Read The No Cry Discipline Solution Online
Authors: Elizabeth Pantley
144
A Peaceful Home: Staying Calm and Avoiding Anger
Mother-Speak
“ If I am tired, hungry, rushed, or stressed out, I can’t seem to
call up even the simplest parenting technique and I fi nd any
bit of childish behavior unbearable. I am likely to snap with
orders and demands. I have even lashed out with a slap on a
leg or hand, which has left me feeling horrifi ed and dismayed
with myself. Because this is so far from how I choose to par-
ent, I fi nd it very shameful and distressing. And, of course,
I feel guilty and afraid that I have damaged our relationship
or even damaged my child’s psyche in some way. My own
parents were not spankers, but when pushed to the limit
my mom did reach out and pinch legs or buttocks. I can see
myself reacting to irritation and frustration in the same way.
So I guess I should be thankful that I had good parents who
were not actually violent, as it must be very hard to break
that cycle. It is very clear to me that violence and even anger
do absolutely nothing to help my child, and they certainly
don’t help me. So I am eager to fi nd more ways to control
them. I wish I would have been taught how to express anger
in a constructive way and then fi nd a way to cool off and get
on with things more positively.”
—Amy, mother to Amani, age 20 months
Lack of Anger Management Skills
It’s possible that no one has ever taught you any specifi c skills
for handling your anger constructively. It’s not likely your parents
taught you as a child, and it’s not a class taught at school. Even
worse, you may have learned poor anger management approaches
from experiences with your own parents and other people who
Why Do Parents Get Angry at Their Children?
145
infl uenced your emotional growth. Children (and you were one,
once) often copy the behavior of other people in their lives, and
this applies to how they see angry emotions dealt with. With time,
what children observe becomes their own pattern of behavior and
will remain so, even up through adulthood, unless they take action
to modify their normal responses.
Typically the only adults who take anger management classes
are those who are in family or marriage therapy or those who are
ordered by a court of law to do so because of extreme anger prob-
lems. This is truly a shame, since every human being could benefi t
from learning anger management skills. In the following pages,
you will learn specifi c skills for controlling parental anger as well
as tips on how to teach your children these valuable life skills.
One other point to keep in mind is that all people respond
to tense situations differently, and we all have different “angry”
personalities. Some people yell, others stomp, some sulk or escape
from the person they are mad at. It can help to think about how
you automatically respond when you are angry—what are your
typical thoughts and actions? If you identify and understand what
your automatic responses are, then you will have more power to
change those actions.
Self-Neglect, Pain, or Exhaustion
It’s common for parents to be stressed and constantly busy. They
tend to their children’s needs with rarely a moment to themselves.
They don’t eat right, they don’t exercise, and they don’t get enough
sleep. While unaware of what is happening, this constant caregiv-
ing and self-neglect can build into a subconscious resentment and
an unmet need for personal space. These buried emotions can be
pushed to the surface. Fueled by daily parenting frustrations, they
can erupt in a moment of anger.
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A Peaceful Home: Staying Calm and Avoiding Anger
Busy parents must continue to function no matter how they feel.
Tending to children, running a household, and working a job keep
us busy from sunup to sundown, and often throughout the night
as well, tending to a sleepless child. Parents must push on through
sleep-deprivation or pain, including headaches, backaches, head
colds, symptoms of pregnancy, postpartum depression, or other
discomforts. Human beings have a natural tendency to have a
shorter fuse when dealing with their own physical problems.
Children, of course, don’t understand or comprehend their par-
ents’ pains. So they continue with their normal whining, bicker-
ing, or nagging—and push a suffering parent past patience. Even
innocent, happy play that is noisy or rambunctious can trigger an
angry response from a parent who is dealing with pain or exhaus-
tion. Parents who are under the infl uence of drugs (both medi-
cations and recreational drugs) or alcohol will fi nd their normal
emotions to be skewed, which can result in angry responses.
Repeated episodes of uncalled-for anger can cause inconsistent,
confusing behavior that can interfere with good discipline prac-
tices and damage the parent-child relationship.
Lack of Motivation to NOT Get Angry
You
can
control your anger. You
do
control your anger all the time.
Don’t believe me? Think of the times that you’ve been upset with
a store clerk, restaurant server, superior at work, neighbor, govern-
ment offi cial, or driver in front of you. How many times did you
swallow that anger and respond in a civilized manner? Think of
times that your child misbehaved but you held your anger because
the situation occurred in public or in front of your boss, mother-
in-law, minister, or child’s teacher. You were able to control your
anger in all of these situations because there would have been a
social price to pay if you had responded angrily. You might have
Why Do Parents Get Angry at Their Children?
147
suffered damage to your reputation, embarrassment, shame, or,
worse, a fi ne or arrest.
When you get angry at your child, the worst thing that you
perceive happening in return is your child’s anger or tears. While
this is never a desirable outcome, it’s not enough to stop you
in your tracks. This is not a conscious decision, but it happens
nonetheless.
Once you acknowledge that anger is not an effective parenting
response and that it can damage your relationship with your child,
while other methods will actually bring positive long-term results,
you will be more motivated to learn a method for controlling your
outbursts. When that happens, you will learn, practice, and adopt
methods that prevent you from releasing your anger in favor of
better, more effective responses.
Noise, Disorganization, Mess, and
General Chaos
Most of us have a picture in our minds of how we’d like our homes