Hug It Out – Calming an Angry Child
I have a technique that has been really helping with dealing with anger in my family. It sounded almost too simple when I read it, but often it’s the really simple shifts, the ones that we think could hardly work, that help us most.
This idea for dealing with anger comes from a recent comment on the Parenting an Angry Child post I wrote some times ago.
I read it and at first I thought, oh he’s too old for that now, but it resonated with me so much – it makes such sense given my son’s sensitive nature. He may be frequently angry, but he seems to feel everything very intensely, so he’s terribly sensitive to my aggravation and frustration over his anger.
Hug it Out With Your Angry Child
Here’s what Mary wrote about her angry child:
“Same here, angry 4 1/2 year-old boy. Solution: HUGS to calm him down.
We haven’t figured out how to always prevent the crisis, but only how to stop it: by not getting into a discussion/lecture/time-out or whatever. We see each tantrum as a cry for love and affection, get down on our knees and open our arms. Sometimes he rushes straight into our hug and sobs in remorse for a few secs, then completely relaxes. Sometimes he claims he doesn’t want to come anywhere near me, but I remain in my open arms position and say “I’ll be waiting for you to come, come when you’re ready” – a minute later he’s here. Some other times he will scream that he will never come close to me, I leave and go about my business after I state that “as soon as you feel ready, come give me a good hug”. Sooner or later, he always comes.
When relaxed, we can talk about the problem.
so HUG away!
“
My arms are open.
Adopting this “My arms are open.” position has been opening my heart, and allowing me to shift into listening mode rather than defensive “This Yelling Is Too Loud” mode. Giving space for hugs and calming before jumping into the work of talking through what is happening has allowed me to hear my son better and offer tools rather than just recrimination.
No, it’s not always as simple as that, but many times it is. I’m not sure why it’s taken me this long to get to the point of using this as a default, but somehow Mary’s words spoke to me, and I wanted to share them with you in case you too need another way to deal with anger that helps you and your child calm down and reconnect.
What do you think? Have you tried hugs for dealing with anger, or do you think you’ll give it a try?

64 Positive Things to Say to Kids
Subscribe to the Bounceback Field Notes to Download your FREE printable of 64 Positive Things to Say to Kids
What if he just has almost too much anger? I agree with this method but it seems like our anger is much bigger than and past hugs?
I like the sounds of this hug it out theory. I will defiantly have to try it. I have been trying with my 3&4 year olds to have them blow it away when they get angry or really upset. My 4yo is a very sensitive boy and his 3yo sister love to rile him up which a lot of times turns into an argument between the 2 of them. When ether of them start to get angry or threw a tantrum I tell them to blow it away and within a few minutes it’s over and they start laughing again.
It works with my son too however I fail to try this method out when he hits me or hits his little sister. How am I suupose to hug him when he hits any of us? Wouldnt this reinforce the bad behavior and show him its ok to hit, mummy will hug you anyways??
Im quiet confused here how to react in this situation. I know that by hitting hes crying out for help, attention most of all and love. But I find it impossible to hug him afterwards. Pls advise what should be done if that case and if applying this method would still be ok or not.
Thank you 🙂
I forgot to mention that my son just turned 3, his sister just turned 1 and his main problem is to adapt with the presence of his little sister eventhough its been a year now.
You may want to try the outward facing bear hug/ wrestling hold when your mad. It allows you time to calm down, and stops him from hurting others (and sometimes a chance to calm down.
Also we have had success with “mad feet” (we have him stomp the floor when he is angry) or since mine headbutts things I will put him in the recliner and have him headbutt that. Maybe having him hit a pillow would help you, at least inthe short run until you can find some other acceptable way to release his anger?
Also have you tried writing down when/why/where he is hitting? You may discover a changeable pattern.
