Guest article by Brandi Walker, PhD, and Griffin Rouse
In children with ADHD, meltdowns are one of the most difficult to manage, difficult to witness, and misunderstood symptoms.
Meltdowns are not a tool for manipulation; they are a total and catastrophic loss of control, triggered by the innate and reflexive need for self-preservation. For parents dealing with a child’s meltdown, both the event and the aftermath, it is important to remember that your child’s meltdown is not happening to you. It is happening to them; they are the victim. Through a meltdown, a child struggles; they are in pain, and they feel completely alone.
The child would give anything to make the meltdown stop. When you witness a child’s ADHD meltdown, part of what you see is the desperation to control, or at least understand, what is happening to them. I had a teen client once tell me about his meltdown, in which he felt like he wanted to carve himself out of his chest with a knife. “It’s like I’m stuck inside myself, I just want it to stop,” he told me.
When I coach families dealing with meltdowns, I often have to remind their parents how difficult it is to be the person having the meltdown. For whatever reason, parents are inclined to believe that a meltdown is their child’s way of “getting back at them” for taking their video game away, or “lashing out” because they didn’t get what they wanted, or “ruining things on purpose” when a meltdown comes at an inopportune time (as they very often do).
The reality is, the ADHD child experiencing the meltdown is the real victim of that meltdown, and everyone else is just collateral damage. Of course, we don’t want collateral damage, and we aim to minimize it as much as possible. But our focus in a meltdown should be primarily on the victim. This means taking the time to remember that the child is struggling for control because they are in severe pain.
Repeatedly banging on the walls, slamming doors, yelling, and cursing are all desperate, and usually successful, albeit short-lived, attempts to relieve the pain the child is feeling. This is, in part, why you will see your child revert to similar behaviours over and over again during a meltdown. Your child has found that this behaviour, for perhaps even fractions of a second, relieves their pain, and in that moment, nothing else matters.
How you react is crucial
When you consider how to approach a meltdown, it helps to think of the meltdown like a broken leg. You would never suggest that a child is ruining your day on purpose if they’d broken their leg. If your child came to you with a broken leg, you wouldn’t think that they broke it to get back at you for a decision they didn’t like. And you wouldn’t tell your child to calm down or get over it if the pain of that injury made them upset. You’d likely immediately assess the situation, prioritize that child amongst any other children you have, and triage that child’s leg based on the information they provided to you, and the information you could gather from your own observations, and perhaps how they reacted if you tried things to help.
Parents often ask me if it is appropriate to punish their child for having a meltdown. But would you punish your child for breaking their leg? The thing about meltdowns is that your child truly has no idea how to stop them, let alone the skills actually to do so. They’ve been thrown into the deep end of the pool with no idea how to swim. They’re thrashing around trying not to drown, and it does not do any good to punish them for getting you wet in the process.
It can be frustrating, and even infuriating, to be a part of the turmoil and destruction that can accompany a meltdown. I have had child clients who have put holes in walls during a meltdown, and that’s difficult to watch as a parent. But when we take a step back, we can recognize that the important thing to take care of in a situation like that is the child, not the wall, and how you react to a destructive meltdown can help your child understand that they are more important than that wall. This is the kind of messaging that, over time, shortens and minimizes the severity of meltdowns. The wall is much easier to fix than your relationship with your son or daughter.
Meeting the meltdown with patience and empathy, and letting your child take the lead, will help it end more quickly and cause far less damage than yelling, punishing, or blaming your child.
Ultimately, the easiest way to get through a meltdown is to follow your child’s lead, just as you would with a broken leg. They know what they need in the immediate moment, and they are unable to think beyond that in the moment. Following their lead is likely going to hurt. It’s going to mean sacrificing the wall and having hard conversations with siblings, explaining what’s going on and why it’s important to meet the meltdown with patience instead of anger. It will mean fighting the voice inside of you that says you’re enabling the behaviour—you are not enabling it, you are enabling your child.
