Name It to Tame It: Helping Kids Understand Big Emotions
Children canโt manage emotions they donโt understand.
Before problem-solving works, emotional clarity must come first.
One of the most effective parenting tools is also one of the simplest: naming what your child is feeling.
This is known as the Name It to Tame It techniqueโand it works because it aligns with how the childโs brain develops.

What Is โName It to Tame Itโ?
Name It to Tame It means labeling your childโs emotion before addressing their behavior.
Instead of correcting, fixing, or distracting, you first reflect what you see:
- โYouโre mad your toy broke.โ
- โYou seem sad because your friend left.โ
- โYouโre frustrated because this feels hard.โ
This step tells your child:
๐ I see you. I understand you.
Only after that does calming and cooperation become possible.
Why Kids Struggle With Big Emotions
Young children experience emotions before they can explain them.
Their emotional brain develops faster than their thinking brain.
As a result:
- Feelings arrive suddenly
- Words lag behind
- Behavior becomes the outlet
When emotions stay unnamed, frustration buildsโand tantrums follow.
Why Naming Emotions Works (The Brain Science)
When you help a child name a feeling, you activate the thinking part of the brain.
Research from the Harvard Center on the Developing Child shows that helping children identify emotions supports emotional regulation and brain development.
This:
- Reduces emotional intensity
- Creates a sense of control
- Signals safety and understanding
Once the emotion feels understood, the nervous system calms.
Thatโs when learning and cooperation can happen.
How to Use โName It to Tame Itโ in Real Life
Step 1: Observe Before Reacting
Pause and notice what your child might be feeling.
Step 2: Reflect the Emotion
Use simple language:
- โYou look frustrated.โ
- โThat made you angry.โ
- โYouโre feeling disappointed.โ
Step 3: Normalize the Feeling
Let them know emotions are okay:
- โThat makes sense.โ
- โAnyone would feel that way.โ
Step 4: Then Offer Support
Only after the emotion settles:
- โLetโs figure this out together.โ
- โDo you want help or a hug?โ
Example Dialogue
โYouโre feeling frustrated because you canโt tie your shoes yet. Thatโs hard. We can try together.โ
This short sentence:
- Names the emotion
- Validates the experience
- Encourages problem-solving
No lecture needed.
Parent Wins
Using this technique regularly helps you:
- Build your childโs emotional vocabulary
- Reduce tantrums and emotional outbursts
- Strengthen trust and connection
- Support long-term emotional intelligence
Over time, children begin naming their own emotionsโbefore melting down.
Final Insight
Behavior improves when emotions feel understood.
Children donโt need perfect parents.
They need parents who help them make sense of what they feel.
Naming emotions doesnโt spoil childrenโit teaches them how to regulate.
This approach works even better when paired with the 10-Minute Connection Rule, which helps children feel emotionally secure before challenges arise.

One Comment