Anger Management for Moms

Tired of losing your temper with your kids? Anger management for moms starts with breaking these 7 patterns to stop feeling angry.

Anger Management for MomsI’ve had my bouts of losing my temper and succumbing to frustration, and for the silliest of reasons, too (like my kids not eating the dinner I cooked, or being late for school drop off). I’ve gone through stages where the mom rage seemed to come out of nowhere, or when no calming techniques would work.

But for the last few years, I’ve reined in on feeling angry. And here’s what surprised me: it had little to do with what I did, but more with what I thought and felt.

You see, I’m learning that most of our behaviors stem from our thoughts, feelings, and beliefs, including whether we feel angry or not. You can try everything, but if your thoughts keep you trapped in a certain mindset, no amount of doing is going to get you out of losing your temper.

Instead, I found seven patterns that keep us feeling angry. Understanding and working through these thought patterns means you’re more likely to finally free yourself from the grasp of your temper.

Let’s take a look at patterns that are keeping you stuck:

1. Feeling like you have no choice

It’s that overwhelming feeling of finding yourself yelling out of nowhere. The rush of energy surges upward, ready to erupt, and it seems like the only way to get it out is to scream as loud as you can.

I hear you. Many moms feel like they have no choice about losing their tempers. After all, it’s not like we plan to yell at our kids or enjoy how we feel afterward.

But here’s what I learned: you always have a choice.

Yup, even in those moments when a split-second is all it takes to lose your cool. But the more you convince yourself that you have no choice, the less likely you are to be aware of what triggered you.

Feeling like you have no choice keeps you stuck, as if you’re the recipient of an unfortunate situation. Instead, be aware that you have a choice. You’ve always had a choice in the past—the only difference is that you weren’t aware of it back then.

What does being aware look like? It means focusing on how you feel in the moment, almost like you’re “watching” yourself rising in uncontrollable anger. This simple pause can separate you from the version of you about to yell, to the point where it can feel odd and you no longer want to go down that path.

Remind yourself that in every moment of your life, you have a choice on how to think, feel, and act. This important distinction can help you see your behavior in a new way—one where you can take full ownership of your actions.

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2. Staying stuck in unhelpful habits

We all operate from habits, from brushing our teeth to driving our cars. This is the brain’s way of conserving calories and energy, especially when we do many of the same things every day.

Unfortunately, these habits extend to how we feel as well, including feeling angry.

You see, your brain doesn’t discern between good and bad habits, or helpful and unhelpful ones. It’s only trained to continue to do things subconsciously from constant repetition. While brushing your teeth can be a helpful habit to automate, losing your temper isn’t.

So, any time you feel like you have no choice, or like you yell out of nowhere, that’s because it’s sort of true. You’ve formed the habit of getting angry so automatically, just as you don’t think much about brushing your teeth.

As I say in my book, 31 Days to Better Parenting:

“When we yell, we’re reacting. Maybe our kids do something, and the culmination of a stressful day builds up and we erupt. We usually don’t yell on purpose or wake up in the morning and say, ‘Today, I’m going to yell at my kids when they misbehave.'”

How, then, can you break the habit of losing your temper? By finding your triggers.

What is it that drives you to lose your temper? For one mom, it might be when her child is about to get hurt, while for another it’s when the kids fight or are unkind to each other. Other times it’s the onset of a tantrum or the sound of whining.

And sometimes the triggers aren’t even about the kids, but instead a busy day at work or an argument with your spouse.

Once you’ve spotted your common culprits, come prepared with alternatives, or “replacement habits.” Maybe it’s closing your eyes, thinking of a positive memory, or walking out of the room—anything other than raising your voice. It doesn’t matter what it is, so long as you find it useful.

At first, doing this new habit might feel odd, unnatural, or like it won’t work. But that’s because it’s “new,” and your brain doesn’t understand why it’s not relying on its old standby of yelling. But with consistent, gentle repetition, you can replace yelling with these new habits.

3. Trying to avoid your triggers entirely

While it’s crucial to know your triggers, that doesn’t mean you try to avoid them completely.

