When diving is no longer a nightmare for the family
Many parents today are often helpless or furious when they see their children crying, scolding or smashing things. Instead of scolding or unconditionally compromising, parents need to understand that children are having difficulty calling out their own emotions. World psychologists affirm that emotional intelligence training needs to start with listening. Help your children call out their anger, disappointment or sadness before guiding them to find healthy ways to relieve stress.
Don't extinguish the fire, teach your child how to cool down anger.
A brave child is not a child who never knows how to be angry but knows how to control their behavior when angry. Instead of forcing their child to stop immediately, wise parents should guide children to apply practical exercises such as deep breathing, counting numbers or separating themselves from stressful spaces. Parents' patience in these moments is the best reflective mirror to help children learn to keep a cool head in the face of any conflict.
Emotional intelligence is the golden launching pad for children's maturity
Many international studies have shown that children with good emotional self-control ability often achieve higher academic results and are more likely to achieve success in adulthood. Understanding one's own emotions also helps children develop compassion, easily empathize and build good social relationships. Investing in emotional management skills is equipping children with the most solid protection armor against life pressure.