My boy of 5 has been defiant, spitting, hitting, bullying his 2 yo sister and aggressive towards me since being moved up a group at preschool. I’ve been responding with reasoning, then in anger, then this week in tears, trying to resist bribery, punishment etc. as I’ve read enough to know they only work in a superficial and unsatisfactory way. I often have the urge to pick him up off his feet and today I decided to do a cooling down bear hug actually taking him outside on the doorstep to change the scene. At first it was restraining in a babe in arms position (holding wrists firmly as he wanted to hit out), but I could keep him still until we both started to calm down and the hold relaxed into a hug then I said we’d do circular or square breathing (breathe in, hold, breathe out, hold: visualising or drawing the shape with finger/hand) counting down from 8 to 0. Every time his behaviour got antisocial, I repeated this. Including in a busy restaurant where I was on my own with the two kids. It’s probably happened between 5-10 times in the morning and then this afternoon went better and it’s only happened once. I thought there must be something out there like this and found this page. Even though it’s tough at first, to be physically close through the anger till it melts away feels instinctively right – I’m hoping that if I can keep this up consistently we can just cut straight to an open armed hug! Things have got so bad recently something’s got to change it and help us reconnect and words just weren’t doing the trick at all.
I did this just tonight with my two year old. When she is upset and crying, I will give her a big hug and then talk to her. She quickly calms down when I sympathise with her frustration / anger and giver her a big hug.
When my oldest is crabby, I put her in water. Food colouring and glow sticks in the bath shake things up, and she can’t stay mad.
What your talking about sounds like SPD which is what my son has and thats why he gets angry & frustrated alot. I already hug my son when I start to see signs that he really needs a hug.
This is a great idea. Our daughter is just learning to speak and verbalize why she’s mad, and her Dad and I have found almost by default that just sitting with her quietly and letting her compose her thoughts helps immensely, or just sitting with her on our lap or next to us helps us all process and get to the bottom of the situation faster and better.
To clarify, once he has released some of his rage, the hugging always works to settle everybody again and repair hurt feelings and reassure him that my love is unconditional. But when in the middle of an outburst, it often doesn’t work.
We are going through an extremely rough patch right now. Way way way worse than the temper tantrums his big sister has ever displayed.
I wish it was that easy. This only works sometimes – namely when big sister is at school. When she’s home I can’t afford to just do that as angry Mr almost 5 will lash out against her if not physically stopped. or he will grab the nearest thing an threaten to break it – usually something she or someone else in the family holds dear.
Sometimes I do time-in with him. which means I physically remove him from the situation – usually to his room where we then sit on the bed – and then I sit next to him quietly until he’s ready to talk. Other times this does not work at all and only makes his rage worse.
I have tried so many different strategies. Sometimes one of them works but often I’m at a complete loss.
My older 7 year old son is quite highly strung and can get really upset and angry sometimes, I find a hug really calms us both down and allows us to then talk about what upset him etc. another tactic I sometimes use when all else fails, when he’s in the throws of his anger I’ll say ” oh the angry monster has visited you, tell the angry monster it’s time for him to go! And I’ve even opened the back door on occasion and asked him to tell the angry monster to go out the door. I know it sounds crazy but it makes him look at his anger and somehow diffuses it.
When in doubt, hug it out!
Have done this intuitively from the start. I’ve never yelled but know some that do and have continually suggested this for them.
I have started doing this with my nearly 9 year old daughter who has off the scale tantrums. It really, really helps. I know exactly what you mean about, “I am in charge and her ridiculous outbursts will not be tolerated.” Although it has taken a while (years) i have eventually learnt to look at it this way: The outbursts are her way of expressing pain, anger, frustration etc, all of which are valid, real emotions. My job is not to suppress those feelings in her ( imagine the fallout from doing that…) but to help her express them differently. If we can hug it out, she calms down, trusts me more, and then we can talk it through. I hope I’m teaching her a better way to express herself. The tantrums are less frequent and less violent. Having said all that, they can still be hurtful and infuriating! Try not to take it personally.
