it.

It takes time for kids to observe others getting angry

Once children have an idea about the rules and expectations they are to follow when they’re angry, you will notice them watching how others, young and old, deal with their anger. My son notices his younger sister getting angry and throwing things. He flinches, and cries if he gets hurt. He sees how it feels. He sees that there are consequences for her, too.

He sees his older sister get angry. He sees her try to talk about it, or go off somewhere by herself to cool down. He sees that there are only positive outcomes when she does this. My son sees my partner and I get angry. We try to model healthy ways to express it, and if we fall short, he sees that we apologise and realises everyone is held accountable to the same expectations.

Now my son is aware of what is a reasonable way to express anger and what is not, he is keenly aware of everyone else’s behaviour when we’re out in public, or even in books or on tv. I can see that in his mind, he’s measuring it all up against the rules that have been set before him.

My son can now see, after repeated experience, how unpleasant harmful explosions of anger can be, and how easy healthy anger release can be. That anger isn’t something that has to be feared. Everyone gets angry, and it’s a part of life, and it’s perfectly acceptable. I think when children start out expressing their anger in a harmful way, they feel as though they’re in trouble for being angry in the first place! They don’t realise that it’s simply the way they’re reacting to their anger that is causing the problem.

It’s the repeated experience, over and over again, that teaches them what to do.

It takes time for children to form their own strategies and test them

As I’ve mentioned before, my son enjoyed pillow fights most of all as a way to release his anger without harming others. Over time, he’s become confident to control his anger enough to stop and tell me what he is angry about. He’s also taught himself to count to ten before reacting.

I’ve heard many people suggest the ‘count to ten’ method. I’ve never bothered to suggest it to my kids, because I don’t use it myself, and could never see the point. Yet this was an idea my son came up with on his own, and it works better for him than any other technique. I also notice that as he’s counting quietly to himself, he’s breathing deeply too! It comes down to what I said earlier: having faith in your child’s abilities.

The more my son tests different techniques, the more he’s working out which ones help him, and which ones he’d prefer not to use. With repetition, it has become a habit, something he can do now with less thought. He’s now empowered. Hell, so am I! Well… not really. You see, now Missy 3 is picking up where he left off, and I’ll be starting all these teachings again from scratch! Oh well, never a dull moment, I guess.

I liken teaching kids about healthy anger management to learning to put a new puzzle together. You start out not knowing how to do it, and it’s a slow process to put the whole picture together. Then, eventually, you come up with strategies (for example, starting with the straight-edged pieces) to work through the challenge. You find when you attempt the puzzle a second time it’s a little easier, and if you’ve completed it twenty times, you can do it on auto-pilot.

This is where the repetition of anger management techniques come into play for kids; consistently let them know your expectations, give them healthy strategies and let them practice them over and over again. Eventually, they will ‘get’ it.

Which stage are you at with your kids at the moment? Are they at the stage where it’s not out of hand yet, or just starting to explode? Or are they at the stage where they can get it out healthily?

 

 

 

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Consequences of Anger

In my last post of the anger in children series, I talked about mine and my families’ definition of what harmful expressions of anger are. Now, I’m talking about challenging our kids to consider the consequences of their anger. Obviously, children are individual people with little experience in stopping themselves from doing harm. Chances are they will act out inappropriately many, many times before they master the skill of managing their anger.

Although I discuss the moral reasons for harming others with my kids, morality is not a primary motivator for young children yet. Until they get to that point, I reinforce moral reasoning but also give consequences for both productive and unproductive behaviour. This motivates the child to try harder to be more civil. It establishes good habits and reinforces the rules. (I’m not necessarily talking about run-of-the-mill tantrums here. Although these ideas can help with that, too)

Motivating a child with consequences helps kids to feel good about doing the right thing and more willing to try to behave more appropriately next time. I believe hitting and doing other harmful things in anger does make them feel better in the short term. However, I also feel kids get frightened when they lose control and of the rage they’re feeling. They get torn between their anger and the ones they love. Deep down, they feel regret and may not like themselves much afterward. Having motivation to behave appropriately can set them free from these self-destructive feelings.

Time out as a consequence

I know time out isn’t popular with everyone, but I believe it has its place. When a child puts others in danger, I put them in time out to protect the other people being subject to it. It’s easy to talk about what time-out does for a child’s self esteem and such, but if others are being put in danger, I don’t give a flying fart. That child’s self esteem takes a back seat to the safety of others. I’ve had my kids become so enraged that they’ve thrown heavy items at others, or worse, hit others with them. I refuse to let the situation escalate to a point where someone ends up in hospital, if I can help it.

