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Mom Life

Being a mom comes with a lot of unexpected challenges. But that's not even the hardest part.
Truth. The hardest part is many of those unexpected challenges aren't spoken about in parenting
and motherhood books. Sometimes we even have a hard time sharing those challenges with our
closest friends. I believe we all have something to learn from each other, which is why talking
about the hard (and imperfect) moments is so important. Around here you'll discover posts
sharing real motherhood stories along with posts sharing real simple motherhood solutions.
C'mon in and hang around for a bit...

The Most Important Thing You Can Do After


You Yell at Your Kids

Mom Life

The Most Important Thing You Can Do After


You Yell at Your Kids
I opened the front door of the tiny 400 square foot cabin, where we are temporarily living,
walked to the back, sat at the picnic table and pulled my knees to my chest. My head buried into
my knees, and all I wanted in that moment was one thing.

To hide.

My kids ages two and four sat inside. My kids. My two sweet kiddos who were looking for
guidance from me. And I was hiding from them.

My hands covered my head burying it deeper into my knees, and I imagined they were
wondering what happened to their mom lately.

Here’s the truth.

I was angry. I checked myself to be sure. Yep, definitely angry. Frustrated too.

Parenting…it can feel a little chaotic and stressful. In fact, somedays it can feel like seeing a
tornado smack dab in the middle of a trailer park. Stuff is flying everywhere, it’s loud, and more
than anything, you’re just trying to survive.

But did you know that when you’re stressed, your brain goes into “flight or fight” mode?
This is the reason you hear about moms either yelling at their kids (“fight”) or running to hide in
the bathroom with chocolate (“flight”).

Talk about a revelation.

Repeated activation of your brain’s “fight or flight” response, tells your brain that the
environment is not safe.

This is where the vicious cycle of yelling can start to take over, your connection with your kids
can slowly erode, and before you blink, each small thing can start to feel like you’re fighting for
your life.

Your brain is tricked into thinking…if you just yell louder you’ll win the “fight.”

It affects your kids too.

When your stress level spikes into the red and you chronically yell, there is a reaction that
follows for both you and your kids. Many times this reaction is everyone feeling like they need
to constantly “fight or flight.”

You start to see things like…

 More backtalk and disrespect.


 More power struggles.
 And a lot less listening and cooperation.

There’s more.

Between early childhood and puberty, the brain will start to prune its connections, which means
the brain will start to eliminate connections it doesn’t need. This pruning follows the “use it or
lose it” principle.

The more your kids use calm ways to solve problems, the more it strengthens or eliminates those
brain connections. The more kids use fighting ways to solve problems, the more the brain
strengthens or eliminates those brain connections.

There is good news.

Something I regularly see is parents worrying that they need to be perfect. That you can’t make
any mistakes. That you can’t admit that…you’re human too.

I’m not an advocate for yelling, but the hard truth is this:

No matter how hard you try, at some point, something will happen and you’re going to yell
again. Everyone’s brain is pushed into “fight or flight” mode from time-to-time.

The good news is that after you yell, one important (and simple) step can change everything, and
you’ll start to…
 Repair and reconnect your relationship with your child.
 Teach your kids what to do after they lose their cool.

Try this simple phrase.

My son stood next to me, looked up and said something that broke my heart. “Are you angry
momma?” I paused, trying to think for a second back to Language of Listening®, the 3-part
parenting framework that I use.

One of the best parts about Language of Listening® is that you don’t have to be perfect. You
gain awareness, and through awareness, you can start to shift your reactions little-by-little.

I responded as honestly as possible before using one simple phrase. “Yes, I am angry. But the
way I reacted…that wasn’t okay.”

Before I could say “Let’s have a do-over,” my son patted me on the shoulder and said, “You can
just try again momma.”

I burst out laughing.

Because this is the beauty of Language of Listening – your kids will start to surprise you in the
most amazing ways. They’ll forgive you. They’ll let you know that it’s okay that you make
mistakes. They’ll let you know that you can simply try again.

Together we walked back into the house cleaned up the spilled bowl of spaghetti off the white
carpet, and I said, “Let’s have a do-over!”

Then we grabbed an empty bowl, pretended it was filled to the brim with spaghetti and red
sauce, and over and over again he spilled the bowl and I reacted without yelling. Then we
pretended again, except this time he was extra careful not to spill the bowl. Altogether, this took
less than 5 minutes.

Remember this.

Whether you run into the bathroom to hide with a chocolate bar or you dive straight into battle
and yell at your kids, it doesn’t end there.

That’s the beginning.

The beginning of repairing the hurt and mending the upset. The beginning of building a bridge
between your heart and the heart of your child. The beginning of starting over, trying again and
confidently knowing that you can always say, “Let’s have a do-over.”

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