I love the idea of this, but how do you get past the feeling that you are giving in to them? My daughter will get very worked up and at the end of it, she wants a hug, but I almost feel like if I give her a hug I am rewarding her bad behavior. Sorry if this doesn’t make sense. But we have so many power struggles and not that I am trying to “win” per se, but I do want my daughter to know that I am in charge and her ridiculous outbursts will not be tolerated. Obviously if we can prevent the tantrum in the first place that would be wonderful. But, I know sometimes my daughter doesn’t want anything to do with me when she is throwing a fit!
Is it crazy to say that this is a tactic that I, myself need at times? When I get so emotional or upset about something all it takes is a good hug from my husband and I’m instantly calmed down and can talk clearly. Oddly enough, it took me awhile to realize that the same thing worked for my kids. It is such a game changer!
I agree – someone mentioned Oxytocin hormones. I think for some of us a hug triggers that it’s OK to relax, and then of course we can think better.
I wish I had of heard this way of dealing with the sensitive child when my big little guy was younger. My sensitive child is now 14 and lives with his father because I couldn’t handle his outbursts. I will see him for a week very soon and I’ll try this new approach out then if needs be but a teenager who doesn’t like cuddles any more is going to be a challenge. I’ve tried it on his 2 year old brother and it just changes the dynamics so much it gives them confidence and helps them know they are loved and it helps mum too
Yes, I have done this with my kids. And yes, it works better than ANYTHING else. Sometimes it’s just a matter of me being able to lay down MY anger and open up to my child in those moments.
This is a technique that we are taught over and over in foster parent training. They call it a “time in” rather than a “time out.” It doesn’t always have to involve a hug, but it just means that in those moments of anger to pull the child closer physically and emotionally rather than isolating through time out.
I’m going to work on being more consistent in this because I really believe it is the most effective form of “discipline” there is. 🙂
I use this frequently with my almost 4 year-old son. I am a stay at home mom and I am with him all the time. Even I get frustrated to the point of breaking sometimes and he will just come up and give me a hug. Especially as I am 3 months from my due date with my second child, and having to deal with a teenage step-daughter too. That does not make things easy on me. But for us this works most of the time, even if it takes as long as 15 minutes to calm the situation. It is a technique I will continue to use with him and the new one when the time comes.
Thank you for sharing this beautiful solution. My sweet strong willed child is super sensitive and when mama gets upset, it is chaos. We will definitely practice the hug technique more often…
Best wishes Elena. With my most sensitive child dealing with anger had really been one of our central lessons. I can’t tell you how relieved I am to find a gentle way to stay present during the anger. It’s not always perfect, but it’s better for both of us.
Can’t tell you how much helpful this is… Just two days back my 2 yr old was super sensetive and ignoring hasn’t work… After ignoring for 20 mins I lost my temper and screamed loudly on her and she got super scared and hugged me… I was so upset myself for loosing my temper.. And was feeling so helpless as I couldn’t make her calm… I wish I should have tried this simple thing… I am sure this gonna help me a lot… Thank you so much… ????
I agree, hugs work. I’ve been using hugs to calm down my 3 year old daughter. After she has calmed down, then we talk about the issue. Sometimes, I think they need to let it out of their system because they don’t know how to otherwise express themselves at their young age.
This works well for our almost five year old daughter. HOWEVER, so many of the times she acts out is when I call her out for mistreating her 3 year old sister (taking, not sharing, typical issues). Time outs turn into screaming fits. I know a hug would settle her down but how does that look to the younger daughter? It’s as if I’m rewarding the older with affection for hurting the younger. Thoughts?
I have this situation as well – I see to the injured party first, give hugs, makes sure they are OK, then turn to the ‘hitter’ second. Hugs for them, then ask if they are ready to hug their sibling better. Generally, if you remain calm it will work out better! Hugs all round 🙂
This follows from a book I read many years ago called Taming Toddlers. Apparently, when your child has what we call a ‘temper tantrum’, they do not understand what is happening to them, why they feel like that or why they cannot control themselves. Consequently they become scared and the cycle continues.