Meeting the meltdown with patience and empathy, and letting your child take the lead, will help it end more quickly and cause far less damage than yelling, punishing, or blaming your child. You may come out of the meltdown with a hole in the wall, but you’ll be one meltdown closer to a largely meltdown-free household, and your relationship with your child will remain intact, and that’s the important thing.
Looking more deeply at meltdowns
As we pursue a deeper, clinical understanding of meltdown behaviours, it’s important to consider if anxiety, depression, or trauma symptoms are expressed in that moment or behind the scenes, fueling a slow-burning fire. In terms of context, what was going on earlier that day, week, or month may also be contributing factors. The presence of signs indicating that the child or adolescent has been experiencing problems, challenges, or distress is critical to know.
Consider these investigative questions: What is the true source of the adolescent’s distress? Is it something ongoing in which the child is exposed to a stressor repeatedly or continuously triggered by it?
For example, a significant stressor could be a classroom environment in which a child may be academically struggling and is often singled out or publicly ridiculed. Similarly, lacking friends or allies in a middle school or high school environment could be stressful, frustrating, and even a vulnerable setting. Remember, when there is significant stress, the body will protect itself through a fight-or-flight or freeze response.
We once thought this response was only related to threats in which our lives are in physical danger. Still, science is showing that extreme life-or-death situations aren’t the only initiators. The two situational examples noted above could trigger a flight, fight, or freeze response in the body. It all depends on how the child is registering or perceiving the situation: whether as a threat to physical safety or security, or a threat to their mental or emotional safety or security.
The child’s capacity to endure the distress, hold it together, and manage is usually relative to how they’re handling the accompanying thoughts and emotions. Without good coping skills or support they deem reliable and helpful, a child will cope with distress in a way that offers relief, regardless of whether it’s healthy or not. Consider the meltdown synonymous with a volcanic eruption. Distress in the body is like hot lava brewing and boiling over once it can no longer be contained.
What parents can do
Now, let’s be honest. Who plans to approach a volcano that’s erupting with more fire? How can that be productive? On the other hand, who ignores an erupting volcano or doesn’t take what’s occurring seriously? We know immediate action is necessary —keeping calm, ensuring safety, and gathering information. Ironically, this approach is best in the case of a meltdown, too.
Returning to the relationship regardless of the meltdown’s magnitude, with open, transparent communication, is invaluable.
Even more helpful is considering how environmentalists and meteorologists work. They typically stay in tune with volcanoes and have a pretty good idea of relevant atmospheric factors that create and sustain both normal and eruption conditions. This approach is adaptable for parents and caretakers: being and staying in tune with your kids while creating an atmosphere of open communication affords an outlet for a child’s distress. Even if the outlet is another trusted adult (aunt, uncle, coach, and so forth) who is easily accessible, the child or adolescent now has a pressure valve to relieve some of their distress.
Teaching the child coping strategies and skills to manage their emotions (such as deep breathing, mindfulness exercises, physical activity, healthy hobbies, journaling/writing, open communication, emotion management with tools like a Feelings Wheel, and so forth) can be valuable. Of course, these should be tools the child uses routinely, not just when a meltdown is on the rise.
Additionally, fostering a consistent atmosphere of listening, healthy, nonjudgmental communication, and patience is a critical component that parents must foster. Further, as noted above, parents need to be okay with managing their emotions and their own fight-or-flight response to personal distress during a meltdown. It’s perfectly fine to take a few moments to breathe, ground, and gather yourself before being present for your child because you have to maintain self-control and not allow your own volcano to erupt.
Once the situation diffuses, take time to process your emotions and thoughts, and engage in self-care and/or professional care as needed. Returning to the relationship regardless of the meltdown’s magnitude, with open, transparent communication, is invaluable. Similarly, validating the child and addressing the behaviour, without shaming their character, is even more critical.
Read the original article here.
