Why Does Your Child’s Behavior Trigger You?
Season 3, Episode 19
This episode explores how attachment styles show up in parenting and why certain child behaviors can feel especially triggering. We’ll briefly define attachment styles, then focus on how a parent’s own upbringing and experiences shape their reactions to things like defiance, clinginess, and big emotions. We’ll unpack why these responses can feel automatic, touch on the brain science behind stress in parenting, and shift into practical insight—helping parents recognize their patterns, respond instead of react, and use connection and co-regulation to support their child. The goal is to normalize these experiences and offer simple, realistic ways to build stronger, more secure relationships.
Key Takeaways for Listeners:
Your child’s behavior is communication, not a problem to fix. When they’re struggling, there’s something underneath worth understanding.
Your reactions are signals, not failures. If a moment overwhelms you, that’s useful information about your own triggers.
Regulation comes before correction. Connection in the heat of the moment matters more than trying to control behavior.
Progress beats perfection. You don’t have to get it right every time—repairing after tough moments builds trust.
Small pauses change everything. One breath or a moment of awareness can shift how you respond and reshape the interaction.