Therefore, strong hug will calm them and reassure that someone has control as they have lost theirs. I have tried it many times and it really works. The strong hug also works as it traps flailing arms and legs. I did not offer the hug later, I initiated immediately and again, it works..
Why oh Why have I not thought of this before! I have a near perfect child who is 5 1/2 but turns to a possessed devil when tired. She does not realise when she is tired (I do well ahead of time) and usually tell her to rest.She is a very intelligent girl who likes to keep her mind active which makes her tiredness worse and so too her mood which usually results in both of us yelling. She does not like it when I yell at her to do something for the umpteenth time and nor do I but we both have a quick temper and she often will get sent to her room if we don’t resolve the issue. Once we both have had time to calm down we talk about the situation so that she recognises it is her behaviour we don’t like but still love her.
Now with a new strategy in my corner I will use this so that we can reach a point of sanity much quicker, a better result for both of us.
Once again thank you for this really simple strategy.
You’re so welcome, and that’s how I’ve been feeling about it too, so I’m glad I could share this simplicity so other parents can give it a try. I’t been a really huge help here, and really good for my relationship with my kids.
This is mainly what I do with my 4y old! Exactly for the same reasons!
I have been trying to advocate it in his nursery as well!…
Being in a Montessori method, they very much work things through words…
And not so much of touch… When actually, my son understand but not engages with words just yet! Makes him feeling even more frustrated!…
Not always I manage to apply this, I still give him a bit of lesson.. Show him that I am upset… And then we have the calm down moment…
I find when I am able to stay calm enough to use this solution it works remarkably well. But sometimes its not just my son having a tantrum – mummy tantrums and this technique are not very compatible.
Ugh, I know what you mean. Mama tantrums aren’t compatible with anything really are they?! This has been helping me avoid some though at least.
Time outs have never worked for our highly strung 3.5 yo, I always sit near/next to him and ask him to climb into my lap for a hug. As he settled I slowly bring in dialogue. Sometimes it sets him off again and we hug a bit longer, then I try again. Sometimes it takes me 4 or 5 goes to get a full sentence out and to actually resolve the situation but it also means that we can revisit the issue in conversation if we need to and his recollection of it isn’t as scary or anger-filled 🙂
OXYTOCIN, folks – that’s what does it. Hang on to that hug for at least 20 secs and both of you get a full dose of oxytocin. <3
<3
It was great to see this. I was an Early childhood teacher before becoming a SAHM and would use this technique in certain situations. It truly does work and creates trust.
A friend of mine posted this on Pinterest … I feel like it was written and posted precisely for me. 🙁 I have been struggling to handle one of my 5 yr olds (twins). He is incredibly tough to parent!! I have honestly been feeling at a loss. I’ve done time outs and lately spanking. (Yes yes … Big topic of debate). I hate all of it. I don’t think I’ve tried hugging it out. I’ve been telling myself I needed to step back and maybe this is exactly what he needs. Crossing my fingers that this has answered my prayers. I hope it helps BOTH of us!!
I have two Boys, 12 & 15. A long heartfelt embrace achieves what a long winded conversation may not. Words may not be understood, a hug says it all.
I agree with this full heartedly. My 5 yr old daughter went through a phase when she was 2-4 where she just threw the biggest fits and tantrums over the smallest things. I was kinda freaked out a few times because she acted like she was possessed…it was extremely frustrating to me and I know it was to her too. After I tried everything I could think of, time out, letting her cry till she was done, spanking her (which made it worse), yelling at her, ect., what I found worked the best was this:
One night she started the fit throwing and screaming and crying after I got her dressed for bed and I just shut the door to my bedroom, sat up against it and was very quiet at first. Then I started praying out loud where she could hear me and I started crying because the Holy Spirit heard me and was with me as He always is and she stopped and came and sat in my lap while I finished praying and was completely calm and quiet. I just held her and rocked her and she only did that one other time after that honestly and I did the same thing. She hasn’t done it since and even now when she starts to get upset or mad to where she even thinks that may happen, I hold her and hug her and pray over her and she’s better and so am I.
