
How do I handle my kid’s tantrums?
Let Kids Have Their Meltdowns: It’s Emotional Intelligence 101












When kids throw tantrums, our knee-jerk reaction is often:
“Stop crying!” or “Why are you upset over this?!”
We rush to “fix” the outburst but forget: Feelings aren’t right or wrong – they just need to be seen and validated.
Why Kids Can’t “Just Calm Down”:
Their brains are still under
construction! The prefrontal cortex (the emotion-control center) isn’t fully developed.
Tantrums aren’t defiance – they
literally lack the tools to express big feelings calmly.
Emotions Demand an Outlet:
A kid’s anger, frustration, or
disappointment is as real as an adult’s.
Bottling it up doesn’t make feelings disappear – it turns them into
ticking time bombs.
The Foundation of Emotional Smarts::
Kids only learn emotions: anger, sadness, jealousy, when they feel safe to experience them.
Validation——Identification——Healthy Expression
Help Kids Feel Safe and Secure:
When kids know “Even at my worst, Mom/Dad still loves me,” they’ll trust you with their feelings
instead of hiding them.
But when big feelings are always punished, ignored, or silenced, kids may:
1. Learn that emotions are “bad,” and become chronic people-pleasers.
2. Act out more aggressively or lie to get needs met.
Short-Term Goal:Help kids express emotions in a safe way.
Short-Term Goal:Teach them to recognize, express, and manage their feelings.
So What Should Parents Actually Do When a Tantrum Hits?
1. Acknowledge FIRST, Problem-Solve LATER:
Ditch: “Stop whining!”
Try: ”Wow, you’re really angry! Is it because…?”
Tips: Let your child know: I see how you feel. Don’t rush to fix or lecture—just connect.
2. Replace behaviors with words:
Don’t: Don’t give in to screaming or hitting—but don’t ignore the feelings behind them, either.
Try: Teach your child to say: “I’m mad!” instead of throwing toys.
Offer choices: “Do you want a hug or do you want to take a break alone?”
Tips: Use picture books or games to help them learn emotion words like “disappointed,” “frustrated,” or “angry.”
3. Set clear boundaries:
Not okay: Hitting, throwing things, hurting themselves or others.
Okay: Crying, yelling, being mad.
Tips: Make the boundary clear: All feelings are allowed, but not all actions are.
4. Be the “Emotion Coach,” not the Judge:
Model how to calm down: “I’m feeling stressed too. I’m going to take a deep breath.”
After the storm passes, reflect together: “What made you so mad earlier? Next time, what could we do differently?”
3. Be the “Emotion Coach,” not the Judge:
Real emotional education means this:
“Your feelings matter. You’re allowed to feel them. And I’m here to listen.”