Every parent knows the moment.
The grocery store checkout. The sweet they can’t have. Your perfectly logical explanation: We have snacks in the car. Dinner is soon.
And then… total meltdown.
The crying escalates. People start looking. Your stress levels rise. You find yourself wondering, Why is this happening?
Because your child isn’t being difficult.
They’re communicating the only way they know how.
Behaviour Is Communication
When children act out through yelling, kicking, screaming, throwing things, or collapsing onto the floor, parents instinctively ask why.
Why are you doing this?
What were you thinking?
You know better than that.
But here’s the thing: often, they don’t.
Not because they’re bad kids. Because they’re kids.
Children are not born knowing how to manage frustration, disappointment, anger, or overwhelm. Those are skills that develop gradually over time.
When a child shrugs, stares blankly, or says, “I don’t know,” it’s often a genuine answer. In moments of emotional flooding, they truly don’t know what is happening inside them.
The behaviour is the answer.
It’s your child saying, I’m overwhelmed. This is what it feels like. Show me what to do.
Behind most challenging behaviour is either an unmet need or an undeveloped skill. Understanding which one you’re dealing with can completely change how you respond.
What’s Actually Happening in Their Body
Think about the last time you felt anxious, overwhelmed, or emotionally activated.
The pit in your stomach.
The racing heart.
The lump in your throat.
Your child experiences those sensations too, but they have far less understanding of what is happening and far fewer tools to manage it.
In that grocery store moment, the denied sweet isn’t a minor inconvenience. To your child’s nervous system, it feels like a significant problem. Their brain sounds the alarm, stress hormones surge, and their body shifts into survival mode.
Fight, flight, or freeze takes over.
Without the words to explain what they’re experiencing, those feelings have to go somewhere.
And they come out as behaviour.
They’re not manipulating you.
They’re struggling with emotions that feel bigger than they can handle.
The Skill They’re Still Building
Emotional regulation is a skill, not a personality trait.
A major part of that skill is learning to recognise and name emotions.
Children are not born with an emotional vocabulary. They develop it slowly through thousands of interactions with the adults around them.
As babies, crying worked. Needs were met.
As children grow, those same strategies become less effective. But unless they are actively taught new ways to communicate, they’ll continue using the tools they already have.
This is why the phrase, “If they could do better, they would do better,” is so important.
A child in the middle of a meltdown is not choosing chaos over calm. They are using every skill available to them in that moment.
Even when a child says, “I hate you” or “You’re so mean,” that can actually represent progress. The words may be uncomfortable to hear, but they are still an attempt to communicate feelings through language rather than behaviour.
What You Can Do
Every meltdown is a window, not a wall.
These difficult moments are opportunities to help children build the skills they are missing.
Instead of focusing only on stopping the behaviour, try to understand the feeling underneath it.
“You’re really disappointed right now.”
“You were hoping for a different outcome.”
“That feels really hard.”
When children repeatedly hear their experiences reflected back to them, they gradually begin building the language to describe those feelings themselves.
That process starts with us.
When we model calm, talk openly about our own emotions, and respond with curiosity instead of criticism, children are constantly learning from us.
Over time, they develop the ability to say, “I’m frustrated” instead of throwing themselves onto the floor.
The messy moments are hard. But they are also the moments that matter most.
Each one handled with connection, patience, and understanding is an investment in your child’s emotional development.
And over time, those small investments help grow a resilient, self-aware, emotionally capable human being.
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