Alot of times they don’t know how to get out what their feeling as little kids and even tho I can honestly say that I have been a screaming yelling parent at times, it works so much better when you keep calm and just let them know you love them and praying with them and over them at night. …let me just say that I serve an AWESOME God who knows how to comfort their sweet hearts.
I am going to try this and see where it takes us!
Hugging sounds like a lovely idea when opposed with an angry toddler. I will definitely try this method with my gorgeous little boy as I know he only gets angry when he is frustrated about something. Thanks for sharing this great solution!
@Michelle, my 4yo boy hits me often, and hard. I say the standard, “I am NOT for hitting!” but he’s too overwhelmed already. I came across this suggested dialogue/script and tried it this week, with good success, so I hope it can help you, too: https://www.ahaparenting.com/parenting-tools/positive-discipline/child-hits-parent
I’m so glad you posted this! I’ve been using this technique since my second child was born and my first lashed out (at 20 mths) and hit both the new baby and me. That was 4.5 yrs ago and we haven’t looked back. It’s effective, responsive and creates a sense of trust for a child that their parents will meet their emotional needs no matter what the situation.
I have an almost 12 year old son and I have done this his whole entire life. When kids get angry I know first hand it gets the parents angry and I got tired and frustrated punishing out of my anger so then it hit me what do I want when I am angry a hug so why wouldn’t my son want that also. Not a flimsy squeeze but avtight huge with my hands closed and tight presses up and down his back while holding him tight but not to right. Calmed him right down. Then we could talk. Never realized that this was a real technique. I live by this! I love adore and admire my son.
I stumbled upon this on Pinterest! But actually, I had an experience a few weeks ago with this when my daughter was having a crazy fit from being overly tired. We were visiting at my mom’s house for a party and she was so tired, screaming, crying, running down the halls. I’m a wait it out type of person but this was unlike anything I’ve ever seen. The third time she was going to run past me I grabbed her and gave her a big hug. She calmed down almost instantly! I never realized how powerful hugs were.
Thank you for your original post. That took courage. I identify with so much of what you wrote. My almost 4 year old has very similar “big feelings” and I am at a loss! Question: When you offer hugs, does your son ever hit you? If so, how do you handle this? I believe this method truly addresses the need behind the behavior, but my son refuses and chases me around the house to hit (or bite) me with the fight-or-flight deer-in-headlights look in his eyes. (Maybe you know the one?) If you have tried something that works please let me know! Thanks again for sharing.
When my son feels violent I take him very gently and place him into his crib or into a baby-gated space while saying “I won’t let you hurt anyone, so in going to place you here where we are both safe. When you are ready for a hug let me know. I’m right here. And then I sit down next to the space but out of reach and wait, offering my silent calm presence. If it seems helpful I sportscast what I’m seeing “you’re really angry so you are screaming and crying. You are having some big feelings. I know how hard and scary that can feel.” Etc. Once he gets to the sniffle nose-wipe stage I offer a hug again. “You seem calmer and less angry, but still sad. Would you like a hug? I’m here.”
Beautiful!
My son does this. He is 4 and has sensory nero issues due to extreme prematurity and a stroke at 2. After a suggestion by his occupational therapist I started doing this some (apparently I need to do it more!). When he is at the peak (head butting, biting, pinching) I face him outward and hold him tight and close. One arm ones under his chin, it is basically a mix of a bear hug and a wrestling hold. He is extremely strong for his age and size (took 4 men to hold him down for a medical procedure once) and I’m rather small, but this works. I also breathe in his ear and help him count breaths. If he is only a little upset I can ask him to do “5 breaths” until he calms down.
The teen posts above actually made me realize where he got this from… ME! My husband has done this to me time to time to get me to calm down, not the outward facing hold, I don’t bite… Much ;), but the bear hug. He won’t let me go until I calm down, he has only done this a handful of times in our 7 year marrage.. But interesting to notice!