Just because tantrums are a trigger for you, it’s unrealistic—not to mention unfair—to expect your child to never throw one. No doubt, your triggers will continue to present themselves, sometimes over and over. Trying to avoid them might make you feel defeated when you’re about to lose your cool.

The key isn’t to try to avoid your triggers, but to change how you respond to them.

So, just because you now know that tantrums set you off, that doesn’t mean you get down on yourself when your toddler has a fit. That also doesn’t mean you give him grief for having a meltdown, either. Instead, focus on changing your automatic habits from yelling to something more helpful.

4. Trying to go from angry to happy

You might assume that not feeling angry means feeling the opposite: happy. So much so that any time you’re about to yell, you feel just as bad for the irritability or impatience you actually feel.

But that’s the problem: you’re trying to aim for the extreme, opposite end (happiness) when you’re barely hanging on. Can you see how unlikely it is to go from one extreme to the other? And can you see how not feeling what you expected would make you feel worse?

Instead, think of your emotions as a ladder, where difficult feelings lie on the bottom rungs while positive feelings are on the top. Rather than aiming for that top rung, what if you aim for the next rung up?

This is why you can’t beat yourself up if you’re not chipper and happy, especially in the face of your triggers. Instead, work your way up, and feel good for every rung you climb.

You were about to yell, but instead, you shut your eyes, took a deep breath, and didn’t say anything. You went from “I was about to yell” to “I chose not to say anything at all,” which is a pretty amazing change.

Sure, you felt irritated and just about ready to burst, but… you didn’t. Just because you weren’t smiling and happy, it doesn’t mean you’ve “failed” or that you’re a bad mom.

You see, the beauty of climbing that ladder is that you eventually continue to move higher. Maybe now you go from irritation to sadness, and you’re able to relax your body a bit. And from there, you manage to hug your child and even crack a smile.

So, don’t aim for the extreme end of where you are—few people can switch that quickly. Instead, start where you are and improve how you feel, rung by rung.

Failing as a Parent

5. Seeing these moments as problems

It seems preposterous to suggest that your triggers—from tantrums to the kids fighting—aren’t problems. They’re not exactly a walk in the park, right?

Except seeing these moments as problems does one damaging thing: it prevents you from seeing them as opportunities.

Yup, opportunities—or chances—to do the right thing. Yet another opportunity to be more patient, to show compassion, to develop your sense of empathy. These “problems” that seem to come back over and over only do so because you haven’t learned the lessons you needed to learn yet.

So, the more you see these triggers as problems, the more they might come back as problems.

Let’s say your kids fight over and over, but you don’t use it as an opportunity to further develop yourself. The next time they do fight, then you’re still not equipped with the patience, compassion, or empathy to help them through it.

But what if they fought and you chose other ways to respond to it? Now you’re developing the skills to handle sibling rivalry, so much so that the next time it happens, you’re better equipped.

Now the next time they fight, it won’t feel like yet another problem, because you’ve improved and changed how to handle it well.

6. Blaming other factors

When you list the reasons you get mad—your child telling a lie or playing too rough with his brother—it’s easy to see those as the cause of your anger.

But don’t be fooled: blaming external factors only holds you back from truly parenting with patience. Why? Blaming others or circumstances places you in a powerless mode.

If the only person you can control is yourself, then blaming relinquishes control out of your hands. It’s harder to change what you can’t control, so it can feel like you’re always on the receiving end of unfortunate circumstances. It always feels like you’re the victim.

But when you take responsibility for the choices you make, then you’re in a better place to make real, lasting change. You’re not relying on your child’s behavior to feel better—you decide how you’re going to feel regardless.

7. Not being dedicated to change

Anger management can only be as successful as your determination to make it happen.

This is especially hard at the beginning when you’re trying to undo so many unhelpful habits, and your brain is trying to convince you not to change. It’s difficult when you still lose your temper, even after trying not to.

But this is exactly when you must be dedicated to changing your negative thoughts and habits. Real change starts with constantly picking yourself back up when it’s so much easier to quit.

This also means focusing a lot of your energy on not getting angry. Maybe that’s waking up each morning intending to be patient, or journaling about your successes and not-so-great days. What we focus on grows, so the more attention and dedication you give toward real change, the more you can see it.

