Volcano Moments: Anger Is Allowed, Hitting Isn't (What to Do When Your Kid Explodes)
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Picture this: it's after school. Backpacks are in a pile. Shoes are somewhere not where shoes belong. Everyone's hungry. Your nervous system is already doing math you did not sign up for. And your kids are in what I call the sibling fairness tribunal. There's an iPad. There's a timer. There's a rule. And your strong willed, big feeling kid is on the verge of a full eruption. In this episode, Dr. Amy Patenaude teaches anger through a volcano lens so you can take it seriously without turning it into a character verdict. Anger is allowed (no shame). Boundaries around behavior are non negotiable (still no shame). You'll get a simple framework for before, during, and after the eruption, plus scripts you can use when your own brain goes offline.
In this episode you'll learn- Why these moments can feel terrifying, and why your nervous system reacts (you're not dramatic, you're a parent with a pulse)
- The parent body check: what happens in your body when your child escalates, and why "a calmer grown up than the kid" is the goal
- The volcano map: deep lava, rising lava, near the top, eruption, cooling, and why catching it at stage 2 or 3 changes everything
- The core boundary: all emotions are okay, and not all behaviors are okay (anger is okay, hitting is not)
- The anchor script for eruption moments, when your job is safety, co regulation, and fewer words
- Extra scripts for fairness sensitivity, holding the line without shaming, and responding to "I hate you" while staying connected
- The repair plan after the lava cools: repair is not punishment, it's a life skill (clean up the impact without judging the feeling)
- The "School Psych in Your Back Pocket" bridge: what to bring to school conversations and a short email script to look for patterns
- The four step recap you can hold in your head: Notice, Name, Vent safely, Repair
- Teach a 1 to 5 "lava scale" during a calm time.
- Practice the exact script once when everyone is fine: "Let's settle the lava in your body."
- Choose one predictable hot spot (iPad timer, homework, bedtime) and make a one sentence plan: "When lava rises, we ___."
- After a calm moment, do a two minute repair: "What happened? What do we fix? What can we try earlier next time?"
- Do one 30 second role play this week: "Timer went off, what can you say besides yelling?"
Pick one. One is enough.
Free resources- Big Feeling Decoder
- Boredom Buster Guide
- 50 AI Prompts for Tired Parents
- School Psych in Your Back Pocket: The School Testing Toolkit (K–12)
"This podcast is for informational and educational purposes only and is not medical, psychological, or legal advice. Listening to this podcast does not create a provider-client relationship. If you're concerned about your child's mental health, safety, or development, please consult a qualified professional in your area."