ZA, I recommend Jane Nelson’s books Positive Parenting, and Positive Parenting for Teens.
Hello, Thanks for this wonderful idea. But how about a teenager?
My teenager is angry most of the time these days and I do not know why.
I am totally confused how to find out the reason?
Do you any person to place or even tactic that works?
Thanks
ZA
Most of the time, teenagers don’t know either. They just know they hurt. Sometimes, instead of going into a problem-solving mode (what’s the problem, let’s fix it)…it’s more helpful to acknowledge and extend an olive branch (rough day? let me know if there is anything I can do to support you)
We’ve used it for my daughter as a teenager. Since we hug each other regularly it wasn’t totally awkward. She would resist but ultimately calmed down quite a bit.
Oh man, I wish I’d tried this last week when EVERYTHING set off my normally laid back 4yo into a screaming, whining, crying, fixated wart. Distraction hasn’t worked. Ignoring hasn’t worked. Belittling and lecturing and losing my temper sure hasn’t. Wow, WHY didn’t I try a hug? Maybe because I was too mad, but I needed a mental u-turn and should have considered kindness!
I totally hear you – I am reading this myself as it rather remarkable popped up on my Facebook page as a link – and I have just given my son a time-out for a full-on melt-down… I think I need to give him a few minutes more and then go talk to him and give him a hug. I sure didn’t think of this at the time either! 🙂
Start it young, folks, cause it doesn’t work quite so well with the teenagers…… at least not until they calm down themselves.
Yes! My 5 year old has been struggling with knowing what to do when he feels angry and this always works. And helps me to remember to be that rock for him, instead of getting upset and making him – and me – feel worse. We are then able to talk it through. Together.
Conversely, my 2 year old isn’t quite ready 🙂
Hey do you deal with at school? I come from a family tht has disciplined the “old school” way and im trying to change tht and do positive parenting rather than yelling spanking, but time out and rewarding and removing dotn seem to be tht effective at his age, preschooler. How do you deal with trying to do the positive parenting outside of the home environment?
Are you finding that the caregivers are disciplining in a way that doesn’t match your values? I have to admit, I homeschool, so I don’t deal with nearly as much out of home care as many other parents. I will ask on my Facebook page later today though, and see if we can get some replies to help.
Speaking of school and caregivers, I did run into conflict with my ‘hug it out’ approach to frustration and anger (tantrums). It was OK with some of his daycare providers (they were open to hugging) but definitely not all of the teachers. The usual time-outs, yelling, ostercising, notes home to me, were how the days went.
Frustrating for daycare, I do feel for them. And of course, the Kindergarten teacher wasn’t going to hug it out with him. Eventually, he learned that mom and teachers do not handle things the same.
Of course, I don’t expect anyone to handle my son as I do. And they didn’t. He had countless silent lunches. I do believe 1st through 3rd grades were devastating to his self-esteem. He reached all-time lows. It was a diagnosis of NVLD and ADHD that helped teachers see him from an alternative point-of-view. It also explained so so much, particularly the calming, centering effect of a hug.
The sensation of being held closely gave focus to an onslaught of emotions (and their corresponding biochemistry). It has the bonus of the “I love you unconditionally” effect. It is the same exact thing as comforting a crying baby, doesn’t it? The physical sensation triggers a counter bio-chemical reaction (subsides adrenaline), which brings one out of fight-or-flight mode.
I always felt judged (that I was in the wrong) for my POV that he needed an encompassing, super-patient, hug to help him transition out of the absolute frustration he was displaying. Teachers, family, friends, you name it, they thought he was just being willful. But I followed my instincts that said what worked for child #1 is not working for child #2. He needs something different.
I wish “Hug-It-Out” replaced the popularity of “Time-Out”.
