Your child is overwhelmed, and so are you—but there are ways to stay calm and guide them through the storm.
The Overwhelm Parents Know Too Well
Your child is screaming on the floor. Maybe they’re kicking, throwing, or shouting words you never imagined would come out of their little mouth. You freeze. Do you comfort them? Do you ignore it? Do you set a consequence?
In the moment, your mind goes blank. You feel powerless, embarrassed, and maybe even ashamed. Later, you replay what happened and wonder, “Why can’t I handle this better?”
If this sounds familiar, you’re not alone. Many parents searching for how to stop child tantrums are facing the same overwhelm.
Why Meltdowns Feel So Hard to Handle
Parents often tell me that meltdowns feel irrational, explosive, and completely unpredictable. One moment everything is fine, and the next — chaos. The smallest thing, like the wrong color cup or leaving the park, can set off a storm.
In those moments, most of the “usual” parenting tips backfire:
- Consequences don’t land. Your child’s brain is too overwhelmed to learn.
- Validation seems to make it worse, they can’t even hear your words.
- Rationalizing gets you nowhere. Both of you end up feeling worse.
Most parents don’t realize that meltdowns aren’t power plays. They’re a sign your child’s nervous system is flooded and they literally can’t access logic, problem-solving, or self-control.
What Actually Helps in the Middle of a Meltdown
The key shift is this: you don’t have to stop the meltdown, but you do need a plan for how to ride it out.
Here are three steps you can try the very next time:
- Steady yourself first.
- Keep words simple.
- Offer safety, not solutions.
Why Having a Plan Matters
Here’s the piece most parents miss: you can’t improvise your way through meltdowns. When your child is screaming, your brain floods too — which is why you feel frozen, panicked, or default to yelling.
That’s why having a clear plan for what to do and say in the heat of the moment changes everything. Instead of scrambling, you’ll know:
- Exactly what words to use.
- How to respond when your child lashes out.
- How to get through the storm without losing your own cool.
The Meltdown Plan: Your Step-by-Step Guide
If you’re tired of feeling powerless in meltdown moments, my new audio course, The Meltdown Plan, was made for you.
In less than an hour, you’ll learn a simple, step-by-step approach to:
- Stay calm and confident in the middle of a meltdown.
- Know exactly what to do when your child is yelling, hitting, or saying “I hate you.”
- Respond in ways that reduce guilt, shame, and chaos.
So the next time your sensitive kid explodes, you won’t be stuck Googling “how to stop toddler tantrums.” You’ll have a plan to follow.

Related Posts
-
Back to School With a Spicy Kid? Here’s What Helps
If your child struggles every September, here’s how to make the back-to-school transition smoother.
-
How to Help a Child Who Lives Close to Shame
If your child hides after making a mistake, says things like “I’m the worst,” or shuts down when corrected—they might be living close to shame. Here’s how to help them build resilience instead.