I’ve mentioned before that my son is at this stage of his anger, lately. We have a gate on our bedroom, with only our bed and bed linen in there. If he’s dangerously mad, I place him on the bed in there. Sometimes I talk to him in there and if he tries to hit me, I stand out of his striking distance. We talk if he’s willing. If my presence makes him madder, I leave him on his own until he’s calmed down a little. I find time alone is helpful to the child, sometimes. With no-one to make them angrier, they can mull things over.

Removal of privileges

This one’s self explanatory; take away something they value for a short time as a consequence of harmful actions.

Making amends

I mentioned this idea in the last post also. I think it’s important that kids be encouraged to be proactive in trying to ‘make things right’ again. Saying sorry is great, but sometimes children come up with more creative ideas. I believe it’s important to make amends in order for the child to take responsibility and ownership of their actions.

Talk with children about how their actions affect others besides themselves

This is where we bring in a little more moral reasoning, which is important for children to be exposed to. Some examples of consequences we might talk about with kids:

- People getting hurt

- Things getting broken.

- Being a role model. I explain to my older children that their actions, positive or not, serve as a way of teaching younger siblings how to behave. If we role model nice behaviour, our younger siblings will copy this and we can teach them right from wrong. Likewise, if we aren’t a good role model, they will copy this too. I also point out here that their younger sibling will probably direct this copied behaviour, right or wrong, at them.

- The idea that when we lose control of our anger, we rarely get what we wanted, if ever.

- If children try hard to manage their anger, they will be praised, or perhaps rewarded in some way.

What about grown-ups?

If there’s one thing kids hate more than anything, it’s being told what to do by grown-ups. In their eyes, we have it so easy and don’t have to be held accountable to anyone for our actions. It helps kids immensely to learn that we are just as accountable for our actions, if not more. It also opens their eyes as to how the real world works, and what they are preparing for in all of this. I like to talk about consequences grown ups face if they let their anger become harmful in the following ways:

- People won’t be their friend.

- They could go to jail for assault.

- They could lose their job.

- They might have to pay money to replace/repair items they damaged.

A consequence of not letting it out

This consequence is, I think, too complex to be discussing with young children, but I think it’s important for us as parents to reflect upon. When people suppress their anger most of the time, (or other emotions) it becomes a painful existence. Sometimes the pain becomes so unbearable that teens and adults may turn to drugs or self-harm to try to numb the pain. This is one consequence that is constantly in the back of my thoughts, reminding me to let my children express their pain. They need to be encouraged to feel it, and know they can and do survive it.

Do you challenge your children to think about the consequences of their anger?

Other reading:

Dealing with anger in children

Finding the source of your child’s anger

Healthy ways children can express their anger

Ground rules for anger

Is it ever ok to lose your cool?

How do I stop tantrums?

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Ground Rules For Anger

Here’s part four of my anger in children series as promised. I’m enjoying talking with all of you about this. Obviously, all our children get angry at some time. It’s frustrating when they take it too far and can mean a lot of hard work for us. I find laying down some boundaries about anger is a great place to start this work.

The boundaries I’m covering here are the ones we use in our family. They are very basic and common sense. Your family might come up with more, or tweak these ideas:

Anger has been taken too far when:

- Anyone is hurt or at risk of getting hurt. This includes people and animals. It includes but isn’t limited to hitting, kicking, scratching, pinching, hair-pulling or throwing things. I also include screaming that hurts our ears.

- Anyone’s belongings are damaged or at risk of being damaged. Our children are taught to look after their belongings and those of others’.

- If someone does/says hurtful or disrespectful things to others. Apart from nasty words, I also include spitting and rude gestures under this rule. If you’re not saying/doing something as part of a solution, chances are you’re being disrespectful.

- If someone makes us angry, it doesn’t give us the right to break any of the above rules in retaliation. This is an important rule, as often kids feel justified in doing this, for example if a child hits them. They feel it’s more than fair that they hit back. I teach them early on that this isn’t the case. I encourage them to tell a grown up and let them deal with the other person.

- Disrupting public peace. If we’re down the street or in a shop, I make it clear that other people do not want or like to hear you screaming or see you hitting things. It’s expected that they show consideration to everyone.

- We try to end our discussions about anger with this mantra: ‘I expect you to be loving, gentle and kind’. We can do this and still get our anger out in a healthy way. It just takes time and practice.

- If our children break any of the above rules, they are expected to make amends. Or, as we put it more simply with kids, make it right. This could be an apology, a hug or kiss, giving the person a drawing or a written note (if they’re old enough), helping to fix a broken toy and so on.

Do you have some ground rules for your childrens’ anger? What are they?

Other reading:

Dealing with anger in children

Finding the source of your child’s anger

Healthy ways children can express their anger

Consequences of anger

Is it ever ok to lose your cool?

