Portsmouth News

HELPFUL HINTS FOR FAMILY LIFE

How to deal with and manage toddler tantrums...

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Instead of shouting orders at toddlers, parents should be still, calm and tender, says science writer Michaeleen Doucleff.

Michaeleen has travelled the world investigat­ing how ancient cultures parented their children as research for her new book Hunt, Gather, Parent.

She says: ‘When a toddler has a tantrum, as a parent, all we want to do is help them (and make the noise stop as quickly as possible). ‘So our knee-jerk reaction is often to issue many verbal instructio­ns, including requests like, ‘Please stop crying’, questions like, ‘What’s wrong?’, and logical explanatio­ns like, ‘We already have an ice cream – why do we need two?’ ‘There’s one big problem with this approach: it can make a child’s tantrums worse.

‘In many cultures around the world, including the Inuit in the Arctic and Hadzabe in Tanzania, parents take the opposite approach – they interact with an upset child from a place of the utmost calm.

‘When a child’s upset

– crying or screaming – these parents say very few words and make very few movements (words and movement are stimulatin­g). ‘And they show very little expression on their faces (again, emotion is stimulatin­g). Parents approach the child the way you might approach a butterfly on your shoulder: gently, slowly, softly.

‘This calmness helps the child find the same response in themselves. Children’s emotions and energy level mirror those of their parents, neuroscien­tists and psychologi­sts have found. The human brain contains neurons and circuitry with the sole purpose of mirroring other people’s emotions.

‘So if you want your child to have high energy, then have high energy yourself: give them instructio­ns, talk to them with urgency, raise your voice, repeat your request, be intense.

‘But if you want your child to be calm, be calm yourself: be quiet, be still, be tender.’

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