The Truth Behind a Child's Rage

Rage in a child as displayed by aggressive behavior, hitting, and tantrums, is always an issue deserving of serious attention. While parents may fear mental disorders such as ADD or bipolar disorder and seek the help of a therapist, consider that much of the solution lies in developing your listening skills and enhancing parent-child communication. Master an approach to dealing with your child’s anger that offers resolution as well as the building blocks for fulfilling emotional growth for both your child and you.

"No. You’re not the boss of me!" Mary yells as she throws a plate across the room, shattering it and spraying scrambled eggs throughout the kitchen. Mary’s mother reaches to pick up the plate, while speaking in soothing tones to her child, "Throwing things isn’t nice, Mary. Good little girls don’t do that." During this tantrum, Mary has added to her foundational belief system in parent–child communication and its relationship to life, physically, mentally, emotionally and spiritually.

So goes the life script of Mary. Children, like adults feel frustrated and angry. Without the proper tools to communicate their feelings, they behave in rash ways, just as adults do. Without direct attention to the reasons for their anger and positive ways to handle such emotion, a child will risk developing emotional and behavioral disorders or grow to be an angry adult. Look around—the juvenile halls and prisons are filled with them. Every time the back door of a prison in the United States opens to release a prisoner, the front door opens to let in a new offender. Where will it end?

Do you have an angry child? One who exhibits frequent tantrums and violent acts like hitting others? Labels and diagnoses may include ADD, ADHD, and bipolar disorder. But regardless of the problem’s label, the essential ingredient to soothing that savage beast is learning to communicate with your child about your feelings and teaching your child to communicate hers before those feelings escalate to hostility and before false beliefs form about the child’s value in your life and the world. Your adult listening skills are the foundation of the solution. Let’s roll back the above scenario…What could Mary’s mother have done besides categorize her child’s behavior in a belief that "good" girls don’t throw things, and before picking up the mess? Here’s a start:

Choose to make a giant step in resolving your child’s rage with the guidance of a personal session with Alexandra Delis-Abrams, The Attitude Doc. Alexandra will show you that your love and ability to listen to your angry child is far more powerful than tantrums and loss of control. She will give you the tools for an enduring, successful, and mutually fulfilling relationship with your child. Click for more private session information.

We all experience anger, even rage. Anger is a natural feeling, but rage is not. You can replace dramatizing the anger with feelings words, when you have the vocabulary. The stress in life at any age, without the skills to smooth it out can have catastrophic results. Become a source of guidance and trust in your child’s life by instilling the beliefs and tools necessary for a life of happiness. Leave out the beliefs that can harm them for years to come. Kindly but firmly take control of the circumstances, establishing boundaries for behavior without blame. Consider that circumstances in life always serve as a mirror reflecting back important lessons to each of us along the way. You and your child will grow together and make discoveries that will enhance every aspect of your lives.

Article courtesy of Alexandra Delis-Abrams, aka The Attitude Doc.
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