Yelling fuels anxiety, depression, and lower self esteem. Studies have found that children who are yelled at are prone to anxiety and have increased levels of depression.
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Read More »Nobody likes to be yelled at. It's demeaning, embarrassing, and can be a frightening experience—especially for children. While most parents are guilty of raising our voices louder and more often than we sometimes mean to, unpacking why we yell and how yelling affects our children may be helpful information to have the next time your 3-year-old throws his plate of food across the kitchen. "People yell because it's their go-to response when they're angry," says Joseph Shrand, M.D., an instructor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and author of Outsmarting Anger: 7 Steps for Defusing our Most Dangerous Emotion. Dr. Shrand also notes that there's nothing wrong with feeling anger. "It's what we do with that anger that matters," he says. Anger, after all, is a common emotion felt whenever we wish things were different. "We feel anger because we wish our child would stop doing something or start doing something," says Dr. Shrand. For example, "I wish my daughter wouldn't slug her little sister," or "I wish my son would tell me the truth about where he was last night." These are behaviors that parents wish they could change in their kids that might lead to an angry outburst. But some efforts to change behavior are more effective than others, and parents who recognize the counter-productivity of yelling are more likely to pursue a better course of action. Here's what really happens when we yell at our children and why it backfires. Plus, what to do instead.
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