Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta losing patience with children. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta losing patience with children. Mostrar todas las entradas

When You Feel Like a Bad Parent After Losing Your Patience: Understanding parental guilt and turning it into growth



Many parents know this moment very well.

After a long day, an intense tantrum, or several stressful situations piling up, patience runs out.

Maybe you raised your voice.
Maybe you reacted more harshly than you wanted.
Maybe you said something you later regretted.

And once everything becomes quiet again, an uncomfortable feeling appears:

guilt.

Many parents then begin to ask themselves:

  • Am I failing as a parent?

  • Did I hurt my child with my reaction?

  • Should I be able to handle this better?

Feeling guilty after losing patience is a very common experience in parenting.

And although it is rarely talked about openly, it can also become an opportunity for growth.


The pressure to be a “perfect parent”

Today many parents feel a strong pressure to do everything right.

Books, social media, parenting advice… all seem to communicate the same message:

Good parents always know how to respond.

But real life looks very different.

Parents are human beings who:

  • Get tired

  • Feel frustrated

  • Make mistakes

  • Are constantly learning

Expecting constant perfection in parenting can create an emotional burden that is difficult to carry.


Losing patience does not define your parenting

One difficult moment does not define the relationship you have with your child.

What truly shapes the bond over time is the overall pattern of interaction.

When parents regularly

  • Show affection

  • Listen to their children

  • Try to understand their emotions

  • Repair when they make mistakes

The relationship becomes stronger—even after challenging moments.

In fact, emotional repair is an essential part of healthy relationships.


The power of repairing after conflict

After losing patience, one of the most valuable things parents can do is repair the moment.

This may include:

  • Acknowledging what happened

  • Explaining your own emotions

  • Apologizing if necessary

  • Showing your child how conflicts can be resolved

For example:

“Earlier I got very upset and raised my voice. I’m sorry. I’m still learning how to manage my emotions better.”

This type of conversation teaches children something powerful:

that all human beings make mistakes—but they can also recognize them and grow from them.


Turning guilt into learning

Guilt can be useful when it invites reflection.

Instead of staying stuck in self-blame, it can be helpful to ask:

  • What led me to react this way?

  • Was I very tired or overwhelmed?

  • What could I try differently next time?

This kind of reflection transforms guilt into a tool for growth.


🌿 Emotional Validation Stories for Parents

To support parents during these moments, we’ve prepared a series of short stories that include the following:

  • Emotional validation messages

  • Reminders about parental self-care

  • Reflections to approach guilt with more compassion

📥 Access the Support Stories

(Because parenting also needs spaces of understanding.)


Closing reflection

Being a parent does not mean doing everything perfectly.

It means being willing to learn, repair, and keep trying.

The moments when we feel we have failed can also become opportunities to show our children something deeply human:

that relationships are not built on perfection…

but on honesty, learning, and consistent love. 🌿

Y. Vargas. 💬💖

Why Your Child’s Tantrums Trigger Your Own Anger: When parenting awakens emotions we didn’t expect



Many parents have experienced a moment like this.

Your child begins to have a tantrum.
The crying intensifies.
The frustration grows.

And suddenly, something happens inside the adult as well.

Your heart starts beating faster.
Your body becomes tense.
Your patience disappears faster than you expected.

Then a difficult emotion appears:

anger.

Afterward, many parents find themselves asking:

  • Why did I react like that?

  • Why did something so small make me so upset?

  • What happened to me in that moment?

Often, the answer is not only in the child’s behavior, but also in what that moment activates inside the parent.


Children’s emotions can activate ours

Tantrums do not only affect children.

They can also trigger intense emotional reactions in parents.

When a child screams, cries, or loses control, the adult may experience:

  • Frustration

  • Helplessness

  • Stress

  • Irritation

  • a sense of losing control

This happens because the adult brain also responds to emotional signals in the environment.

Emotions are contagious.

And when tension fills the room, the adult body reacts as well.


Emotional memories also play a role

In some cases, strong reactions are connected to past experiences.

Many adults grew up in environments where:

  • Strong emotions were not welcomed

  • Immediate obedience was expected

  • Expressing frustration had negative consequences

When a child expresses intense emotions, something inside the adult may become activated—often without conscious awareness.

Not because the parent wants to react that way, but because their own emotional history is present in the moment.


When the body goes into reaction mode

During stressful situations, the human body activates its alert system.

This can lead to:

  • Faster breathing

  • Muscle tension

  • Impulsive thoughts

  • A strong desire to stop the situation immediately

At that moment, the adult may also lose part of their ability to reflect calmly.

That is why many reactions happen automatically.


The power of a conscious pause

One of the most helpful tools in these moments is creating a small pause before reacting.

Simple actions like:

  • Taking a deep breath

  • Lowering your voice

  • Reminding yourself that your child is overwhelmed

  • Taking a few seconds before responding

can help the brain regain clarity.

It won’t always be perfect.

But even small pauses can change how the situation unfolds.


Parenting is also a journey of self-awareness

Raising children is not only about guiding their development.

It can also be an opportunity to better understand our own emotions.

Many parents discover that parenting invites them to:

  • Recognize emotional patterns

  • Develop greater patience

  • Learn new ways of responding

This process does not mean parents must be perfect.

It simply means that they are also growing alongside their children.


🌿 Free Resource: Emotional Reflection Worksheet for Parents

To help you understand your reactions during difficult moments, we’ve created a reflection worksheet that includes:

  • Guided questions for parents

  • Simple emotional pause exercises

  • Ideas for responding with greater calm

📥 Download the Reflection Worksheet

(A resource to support your own emotional awareness.)


Closing reflection

Children’s tantrums do not only reveal something about a child’s emotional development.

They can also reveal something about the inner world of the parent.

When parents begin to recognize their own emotional responses, something meaningful happens.

Parenting stops being only about controlling a child’s behavior.

It becomes a path of personal growth as well. 🌿

Y. Vargas. 💬💖