And yes, this means significant change won’t happen overnight—it might take weeks or months before you replace your old habits. But the only way to get to that point is through unwavering dedication.

Conclusion

If you feel trapped in anger and mood swings, no worries, friend—you can learn to undo patterns that are keeping you there.

Start by realizing that you have a choice—that you’ve always had a choice—whether to lose your temper or not. Spot your triggers and replace unhelpful habits with better ones. That doesn’t mean though that you try to avoid your triggers, but rather change how you respond to them.

Don’t feel like you need to jump from anger to happiness in one quick motion. Instead, think about moving up the rungs of a ladder, step by step. Realize that your triggers aren’t so much “problems” as they are opportunities with lessons for you to learn.

Avoid blaming external factors and instead take responsibility for your choices. And finally, dedicate yourself to changing how you respond to your child’s behavior. True commitment is needed to make lasting change.

As you can see, managing your anger starts not so much with doing as it does with how you’re being—in your thoughts, feelings, and beliefs.

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6 Comments

  1. My biggest difficulty is coping with my granddaughter’s mood swings. She can be a happy child and then suddenly switch to temper tantrums. She screams “No!” and refuses to wash, get dressed, brush her teeth, hold hands when walking, etc.

    It is emotionally tiring. She refuses time outs, running up the stairs when we have to resort to this and will not say she is sorry. Trying to talk things through after a three minute time out is impossible.

    These tantrums can sometimes last a long time. Yet at other times it is if a switch has been clicked and she reverts to her happy self very quickly.

    We find that giving her 5 minutes warning of a change of activity does help but any change in her day to day routine causes havoc.

    Any suggestions would be much appreciated.

    1. Nina Garcia says:

      Hi Caroline! It can definitely be rough dealing with a child’s mood swings, especially when they switch so suddenly. One thing that I’ve found to be really helpful in these situations is to show empathy for their troubles. It might seem so petty to us, especially when they pout about the littlest things. But by showing empathy and acknowledging their feelings, they feel heard and understood.

      So, you can say, “You seem upset that you can’t peel the sticker off. I’d feel mad too if I couldn’t figure something out yet.” A simple validation can make you on the same side as her instead of an opposing side she has to fight.

      Hang in there <3

  2. My daughter is 3.5yo. She spends most of her time with me. Although she goes to the day care, whatever time she is at home, I am the one who is with her.

    I have to face her tantrums as well. And because I am the one who is losing control and shouting at her and telling her what to do and what not to do, she nowadays has started getting more inclined towards her father. She wants daddy to feed her, dress her, pick her up from day care, so whatever I used to do, now she asks her father to do. She also said once, I don’t love you mom, I only love papa. I was taken aback. However, I try my best to deal with her patiently, but we are humans after all, we tend to lose our patience.

    Now, I am scared of losing her. The way she reacts and goes to her father and doesn’t come to me hurts me, not because she is going to her father, but because she isn’t coming to me.

    I don’t know if you could help me or guide me, or suggest something on this.

    1. Nina Garcia says:

      It can definitely be rough when we see how our kids respond to our anger and frustration. It’s sort of a slap in the face, a reality check, of our anger. As painful as it is to see, it can serve as a push to focus on staying calm and responding in a more positive way when she throws tantrums. This doesn’t mean you condone her behavior or let her get away with everything. But by focusing on staying calm, you can both discipline her behavior and model how to stay calm.

  3. Do you have any personal techniques that you use to work on yourself from the inside? So that the way you react to your kids is more calm and collected? That is something I’m seeking and trying to find what works for me but thought to ask you since I really find your emails so informative but comforting too. Like how do you personally cope with motherhood stress etc?

    I find a lot of it is rooted in my own feelings and not having the tools to cope. If I could just find a way to really breathe and step back I know I’d have a better handle on our situation.

    Thanks for any insight you may offer!

    1. Nina Garcia says:

      I totally know what you mean about having tools to actually put advice to action. I think we need a “mantra” type of reminder to draw on so that we respond with calmness instead of reacting in a split second.

      For instance, one that has been helpful to me is asking myself, “Is this helpful, or hurtful?” Just a simple question can help me reset from feeling compelled to get angry.