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Child psychology & parenting

Understanding Tantrums: What Parents Can Do

Why tantrums happen, how adult responses can unintentionally maintain them and what to do before, during and after a meltdown.

Content prepared by Gisele Cottica, Psychologist

Tantrums do not happen out of nowhere. They often reflect emotional overwhelm and a lack of skills for communicating needs, tolerating frustration or coping with limits.

How patterns can be reinforced unintentionally

When tantrums lead to the desired outcome

If crying, screaming or dropping to the floor regularly results in a treat, more screen time or avoiding a task, the behaviour is more likely to happen again.

When limits are inconsistent

If a limit changes from one day to the next, children may persist longer because they have learned that the answer sometimes changes.

When attention arrives only during a crisis

If the strongest attention happens during a tantrum, the behaviour can become an effective way of creating connection.

When adults negotiate in the middle of the storm

During intense emotional overwhelm, a child is not ready to absorb lengthy explanations or learn a new skill.

What can help?

A tantrum is not necessarily conscious manipulation.

It often shows that emotional and communication skills are still developing.

Frequently asked questions

Should I ignore every tantrum?

No single response fits every situation. Safety, the child’s age, the trigger and the purpose of the behaviour all matter.

What if the tantrums are very frequent or severe?

Seek professional guidance if tantrums are intense, prolonged, dangerous, difficult to manage or significantly affecting family and school life.

This educational information does not replace an individual assessment or medical advice. If you are concerned, seek guidance from a suitably qualified professional.

Support for families

Would you like to talk about support for your child?

Contact Gisele to discuss your family’s needs and possible next steps.

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