
If your child is angry, neither lashing out or bottling it up is a good idea. Here are eight great anger busters to help your child manage his or her emotions.
Your child is yelling, slamming doors and having an all-out tantrum – but can he trust you with his anger?
Punishing the behaviours associated with anger might be a quick fix, but without instruction, your child will lose out. National anger management trainer Bob Bowen warns that children who never learn proper ways to express their frustration will eventually find their own, often inappropriate, methods.
“At seven years old, she may be yelling or pulling someone’s hair, but by age 16 she will have developed 15 other incorrect ways to say, ‘I’m frustrated.’ She has to find her own path because, as parents, we haven’t given her the correct one.”
Parents Need to Handle Their Emotions Too
The road to teaching proper “anger behaviour” can be extremely bumpy when parents are sucked into the heat of the moment. Parents need first to handle their own emotions.
“When a child sees a parent managing his own frustration and anger, he will learn by example,” Bowen says. “How a parent responds to his child’s anger is how the parent teaches.”
Teaching discipline instead of punishing the child equips him with anger management tools that can be used for the rest of his life. Here are eight things you can do to help your child learn how to express his anger positively.
Eight Great Anger Busters
- Model anger management. “I’m feeling very angry right now, so I’m going to take time to be alone and get some self-control.
- Show respect. Don’t participate by calling names or getting physical.
- Give them words to express their anger. “I know you are disappointed, or sad or frustrated.”
- Identify with their pain. “I remember when I didn’t get to go to a party…”
- Set positive limits. Instead of saying, “Don’t you throw that doll,” say, “After you put the doll on the table, we can go have snack.”
- Redirect energy bursts that often come with anger. Encourage positive outlets like running, jumping, blowing into a horn or painting.
- Avoid power struggles with your child. They’re always lose-lose situations. If your goal is to control, you will teach him to control others.
- Provide a cooling-off period by reading a book together or going on a walk. Then calmly discuss what happened and make a plan for next time.
Originally published at Mum Daily. Image by Ketut Subiyanto on Unsplash.
Related News
Father’s Day for me is always a list of questions. For example, how can the fatherless write anything good about fatherhood? Ask for a positive vibe, joyful word, or quirky rhyme, and all I once could offer in response was numb bewilderment. I had learned the hard way that sharing my experiences can be like a bulldozer to those unprepared to hear about them. Fatherlessness is what Father’s Day once meant ...
Rod Lampard
What will Trump’s America be like for kids? In answering this question, three issues come to mind. For the sake of alliteration, let’s call them: guns, gender and gestation.
Kurt Mahlburg
News
Dads 4 Kids News is for writers to share interesting insights, news, and stories, to encourage dads and their families.
Most Read
The opinions of the various writers are not necessarily the opinion of Dads4Kids. Please do your own research and come to your own conclusions. We welcome feedback and if you would like to submit an article for the Daily Dad, please contact the editor at info@dads4kids.org.au










