Phidas Anger Management Consultants

Phidas Anger Management Consultants Helps Adults and Children with Anger Management

There are two ways to influence your child. The first is through developing certain skills that help you respond to his needs and behaviours, and the second is through developing some lifestyle habits that affect him in positive ways. The skills will allow you to affect your child‘s internal state. The lifestyle habits allow you to affect your child‘s external world. The skills are about understanding and responding to your child‘s overall emotional, mental and physical health and behaviour. These address his internal needs.

The habits help you influence your child‘s development and behaviour through their environment, lifestyle and routines. These address his external needs.  When you work on developing these skills and habits simultaneously, your child‘s behaviour will usually transform totally. When you address both – the psycho-emotional aspects of your child‘s behaviours, and the external influences of your child‘s environment and lifestyle – you are then facing the whole picture. And therefore, you can provide a lasting positive impression in his behaviour and give him the best foot forward in life.

When your child is exhibiting behaviours that are not desirable, addressing only the behaviours themselves will leave you frustrated because the behaviours don‘t change, or grow into even worse behaviours. By honestly and objectively addressing the root causes of the misbehaviour, by gaining perspective on your child‘s emotional, mental and physiological needs, and by learning how to apply  skills to help you respond to his needs, behaviours and habits, you will be able to develop an entirely new relationship with your child.  A relationship with your child and family that is filled with love, compassion, understanding, connection, consideration, cooperation and open communication.

Three Kinds of Discipline Styles

There are three kinds of parenting discipline styles known as authoritarian parenting, permissive parenting and democratic parenting.  I will explain the problems you will encounter if you use authoritarian parenting or permissive parenting, and why I recommend democratic parenting.

Parents who use authoritarian parenting are either using authoritarian violent parenting or authoritarian non-violent parenting.

Problems you will face if you use authoritarian violent parenting.

With this kind of discipline, all your control comes through hitting, spanking, threatening, yelling, humiliating, blaming, belittling, criticizing, etc. To do this means you control your child by physical or verbal abuse. You can already see the problems you face with authoritarian violent parenting. Clearly the home atmosphere will be tense, rigid and oppressive. With this form of parenting, your children will often feel angry, hostile, scared or powerless, and will have low self-esteem.

Through authoritarian violent parenting children learn violence, competitiveness, lying and blind obedience to authority, and they end up having no self-discipline. What we then see in the adolescent teen is a child who will likely rebel, run away from home, act out with fights, drugs, sexual promiscuity, etc. and become hurtful to herself or to others.

As you can see, in authoritarian violent parenting, the parents ultimately run out of power – just as violent dictators who rule countries with this same style eventually get overthrown.

Research study results on instances of harsher punishment:

One large study showed that the more parents spanked children for antisocial behaviour, the more the antisocial behaviour increased.

The study showed that the more children are hit, the more likely they are to hit others including peers and siblings and, as they grow into adults, they are more likely to hit their spouses. Hitting children teaches them that it is acceptable to hit others who are smaller and weaker.

Authoritarian Non-Violent Parenting

Now, let‘s talk about the problems with authoritarian non-violent parenting. With this form of discipline, the methods we use to control our children include rewards and punishments. The rewards may include money, privileges, treats, toys, hugs, praise, attention, etc. Among the punishments used in authoritarian non-violent parenting include loss of privileges, withdrawal of love and attention, isolation, making the child feel guilty, etc.

So what children learn from this form of parenting is conformity, apple-polishing and deviousness, and they tend to lack self-discipline. Children raised with authoritarian non-violent parenting may feel resentful, angry, misunderstood and manipulated.  What then could be seen in the adolescent teen is emotional withdrawal, rebelling and searching elsewhere for unconditional love. Parents who practice this form of discipline most commonly complain that their teenager doesn‘t talk with them. Thus, as you can see again, with authoritarian non-violent parenting parents run out of power.

Permissive Parenting

It‘s worthwhile to say a few words about permissive parenting, for often parents find themselves at the end of their rope when using permissive parenting, as once again they tend to run out of power. In this case, out of frustration and lack of skills, the pendulum swings and the parent resorts to authoritarian parenting.

In order to get children to cooperate using permissive parenting, you would have to use pleading, bribing, negotiating, nagging, yielding, lecturing, waiting, self-sacrificing, rescuing and catering. In all of these instances, the real needs of the child are not addressed, and as a result, each of these is a form of neglect (neglecting to address the child‘s real needs).

With permissive parenting the home atmosphere can be chaotic, exhausting, and inconsistent. Children learn how to manipulate others and develop no self-discipline, while feeling confused, guilty and insecure.

Children raised with permissive parenting can become selfish, dependent, demanding, whining, domineering, manipulative and irresponsible. Parents can also feel resentful of their children.

So, as you can see I recommend avoiding using authoritarian parenting or permissive parenting, for the reasons described above, and instead recommend democratic parenting.

Democratic Parenting

Democratic parenting is all about connection and including the children in the process. For children to enjoy life and have good age-appropriate judgment, they must feel connected to other people and to their environment. They must feel like they belong and hold a significant status in life.

With democratic parenting, everyone has a sense of power – including the child. When the sense of power is shared with the child, there is no need for power struggles, making cooperation natural and easy.

The methods used for democratic parenting allow the home atmosphere to be relaxed, orderly and flexible. The parents provide unconditional love, modeling, encouragement, listening to feelings and natural consequences for their children, and meet their real needs.

In this relaxed home atmosphere, problem solving is encouraged. Regular family meetings in a supportive atmosphere are incorporated among the problem solving options. Because the atmosphere helps children feel connected and loved, and the children‘s thinking and ideas are incorporated in family decision making, children feel happy, secure, confident and well loved, and they tend to have high self-esteem. All the while, children are learning self-discipline, responsibility, problem-solving skills, respect, natural consequences, intelligent thinking and cooperation. What we then see in the adolescent teen is love and respect between the parents and the child.

Because the child‘s needs have been met, and she feels loved and connected to their parents and others, she feels no need to rebel or withdraw.

IMPORTANT POINTS:

  • Punishments and rewards may work short-term but have negative consequences in the long run.
  • Authoritarian parenting causes parents to run out of power because the child will model the manipulation and domination that the parents are using by engaging the parent in power struggles, rebelling and withdrawing.
  • Permissive parenting causes parents to run out of power because the child‘s real needs are not met, and challenging behaviour will surface as a result.
  • Democratic parenting is about maintaining a connection with your child, and making them feel included in the process of life‘s day-to-day activities.
  • Democratic parenting involves communicating with your child in order to solve problems and overcome obstacles. Therefore it teaches her intelligent thinking, natural consequences, self-confidence, self-discipline, responsibility, team spirit, respect and cooperation.


When you arrive home after a hectic day of endless deadline and your boss breathing down your neck, having to deal with your angry children is over the top stressful. No matter the age of your children, they have stressors that similarly overwhelm them. A frequent human response to stress is anger. This holds true for many children as well. Life is full of challenges, and parenting is a big one. It is the most important challenge we face. Unfortunately, it can become a terrible mistake to bring that frustration home. If you have ever done this or have found yourself on the brink of doing this, then it is time to look for some effective ways on how you can control or manage your anger, and help your angry children cope as well. Discover the #1 Secret Solution at Parenting 101 Success. www.parenting101success.coM

JJ’s New One

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