How do I stop tantrums?

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Healthy Ways Children Can Express Their Anger

This is part three of my anger in children series. In the first post, I talked about inappropriate ways my son has been expressing his anger. I believe it’s important for anyone, kids included, to have the right to feel anger. To feel it fully and be allowed to express it. This series isn’t about stopping your children from getting angry. Anger is a part of life, and is normal. This series also isn’t about raising perfect little robots who are seen and not heard.

Anger is healthy

I want my children to learn to let their anger out in constructive, healthy ways. I believe this is an unhurried process, which comes with life experience, practice and boundary-setting. Missy 10, for the most part (we’ll say 99% of the time) is great at expressing her anger appropriately. This isn’t because she’s in some way a ‘better’ child than Mr 4. She’s older and has maturity, life experience, practise and years of her parents’ teachings under her belt.

She certainly wasn’t always this way and went through all the same struggles our son is facing now. When things get difficult with my son, I console myself with this reminder! It’s interesting to note that when she was four, she was behaving much the same way, and I was the one who was sick, and ended up in hospital for surgery! So bizarre…

Get it all out

I have a list of ways we can redirect our children’s anger. They allow children to vent without doing harm to anyone.

- Bang a drum, or punch playdough.

- Hit their bed, pillow or something soft that won’t get damaged or hurt the child.

- Talk to someone about their feelings, be it a friend, sibling, parent, pet or counsellor. Whoever the child is comfortable with.

- Sing.

- Ride a bike.

- Jump on a trampoline.

- Throw/hit/kick a ball around.

- Dance.

- Hug it out.

- Have a cry.

- Draw or paint.

- Imaginary play, particularly role-playing games.

- Write (for older children)

- Have a bath, swim or general water play. Water is very soothing to children.

- Any physical play that gets their energy out.

- Pillow fights!

Work with your child’s personality

It’s good to experiment with these ideas until you find what works for your child. My son benefits the most from pillow fights or anything physical. (Since the blow-up he had two days ago, he has been telling me when he feels he needs a pillow fight and I set the timer for 10 minutes. Once we’ve thrashed it out, and the timer goes off, we stop. I had to bring the timer in, otherwise he’d want to keep going all day long!) Other times, depending on the extent of his anger, he will cry, talk or hug.

Although he loves to draw, it’d never work for him during the peak of his anger. However, it does help him to draw when he’s calm, as he sometimes will reflect on his past feelings, talk about them and make sense of them. I’m sure there are many more wonderful ideas, so if you have any to share, I’d love to hear them.

Other reading:

Dealing with anger in children

Finding the source of your child’s anger

Ground rules for anger

Consequences of anger

Is it ever ok to lose your cool?

How do I stop tantrums?

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Finding the Source of Your Child’s Anger

‘What’s gotten into him lately?’ Us parents often find ourselves asking this when our child’s anger gets out of control. Or more frequent. This is part two of my anger in children series – figuring out what’s gotten our child so riled up.

Talk to me

When my child is calm, and not in the throes of rage, I talk to them about their anger. I look for things that are worrying, upsetting, frightening or annoying them. Over time, I’ve been teaching Mr 4 about how to name his feelings (think in terms of years, not overnight). This means that that when he’s feeling a certain way, I will use one word to describe it. With repetition, he’s learned what disappointment, frustration and a whole host of other feelings mean. It’s bloody hard for a child to express their feelings when they don’t know what they’re called!

My children enjoy playing our felt game, faces with feelings for fun, but it has the bonus of teaching them to identify and talk about emotions. They enjoy acting out the different feelings, making up scenarios, voices and dialogue. With this foundation, I can talk to my child knowing they’ll understand the emotional concepts I mention.

Reflective listening

I often use this approach here. (I don’t use it as often with Missy 10, as I can ask her what’s wrong and she’ll easily tell me. But it’s good to have a range of approaches for different personalities). Yesterday, after Mr 4 was more open to talking after an explosive episode, I told him, ‘You’re angry because yesterday I told you Daddy’s going back to hospital for a longer time’

Mr 4 tensed up with fury. I knew I was on the right track.

Him: ‘I don’t want him to go’

Me: ‘You’re going to miss Daddy when he’s in hospital’ He nodded.

Me: ‘Last time Daddy went to hospital, you told me he wasn’t coming back, remember?’ He nodded.

Me: ‘And did he come back?’ His eyes widened, and he nodded some more.

Me: ‘You were so surprised and excited when he came home, weren’t you?’ He nodded, got up, gave me a hug and began crying.  (Yes, I had some tears, too!)

