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"Distress tantrums happen because essential brain pathways between a child's higher brain and his lower brain haven't developed yet. These brain pathways are necessary to enable a child to manage his big feelings. As a parent, your role is to soothe your child while he experiences the huge hormonal storms in his brain and body. If you get angry with a child for having a distress tantrum, he may stop crying, but this may also mean that the fear system in his brain has triggered, over-riding his separation system. Or he may simply have shifted into silent crying, which means his level of the stress chemical cortisol will remain sky-high. As we have seen throughout brain research, uncomforted distress can leave a child with toxic levels of stress hormones washing over the brain." ~ Neuroscientist Margot Sunderland
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"Odd as it may seem, children who hit
are children who are afraid. The fears that cause trouble for a child
who hits usually have their roots in some frightening experience earlier
in her life, even though she may not seem frightened at all. To manage
her fear, the frightened child develops aggressive behavior that flares
any time she feels tense. Instead of crying or saying she feels scared
when her fears are triggered, she tightens up, can’t ask for help, and
lashes out." -- Patty Wipfler
It's not so easy to feel love in the face of aggression. We
may know intellectually that our child is lashing out because she's
overwhelmed or scared, but we still move into "fight or flight" because
we feel like it's an emergency. READ POST
"Dr
Laura...Things have gotten
better since we stopped using timeouts and the occasional spanking, but I
can't seem to help my son feel safe enough
to stop stuffing his feelings....he goes from trying to hit his
sister to yelling at the dog and won't let the feelings out so it
happens again and again. I try to stay close (to help him with his feelings) but he just runs
from room to room."
This smart mom knows that her son's misbehavior is a cry for help. But how can she help him when he doesn't feel safe enough to show her his feelings? By building safety through play when he "misbehaves." Here's how.
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"2 year-olds argue with their parents 20 to 25 times an hour." -- Child Development
Between 12 and 15 months, we learn a wonderful word: "No!"
It's an ecstatic discovery. We learn we are separate, autonomous
beings with a will of our own who can impact what happens in the world.
We delight in saying, "No!" at every opportunity. READ POST
"An angry child is one who is quite frightened and sad underneath her tough stance. However small the issue, she feels that something absolutely vital to her is being threatened, and she has no choice but to fight. She also feels alone. As far as she can tell, no one understands her, no one will come to her rescue, and everyone is out to hurt her. Children naturally lean toward affection and companionship. When you see a child fiercely attacking her loved ones, you can assume that she is sitting on extremely painful feelings. She puts up her guard, daring us to care that she is hurt and needs help." - Patty Wipfler READ POST
Mommy: “Avery, you must be getting hungry. Its time to walk
home and make some yummy peanut butter sandwiches for lunch. Would you
like to walk or ride in the stroller?”
Avery: “No Mommy, I’m sitting on the swing.” READ POST
"How
many times have you felt forced/nudged/shamed/coerced into parenting in a
way you don't usually because you were in a public situation? I know I
have, and it still happens now that my kids are out of the toddler
tantrum stage." - Ask Moxie
"Where
I struggle is under the judgmental gaze of grandparents who believe in
PUNISHMENT and CONSEQUENCES when the line is crossed. I can almost hear a
tsk, tsk as I do my empathic parenting. Do others struggle with this?
No matter how old I get....I still want parents' approval, you know?" -
Ann READ POST






Comments
or he'll be ready for those hugs. I learned that my little guy doesn't like being asked to talk about the tantrums. He'll talk about it when he's ready. Sometimes he doesn't want to ever talk about it. Other times, he just can't even remember what the trigger
was in the first place. I think that the beginning of this post explains those times best to me. Thanks!