Ask Jennifer Kolari: Self-Hitting

May 6th, 2010 | By jenniferkolari | Category: Ask Jennifer Kolari, Lead Article

Hi Jennifer,

I’m struggling to deal with a particular behaviour that my five and a half year old, Chandra, has been displaying.

For the last three months or so, when she gets upset about something, she says she doesn’t like herself and starts to smack her head. This is very upsetting to me and even moreso when her younger sister imitates her. The latest example occurred when her Daddy chose to floss her sister’s teeth before her own. This caused an eruption of anger which then led to the above described behaviour.

I’m not sure whether I should physically stop her from hitting herself (by gently guarding her head or lowering her hands) or ignore the behaviour. I have tried the first and she often does not like being touched. I have also said something like, “I see that you are angry. It upsets me when you hit yourself because I love you.” The behaviour persists.

Does she want me to pick her up and soothe her?

Anger is an accepted feeling in our household but I am trying to teach her that aggression is not acceptable. We’ve talked about activities that could help her calm down but in the moment she doesn’t want to do those, doesn’t want to be touched, doesn’t want to deep breath, walk in meditation or go to a quiet spot to calm down.

Is there something about her age that is triggering all of this?

Thanks,

Kim E.

Hi Kim,
I like everything you have tried already and my advice would be not to give up on any of the things you are currently doing, sometimes behaviours are sticky and it takes a while to alter them. She may not like it when you hold her arms but if she is hurting herself you may have to, especially if she is head banging. You can quietly tell her that is the price for hurting herself and that you love her too much to allow her to hurt herself.

In addition to what you are already doing, I would suggest adding some special time and some connecting or baby play, time every day for 20 minutes or so where you are cuddling her and pretending she is a baby or a much younger child. Children love this and it is very good for them for many reasons. It strengthens the bonds that her difficult behaviour can fray and it can soothe her with important reward chemicals that get released in the brain like oxytocin. It does not mean you have neglected to do this or that you are not bonded strongly to her—only that things can become strained by her negative behaviour, making her feel less loveable. Again, not that you don’t love her: it’s that she may feel a bit unlovable because of the choices she has been making. Strengthening the bond will help a great deal and should help her become more organised emotionally.

I would also recommend the CALM technique (mirroring) described in my book as a way to talk to her and relate to her; it will also help to build her resilience so that she is more able to control these big feelings that she has.  There are examples of mirroring on my website, ConnectedParenting.com, in a feature called Mirroring Mondays.

If these behaviours continue, don’t hesitate to talk to you daughter’s paediatrician or look for a parent coach or child therapist to help. It is very hard, as a parent, to watch your child struggle to find ways cope with their big feelings.

I wish you all the best.





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.
Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Leave Comment