
Helping Kids with Feelings When They Hit
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Hi Dr. Laura-
My son hits other children regularly. I am really struggling with feeling and speaking
with love to him when he hits out. At best I speak to him in a firm
voice about whatever it was he did, is not acceptable then I change to a
softer tone about the feelings but am having a hard time in really
feeling that love and expressing it in my voice. I am really trying and
know it's more my issues I need to deal with and work through...Any
advice would be appreciated.
I am finding now when he hits out he runs away when I
say I want to talk to him. An example that happened today we were at
the park and he hit my friends little boy in the face, I walked over
very calmly and said to him I just want to talk to you for a moment and
he ran away and started screaming.
If I had let him go he would have
just kept on playing and I wanted him to know that it was not okay to
hit this boy so I took him out of the playground to try and talk to him
but he just cried hysterically, would not let me touch him or hold him. I
could not get a word in as he was just so loud and wasn't interested in
anything I had to say to him.
This went on for 10 minutes so I gave up
and took him home and he kept crying like this until we got home and
then once home he wanted me to cuddle him. After a cuddle I than tried
to explain that you do not hit people in the face, talked about what he
was feeling and I just get the blank look from him.
At home he is doing this a lot, he hits out, I go to
him to talk to him and he runs away and then starts screaming and
crying if I try to look at him, to talk to him. If I give up and walk
away he comes to me crying saying he wants me to hug him (which I do and
wait for him to calm down) but as soon as I try and start talking he
runs away again. I don't like physically restraining him as I think this
upsets him more but I don't know how to keep him near me to try and
talk to him.
Lastly when I am doing this process of getting to
the feelings underneath and he does manage to sit with me, how long
would you persist in doing this if I am not getting anywhere with him,
as a lot of the time I can be sitting there for 10 minutes or more and
he just sits in my lap and stares at me and listens and it almost feels
like a stand off like he is saying "I can sit here all day mum
your'e not going to break me".
Any advice you can give would be really helpful.
Thank you,
Belinda
Belinda-
It is natural that you are having some challenges
implementing this new way of helping your son with his feelings. You're
on the right track, but it seems to me from what you are describing
that you are getting a bit confused between teaching your son the right
thing to do, versus helping him with his feelings.
There are five things you need to do with your son to help him past this stage:
1. PREVENT hitting if possible.
You do this by staying very close when he is with other kids. Here is a url of how you do this:
Toddler Hitting Other Kids at Playgroup
2. Set clear, firm, kind limits when he does hit.
Firm is good. Mean is not. "No hitting. Hitting hurts. You can tell the other child what you want or need without hitting them. Here, I will help."
3. Manage your own feelings about his hitting.
Naturally you will be angry when he hits. But angry does not make your son feel safer. Two things you can do to manage your own feelings so you can stay more kindly towards your son:
First, talk to others about your feelings. In other words, you need to vent, too. Or put it in a journal. Behind your anger there is fear. Fear that something is wrong with your son, or you are a bad mom, or he will be a criminal. None of these things are true. But you need to let that fear come up and feel it, so it is exposed to the light of day. Then it will shrivel up and blow away and you will be better able to help your son. But you need to talk about that fear to feel it and let it go. (One caveat -- don't talk to moms who will tell you what to do. All you want is a chance to vent your upsets and fears about this. You do not need someone reinforcing them by getting scared herself and telling you to take action before he becomes a psychopath. Reinforcing your fear is not helpful.)
Secondly, see it from his perspective. He is a very little person who is easily overwhelmed. He is afraid. He gets over-stimulated and disconnected from you and feels all alone and terrified. He can't bear those feelings. So he lashes out. If you can accept all this and understand him, you will feel more sympathy for him. Let him into your heart.
4. Help him with his feelings after he hits.
He lashes out because he can't bear his upset feelings. Help him to tolerate and feel those feelings. He will feel overwhelmed, but then they will pass and stop controlling him. This is NOT a verbal process, as I will describe below. It is NOT about teaching or talking. It is about safety. You talk only enough to stay connected and help him feel safe. Telling him what he did wrong does not help him feel safe. Teaching does not help him feel safe.
5. Stay very connected with him every day so he trusts you with his feelings.
Do this through warmth, touch, snuggling, physical games. Make sure
you have Special Time for ten minutes every single day. Announce that
you are all his for ten minutes, with no interruptions. Alternate days
so one day is his choice, the next is yours. So one day you let him
choose what you do -- in other words, play whatever game he wants and do
it his way. On the next day, YOU decide what to do. Use the time to
connect with him by playing physical games that involve connection and
power and help him to work on his fear. Anything that gets him giggling
is what you want. Here's an article of games you can play with him:
http://www.ahaparenting.com/
This daily special time will build trust with you so he will be more able to let his feelings up and out rather than running away from you. It will also make him more willing to rely on you to help him feel safe, for instance to call you for help instead of hitting. And giggling lets up the same feelings as crying, so the more giggling, the fewer tears.
