OK. You did it.
You lost your temper and turned into a Hulk, a witch, fiery-dart breathing
dragon, and you crushed your little loved ones’ spirits, you spanked their
little bottoms, or maybe you shook, or slapped, or threw things, definitely
yelled and said vile things about how awful they are. The angry words came out faster than you
could catch them. And now you feel
horrible. You are the worst mother
ever. Your poor terrified kids would be
better off in an orphanage than living with you. They cry.
You cry. And the worst part is,
this is a normal day.
Mommy
rage. We know it’s bad. What we don’t know is how to change ourselves
into the patient, loving, long-suffering, unflappable mother we long to
be. All we know to is to try
harder. Next time we won’t let ourselves
get angry. We’ll show more
self-control. We won’t ever let
ourselves act like that again. But we
do. You may have been a calm, serene
person BC (before children), but somehow kids help us discover the temper we
never knew we had.
Things
kids do that push the anger buttons:
Babies:
cry non-stop, cry because they are too tired to eat and too hungry to sleep,
make a diaper change a wrestling match, won’t nurse, have colic, won’t sleep
when you are exhausted.
Toddlers:
whine, throw a tantrum because you cut his sandwich in squares instead of
triangles, insist on putting on her own socks and melt down because they won’t
go on, paint the brown couch in a rental with red oil paint (true story),
refuse to eat, refuse to nap, scribble on the walls,
cut their hair, dig the
dirt out of a potted plant, climb to the top shelf, run into the street,
destroy something you value, poop in their bedroom and then paint the walls
with it, pour the bottle of vegetable oil on the floor and skate in it (another
true story).
School
aged children: whine, fight with each other because “He’s breathing on me.”, talk
back, ignore you when tell them what to do, won’t get ready in time, lie, steal,
can’t find their shoes when it’s time for school, don’t do their chores, need
constant help with their homework.
Teenagers:
wear inappropriate clothing, sass, ignore chores, ignore homework, stay out too
late, chose grody friends, live on their phones or tablets, don’t obey, whine,
argue about everything, smoke, drink, fight, use drugs or have sex.
Pair
these triggers with never-ending dirty dishes, piles of laundry, not enough
sleep, not enough money, not enough time for all you have to do, and even the
most mild-mannered mom can turn into a screaming maniac.
Barnhill, who wrote She’s Gonna Blow! Real Help for Moms Dealing with Anger, says it’s
often the ‘little’ things in our everyday lives that are the most likely to
send us over the edge.1
“Anger
is the most powerful of all emotional experiences… The only emotion that
activates every muscle group and organ of the body, anger exists to mobilize
the instinctual fight-or-flight response meant to protect us from predators.”2 But our children aren’t predators.
The
funny thing about anger, as strong as the emotion is, it is often a secondary
emotion, one we experience because we aren’t dealing with the primary
emotion. Most often our anger comes
because of fear. We fear our children
will get hurt or will hurt someone else, we fear looking like a failure, we
fear they won’t love us, that they’ll bomb out at school and thus life, that
they’ll grow up to be liars or thieves, or living on the streets.
Other
emotions that can hide under anger are hurt, frustration, disappointment,
grief, guilt, loss, or a feeling of inadequacy, or even the unfinished business
of your own childhood. For example, “for
some people, a crying baby becomes a signal not of the child’s needs but of the
parent’s abject failure. The inability to comfort a distressed baby, or at
least to stop the crying, is the leading cause of child abuse, shaken-baby
syndrome, and infanticide.”2
Psychologist Gary J. Oliver explains,
“At a very early age, many of us learned that anger can help us divert
attention from these more painful emotions.
Anger is safer.”3 It
may be that our anger simply stems from feeling overwhelmed, fatigued, or burnt
out.
For
me, the underlying emotion was fear of loss of control. I was under the mistaken belief that my job
was to make my children be good.
With my compliant children, it was easy.
I told them what to do, they did it, and I was a good mom. With my non-compliant children, it was
different. I told them what to do, they
did something else, and I was a failure as a mom.
maximkabb/iStock/Thinkstock
I couldn’t make them do anything. So I got angry.
What
do we do with our anger? We can stuff
it, which can make us emotionally and even physically sick, and which can
slowly build inside us until it explodes, blowing us up along with our
children. Or we can unleash it
immediately on our poor scared children, often being cruel, critical and
hostile. Another way anger is often
expressed is passive-aggressive behavior.
Procrastination, sarcasm, emotional withdrawal, lack of consideration,
and the silent treatment make our point.
Oliver and his co-author H. Norman Wright tell us it rarely helps to
“try hard” to stop being angry. We need
more than self-control.3
Oliver
tells us that simply feeling the emotion of anger is not wrong.2 It can be an important message that… our
needs or wants are not being fully met. To keep from hurting those we love, and
ourselves, we need to look closely to understand what is really underneath our
anger—our fear, our frustration, our hurt—and choose to talk about those
emotions instead. It is an opportunity
for emotional growth. When those
emotions are healed, there is no need for the anger. “Talking about these ‘softer’ primary
emotions tends to prompt softer language from us that’s less threatening to
others.”3
I used
to get really angry at my 4-year-old son for riding his Big Wheel in the
street.