I let him cry and told him it’s good to let his sadness out. Next, I told him, ‘you’re worried Daddy won’t come back this time too, aren’t you?’ He nodded, and I reassured him that he’d come back this time too, and it’d be such a happy time. He smiled at this, then became serious. ‘Why did you need a doctor’s appointment anyway?’ Ah-ha!

Can you see how this reflective listening works? Without having to interrogate your child, you can expose their deepest, darkest fears – the ones you wouldn’t have guessed. Let’s face it, we can only deal with these issues once they’re out on the table.

Four is such an emotionally intense age. You’ve got the over-active imagination, the monsters in the bedroom and above all, the most literal interpretation of cause and effect. See, my partner has had a lot of doctor’s appointments over the past year and a half. Notably, when he went to hospital for paint poisoning, it was within the hour of returning from a doctor’s appointment. Is it any wonder, that being four years old, he believes that a doctor’s appointment causes us to go to hospital? The truth is, it’s the illness, and the extent of it that caused it.

Similarly, that time he went to hospital, I was the one who rang the ambulance. My son was two years old at the time, and full of resentment toward me. All he could see was that I put his father there (and my partner was refusing to go!), and when he asked if he was coming home, I was the one saying no. He couldn’t see that the illness was causing the hospital stay then, either. To him, I made the phone call, therefore I caused it.

On further discussion, we talked about how he was afraid that both of his parents would end up in hospital at the same time, and he’d have no-one left to look after him. With reflective listening, we scraped through his anger and sadness to reveal a frightened little boy. I won’t bore you with the dialogue, but of course I reassured him that this wasn’t going to happen at all.

Preventative measures

Once we know the source of our child’s anger, we can use this to take preventative measures. I am making sure to explain everything I can about this hospital stay and checking if he has any more questions or worries about it.  Because my son gets very physical when he’s mad, I look for ways to help him have a physical release in his play. I see that it’s important that he spend lots of time with both parents as much as is possible, so we allow for that, too.

He and Missy 2 have had some dreadful fights lately, which have also made him angry. I try to ensure they have plenty of time apart to prevent that anger build-up. I remind myself to give my kids fish oil. It’s annoying how everytime things get stressful around here, I forget to give it to them, when in reality, that’s when they need it most!

Tomorrow, I’m going to talk about teaching our children healthy ways to express their anger. I believe if anger isn’t expressed, it can have destructive effects. My son avoids expressing his anger and bottles it up until he explodes. This is the life lesson he needs at the moment, and it’s the one we’re teaching him. It takes time, but I know we’ll get there.

To get in the mood for tomorrow’s installment, how do your kids express their anger? Are you happy with how they do it? What would you like to see improved?

Other reading:

Dealing with anger in children

Healthy ways children can express their anger

Ground rules for anger

Consequences of anger

Is it ever ok to lose your cool?

How do I stop tantrums?

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Dealing With Anger in Children

I’m writing this with a bruised chin tonight. You see, Mr 4 decided that he was so angry at the world, that throwing a heavy wooden toy at my face would make him feel better. Charming.

I mentioned here yesterday and also to my son that my partner is going to hospital next week for a long time. Every other time his dad’s gone to hospital has led my son to become increasingly angry and upset. Unfortunately, he expresses his anger explosively and violently. He becomes defiant, breaking the rules on purpose to get a reaction. He tries saying disrespectful things, such as ‘shut up’, that he knows he isn’t allowed to say.

After having broken the news to him about his father’s impending hospital stay, I braced myself for all of this. My son was right on schedule today, exploding like a time bomb.

As you can imagine, I also feel anger over his behaviour. Like any parent, sometimes I handle it well, other times I handle it terribly. What better time for me to write about this subject, whilst it’s so fresh in  my mind? I’m going to write a series about anger management for children over the next few days. Over the course of the series I’ll share how I dealt with my son’s behaviour this time around.

Each day, I’ll cover different aspects that I’m teaching my children about anger. They include:

Finding the source of the anger

Healthy ways children can express their anger

Ground rules for anger

Consequences for harmful expressions of anger

Repetition

Anger in the real world

Teaching a child how anger works.

I hope you’ll journey with me during this series, and share your thoughts and ideas with everyone. What I’d love to hear from you today, is what you feel causes your child/ren to get angry?

Other reading:

Is it ever ok to lose your cool?

How do I stop tantrums?

Emotional development – how help children talk about feelings.

 

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Sibling Rivalry Solutions

When I fell pregnant with Mr 4, my second son, I knew everything would change. Yes, Missy 10 (then 5) had grown up with her three step siblings visiting now and then. But this was different. She was finally going to have a baby brother. Living with us, being raised alongside her. Sharing the affections of her parents.

