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When
Mom Has a Temper Tantrum
By Melanie Howard
http://www.clubmom.com
Each month, my five-year-old son's kindergarten class
compiles a "book of days," in which the children share their
daily home experiences with one another. The next month, the
book gets circulated to all the parents. Imagine my chagrin
when James brought last month's book home, and there—between
"Mollie and her mom made brownies" and "Jeremy helped his
dad take out the trash"—was "James's mom was angry with him
this morning." My temper, in writing, laminated and
distributed for all the world to see.
Worse yet, I realized that almost all our recent mornings
had degenerated into Mommy screamathons over seemingly minor
matters—dawdling, misplaced gloves, sibling bickering. I
felt terrible, and obviously James did, too. How could we
break this angry pattern?
"Yelling is usually a sign that a parent has no
strategy," says Thomas Phelan, a clinical psychologist in
Glen Ellyn, Illinois, and the author of the popular 1-2-3
Magic: Effective Discipline for Children 2-12 (Child
Management, Inc.). At a loss for what to do, moms may resort
to yelling out of anger or frustration. But the end result
is that parents feel guilty and children get the emotional
message that they are bad.
It's because we love our children so dearly that they are
able to provoke such strong feelings of anger in us,
according to Nancy Samalin, a New York City–based parent
educator and the author of Love and Anger: The Parental
Dilemma (Penguin Paperbacks). But that doesn't make
expressing that anger through hollering or put-downs
appropriate—or effective. Samalin, who has conducted
workshops for parents of toddlers through teens for more
than 25 years, says the key is to feel and acknowledge your
emotions but not let them control you and make you act
irrationally.
Samalin and Phelan recommend drawing on these following
strategies when your kids are driving you up the wall:
- Exit or wait. When you feel your anger
getting the better of you, briefly withdraw from the
situation until you calm down, Samalin writes in Love
and Anger. Phelan agrees: He suggests stepping out of
the room, counting to ten, going to your bedroom, and
closing the door—whatever it takes to restore your cool.
- "I," not "you." Avoid attacking your child
with "you" statements—"You are such a slob!" or "You'll
never learn." Instead, think in terms of "I": "I don't
like picking clothes up off your floor every day" or "I
get upset when we're not on time." These are less
hurtful and inflammatory.
- Put it in writing. If you are too angry to
speak, don't. If your child is old enough to read,
express your feelings in writing. Sometimes just the
time required to find pen and paper will help you to
cool off.
- Stay in the present. When your child makes
you angry, don't work yourself into a tizzy by listing
every offense he has committed in the past week and is
likely to commit in the future. Stick to the issue at
hand.
- Restore good feelings. When you do lose it,
reconnect with your child as soon as possible. That may
mean saying you're sorry and giving a hug and kiss to a
younger child. For an older child, you may want to offer
an explanation of why you were angry along with an
apology. Don't worry that apologizing will diminish your
authority—it won't. It shows your child that you respect
him and teaches him that everyone can be wrong
sometimes.
- Recognize what the problem is. Is it really
your child's messy room? Or are you sleep-deprived?
Feeling overwhelmed at work? Mad at your husband or
mother or boss? Be aware of when you are more vulnerable
to anger and resist the urge to transfer negative
feelings to your child.
- Make yourself—and all family members—accountable
for lashing out. Institute a "no losing it" rule to
make kids and parents aware of the times they go
ballistic. But do it with a light touch. For instance,
make a chart and tack on a sticker when one of you has
an outburst. If one family member is accumulating a lot
of stickers, it's time to talk about it.
- Carry a tape recorder. When you feel yourself
about to blow, turn it on. If you explode anyway, play
back the tape and imagine yourself as the child on the
receiving end.
- Use cognitive therapy. This technique is
sometimes used to calm fearful fliers. Analyze your
thoughts and put them in perspective—or, as Phelan puts
it, "deawfulize" the situation. (Fliers learn that their
fear is of crashing, not flying. And since crashing is
unlikely, their fear is not reasonable.) Ask
yourself—when your children are fighting, say—if it's
really that horrible. Think of the situation as
aggravating but normal behavior that merits a calm,
rational parental response.
Melanie Howard is a writer and a mother
of two. She lives in Alexandria, Virginia.
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