What Your Nervous System Needs When Your Child Is Triggering You

Jun 21, 2025

**You can also listen to this in audio format only on The Regulated Mother Podcast on Apple or Spotify

**Below is the podcast turned into a blog article for easy reading.

 

 

What Your Nervous System Needs When Your Child Is Triggering You

You try to stay calm.

Your child is swearing, maybe even breaking things or hurting a sibling, and your whole body is mobilized with energy. You know you should stay grounded — but the panic takes over. You yell. You snap. You say or do something that only seems to make it worse.

And afterward, you’re left spiraling. You feel like you’ve failed. Again. You wonder why nothing works. Why you don’t know how to handle your own child.

If you’ve been there, I get it. I’ve been there too. And what I’ve learned — through experience, education, and so many dysregulated moments — is that your nervous system isn’t failing you. It just needs support. It needs safety. It needs 3 core things to come back into balance:

Context. Choice. Connection.

Let me walk you through what these mean and how they can help you — not just in theory, but in the actual storm of parenting a hypersensitive, high-needs child.

 


 

A Moment from My Life: When My Child Swore at Me

There was a time when my child would swear at me during meltdowns. “I hate you,” “You’re an idiot,” “F-you.”

In those moments, my chest would tighten. My jaw would clench. My heart would pound. I would feel a rush of energy surge through me — the overwhelming urge to do something to stop the behavior. I would try to stay calm… only to be taken over by my own reaction, yelling back or threatening consequences.

At the time, I truly believed I had no choice. I was in survival mode. I didn’t know another way to feel safe.

But none of it worked. Trying to control the situation only escalated his behavior and left me feeling ashamed, resentful, and like I was failing as a mother.

 


 

What the Nervous System Needs to Feel Safe

Later, I learned something that changed everything: the nervous system needs three things to feel safe.

1. Context
2. Choice
3. Connection

These are the anchors that bring your body out of fight, flight, freeze — and into regulation and presence. When you can give these three things to yourself, everything begins to shift. Only then can you offer them to your child.

Let’s walk through each one.

 


 

1. Context: “I Know What’s Happening Here”

Let’s go back to that moment — your child is swearing at you. Maybe yelling, “I hate you!” or “You’re the worst parent ever!”

Your nervous system reacts fast: panic, anger, shame. Thoughts rush in: “This is unacceptable,” “My child shouldn’t talk to me this way.”

That reaction is normal. But what your system needs in that moment is context.

Context brings in the who, what, when, where, why, and how. It reminds your brain:

  • “This is a PDA meltdown.”

  • “This is a stress response, not a personal attack.”

  • “I know what’s happening.”

  • “I know what to do.”

When I can say to myself: “Oh yes, this is expected. It makes sense. I’m going to stay quiet for now because that’s what helps him ride the wave” — my nervous system calms. It feels less like threat, more like a challenge I know how to meet.

Context brings clarity. It helps you not take things personally. It gives your brain a map.

 


 

2. Choice: “I’m Choosing on Purpose”

When you’re in the middle of an intense moment, it often feels like you have no choice.

You feel frozen, or you default to yelling — because your survival system says “do something!”

But what I’ve learned is this: your nervous system doesn’t need perfect choices. It needs to feel like it has a choice at all.

And choice doesn’t mean controlling your child. It means asking:

  • What’s the most supportive choice I can make — even if it doesn’t fix everything?

Some examples:

  • “I choose to stay quiet and not escalate.”

  • “I choose to remove a sibling for safety — even if it heightens my child’s stress.”

  • “I choose to help myself first — because I can’t co-regulate if I’m dysregulated.”

Sometimes your only options are crappy and crappier. But naming your choice makes all the difference.

Because when we feel trapped, we spiral into powerlessness and despair. But when we feel choice — even in a hard moment — we stay in our agency.

 


 

3. Connection: “I’m Still With You — and With Myself”

Most of us try to connect with our child first. But if we’re highly activated inside, we’re trying to connect from a place of fear — and our child will feel it.

Real connection starts with yourself.

It means turning inward and acknowledging what’s happening inside of you — fear, anger, shame, helplessness — and staying with it instead of fighting it.

You can try this:

  • Place your hand on your chest or belly

  • Breathe

  • Say to yourself: “I see you. This makes sense. You’re not alone.”

This brings your ventral vagal system online — the system of regulation, connection, and presence.

From here, you might still say nothing to your child. You might avoid eye contact or give them space. But if you stay open-hearted, they will feel that.

Sometimes, I imagine sending love from my heart to his — without words.

That is energetic connection. That is co-regulation — even if it’s quiet.

 


 

What Changed for Me

Once I started bringing context, choice, and connection to myself, everything shifted.

I didn’t need to yell. I didn’t collapse. I didn’t have to fix everything.

I felt steadier. More creative. More like the mother I wanted to be — even when things were still hard.

And I could offer the same to my son. I could build in context, offer choices, and stay connected — even in the storm.

 


 

Your Practice: How to Begin

Try journaling or reflecting on these three questions:

Context: How can you remind yourself that your child’s behavior is expected and makes sense — even when it’s hard? What helps you remember that you know what to do?

Choice: What options can you give yourself in those moments — even if they’re not perfect? Can you feel like you’re choosing on purpose?

Connection: How can you stay with yourself — the scared or angry part — and offer it care? Can you feel connection even if you say nothing at all to your child?

You might even visualize a hard moment from the past:

  • Picture yourself bringing in context, choice, and connection.

  • Let your nervous system practice this new response.

Because the more familiar it becomes, the more accessible it will be next time.

 


 

You’re Not Alone

If this spoke to you, send me a message. Share it with someone else who’s in the thick of it. Let them know they’re not alone.

Because even in the storm, you can return to yourself. That’s where the healing begins.

Close

50% Complete

Two Step

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.