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When Your Child Is Angry or Aggressive: What Helps

All children get angry sometimes.

They may yell, hit, throw things, lash out, or seem completely out of control. When that happens, it can be upsetting—and hard to know how to respond in a way that actually helps.

If your child’s anger feels intense, aggressive, or constant, you’re not alone. Many parents are dealing with meltdowns, yelling, hitting, and explosive behavior, and wondering how to set limits without making things worse.

The good news is that anger itself is not the problem. Anger is a signal that your child is overwhelmed, hurt, frustrated, or dysregulated. When we understand what’s underneath the anger, we can respond in ways that help children feel safe, regain control, and learn better ways to express themselves.

This guide will help you understand your child’s anger, respond in the moment, stop aggression, and support your child in developing self-regulation over time.

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If your child’s anger has been feeling intense or hard to manage, start with these:

Help in the Moment

When your child is furious, the goal is not to lecture or punish. The goal is to keep everyone safe, stay as calm as you can, and help your child move back toward regulation.

When Your Child Hits

Aggression needs a clear limit—but children also need help with the feelings driving the behavior.

When Anger Turns Into Aggressive Tantrums

Some children don’t just get upset—they become physically aggressive, hitting, kicking, or screaming when overwhelmed. These are often intense tantrums, not deliberate misbehavior.

Understanding this can help you respond in ways that calm the situation instead of escalating it.

If your child is having frequent meltdowns or losing control, see our guide to tantrums and emotional outbursts.

Understand What’s Driving the Anger

Angry behavior usually has deeper roots—frustration, fear, shame, exhaustion, disconnection, or a nervous system in overload.


Your child does not need to be punished for having big feelings.

They do need your calm leadership, clear limits, and support learning what to do with those feelings.

Over time, these hard moments can become opportunities for connection, healing, and growth.

Less drama, more love.

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Screens are part of modern childhood — but without clear expectations they can easily lead to daily battles.

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