I knew that fighting would be inevitable, but I welcomed it. I think kids learn a lot about life from those fights with their siblings. They learn how to problem-solve, compromise and think about what is morally right and wrong. They learn how to express anger, frustration and sadness appropriately. Nicole Avery wrote about the importance of not becoming the referee and letting children work through the problem themselves. I fully agree.

What I’d like to focus on today, is the type of sibling fights that can go on all day long, possibly even day after day. This situation can become stressful for the entire household. The children tire of having the same repetitive argument, and parents get fed up with listening to it. Because it continues all day, it’s no longer constructive for the kids to be left to work it out. I find these types of arguments are often caused by siblings who are spending too much time together.

I had a day like this yesterday. Missy 2 and Mr 4 spent the entire day provoking one another, then hitting or pushing each other. Then, they’d whine to us about what the other child did. Missy 10 wasn’t a part of this dynamic, and usually isn’t, because she’s at school. She gets a break from them, and they, her. (Come back to me during school holidays, and I’ll be singing a different tune)

I looked back on the types of days my youngest two have been having. Wake up in the same room (we’ve had to make them share a room for a little while due to renovation issues), have breakfast together. Play together, lunch together, bath together, dinner together, bedtime routine together. I think if I had that much togetherness with just one person, I’d turn on them, too!

So, my solution for the ‘I’m sick of your face’ blues, is to simply split them both up, giving them something constructive to do. I find when siblings fight constantly like this, that the fight takes over their play as well. They forget to play, because they are so focused on the negativity.

My partner took Missy 2 out to do this:

Jumping her jollies out, kicking her aggression into the ball.

…and I took Mr 4 into the studio to do this:

Finding a new focus, concentrating on scissor and gluing skills. I like him to do this for school readiness preparation, anyway. I asked Mr 4 if he was enjoying the break from his little sister. He looked at me with his eyes widened with this new realisation, breathing a massive sigh of relief, and said, ‘YES!’ I explained to him that we all need a break from people sometimes, and that he and Missy 2 would probably end up playing happily later as a result. They could enjoy each other again, as they usually do.

Mr 4 was chuffed at that suggestion. We didn’t have this talk with Missy 2, as it’s probably a bit too ‘heavy’ for her just yet. But in getting Mr 4 committed to the cause of getting along, he made the effort once they got back together. Missy 2 was then also open to make an effort as a result.

….And play nicely again, they did. When it was bath time today, I tried washing them separately, in keeping with the idea of giving them more breaks like this from one another. Missy 2 looked worried. She wanted to know why her brother wasn’t in the bath with her!

It’s true what they say: absence makes the heart grow fonder. Are your kids getting along today?

Other reading:

Dealing with anger in children

Regressive behavior in children

Helping kids to make choices

Emotional development – how to help children talk about feelings

Emotional development – initiative

Reflective listening

 

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What can you do if your child has a public tantrum?

I hope you’ve been enjoying my tantrum series.

As promised, I’m going to talk about the most feared of tantrums, the public tantrum. Before this, let’s look back on what’s been covered:

Why children have tantrums

Tantrum triggers and how to avoid them

Using language as a tool against tantrums

So, we’ve talked about what causes tantrums, ways we can prevent them and how to build up our childrens’ communication skills to help get through the tantrum stage more smoothly. But what about if you have implemented all of these strategies and your child still has a tantrum anyway?

Relax. Remember, it’s a normal part of a child’s development, and it’s nothing you’ve done wrong. It can take time for a child to learn to accept that not everything will happen they way they want it to in life, all the time. I have focused more in this series on understanding the motives behind tantrums and preventative measures, because I believe that it’s all the work we put in here that pays dividends.

I’ve yet to meet two parents who’ve ever agreed 100% on the best ways to raise children. Most parents and carers have varied yet passionate opinions on how to deal with a child who is throwing a tantrum. I’m going to reiterate that these ideas are only my approach, and I enjoy open discussion on the wide variety of ways other parents deal with it. Don’t be afraid to be creative in your approach, try your own ideas. You know your child better than anyone else in the world. As always, let’s respect each others’ differences and let everyone have the freedom to have the floor with their opinions.

With that little disclaimer out of the way, I’m going to focus on the tantrums where a child doesn’t get something they desperately want. I have a few ‘constants’ that do not change, regardless of the childs’ age:

I don’t say no, then say yes after the tantrum.

Your child wants an ice cream. For whatever reasons, you’ve said no. Child screams, maybe even throws themselves on the floor. This is stressful for parents and carers. Often it seems easier and so tempting to just say, ‘oh, alright then, you can have the ice cream!’ If you do this, I guarantee that the tantrum will stop instantly. I also guarantee that your child will throw more tantrums in the near future and will probably take longer to move out of this tantrum stage of their lives.

