It began in the supermarket parking lot.
My son and I were heading to the car when we noticed a father yelling at his child. It wasnât just the wordsâit was the tone, the sharpness, the tight jaw that made my little one pause.
He looked up at me and said softly,
âMaybe that boy was troubling⌠but itâs not cool to be shouted at like that.â
There it wasâan observation, a boundary, a quiet truth from a child who sees the world a little differently and more deeply.
And yet, many children donât voice what he did.
Because for too many, that kind of interaction is home. Normal. Expected.
The Problem: When Toxic Patterns Feel Familiar
Iâve sat across from children who laugh off being shouted at.
Who say things like:
- âShe gets mad because I forget.â
- âHe only yells when heâs tired.â
- âItâs fine. I just stay quiet so no one gets angry.â
Theyâve adapted. But not in ways that help them thriveâonly survive.
And whatâs even more heartbreaking?
They carry these templates into adulthood.
They learn that:
đ Love must be earned through pleasing.
đ Boundaries cause abandonment.
đ Safety is uncertain, and so is affection.
Where It Starts: Repeating Without Realising
We tend to think toxic patterns are about obvious thingsâscreaming matches, slamming doors, name-calling.
But sometimes, itâs in the quieter, consistent cues:
- The affection that disappears after a disagreement.
- The constant criticism is masked as âjust being honest.â
- The withholding of praise unless perfection is achieved.
These patterns often stem from our own unhealed stories. And we pass them onânot out of malice, but out of habit.
The nervous system remembers. It adapts.
But hereâs the good news: it can also relearn.
The Childâs Mind: How Patterns are Learned
Children donât just listen to what we say.
They soak up what we do.
They watch how we respond when:
- They cry.
- They mess up.
- They speak up.
And based on our responses, they start forming beliefs:
đ âIâm lovable only when Iâm easy.â
đ âSpeaking up makes people upset.â
đ âMy needs are too much.â
These beliefs are like scripts, quietly written over time. And those scripts shape who they become, how they love, and what they tolerate.
What Can We Do Differently?
No one gets it right all the time (I certainly donât, not even with all my degrees and training and picture books đ ).
But small, consistent changes in how we respond can reshape a childâs entire inner world.
Here are a few ways to start:
⨠3 Gentle Practices to Break Toxic Cycles at Home
¡ Name the Emotion, Not the Person
Instead of: âYouâre being bad.â
Try: âYouâre feeling frustrated right now, and thatâs okay. Letâs figure it out together.â
When we separate who they are from what they feel, we reduce shame and create space for growth.
¡ Practice âRepair Momentsâ
Every time we raise our voice or overreact (yes, it happens), we can return with:
âI didnât handle that well. You didnât deserve to be spoken to like that.â
This teaches children that love includes accountability, not fear.
¡ Model Calm Boundaries
When something isnât okay, itâs alright to be firm without being frightened.
Try:
âI wonât let you hurt me or shout at me, but Iâm right here when youâre ready to talk.â
This models emotional regulation even during conflictâand thatâs gold.
đĄ An Activity to Try This Week: The âSafe Love Jarâ
Place a jar in your childâs room (or somewhere visible).
Every time someone shows love in a kind, respectful way (big or small), drop a note or a pebble in.
Examples:
- âMumma gave me space when I was upset.â
- âWe solved a fight without yelling.â
- âDaddy said sorry after he snapped.â
Watch the jar fill. Then, sit down together and read the notes at the end of the week.
Let your child see and feel what safe love looks like.
Final Thoughts: Youâre Not BehindâYouâre Aware
You donât have to undo generations in a day.
You just have to notice the moments when you could repeat the old wayâand choose differently.
Thatâs where the healing begins.
In homes where children feel safe to make mistakes.
In relationships where love doesnât demand perfection.
In voices that soothe instead of silence.
đŹ Tell me in the comments: Whatâs one belief about love or relationships youâre unlearning?
And if youâre navigating this journey and feel stuck, youâre not alone.
Iâm here to help.
Letâs raise emotionally stronger, safer humansâstarting with ourselves. đ
đ Recommended Resources
To deepen your understanding and support healing from toxic relationship patterns, these books offer compassionate guidanceâperfect for parents, educators, and self-reflection:
A heartfelt guide for recognising family dynamics passed down through generations and how to heal them. Helps adults break free and model healthier patterns for children.
Explores how toxic cycles continue into adulthood and what it takes to shift themâuseful for parents wanting to create healthier legacies for their kids.
Packed with over 49 practical strategies to reduce power struggles, improve communication, and strengthen emotional safetyâessential for breaking the âyelling = controlâ habit.
Although thereâs no dedicated course on toxic relationship patterns, the âPTSD â Cleaning and Clearing Shock & Traumaâ course does explore how early experiences impact emotional patterns and responses. While not specifically parent-focused, it offers valuable insights into how trauma gets embeddedâand how we can begin to release it, both in ourselves and within our families.
How to Use These Tools
- Start with reflection â Choose one book that speaks to your current experience.
- Do the activities â Try a discipline tool or communication tip from the selected book this week.
- Journal the impact â Note how it changes the atmosphere with your childâor within yourself.
- Share and discuss â Use the comments to let the community know what resonated with you!
đŻ Ready for tailored support?
Letâs work together to empower youâand your childâwith tools that transform relationship patterns for good. đ
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