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A Psychotherapist & Mom On How To Keep Your Cool With Your Kids

Lia Avellino, LCSW
Author:
April 01, 2024
Lia Avellino, LCSW
Parenting Writer
By Lia Avellino, LCSW
Parenting Writer
Lia Avellino, LCSW, CEO of Spoke Circles, is trained as a relational and somatic psychotherapist and supports individuals and groups in being real and vulnerable.
Young boy jumping on his mom while she tries to work at her laptop - Parenthetical
Image by Juno x mbg creative
April 01, 2024
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In mindbodygreen's parenting column, Parenthetical, mbg parenting contributor, psychotherapist, and writer Lia Avellino explores the dynamic, enriching, yet often complicated journey into parenthood. In today's installment, she talks about keeping control of your emotions even in the most challenging of times.

I have three children ages 5 and under. I'll let you peer into an average night. My infant has one of those erupting poops in her diaper that gets all over my dress. As I am undressing to change into clean clothes, my 2-year-old asks me, "Why do your boobs look like that?" In my head I am thinking: Oh, nipples that resemble pancetta are not familiar to you!? Simultaneously, my 5-year-old is practicing her opera singing while asking me for the fourth snack of the hour. My eyes start to widen, and I want to do what the shit did to the diaper: explode! 

There are so many moments as caregivers when we need a release valve—moments when our own emotions feel too big and the situation demands more than our capacity for patience and grace.

Most parenting advice in these situations sets us up to fail. If our nervous systems are dysregulated, we cannot implement an effective parenting strategy. The best advice cannot be put into play if we are not within the "window of tolerance," otherwise known as the emotional zone we must be in to access our tool kit of wisdom.

So, how do we show up regulated in these blood boiling/"this is too much"/"I want to scream" moments?

Here are six accessible strategies:

1.

Stop blaming yourself when you mess up and start blaming American culture

When we behave in ways we aren't proud of, we typically blame ourselves instead of getting curious about what the conditions are that create an environment for our negative qualities to express themselves.

The American Psychological Association's research showed that in 2022, 27% of Americans reported "on most days being so stressed that they cannot function."

Living in a world with racial injustice, a climate in peril, innocent children dying is meant to make it difficult to function. Additionally, we live in an individualistic culture that doesn't put forth the tenets or resources that would allow children to be raised by not just their parents but a community of committed and loving adults.

Being stressed means that we are feeling responsible for too much, and when our nervous systems feel overwhelmed, we often lash out or shut down. This isn't meant to excuse harmful behavior (we must take ownership of how we show up with our children in order to be effective parents). But it does provide a rationale for why you might feel like you're on the brink of breakdown when you are working, child-rearing, attempting to exercise, and maintaining a romantic relationship and friendships.

2.

Resource in the non-stressful moments

We are not going to be able to access grounding techniques in the "I am on fire" moments if we are not practicing them in the neutral/serene ones. When you are not feeling activated, identify two or three practices that leave you feeling a sense of peace or "in yourself."

Grounding techniques can be mental (visualizing a place that soothes you) or physical (feeling the ground underneath your feet). These don't need to be laborious or time-consuming but rather a few minutes every day that allow you to build the neural pathways to expand your window of tolerance.

3.

Ask yourself the origin of your reaction

Get curious on why you react to your children the way you do. If your inclination is to yell, I wonder if you were yelled at?

If it is to run away, were you left alone with big emotions? Did your caregivers expect you to be able to regulate or be "fine" on your own, without teaching you how?

After these experiences, you may have unconsciously stayed in a state of fight/flight/freeze that you are now passing down to your children. This may be an indicator that there are parts of your own history that need your attention before you can support your little one.

If there is an automatic behavior that continues to come up, no matter how many intentions you make to stop it, this means that it needs more care in order to heal. What we do not heal in ourselves we unconsciously pass to our children.

What did "little you" need in those tough moments? How might this give you information about your little one's needs? 

4.

Don't speak

This is a simple but powerful intervention. In the fire moments, it can be helpful to commit to silence and even separate yourself physically. I find that I do more harm speaking in tough situations than I do if I take some time not to respond to the ninth request or even to pick up my baby when she is crying.

Taking a minute or two to ourselves allows us to step back from our anger and choose a different response. 

5.

Expect a mess

In Western culture we often have unrealistic expectations for our children. We believe their behavior is meant to push our buttons or create chaos in our lives.

In one of my favorite parenting books, Hunt Gather Parent, author Michaeleen Doucleff, Ph.D., states, "What if we think of (children) as illogical, newbie citizens trying to figure out the proper behavior? What if we assume their motivations are kind and good, and it's just that their execution needs some improvement?"

Expect the messy house, the request for immediate attention, and the developmentally appropriate moodiness. This doesn't mean that you can't feel how you feel about them, but it does liberate you to not be surprised by it (an experience our nervous systems don't like), and therefore you can prepare yourself for it. 

6.

Commit to not replaying the tape and feeling shame

Trauma educator and mother Amy Bauman once said to me, "Discomfort feels like the impulse to act out followed by a deep kind of lonely despair. I am constantly practicing not acting from that place. Not satisfying in the short term but less shame when I replay the movie." 

How do you want to feel when you replay the movie? Visualize that feeling, hold on to it, and act as if it is your guiding star. What do you want to do/not do, in order to live better with and feel better about yourself in the fire moments? 

The takeaway

The goal isn't to have less difficult moments (these are inevitable) but rather to figure out what you need to respond differently in those moments so that you don't negatively impact how you feel about yourself or the relationship with your child.

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