What happens when a child is given in to like this, is that the child is rewarded for expressing their wants in an inappropriate way. No, we don’t expect perfect behaviour from a one year old, or a three year old. It’s normal for them to try to see what will work for them. But it’s up to us to teach them better ways to express this. When we teach our children that screaming for what we want doesn’t achieve the desired result, over time they become capable of finding other ways to ask for things, also to accept that sometimes it’s no.

What would happen if we applied for a job and didn’t get it? Asked a potential love interest out on a date and were rejected? Would kicking and screaming help the situation? No. Does this mean that we expect our children to behave like adults at all times? No. We expect our children to try inappropriate behaviour, and then we repetitively teach them what the actual expectation will be of them in the real world. We spend this time preparing them.

So if it’s no when my child first asks, then it’s no after they’ve had a tantrum too.

Ignore the tantrum.

Now, I don’t want people to say, ‘but what if they’re hungry/tired? They’re upset because they need something!’ Yes, I agree. In those cases, if that is the cause, as I’ve already covered in previous topics, you deal with it. But today I’m talking about dealing with tantrums where a child does not like hearing the word, ‘no’.

I find that a child tantrumming over not getting what they wanted is much like dealing with someone who is ranting when they’re drunk. You can’t reason with them during the rant. I personally choose not to reward the behaviour with attention. Once they have calmed down, then I will talk to them about the situation. I am a strong believer in letting a child have their thoughts sometimes. Giving them time to themselves to reflect on what they are doing. Thinking about if it’s even working. I remember back all the way to two years of age in my childhood. I remember throwing tantrums. One of the most loving things my parents did for me was to leave me alone with my head, and let me make sense of it. If I am concerned that my child is in danger or putting others in danger, then I move them somewhere safe and leave them to it.

Create a diversion.

I’ve added this idea more for the very young tantrummers, say between the ages 1-2 years old. Because their attention span can be shorter, often we can redirect the behaviour towards another activity or interest. A child may be ready to scream for that ice cream, but if we can say, ‘look Gretel, there’s a fire truck! It’s big and it’s red and let’s go play with it/look at it!’ sometimes the child will forget all about it.

Some may consider this rewarding the behaviour. I disagree. They’ve forgotten their tantrum, and they didn’t get the ice cream, did they?

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Language as a tool against tantrums

This week I’ve been talking a lot about tantrums. We’ve talked about the ‘why‘, the triggers and today I’m talking about how we can use language to help our child and ourselves.

I’ve mentioned before the frustration a child feels when they lack the ability to put their wants and feelings into words. So my best tip in tantrum prevention, and getting through the tantrum phase more quickly and easily is expanding on a child’s communication skills.

Give your child a vocabulary for emotions.

If children can put a word to different feelings, or know what they mean, it becomes a way of communicating what they are feeling. My three year old son has been taught to differentiate common feelings: happy, sad, angry. We also have taught him the meaning of the feeling, ‘frustration’ and ‘disappointment’. These are two feelings that are very common causes of tantrums, and very hard emotions for kids to put into words, unless we use them often. We did this with Missy 9 when she was in the tantrum stage, also. Often, my son will use these words to describe how he’s feeling, and when he’s too upset to tell us, we can ask him (‘are you upset, angry, frustrated?’) and he will nod or shake his head at the word he is feeling. Usually, once we’ve nailed how he’s feeling, we find he can’t help but start talking about what is bothering him.

Some ways we can teach kids to understand different feelings:

- through pretend play. You, or your child/ren can act out different feelings. Make it fun. Kids love watching mums and dads pretending to cry. Little sadists, they are… You can pretend with toys, puppets, whatever you like.

- through songs. Try, ‘If you’re happy and you know it’ or, ‘how do you feel today?’

- via stories. When you’re reading a story with your child, stop to look at the pictures. Ask your child how they think the character is feeling. If it’s a feeling that is sad, angry, etc you can ask the child, ‘what do you think would make him happy again?’

- when watching tv shows. You can ask the same sorts of questions as you would when reading a story.

- encourage them to observe other people, such as their brothers or sisters and think about how they are feeling. This has the side benefit of encouraging compassion for others as well.

- give names to the feelings when they come over the child. I’ve mentioned before that when any of my children are frustrated, particularly when little, I will say, ‘you’re frustrated, aren’t you?’ or, ‘I can see how angry/upset you are’.

- through art. When your child is drawing or painting, or creating something, you can sometimes bring discussion about feelings into it. If your child is drawing a person or an animal, you can ask your child how the person in the drawing is feeling, and what made them feel that way. You can ask what would make the animal happy.

- when you’re listening to music, talk about whether it sounds like a sad song, a happy song, an angry song, etc.

