Depending on the intensity of the situation, you and/or your child may need a while to cool down before you talk about what happened.
“A little bit after the storm” is often a good time, said Bren. “They have to feel safe, we have to feel safe.”
Take stock of your needs and your child’s, and keep your temperament in mind.
“If you’re the kind of person that tends to be a little bit spiteful, or you hold on to stuff... then taking ownership in the moment is probably not the best time because it’s not going to be genuine,” said Lockhart.
If you’re unsure whether your child is ready for your apology, Lockhart advised you to ask them directly, “Do you want to talk about this now? Or do you need a few minutes?”
When you approach your child, ensure your body language affirms that you are looking to repair, not fight. If your child is small, get down on their level so that you can see eye-to-eye.
“We want our face to be soft and calm. We want to offer eye contact but not demand it — not be intrusive to them,” said Bren.
You also want to lower the volume of your voice and soften your tone. No kid will believe an apology is authentic if you shout it at them.
“When we’re actually talking to our kid, there’s sort of a tendency, I think, to talk too much, to want to create a lot of explanation and just a crusade and turn it into a teaching moment,” said Bren.
“No one wants to receive an apology and be lectured simultaneously,” she added.
There is a better time for your child to learn how essential it is to pick his dirty clothes up off the floor and put them into the laundry basket. All you want, at that moment, is for him to know that you’re sorry you blew up about it.
While your explanations may be longer with older kids, it pays to keep them brief, even with teens.
“They start to gloss over, and they glaze over, and then they shut down. They don’t hear anything you say,” Lockhart said.
You might start by saying, “You threw your food on the floor, and I yelled at you.”
Then, Bren suggests you “talk a little bit about how that might have felt for your child.”
If you noticed the look on their face when it happened, you could probably guess how they might have felt at the moment. You can say something like, “that must have been scary for you.”
Examples include: “I’m sorry. I shouldn’t have yelled at you like that,” or “I should never speak to you that way.”
“We don’t want to say something like, ‘I’m sorry that you made me yell,’” said Lockhart. “That feels attacking. They’re gonna get defensive. And then it just goes downhill.”
Say something like, “it’s not your fault that I yelled.”
Your child should understand that they are not to blame for your emotions. Even though they did something aggravating, your oversized reaction had more to do with you than with them.
Lockhart suggests using I statements to explain how you were feeling and why you may have overreacted this time: “I yelled because I was feeling exhausted/overwhelmed.”
The key here is that the explanation is about your feelings, not your child’s actions. If their behavior needs to be addressed, that should be done later, separately. Your apology — your repair work — deserves its own moment.
You want to reassure your child and connect with them: “Even when I’m angry, and I yell, I still love you.”
“If you come away from a repair as a child learning, hey, even when something doesn’t feel good between me and my parent, that feeling gets resolved, and it goes away, and I feel safe again with them. That is going to really create a strong attachment,” said Bren.
Now could be the moment for a hug, if that’s something your child might want, or another gesture “communicating that you care about the impact that [the incident is] having on your child,” said Graham.
There are several things you want to avoid saying when you’re trying to apologize to your kid.
One is what Lockhart calls “diffusion of responsibility,” or blaming your child, your partner — anyone else — for your behavior. You want to take sole ownership of what you did.
Lockhart advises against “playing the victim,” as in phrases such as “no one ever listens to me” — even if they’re true. This “can elicit a response from your child to then take care of you after you just hurt them,” said Lockhart, and is definitely not a behavior you want them carrying forward in their life.
Finally, you want to avoid shutting down.
“Many individuals do that because that’s what they were taught. They were either isolated as a kid, or their parents told them, ‘Don’t talk about those things,’” said Lockhart.
But, as parents, we can do things differently with our kids, teaching them skills they need to build other strong relationships.
Sometimes, there are smaller ruptures — an unkind comment that you suddenly realize you shouldn’t have shared, for example.
“Sometimes it’s a quick blip, right? Sometimes I snap, or I say something kind of like, sharp,” Bren continued.
Bren calls these “micro-ruptures” and advises immediate repair if everyone feels safe and calm. If you say something that doesn’t sit right, for example, you could immediately say:
“Don’t underestimate the value of that small repair,” Bren added. “That’s really teaching our kids social skills and mindful awareness of how we engage with others in the moment.”