Blog How to Help Your Toddler Express Their Feelings
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Discover three practical strategies to help your toddler express their emotions in healthy ways. Learn how mirroring language, using picture books, and encouraging open-ended play can transform tantrums into valuable developmental opportunities.
Toddlers live in the moment. These moments are characterized by feeling either strong and powerful or little and helpless. During the second and third years of a child's life, they have tantrums as they realize that their wants and wishes don't always align with those of the family and caregivers around them. They do not yet have the coping skills, nor can they meaningfully verbalize their feelings, which leads to these tantrums.
Parents have the difficult task of needing to respond to just about all demands, at all hours, in the most balanced and regulated way that they can. It's a tall order for parents but we do our best to hold the line while keeping our cool and responding with gentleness and empathy.
But aside from maintaining the calm and showing up with relentless patience, what else can parents do?
Parents can observe their child and mirror their child's feelings using words. "Ugh, I know, you are so mad that the cup you wanted isn't here. You are so mad." Parents should focus on using simple and concrete words to help their child directly relate to the feelings they are having. "Look at her happy smile!" OR "Your tower fell down. You are sad. Your face looks sad."
Parents can also model emotional expression by talking out loud, in earshot of their child, about how they themselves are feeling. "I was going to have a nice time reading my book but I can't find it. I feel frustrated that my book isn't where I thought it was."
Showing your child that you understand them by putting words to their feelings, as well as using words to express how you yourself are feeling, in a calm but expressive way, helps your child connect with how to express themselves.
Tips:
Reading picture books creates a space for children to process emotions outside of the moment. The illustrations are a visual tool that children use to make sense of experiences both their own and those of others. Practice pointing to and labeling the emotions with your child.
Tips:
Open-ended play allows toddlers to express their feelings by providing a safe place to make sense of the world. Through play, children can explore feelings such as fear and excitement while hiding or playing peek-a-boo, frustration and pride while building block towers, joy and care while playing with baby dolls, sadness or feelings related to separation while playing with a set of animal figurines. These feelings may be verbalized or quietly considered but they are owned, created, and experienced by the child. They may be reflected upon deeply or in passing.
Open-ended play is meant to be without structure, which allows children to play freely without feeling pressured to perform or achieve a specific outcome. Children get to have agency and come up with how they want to move the play forward, if they want to at all.
Tips:
At the heart of toddler behavior is their emotional life and their dual search for security and independence. Support their ability to express what they are feeling, as well as their overall emotional development, by modeling and mirroring feelings, introducing emotional language through the use of picture books, and support their emotional understanding and reflection through open-ended play.
At NeelCamp, we understand that emotional development is a crucial part of childhood growth. Our after-school programs and summer camps provide supportive environments where children can continue developing these essential emotional skills through guided activities and play. Learn more about our child development approach and program offerings.
For more parenting resources and child development insights, visit our blog.
Published on: Apr 16, 2025 5:23 AM
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