Help your child to widen their vocabulary in general.

The more language skills a child has, the less they will tantrum.

- Talk to your child often, talk about what they are doing, what you are doing, describe how you are walking up the steps together, or washing your tummy in the bath, describe anything that occurs in your day.

- Tell your child the names of objects, and praise them when they try to say them. An important one was for us to teach our daughter the word, ‘cup’. Once she could attempt to say that word, we managed to remove that tantrum trigger, because we could make out what she was trying to say. In turn, she learnt that saying words was a more likely way to meet her needs and wants than screaming or grunting, and led to her wanting to try other words, too.

- Read with your child often. We all know this is an obvious way to develop a child’s language skills, but it’s still important to mention it here.

Role model language when you are angry/upset/frustrated.

We can teach our children that us adults get upset, frustrated and angry too. If children can see us showing appropriate ways of expressing those feelings, it makes it so much easier for them to see what we expect them to do when it’s their turn. Think about what you do or say when you are angry. Do you yell and scream? Do you slam things on the table?

Hey, we’re all human, and we all sometimes react in a way we wished we hadn’t. I’m not just talking about with our children, I’m talking about with life in general. This isn’t intended to judge anyone, or criticise at all. But I know in myself, my moods and my temper can easily get the better of me at times, and it’s important to keep it or get it in check, because I have three pairs of eyes watching how I handle it. Learning about the ‘done thing’ by adults, so to speak.

Here’s the list of what I like to aim for in terms of role modelling these feelings in front of children:

- I try to tell my kids how I’m feeling. I don’t always go into why I’m upset or angry, because sometimes they are for adult reasons, and not my childrens’ burden to bear. But if they can handle the reason I’m feeling a certain way, I aim to tell them. Examples are:

‘I’m just really angry because the cat scratched my leg and it  hurts a lot.’

‘I’m frustrated because I’ve been trying to open this jar and it’s stuck!’

‘I’m disappointed, because I wanted vegemite on toast, but now the jar’s empty’

- I try to tell the kids what I think I might do about it.

‘I think I need to sit down for a minute until I calm down, and my leg stops hurting’

‘Maybe I’ll ask Daddy if he can help me to open this jar.’

‘Oh well, I might have cereal for breakfast instead’.

I have deliberately used the words, ‘aim for’ and ‘try to’ when making up this list. The reason being, is that I’m human and I fall short often. Most people do, it’s human nature. The good news is, we can teach our kids through role modelling, what not to do as well!

Kids sometimes get really scared of their tantrums, because they know they are out of control, and it’s not a nice feeling for them. They might think it makes them ‘bad’, or think we won’t love them as much because they weren’t completely perfect. What if they could see adults making errors in their judgement, losing control? (Within reason, of course) Won’t that make them feel that they’re not so bad when it happens to them? I think so!

Sometimes, like a lot of parents, I’ve yelled when I know I shouldn’t have at people, including my kids. I think it can help a lot to apologise to our kids if they see us go over the top. An example:

‘I’m sorry I was silly before. I shouldn’t have yelled like that. I think I should’ve just walked away to calm down.’

If any of you have ever seen your child copy the way you do something, be it a phrase you often use, or facial mannerisms, you’ll know just how powerful your example is to your children. Good or bad. I find my two older kids often come back to me later after they’ve overreacted to something, and really surprised me with a heartfelt apology, and an explanation why they lost control. An example could be Missy 9: ‘I’m sorry I was rude at the shops. I really wanted that magazine, and when you said no, I still really wanted it. I promise I’ll try not to nag you next time’.

When this genuine sort of apology is given to me, I like to thank them, and let them know we all make mistakes, and the main thing is to learn from them so next time we can try to do things differently.

I hope you come back to read my next post about public tantrums. I know this is the type most of us struggle with! I’m also going to talk about what we can do if you’ve avoided the triggers, you’ve done everything you can to avoid tantrums, and your child still has a tantrum anyway. Kelly from Be a Fun Mum has aptly suggested I call it, ‘Parents Eat Humble Pie’. I must say, it has its merits!

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Tantrum triggers and how to avoid them

So far, I’ve been talking about tantrums and the different types there are. Today I want to get readers thinking in terms of triggers. Sometimes, when our child first starts a new sort of tantrum, we can be mystified as to what made them so frustrated and upset. Often in the heat of the moment, it can seem like they are having tantrums for no apparent reason. When we become aware that certain events can trigger tantrums, and begin to observe what else is going on at the time, we can work on tantrum prevention, or minimising the extent of the tantrum.

Squiggle Mum shared with us her tantrum tracker which can help a parent or carer to remember triggers, or to watch for a pattern, or a commonality in tantrums, thank you Squiggle Mum!