6. Teach him that hitting is not ok.
You don't do this when he hits. Wait at least two hours, until everyone is calm again.
Of course, he already knows not to hit. He just can't stop himself. So
the other five steps are much more important, so that he can actually
act the way he knows he should.
If you can help him learn some better ways to handle those feelings, he might even remember them next time he gets mad at the playground. NOT while he's still upset, but hours later, you can talk with him about it. Do it with a light touch and a sense of humor. Say "Remember at the park when you hit that little boy? You must have been so mad, to hit him."
Telling him that what he did hurt the other child is fine. But making
him feel like a bad person for doing it will just backfire because it
scares him: "Mom says what I did was bad...but I couldn't help
myself...I must be bad....what if she stops loving me because I am so
bad?" That fear is what causes his blank stare. In other words,
you are scaring him by "talking at him" about what he has done wrong. So he gets his defenses up and stares you down.
Listen to him and reflect: "You
were mad at him?...Tell me more..."
Validate: "So you were mad because he tried to grab your truck? No wonder you got mad!"
Then help him explore alternatives: "Next time, when you get mad, what could you do?
Could you call me? Could you walk away? Could you hit the sand?"
Then have him practice these responses, so he has 'muscle memory' of them. "Ok,
let's practice. This stuffed animal tried to use your truck. You are
so mad and want to hit him. But you remember there are other things you
can do! So you call me, ok? I am right over here talking to another
mom. Call me, ok, and I will come. Call me right now."
The specifics in your question, step by step:
a. You did absolutely the right thing to go over to him immediately
when he hit the boy. Naturally he would just go on playing if you did
not set a limit about the hitting. In fact, I would urge you to be MORE
definite in your limit setting. Not " I just want to talk to you
for a moment" but instead "I know you're upset but NO
HITTING!" As you say it, you get down on his level, put your hand on
his arm or back (gently but firmly to make contact) and make eye contact
with him. This is Step One.
b. Step Two -- Taking him out of the playground to connect with him
is perfect, since it gives you and him more privacy. But don't think of
it as taking him out "to talk with him." You are NOT talking at all at
this point. He can't hear you.
Instead, think of Step One as interrupting the hitting by
setting a clear limit and removing your son from the situation, so you
are intervening to stop the hitting from escalating.
Think of Step Two as taking him out of the playground to help him with the feelings that caused him to hit.
Aggression in mammals always come from fear. So in Step One you are
protecting the other child and in Step Two you are helping your son with
his fear. Step 3 is Teaching him not to hit. That comes hours later. Forget about it for now. You can't teach when either of you is upset.
c. "I could not get a word in as he was just so loud and wasn't interested in anything I had to say to him."
Your son was feeling all his upset feelings. That is a GOOD thing.
Help him feel safe enough to keep feeling them. Don't talk when he is
upset. The way we help our children with their fear and other big
feelings is not verbally. It is to give them a safe "holding
environment" for them to feel their feelings. If they feel safe with
us, when these feelings come up, they will feel them and "show" them to us. Kids often need a witness for their feelings (as all humans do.) And once emotions are felt, they evaporate.
So in the park,
or at home, when his feelings come up, your goal is to stay with him and
help him with his feelings. Resist the impulse to teach. When humans
are upset, learning shuts down. You are still on Step 2, helping him with his feelings.
d. It makes perfect sense that he runs away when you go to him to
set a limit. He has all these upset feelings (which is why he lashes
out) and when you connect with him, he has to acknowledge not only what
he has done that he knows full well is wrong, but also all those upset
feelings. The whole reason he lashed out is that his fear was
unbearable. He doesn't want to feel all that. So he runs away. Just
follow him and stay as close as possible. If he tells you to go away,
say "I won't leave you alone with these big scary feelings. I am right here." If he moves further away, he is trying to regulate the space between you. Say, "I won't come any closer than this until you're ready, but I am right here."
e. When you say he got hysterical, I assume that means out of
control crying. That is a good thing. That is him feeling safe enough
to let all his fear out. He might also thrash around, which is also
fear coming up. This is GOOD. It will happen a few times, and then he
will be done with it. These feelings are what has been pushing him to
hit. He has been carrying them around for a long time. Once he feels them, they will vanish. He will be more able to manage his feelings, and therefore his behavior.
Stay close so he feels
safe. Don't try to talk with him while he is hysterical. The point is
to release all those yucky feelings. Talking moves him out of his heart
and into his mind. Instead, just stay with him while he is
hysterical. If possible, hold him. If not, touch him. If that is not
possible, stay with him and keep connected using your voice. But don't
try to say too much. Just say "You are so upset...I am right here....You are safe....." in as soothing a tone as you can muster, every so often.
