Ten ways to help your child manage their feelings
Parents play an important and supportive role in helping children to recognise, name and manage their emotions. Here are 10 ways you can help.
Parents play an important and supportive role in helping children to recognise, name and manage their emotions. Here are 10 ways you can help.
When something goes wrong in your day, how do you react? When someone does something that upsets you, what do you say? If something doesn’t go according to plan at work, how do you feel and how do you manage those feelings?
As adults, most of us have learned how to recognise our emotions and we’ve developed strategies to handle anger, frustration, resentment, fear or sadness. We might go for a walk, talk to a friend or have some quiet time.
Helping children to pay attention to their feelings, to recognise feelings, and to find ways to process them is important and parents play a key role in this, says Maria Bailey, Haileybury Director of Counselling Services.
“Younger children can experience strong emotions – either positive or negative – and it’s important that they learn to manage and tolerate those emotions.”Maria Bailey, Haileybury Director of Counselling Services
“Parents can help children tune in to their feelings, pause, express emotions appropriately with their own behaviours and build skills to work through them.”
Diane Furusho, Haileybury’s Deputy Principal (Student Wellbeing), says many schools, like Haileybury, adopt a traffic light system to help younger children manage their emotions.
“As children become agitated, they learn that they are going from green to yellow and they recognise that means they are starting to feel that someone inside isn’t quite right. Those feelings come before they enter the red zone and lose self-control,” says Diane.
“Emotions are helpful and normal and it’s important that children realise emotions are OK. They are part of growing up and unless we experience negative emotions like sadness and frustration, we will never know what happy feels like. Parents can support children as they learn about emotions and how to manage them.”Diane Furusho, Haileybury’s Deputy Principal - Student Wellbeing
Here are ten things you can do.
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