This list is not extensive, but you may be able to relate some of them to your child’s tantrums. If not, it’ll give you a good idea of what sorts of things to look out for. When looking for triggers, my suggestion is to start when you have a full day to just observe your child in their day to day routine. Obviously, you still have other things you have to do at the same time!  But here’s a good list of common tantrum triggers:

- As mentioned before, frustration  at lack of language. I find with my children, it’s usually been because they’ve wanted the same item repeatedly, so I use one word to describe what they want, eg, ‘cup’. When they start grunting, pointing and reaching madly, that’s when I ask, ‘cup? Do you want your cup?’ If they relax and look happy, then you’ve got it! Eventually, they will make an attempt to say the word, even if they don’t say properly, you’ll know that’s their word. Often, a child might come up with a hand action that relates to that item they often want. If you can keep aware of these subtle movements, then it can become a way for your child to communicate with you. Many parents also like to teach their children simple sign language actions to help their child through this stage.

- Tiredness. Does your child often start throwing tantrums a little before bedtime or naptime? Or have they had a busy day and are tired just because? I have sometimes moved my childrens’ naptimes forward by about half an hour, just so that they don’t have to get to that stage. If they are no longer napping, sometimes just some time with a story or other quiet play can help to diffuse a tantrum triggered by tiredness.

- Hunger. Little ones can get grouchy sometimes if they are hungry. Do they often have a tantrum right before lunch? Or dinner? This has been the case with all of my kids at some stage when they’ve been very young, and like the tiredness trigger, moving the eating routine forward just a tiny bit can help to quell prospective tantrums in the future.

- Trying to learn a new skill. Often, when a child takes on a new challenge, such as trying to put a puzzle together, dress themselves, or anything that is important to them to master, at first, they can’t do it. The bottom line is, for a little kid, they just want to do it, and when they can’t, it sucks. An offer of help from a well-meaning parent or sibling can compound the problem, because they don’t want someone else to do it for them, they want to do it themselves.

I tend to say to my children in this situation, ‘you’re frustrated, aren’t you? You want to put those socks on’. I find doing this first allows the child to feel that someone at least understands their dilemma, and this can often calm them enough for a moment. Kids who hear this also tend to be more open to what you are going to say next, because they know you are both now working towards the same goal. I try very hard to keep my hands off what they are doing for as long as I can (it’s their skill to master, remember?).

Next, depending on the child’s developmental stage, I will either ask them why they think it isn’t working or gently tell them what isn’t working, and make a suggestion as to what might make the job easier. ‘The sock is a lot smaller than your foot, isn’t it? But what if we stretch this elastic out to make it bigger? Then your foot will fit into it better, and you can slide it on more.’ What will often happen, is the child will try out your idea, and it will either work and they’ll feel wonderful, or it won’t work, but because they’ve had the chance to try, they might be more open to letting you help with the last part of the task for them.

- Siblings or other children bothering them. This one is tricky. If another child is  repeatedly upsetting your child, you may not see it very often. The other child may wait until you are not looking before snatching a toy from the child prone to tantrums (especially if it’s a younger child, more so if that child cannot yet speak much), hitting them, saying something to upset the child, or doing one of the many things kids can do to drive each other up the wall. This is where the observation stuff comes in very handy.

Usually, you can try to be unobtrusive and discover what is being done by the other child to bother your child so much. Many parents and carers can get quite a shock at what they find! If you have an especially careful child, you might not see it happen even if you are watching with an eagle eye. When this is the case, I usually get one of the other siblings not involved in the power play to keep an eye out for me, and let me know what the other child is doing.

The great thing about this is that it provides the child throwing the tantrum with an immense sense of relief and you can go on to deal with the other child’s behaviour.

It’s so useful to become aware of the triggers to your child’s tantrums. Facilitating understanding can lessen your frustration with your child’s tantrum, and help you to more clearly come up with a plan of how to deal with it. When parents and carers start watching for the triggers, they often find that the tantrum they have everyday, is at the same time, and at the same part of the routine. My two year old was often having a tantrum session right before lunch, as she was hungry and tired. When this happened, I would quickly put on her favourite ‘The Fairies’ dvd, which settled her instantly, just for long enough for me to make some lunch. I fed her then quickly popped her into bed for a nap. Once I began moving her lunch and nap time forward just a tiny bit, we managed to prevent the whole shebang. So, the main point I’d like to focus on, is that it’s the pattern that we watch for with triggers.

My next post will be about using language to help you and your child to navigate more smoothly through the tantrum stage. I’d also like to just say quickly, that I’m enjoying the responses on this series. I love that everyone commenting is so passionate about their own experiences!





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