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Kabbalistic Remedy for Tantrums


Question:

I am having major problems with my two-year-old. He has huge tantrums and is impossible to control. We are going crazy and don't know what to do. Is there some Kabbalistic formula to get a child to behave?

Answer:

If you are seeking a magical incantation that will instantly bring your child into line, I can't help you. But here is a Kabbalistic idea that may give you some guidance.

The Kabbalah teaches that there is a parent/child relationship going on within every one of us. In that relationship, intellect is the parent, and emotion is the child.

A good parent must have all the characteristics of the mind: calmness, clarity, and consistencyOur emotions, like children, are colorful and fun, wild and untamed, impulsive and erratic. Emotions know no boundaries, have no sense of proportion, and are not reasonable. Our heart can take us to great heights of pleasure and happiness, or can lead us down dark paths of confusion and hurt. This is because our heart is full of vitality and energy, but lacks one important skill: it has no direction.

When we thoughtlessly follow our heart, we get lost. We can fall in love with the wrong person, get angry for no good reason, or be scared of our own imaginary ghosts. It is our mind that provides direction and perspective, education and guidance. A cool and clear-thinking mind can calmly direct the heart to feel the right emotion at the right time, when to love and when to fear, when to get excited and when to hold back.

The same holds true for being parents to our children. A child is a bundle of emotion, spontaneous and moody, passionate and irrational. This is what makes children so lovable and so impossible. They have not yet developed the ability for mind to direct heart. And so, the parent must stand in and play the role of the mind for the child, to help them tell right from wrong, to guide them to channel and control their emotions.

This means that a good parent must have all the characteristics of the mind: calmness, clarity, and consistency. The child doesn't always obey the parent, just like at times emotions are too strong to listen to intellect. But even then, the message must be conveyed in a clear and calm manner.

If your child is tantruming, then he is playing his role well. Your role is to keep your composure and let him know that what he is doing is unacceptable. This may not magically stop his tantrums, but it will give him a model of mature behavior - that mind controls heart, like a parent directs a child.

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By Aron Moss   More articles...  |   RSS Listing of Newest Articles by this Author
Rabbi Aron Moss teaches Kabbalah, Talmud and practical Judaism in Sydney, Australia, and is a frequent contributor to Chabad.org.

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Reader Comments
Latest Comments:
Posted: Mar 8, 2010
tantrums
If the child senses that the adults are afraid of the child having a tantrum (usually because they look like bad parents) then they can manipulate the situation to their advantage. We don't need to bully the child out of the tantrum, but offer sane, calm, advice and let the child choose either to behave or cry. The crying response is normal at this age but can become a problem if the child gets his/her way as a result of the tantrum.
Posted By Hadassah Aber, N.M.>, FL

Posted: Mar 7, 2010
SANITY CARDS
I urge parents to order my 39 SANITY CARDS, which are based on the wisdom of TANYA. They helped keep me calm and consistent when dealing with my ADHD kids. I put them on a poster board and hung them in every room. Each time there was a crisis, I looked to see which ones I needed to use. It's like having Tanya right there, in front of your eyes, My kids learned them too.
Posted By Dr. Miriam Adahan

Posted: Mar 6, 2010
answer on reader comments
the article clearly states that we should give boundaries and discipline our children. But it is in the way that we discipline where the difference lays. Kids copy us. So it is extremely important to stay calm at all times. They also respect us, when we act calm and controlled. It's a physical circle. It is important to realize that we may not always immediately get result. Patience comes from the realization that everything comes from G-d. And everything that we cannot change we must accept with love. We must also work very hard on humility. It's the basic for patience, which is the basic for keeping calm. I am myself still working on it. We should also remember not to become inpatient with our own failures. Stay always focused on the good side too. Getting upset is then from the evil inclination, which will make us act wrongly.
Posted By judith, 2018, Belgium

Posted: Mar 5, 2010
child tantrums
The most important part of your answer was to highlight that these parents are looking for a simple magical answer - and life, and especially Judaism is not like that.
Maybe there is something wrong with child - emotionally or physically. Maybe there is something wrong with the parents. If the child had a physical illness he would be taken to a professional not a Rabbi. If the child is experiencing emotional difficulty he should be taken to a professional. You stress the need to understand what's going on with the child, but if it is a real or serious issue they should go to as professional. Magic doesn't work!
Posted By db, London, UK
via chabad.org.uk

Posted: Mar 5, 2010
Tantrums
While a parent can always force control over the child's tantrum, the ultimate goal should be for the child to internalize self-control. Such a lesson cannot be forced from outside. Instead, the tantrums themselves will lead to such distress and pain that in time, hopefully, the child will internalize the lesson, see his role model, and opt for the intelligent choice.
Posted By Anonymous, Dallas, TX

Posted: Mar 5, 2010
parenting
children do not have g-dly souls at age two. They are almost pure animal souls. Disciipline and control of those animal impulses is necessary if the child is to develop respect for parents and eventually self control. In the meantime keep up the work of parenting.
Posted By Anonymous, memphis, tn

Posted: Mar 5, 2010
tantrums
this is very perspicacious response to the question posed. In reflection one surmises that a frustrated or ngry parent then feeds back to the child an affirmation of behavior by reproducing the tantrum at a larger level or higher volume of anger. The child learns that the tantrum gets a response, does it again. It ebcomes negative cycle. If the parent has the self-possession to redirect the tantrum with some coolth and reason, the cycle can be broken. Sometimes bullies and children feed off the visible frustration we have.
Posted By pogo, prague, cz

Posted: Mar 5, 2010
stop treating the child as though he is good. "man is evil from birth" - thats from the Torah! the more you train his spirit now the easier later when he grows up. Simple
Posted By Anonymous, San Francisco, CA

Posted: Mar 4, 2010
Tantrums
That sounds all well and good. I absolutely agree. But this answer is incomplete.
When you state that behaviour is unacceptable, well how is it unacceptable? If there is no consequence to the childs actions, then it is being accepted. Ultimately, yes the child will learn from the parent's emotional intelligence, but until then, what?
Posted By Anonymous, Nyack, NY

Posted: Mar 4, 2010
Thanks
Thanks for reinforcing in me this fundamental principle .
Posted By Carmen



 


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