Seeing what may be happening underneath big reactions
What looks like an overreaction on the outside is often connected to something deeper happening underneath.
You’ll receive a short reflection to help you get more out of the session.
When a Small Moment Suddenly Becomes Big
Most parents have experienced moments that seem to escalate far beyond what the situation itself would appear to warrant.
A simple correction becomes:
- tears
- anger
- shutdown
- yelling
- defensiveness
- emotional overwhelm
- “Why is this becoming such a big deal?”
- “Why are they reacting like this?”
- “What am I missing?”
What We Usually See
Most of the time, parents naturally focus on:
- the words
- the tone
- the behavior
- the reaction itself
what is happening externally.They are also reacting to:
- what the moment feels like internally
- what it reminds them of
- what they believe the moment means
- the emotional pressure already building inside them
Emotions Often Carry More Than the Present Moment
Sometimes a child reacts strongly because the moment touches:
- embarrassment
- fear of failure
- shame
- loneliness
- fear of disappointing someone
- fear of losing connection
- feeling misunderstood
- emotional exhaustion
something inside suddenly feels overwhelming.So what adults experience as:
“an overreaction”may actually be:
an overloaded nervous system trying to manage something bigger underneath the surface.
A Small Moment Most People Miss
A child forgets something important for school.
You remind them.
And suddenly:
- frustration rises quickly
- defensiveness appears
- voices get louder
- the situation escalates far beyond the forgotten item itself
- embarrassment
- pressure
- fear of disappointing you
- fear of being seen as irresponsible
- stress from other parts of the day
the internal pressure was already building long before the conversation began.
Why Parents Often React Too
When children escalate emotionally, parents often experience something internally too.
Especially when:
- voices become disrespectful
- tension rises quickly
- emotions feel out of control
- the situation becomes unpredictable
- urgency
- fear
- frustration
- helplessness
- pressure to regain control quickly
the parent’s nervous system begins reacting to the child’s nervous system.That is often when conversations spiral. Not because either person is bad. But because:
two overwhelmed internal worlds are now interacting at the same time.
What Children Need in Those Moments
Children do need:
- boundaries
- accountability
- responsibility
steadiness.Not permissiveness. Not the removal of responsibility. But a parent who can remain grounded enough to help create safety inside the moment. Because children often borrow emotional regulation from adults before they fully develop it internally themselves.
Another Real Moment
A teenager comes home visibly frustrated.
You ask a simple question.
And immediately, the response feels sharp:
Maybe something socially painful happened.
Maybe they already feel overwhelmed inside themselves. And suddenly, the moment becomes less about “attitude” and more about:
“I said I’m fine.”You can feel the pull internally:
- to push harder
- to correct the tone
- to react to the disrespect
- to shut the conversation down
Maybe something socially painful happened.
Maybe they already feel overwhelmed inside themselves. And suddenly, the moment becomes less about “attitude” and more about:
a child struggling to carry something internally.That doesn’t mean boundaries disappear. But understanding changes how the moment is approached.
Overreaction Is Often a Signal, Not Just a Behavior Problem
Children’s reactions often communicate something underneath the surface:
- emotional overload
- stress
- fear
- shame
- exhaustion
- disconnection
- insecurity
- lack of emotional skills
- nervous system overwhelm
behavior alone rarely tells the full story.And when parents only respond to the visible behavior, they can unintentionally miss what the child actually needs underneath.
Emotional Awareness Changes the Way We See the Moment
When parents begin learning to notice:
- what is happening internally in themselves
- what may be happening internally in the child
- how emotional pressure builds before reactions appear
“How do I stop this behavior as fast as possible?”Instead, the question becomes:
“What is actually happening underneath this reaction?”That shift changes everything. Because awareness creates space. And inside that space:
- steadiness becomes more possible
- curiosity becomes more available
- connection becomes easier to protect
- different responses begin to emerge
Emotional Maturity Is Learned Gradually
Children are not born already knowing how to:
- regulate emotions
- communicate clearly under pressure
- process disappointment
- carry frustration well
- stay grounded when overwhelmed
- emotional safety
- steadiness
- repair
- connection
- being understood without shame
“Big feelings do not make me bad, unsafe, or alone.”
What This Does NOT Mean
Understanding what is happening underneath reactions does not mean:
- removing boundaries
- excusing harmful behavior
- avoiding accountability
- never correcting behavior
Where This Begins
Most parents are already trying to navigate these moments.
You can feel it in questions like:
- “How do I stay calm when my child escalates?”
- “How do I help without making things worse?”
- “How do I correct behavior without damaging connection?”
- noticing internal reactions
- slowing down the escalation cycle
- understanding what emotions are communicating
- creating steadiness inside emotionally charged moments
Join the Unlock™ Workshop
In the Unlock™ Workshop, we walk through:
- why reactions happen in real moments
- what is happening internally before conversations escalate
- how awareness creates space for different responses
- how steadiness and connection can grow together
You’ll receive a short reflection to help you get more out of the session.
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