Why Ignoring Your Children Feelings Can Backfire
The Gentle Pivot: When We Unintentionally Miss Our Children's Feelings
As mothers, we are often juggling a thousand mental tabs at once. Between the laundry, work deadlines, and the endless "to-do" list, it’s only natural that when our child starts crying over a broken cracker or a lost toy, our first instinct is to find the quickest exit strategy. We might say, "It’s okay, it’s just a cracker," or "Please stop crying, we have to go."
We don't mean to be dismissive; we are simply trying to keep the day moving. However, research into child development suggests that when we skip emotional acknowledgment to jump straight to a solution—or minimize the feeling to keep the peace—we might unintentionally be setting the stage for bigger behavioral struggles later on.
The Heart of the Matter: Connection Before Correction
Our children don't always need us to fix their problems; more than anything, they need to feel that we see them. When we unintentionally dismiss a child's emotions, they don't actually learn how to "get over it." Instead, they often feel like they are facing those big, scary feelings all by themselves.
Why "Later" Becomes "Louder"
Quiet Suppression
When we ask them to "toughen up" to save time, the stress stays living in their little bodies.
The Accumulation
Every dismissed moment adds pressure to their "emotional cup" throughout the day.
The Overflow
Eventually, the cup spills over as "unexplained" intense tantrums.
The Four-Step Framework Solution
Observe Without Judging
Before you speak, look at their face and body. Notice they are having a reaction without deciding if it's "rational."
Name the Feeling (The "I See" Statement)
"I see your face looks very sad." This names the invisible "monster" and makes it less scary.
The Five-Second Pause
Stop talking. Let the acknowledgment sink in and watch for their nervous system to reset (shoulders drop).
Problem-Solve Together
Now you can fix it. "Should we try to tape the cracker back together?" They are more likely to cooperate now.
A Small Shift for Busy Moms
Adjusting this cycle doesn't require a total parenting overhaul—it just requires a gentle pivot in our language. By using these "I see..." statements, you become an emotional anchor. You aren't "giving in"; you are helping them process so they can move past it.
Learn more about other toxic mother traits.
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