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Toni has 15 years
experience helping
parents find solutions
that
work.

Toni Schutta, Parent
Coach, M.A., L.P.
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Managing Your Child’s Anger: 9 Possible
Triggers and Solutions for Coping
Has
your child thrown a tantrum lately, thrown toys across the room or
hit a sibling? Odds are that s/he has!
Children’s anger can be exacerbating for parents. After all, many
adults still struggle with healthy expression of anger, so dealing
with a child’s anger can be doubly frustrating.
When your child gets angry, take a step back and try to figure out
what may have triggered the angry outburst? Many times, believe it
or not, there may be a good explanation.
Listed below are nine common triggers for a child’s anger outbursts
and possible solutions to help your
child calm down. The solutions may also provide
ways to prevent the next meltdown.
1. Time of Day - Many children express more anger
between 4:00 and 6:00 p.m., right when you get home
from work and want to make dinner. Document what
time of day is most troubling for your child.
Parenting Advice: Take 15 minutes to sit down with
your child and talk over his/her day before you begin
making dinner. Give your child something relaxing to
do while you make dinner. A healthy snack may also
tide them over until dinner.
2. Abrupt Changes - Children crave routine and structure.
They don’t like curve balls.
Parenting Advice: At the start of the day, outline the day’s
activities. Five to ten minutes before a change of activity
will take place, tell the child what the change will be.
i.e. “In five minutes, you’ll need to put the toys away and
go take a bath.” When it’s time to leave you can take the child
by the hand to get to the next activity.
3. Too much stimulation - Children may get over-stimulated
from too many activities in one day or too much of one
activity at a time.
Parenting Advice: Try not to over-schedule. Plan down-time
in every day. Avoid certain activities if your child is sensitive
to stimulation.
4. Overtired - Most children need 10-12 hours of sleep a day to
function best.
Parenting Advice: Make sure your child is getting enough sleep.
Develop a bedtime routine to prepare the child for bed. Allow
for quiet times, even if your child doesn’t sleep.
5. Hurt Feelings
Parenting Advice: Help the child identify the feelings and talk
with you or another person about them. Teach the child to ask
for what they need from other people.
6. Jealous Feelings
Parenting Advice: Acknowledge that feeling jealous sometimes
is perfectly normal and show your understanding. Try to focus
on the strengths your child has and never compare siblings. Try
to spend some time alone every day (or week) with each child.
7. Child Doesn’t Get Own Way
Parenting Advice: Pick your battles. If it’s important to you
(or to your child’s safety), stick to your guns. Apply a
consequence if your child doesn’t comply and follow through.
You can also allow the child two choices s/he can select from.
This allows the child to feel some sense of control. If it’s not
that important to you, let the child have what they want sometimes.
You’re demonstrating to the child that s/he is a responsible person
whom you can trust.
Not Sharing - This is a skill that takes years to master. Hang in
there!
Parenting Advice: Have your child put his/her favorite toy
somewhere that others can’t reach, thereby avoiding arguments.
Assigning an equal amount of time that each child can play with
a toy can help, too. Giving the toy a time out so that neither child
can play with it if they argue, can also work.
9. Too much energy
Parenting Advice: Allow your child time each day to run and jump
and let off steam in a positive way.
Remember that expressing anger is healthy and normal, even for
children.
You can’t shield them from hurt feelings, but you can help by
finding
predictable patterns in your child’s outbursts and making
adjustments
that will cause fewer outbursts.
Visit www.getparentinghelpnow.com to receive the free mini-course
“The
7 Worst Mistakes Parents Make (and How to Avoid Them!) and find
instant answers to 17 common parenting problems. Toni Schutta is a
Parent Coach and Licensed Psychologist with 15 years experience
helping families find solutions that work. Listen to her radio show,
“Real Parents. Real Solutions.” at
http://www.tinyurl.com/realparentsrealsolutions
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