Emotions,  Parenting

Research on Temper Tantrums

Children’s temper tantrums are widely seen as many things: the cause of profound helplessness among parents; a source of dread for airline passengers stuck next to a young family; a nightmare for teachers. But until recently, they had not been considered a legitimate subject for science.

Now research suggests that, beneath all the screams and kicking and shouting, lies a phenomenon that is entirely amenable to scientific dissection. Tantrums turn out to have a pattern and rhythm to them. Once understood, researchers say, this pattern can help parents, teachers and even hapless bystanders respond more effectively to temper tantrums — and help clinicians tell the difference between ordinary tantrums, which are a normal part of a child’s development, and those that may be warning signals of an underlying disorder.

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What I found illustrative of this story was the first comment… An excerpt:

This was the worst piece of parenting psycho-babble I’ve ever heard. Explain to me what the child has learned from this besides how to manipulate his or her parents into getting his or her own way? It’s all well and good to study and understand the dynamics of a temper tantrum, but as parents, our responsibility is to help our children become civilized human beings. In our household, tantrums were an automatic “no” for whatever the child was asking for and, if one of my kids had slammed a chair against a wall, that child would have been in his room. Amazingly, my children had very few tantrums and none of them escalated to this level. Not only did they learn that this behavior is unacceptable, they also learned how to ask for what they wanted in a respectful and polite manner and how to negotiate if they really, really wanted something.

I’m sure it’s wonderful to have judgmental atttitudes about others’ kids behavior, but what it illustrates to me is that most people, especially parents, don’t understand the basic mechanics of emotions. And don’t know how to properly react to emotional outbursts. To me, this comment just describes an “invalidating environment”. Kids are not trying to manipulate the parents during a truly emotional outburst. No, their reacting just like their emotions inform them (anger/sadness) and behaving in a perfectly natural way. If you deal with the emotions properly, this behavior will not occur.

 

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