Whatever you do, don't teach. Don't correct him. Don't tell him what
he did wrong. He can't listen right now. It will make things worse
because he will stop feeling safe. Remember, you are still on Step 2,
helping him with his feelings.
f. "This went on for 10 minutes so I gave up and took him home and he
kept crying like this until we got home and then once home he wanted me
to cuddle him."
Excellent. Ten minutes of crying is great. 20 minutes is even better. He's
been lugging around a full backpack of fear for awhile. Once he begins
to cry and let it out, that is great. Keep going for as long as you
can stay kind and patient. Remember, in the car, he is not feeling
connected to you, so you are interrupting his healing. Try to sit with
the feelings for as long as you can before you take him home. Keep breathing. Say a little
mantra to yourself: "He's getting out all that fear....he's healing...we're on the right track."
After they express big feelings, kids get worried about whether we still
love them. One of the reasons for them holding those feelings in is that they thought those feelings weren't acceptable. So that snuggling you did with him was very important. Hold
him and tell him you love him no matter what, forever and ever. Say "You
were so upset. Thank you for showing me all those big feelings. I am
right here, no matter what. I will always keep you safe." You are still on Step 2, helping him with his feelings.
g. "After a cuddle I then tried to explain that you do not
hit people in the face, talked about what he was feeling and I just get
the blank look from him." Ok, here is where you transition out of Step 2
(helping him with his feelings) and back into life. BUT you are still
not teaching. You can't tackle Step 3 (Teaching) yet. He's too vulnerable and raw inside. He is not ready to
learn yet. His brain has not switched back on.
GREAT you waited until after the cuddle. Your first words should be a reflection of his feelings, as I mentioned above: "You were so upset...you were crying so hard."
Then you affirm his safety and your love: "I love you and I will always keep you safe." Keep repeating versions of this.
Finally, I don't want you to ignore the hitting. I just want you not to belabor it now because it won't help. You can say "You hit that boy in the face. That hurt!"
But then drop it. His brain is not fully in gear yet. If you lecture
him you will get a blank stare. That is a defense. As you put it, "a stand off like he is saying "I can sit here all day mum
you're not going to break me". There is NO reason to lecture. It
puts up a wall. Instead, when it seems clear he is done processing and
ready to move on, ask him if he wants a drink of water. Wash your own
and his face and hands. This helps you put the incident behind you.
LATER, you can teach him, using what I described above.
h. "At home he is doing this a lot, he hits out, I go to
him to talk to him and he runs away and then starts screaming and
crying if I try to look at him, to talk to him."
Try to stay close. But after you set the limit, don't talk. Just put your hand on him and say "I won't let you hit, Sweetie." When he runs away, follow him and say "You are so upset....I won't leave you alone with these big scary feelings....I am right here."
i. "If I give up and walk
away he comes to me crying..." Don't give up and walk away. If he
keeps running away, it is fine to sit down so he doesn't move further
away. He is showing you how much distance he wants. But when you walk
away, that is frustration and he naturally feels your anger and that
scares him. He is worried about feeling those big scary feelings inside him, and he does need
you close to feel safe. Although if you are too close, his feelings come up
more intensely. So he is naturally trying to regulate the distance
between you. Let him be in charge of that.
j. "he comes to me crying, saying he wants me to hug him (which I do and
wait for him to calm down) but as soon as I try and start talking he
runs away again.
Don't talk. Hug him. If he starts to calm down, see if he is really done with the feelings by saying "You were so upset...you were so mad you wanted to hit..."
or whatever, mentioning whatever set him off. He may cry more, which
is great. Better to get it out now than to have him hit a kid on the
playground. If he is really done, he will not cry more.
k. "I don't like physically restraining him as I think this
upsets him more but I don't know how to keep him near me to try and
talk to him."
Don't restrain him. Stay as near as he will let you. He will not run
too far away, as he has shown you, given that when you walk away he
comes back. So let him regulate the distance. He is building trust.
l. "Lastly when I am doing this process of getting to
the feelings underneath and he does manage to sit with me, how long
would you persist in doing this if I am not getting anywhere with him,
as a lot of the time I can be sitting there for 10 minutes or more and
he just sits in my lap and stares at me."
You are not getting to the feelings if you are talking. You are
lecturing. No point in that. It's like building a wall between you.
Instead, make sure he is done crying by empathizing "You were so
upset." Then follow the instructions above to move on from there.
To do this is tough. We as parents need to breathe our way through these big feelings. If we were comfortable with them, our child would probably be more comfortable with them. So you are way ahead, in that you know part of this is your own issue. I encourage you to keep exploring your own feelings and letting yourself feel even what is scary or uncomfortable.
But then, don't dwell on it. See yourself in a positive state, holding your little guy, being understanding, generous of spirit, loving. The more you see that and practice it, the more you will feel it. That unconditional love is just as essential to your son's learning as the limits you set on his hitting. The teaching is what is less essential.
Make sense? Good luck, and let me know how it goes!
Dr. Laura