Why Does My Child Hold It Together at School and Melt Down at Home?
Parenting, Child Behavior, All About Emotions Dylan Spradlin Parenting, Child Behavior, All About Emotions Dylan Spradlin

Why Does My Child Hold It Together at School and Melt Down at Home?

Why Does My Child Hold It Together at School and Melt Down at Home?

The 4:00 p.m. version of your child is not the whole story

Maybe your child’s teacher says they are doing fine.

Maybe they are polite. Quiet. Helpful. Focused enough. Maybe they are even the kid who gets described as “a joy to have in class.”

Then they get in the car, walk through the front door, or hear one tiny request—shoes off, wash hands, please don’t yell at your brother—and suddenly everything explodes.

Crying. Rage. Silence. A demand for snacks immediately. A refusal to speak. A meltdown over the wrong cup, the wrong socks, the fact that you breathed in their general direction.

And you are left wondering: How can they be so “fine” at school and so impossible at home?

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How Children Become People-Pleasers

How Children Become People-Pleasers

People-pleasing in children often gets missed because it looks like kindness, maturity, or “good behavior.” But sometimes the child who is easy, helpful, and always checking on everyone else has learned to quiet their own needs in order to stay connected. This is not manipulation or weakness. It is often a protective nervous system response — and with the right support, the pattern can begin to change.

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3 Ways to Stay Grounded When Your Kids Are Going Wild
Parent Behavior, Self-Care, Child Behavior Dylan Spradlin Parent Behavior, Self-Care, Child Behavior Dylan Spradlin

3 Ways to Stay Grounded When Your Kids Are Going Wild

We’ve all been there. Maybe you’ve had a long day, or perhaps you just aren’t feeling great. Or maybe the day started off perfect and just devolved into chaos!

But here you are - your head is pulsating, your eyes want to shrink backwards into your skull, your heart racing, teeth clenched against all the sensory input.

The volume from is increasing from the kids, they are running back and forth from room to room, laughing, yelling, screaming, and you don’t understand why are about to scream at them?

So what can you do in that moment? Because you know what happens if you don’t do something (and honestly, taking a deep breath or two…or ten…doesn’t always do it) you are going to yell, or exit with a slammed door behind you, and then all of you will be in tears.

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