I happen to like this idea given if you replace anger with fear, scared, frustrated this could seem help a lot better. I have done this as called hug therapy an calmed mine down were he’s able to communicate his feelings
I’ve done this a few times with my 3 year old. Once recently when she was supposed to be in “time out” (a tactic I rarely use because it’s more maddening trying to get her to stay there than the original behavior was)….she got so emotionally out of control and was shaking so instead of redirecting once more, I asked if she wanted held. We sat together quietly while she calmed down and practiced calming breath techniques once she felt a little better. And tried some funny breathing exercises that made her laugh. Once calmed down, I explained what behavior got her the “time out” and she then did sit quietly for the 3 minutes. Which was amazing.
Though it seems or feels less empowering to relinquish the fight (like you’re giving in or wimping out), changing the tone through, say, a hug, can do wonders for all involved!
I’m definitely going to try this. I have a very quick to anger, highly sensitive 3.5 year old son, who was recently diagnosed with ASD. Over the years we have tried everything, time-outs, consequences, etc, but I have come to realize that his intense outbursts scare him more than anything, and what he really really needs to know is that we are there for him and nothing bad is going to happen to him when these feelings overwhelm him. What better way to show him this than a hug. So simple, like you say, but that’s exactly what it should be.
Hi, my son is also autistic, you will find the book ‘the reason I jump’ very illuminating, it’s written by an asd child. Your thinking is spot on. 🙂
Thanks Clare, I’ve just put a hold on it from the library. Sounds very interesting 🙂
Thank you also for the support.
The Reason I Jump will change your world for the better. I wish every person would give it a read. In 90 minutes it opened my eyes and transformed the way I interact with, understand, and love my Autistic children.
Hugging it out is simply reinforcing spectacularly bad behavior.
It’s teaching a kid that behaving badly gets you snuggles from mommy!
Snuggles from mommy are free and should come any time they are needed! Perhaps the “bad behavior” is only a result of something deeper that truly needs that hug!
Things like yelling, spanking, expressing anger towards your child, etc. reinforce bad behavior too — because they teach a child that aggression is an acceptable response. If mom and dad can get angry and yell/hit/have their own emotional outbursts, then it must be normal.
Hugging your kids is not condoning their behavior. It’s acknowledging their feelings (and people, including kids, have a right to feel what they feel; feelings are neither right nor wrong, they just are). When someone is overwhelmed by feelings, you can’t rationalize with them — they won’t be able to really hear you or communicate back effectively. A hug acknowledges the child’s feelings, and your love and care for them no matter what. This allows them to feel safe enough to start to calm down.
Once they’ve called down, THEN you deal with things like consequences, boundaries and limits, discussion of rules and expectations, etc. It’s also the time to explore what led up to the outburst so you can ideally prevent it from happening again.
Hugging it out is not the end all solution. It’s just a way to end the outburst so you can calmly and rationally get to the real work of resolving things.
Really well stated Danielle, thank you.
I have read a book about the brain connections in kids. Hugging him or her helps to build some connections that are needed to think about the facts (by the way, angry childs are less of those connections that regular kids, that is why they react as they react).
Hugging them doesn’t send the message that they are right, is just a message that they are loved (love is unconditional) and also help them having empathy. And this works for all kids, not only for angry childs.
I read in another book that angry childs can judge themselves as really bad monsters that don’t deserve to be loved after all they did. So, knowing they’re loved gives them the strenght to try to improve.
I hug a lot my son when he is having a crisis, even when I tell him that he won’t get what he is asking for.
Do you know the name of the book about the brain connections? I would love to read it. Thanks
Completely disagree. There wouldn’t be so many people attesting to it working. Positive physical contact with your child is never wrong.
I really like this idea, and will try this with my 8-year old and 4-year old. I have a feeling it might not only help them, but myself! Instead of commanding, softening. Softening is what we all seem to need in my house these days.
Thank you for this simple awesome idea. I’m going to try if with my high strung, quick to anger 6 year old son.
This is really good advice and it works well with my sensitive 3-year old. If I’m not offering a hug for whatever reason she’ll say “mama, I need you,” or “mama, hold me.” Unfortunately Daddy’s hugs aren’t as effective, as much as he offers them. She just says, “I need my mama.”