Yelling at him didn’t seem to
make any difference. When I explained
that I was afraid he would be hit by a car and badly hurt, he explained to me
that he was faster than any car, so riding in the street was safe. A short
race down the block between me in the car and him on his Big Wheel,
demonstrated that the car really was faster, and after that he stayed out of
the street. Expressing my fear worked
better than expressing my anger.
Tricia
Jalbert in her blog Mommy Rage: Cool Down
Before you Melt said, “Children learn from watching how you deal with your
own feelings and how you deal with theirs.
While you wouldn’t want to saddle your child with inappropriate exposure
to your adult issues and emotions, it is not unhealthy for them to simply see you
angry. It’s what you do when you are
angry, and how you manage your intensity, that are important. Showing healthy responses to strong emotions
teaches children that these emotions can be expressed and managed safely.”4
What
are healthy responses to that dangerous fire of anger inside ourselves?
Give
yourself a time out.
Go ahead and tell
your kids that you are angry and need time to cool off and you’ll talk to them
later. Exercise, punch a pillow, scrub
something to get rid of the toxic chemicals flooding your body from anger. See if you are tired, or hungry, or lonely,
and if so, take care of it. Consciously
relax. Tense and relax all your muscles.
Try creative projects or meditation. I used to go into my bedroom and pray that my
anger could be replaced with love and I could look for teachings and solutions
rather than punishment.
Force
a smile. Mom Tara Giroud said, “I used
to think [a forced smile] was the stupidest thing, but lately when I’m
five-miliseconds from exploding, I turn around and force a smile and within
seconds I can feel a shift. I can
breathe. I can come back into my
somewhat more rational self. I can turn
back to my kids and not roar my terrible roar or gnash my terrible teeth.”5
Speaking
of which, work to avoid scaring your children.
You can honestly express your feelings without being scary. Really.
You
can also express anger without blame or labeling. “I feel angry when you keep fighting,” rather
than “I can’t stand you, you are such a trouble maker.”
Don’t
take it personally. We sometimes see
disobedience as a personal insult. We
say do this, and they do that. Remember,
they are just children. They aren’t out
to get us. They are just seeing things
from their undeveloped viewpoints, which is all about them, not us.
Girard
warns us about counting to ten.
According to one report, it actually makes people angrier. We don’t want that. Taking deep breaths is good if you focus on
the breathing out rather than sucking the air in. Taking a deep breath in may trigger the fight
or flight response. Instead, focus on
blowing all the air out of your lungs.
This moves you into a more rational part of your mind.
Think
ahead and look for potential anger situations and avoid them if possible, or
visualize possible better responses.
“The
difference in your reaction to the child’s behavior lies entirely within you and depends completely on how you feel about
yourself, says Steven Stosny, Ph.D. [If
your self-value is low], the child’s behavior seems to diminish your sense of
self, and in anger you punish him for doing it to you. [When self-value is high], the child’s
behavior does not diminish your sense of personal importance, value, power, or
lovability. So there is no need for
anger. Rather, the problem to be solved
is how to teach the child to behave better; you won’t do that by humiliating or
scaring him with anger. His reaction to
humiliation and fear will be the same as yours—an inability to see the other
person’s perspective, an overwhelming urge to blame, and an impulse for
retaliation or punishment.”2
Remember
we are a work in progress as parents.
We’re not going to be perfect all at once. I’ve been a mom for 54 years, and I’m still
not perfect (don’t tell my kids. Oh
wait, they already know). So at some
time or another, our toddler is going to scribble on the wall or our teen is
going to come home at 4 am, and we’re going to lose it and morph into that
fiery dragon again.
When that happens,
we can quickly admit that we have been wrong.
We can and should apologize to our children. We can talk about the underlying emotion that
led us to the anger. We tell our child
how we are feeling now (sorry, embarrassed, guilty, etc.). We can talk about what we should have done to
calm down before we lost it. We can
brainstorm with our child about avoiding future bouts of anger. Your child can learn an invaluable life skill
by this type of interchange. You model
for them how to handle it when they lose their temper. Win-win.
1. Focus on the Family When Moms Get Angry by Carol Steffes
2.
Psychology
Today Why
Parents Really Get Angry at Their Kids.by Steven Stosny, Ph.D., posted Aug 07, 2015
3. 2015 Focus on the Family (Canada) Association Why moms who struggle
with anger need to be brave by Catherine Wilson
4. The Snap Mom Mommy Rage Cool Down Before you Melt
by Tricia Jalbert
5. Walking on travels: Hey you, Angry Mom, you’re not alone by Tara E. M. Giroud, posted Feb. 20, 2017 in
MOM, Parenting
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