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Emotional regulation is the ability to manage and respond to emotional experiences in healthy ways. It’s one of the most important skills we can help our children develop — and it’s a skill that takes years of practice and guidance to build.

Here’s how to support emotional regulation at every stage of childhood.

Ages 2-4: The Foundation Years

At this age, meltdowns are developmentally normal. Young children have big emotions and very limited language to express them. Your job is to be the co-regulator — your calm is their calm.

What helps:

  • Name emotions for them: “You look frustrated. That’s okay.”
  • Provide physical comfort and connection
  • Use simple breathing exercises (“Let’s blow out the candles”)
  • Keep a predictable routine

Ages 5-7: Building the Language of Emotions

Children in this age range are developing more language and can begin to identify and label their emotions with support.

What helps:

  • Emotion charts and feelings faces
  • Social stories about big emotions
  • Reading books with emotionally complex characters
  • Simple problem-solving scripts: “When I feel angry, I can…”

Ages 8-12: Building Self-Awareness

Older children can begin to notice their emotional triggers and develop their own regulation strategies.

What helps:

  • Help them identify their personal triggers
  • Create a personalized calm-down plan together
  • Practice mindfulness and body awareness
  • Teach thought-challenging skills

Ages 13+: Teen Emotional Regulation

Teenagers are undergoing massive neurological changes — the prefrontal cortex won’t be fully developed until their mid-20s. This means emotional regulation is genuinely harder for teens.

What helps:

  • Validate before problem-solving
  • Give them space to cool down
  • Model healthy emotional regulation yourself
  • Support healthy outlets: journaling, exercise, creative expression