Header Logo
Log In
← Back to all posts

4 Hidden Mistakes That Make Child Aggression Worse (Even When We Mean Well)

by Dr. Jazmine
Nov 11, 2024
Connect with TMP

Here's a mindset shift that will transform how you respond to aggressive behavior: Your child isn't being defiant - they're dysregulated.

I know what you're thinking - "But when my child throws blocks or hits their sister, it feels like they're just being mean and defiant!"

But here's the truth - children *want* to do well. They don't want to be "mean" or defiant. All of us, including our children, want to do well and be liked by others. 

What gets in the way? Their emotions. 

And as parents, our typical responses (giving stern commands, implementing surprise consequences, and launching into lectures) actually makes things worse.

Why? Because when children are emotionally dysregulated, their emotional brain takes over and their logical brain takes a back seat.

So all our well-meaning attempts to "teach them a lesson" in these moments? They're actually creating more dysregulation.

Let's break down exactly what's happening in your child's brain during these moments and, most importantly, how to turn things around.

In this week’s lesson, we'll explore:

  • The 4 common mistakes we make (without meaning to) when our child gets aggressive
  • Why typical discipline approaches backfire during heated moments
  • How to respond in ways that help your child learn and grow
  • Printable: Navigating Child Aggression: A Decision Tree to Help Parents Respond Effectively

 

Does this pattern sound familiar?

 

The 4 Common Mistakes Parents Make When Their Child Gets Aggressive

For the purposes of this next section, I’m going to sub out “aggressive” with “dysregulated” because I think it helps re-frame our mindset.

When we see aggressive behaviors, our minds label these behaviors as mean, rude, bad, disrespectful.

But if we start to see these periods as emotional dysregulation, we’re more likely to label the behavior more accurately.

According to Web MD, the term “emotional dysregulation is used to describe an emotional response that is poorly regulated and does not fall within the traditionally accepted range of emotional reaction. It may also be referred to as marked fluctuation of mood, mood swings, or labile mood.”

Mistake 1: Giving directions to a dysregulated child

When our child becomes aggressive, it’s so tempting to give them a direction to try to gain control and order over a chaotic situation.

But here’s what I need you to know - It’s nearly impossible get cooperation when you tell a screaming child to “Pick up the blocks.”

Sure it might work for some children some times. But more often than not, it only adds fuel to the fire.

Why? Because when they don’t listen to our directions, we become dysregulated (leading to mistakes 2-4). So we end up accidently making a bad situation worse.

But let me back up. Why does giving directions to a dysregulated child often backfire?

[🔓This article is for premium members. Not a premium member yet? Start your free 7-day trial now. ⤵]

This post is for paying subscribers only

Upgrade

Already have an account? Log in

You Keep Yelling Because It Works. Here's What Nobody Tells You About That.
Girl, I get it. I really do. You're burned out. You're touched out. You're running on empty most days before the kids even wake up. You're tired of the "mommy mommy mommy" and the "mine mine mine" and the crying and the defiance and the negotiating over things that should not require negotiation. You love your kids more than anything in the world and parenting them is also, genuinely, one of ...
Most Parents Don't Realize They Trained Their Kid to Tune Them Out
"He will acknowledge us and keep on trucking." I read that line from one of your survey questions and honestly just sat with it for a second. This detail is such a specific kind of frustrating. At least when a child ignores you completely, you can tell yourself maybe they didn't hear you. When they look up, register what you said, and go right back to what they were doing, though… phewww. Tha...
Your Kid Is Going to Say Something Awful This Week. Here's Exactly What to Do
I'm tired of parenting content that subtly gaslights parents with messages like "Your child isn't trying to reject you or hurt your feelings." Yes they are. Whenever your child blurts out things like "I don't want to play with you anymore" or "I'm not your friend" or "You're a mean mommy", they are trying to reject you. These phrases are designed (not consciously or maliciously) but nonethele...

Join Our Free Trial

Get started today before this once in a lifetime opportunity expires.