About this episode
We talk a lot about how to manage kids when they are being impossible. But it's supposed to be the terrible twos, not the terrible forty-somethings. What do we do when we're the one in the family who's dysregulated?
In this episode, we discuss:
How to know if you're emotionally dysregulated
Why parents (especially moms) are particularly vulnerable
How dysregulation can show up both as anger and as shutdown
The connection between rumination, shame, and reactivity
How emotional dysregulation can become contagious in a household—and how calm can be contagious, too
Practical ways to reset when you feel triggered
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Cleveland Clinic: Emotional Dysregulation
Our Fresh Take with Erin Cox
Elif B. Koş Yalvaç et. al for Journal of Affective Disorders: Emotional dysregulation in adults: The influence of rumination and negative secondary appraisals of emotion
H.W. Koenigsberg for Journal of Personality Disorders: Affective instability: toward an integration of neuroscience and psychological perspectives
Rachel Schepke for PsyPost: Young children are more irritable when their mother has emotion regulation difficulties
Dominique Cave-Freeman, Vincent O. Mancini, et al for Journal of Personality and Individual Differences: Maternal Emotion Regulation and Early Childhood Irritability: The Role of Child Directed Emotion Regulation Strategies
Couples Therapy, Inc: Navigating a Marriage with an Emotionally Dysregulated Spouse
Rick Hanson et. al: