How do you react to a child’s
anger? Maybe you get mad yourself or you
try to ignore the whole nasty episode?
Perhaps you put it in the box labelled ‘bad behavior’ and you are already
thinking of what may be an appropriate punishment.
No bad kids, just mad kids
‘There are no bad kids, just mad
kids’ is a telling remark made by a well known child psychologist and that
focuses our attention on the fact that we need to change our tactics a little
bit.
Why are the kids mad? What is the reason? Is there an underlying emotion of which anger
is just the tip of the iceberg? These
are the thoughts that should be going through our minds when confronted with an
explosion of anger.
Finding out why he or she is angry
When things are a little calmer, you
can try to repeat back the words to the child in a very calm, almost curious
tone of voice as if you are seeking to investigate or empathize in a very
supportive way.
That immediately changes the whole
scenario and the child realizes that somebody is there to lend a helping hand or
even listen. Now that is progress!
Compare that to yelling back,
slamming a door or two and the child ending up in a very long and stubborn
sulk! When that happens, the anger is
stored and nothing is resolved.
Another technique is to ask later on
what on earth happened and if the child can let you in on what actually caused
the eruption.
Empathizing and communicating
This is where communication can start
and you can broach various subjects related to what the child tells you:-
- aggression and violence are unacceptable in your family set up.
- there are lots of ways of reacting to anger
- tell the child how YOU deal with anger – give real examples
- tell the child about counting to ten and taking a deep breath
- recount how you can walk away from an angry scene
- talk about doing some physical activity to get rid of all that pent up anger, such as exercise or beating a carpet to get rid of dust or tearing up old newspapers.
- tell him how you felt at the various stages of the anger explosion.
- talk about self-control
Tell a story and talk about the reactions
of the characters and the consequences of those actions. Talk about how anger can
be controlled and how we can channel this strong emotion into much more
socially acceptable ways.