Ask Jennifer Kolari: Childhood Anxiety
Nov 23rd, 2009 | By jenniferkolari | Category: Ask Jennifer Kolari, Lead Article
One of the more common questions and issues I deal with in my therapy practice is about childhood anxiety.
All of us have anxiety – it is an important emotion.
We need it to survive, stay safe and make good choices. Some of us are hardwired to be more anxious than others. As a therapist, I feel that more and more children are struggling with anxiety for many reasons and many parents struggle with how to help their kids cope. We want to make sure our children control their anxiety so it doesn’t control them. We don’t want their worries and fears to get in the way of enjoying and participating fully in their lives.
As parents it can be very difficult to help an anxious child. We often resort to reasoning with them and trying to use logic to talk them out of these irrational feelings. Unfortunately, this can just makes things worse. Once the brain is anxious for a certain amount of time it begins to organizes itself around that and remain in fight or flight mode for longer periods. An anxious brain does not always respond very well to rationale and the child often becomes more invested in convincing you how scary a situation really is. Children can also widen their repertoire of things to be frightened of, leaving parents baffled and swinging between feeling empathy and frustration.
Children don’t always show the typical or obvious signs of anxiety that we might think of. Sometimes demanding behaviour, extreme bossiness, temper tantrums and sleep disturbances can all be symptoms of worry or anxiety.
Here’s what to do:
- Talk to Your Child’s Doctor. If you feel your child’s anxiety is regularly getting in the way of them enjoying their life, if they constantly have trouble sleeping or complain often of stomach aches, nausea or headaches, contact your child’s pediatrician.
- Fight or Flight Response. When a child is feeling anxious, their fight or flight instincts might kick in. This means their brain is not letting them think rationally, so when a parent tries to rationalize the situation, the child feels like they aren’t being listened to. Instead, ask lots of questions about how they are feeling, and put some urgency in your voice, without sounding anxious yourself. This will show you get that they are worried, and will help them get back to a place where they can hear the logical things you have to say.
- Give it a Name. Don’t talk about your child being afraid, because this makes it seem like something that they can’t fix. Give it a name, like the “worry bug.” For older kids or teens, just refer to it as the “worry that gets in the way.” Then you can work together to come up with ways to reduce it. This helps kids to control their emotions.
- Get Connected. Spend more cuddle time with young children and spend more alone time with teenagers. Children feel safe and more secure when they feel deeply loved.
- Set Limits. Kids are exposed to a lot of adults themes – and they are not socially or emotionally prepared to deal with these. Set limits on behaviour and the things you kids are exposed to. When kids see that parents don’t have control, they get nervous about who will take care of them and this aggravates anxiety. Turn off scary news reports on TV or hide frightening headlines.
- Scaling. Get your kids to rate their anxiety and use deep breathing or positive imagery to bring the number down.
- Calm Yourself. Sometimes children come by their anxiety honestly. Use the same techniques to make sure you are calm. Kids often gauge their responses based on ours.
Jennifer Kolari is a regular contributor of mychildfeels.com with her feature, "Ask Jennifer Kolari". You can read her Connected Parenting Blog and visit her at www.connectedparenting.com for more information.


[...] out Jennifer Kolari’s latest post at My Child Feels discussing childhood anxiety, what to watch for, and what to do if your child is [...]
Thank you Jennifer, for putting a name to behaviours that are sometimes difficult to deal with in our children. I myself have been guilty of not accepting tantrums and bossiness, or demanding behaviour as something other than being “bad”. This helps to understand children and feel love and openness to anything they may demonstrate that is not usually acceptable behaviour. My mom always says, “how can you expect children to behave better then some adults do..” and this really puts a name to those behaviours that are probably the same for adults too!
[...] out a new post on mychildfeels.com by Jennifer Kolari entitled “Ask Jennifer Kolari: Childhood Anxiety.” This touches many of us and well worth reading. SHARETHIS.addEntry({ title: "New post on [...]
Jennifer K, about Childhood Anxiety,
Many children feel comforted by cuddling their ‘ security blankets’. This goes on until, in many cases, the blanket is worn to threads. One of my grandchildren who has TS and anxiety issues about being away from home has found that same comfort and security wearing around her neck Kid Companions with her name and favorite smiley printed on the lanyard. The fact that her mom is the designer of this innovative product must help a bit but I was surprised how well this feeling of being OK, of home and mom being close by worked when the child had to stay overnight with me and to fall asleep she actually spoke to and held lovingly her heartshaped chewy fidget. Works for one must work for many other anxious children.
Jennifer K, about Childhood Anxiety,
Many children feel comforted by cuddling their ‘ security blankets’. This goes on until, in many cases, the blanket is worn to threads. One of my grandchildren who has TS and anxiety issues about being away from home has found that same comfort and security wearing around her neck Kid Companions with her name and favorite smiley printed on the lanyard. The fact that her mom is the designer of this innovative product must help a bit but I was surprised how well this feeling of being OK, of home and mom being close by worked when the child had to stay overnight with me and to fall asleep she actually spoke to and held lovingly her heartshaped chewy fidget. Works for one must work for many other anxious children.