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Impulsive Behavior in Children: How to Help Your Child Gain Control | Emotional Dysregulation in Children | E238
Episode 23811th October 2024 • Dysregulated Kids: Science-Backed Parenting Help for Behavior, Anxiety, ADHD and More • Dr. Roseann Capanna Hodge
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Impulsive behavior in children can create challenges at home, in school, and in relationships. In this episode, I explain what drives impulsive behavior in children, why impulsivity is often connected to nervous system dysregulation, and how parents can help children build the skills needed for better self-control and emotional regulation.

Many parents assume impulsive behavior is simply a lack of discipline or motivation. The truth is that impulsive behavior in children is often influenced by underlying factors such as ADHD, anxiety, sensory sensitivities, executive functioning challenges, and emotional dysregulation.

In this episode, you'll learn:

• What causes impulsive behavior in children

• How impulsivity affects learning, relationships, and daily life

• Why self-regulation is essential for impulse control

• Practical ways to help children build stronger regulation skills

Why are some children more impulsive than others?

Impulsivity can be connected to:

• ADHD and executive functioning difficulties

• Anxiety and chronic stress

• Emotional dysregulation

• Sensory processing challenges

• Nervous system overload

When children struggle with regulation, they often react before they have time to think through consequences.

Behavior is communication.

It's not bad behavior—it's a dysregulated brain.

Understanding the root causes of impulsive behavior helps parents move from frustration to support.

How can parents help?

Helpful strategies include:

• Focusing on regulation before correction

• Building emotional awareness

• Practicing pause-and-think skills

• Creating predictable routines

• Supporting executive functioning development

Children learn impulse control through repetition, support, and skill-building.

What does progress look like?

Children who improve regulation often begin to:

• Think before acting

• Manage frustration more effectively

• Improve social interactions

• Increase attention and focus

• Strengthen emotional resilience

The goal is not perfection. The goal is helping children build the skills they need to navigate challenges more successfully.

When parents understand impulsive behavior in children through a nervous system lens, they are better able to respond with empathy, structure, and effective support.

Dr. Roseann Capanna-Hodge helps parents understand emotional dysregulation in children and teaches practical nervous system regulation and co-regulation strategies through her Regulation First Parenting™ approach.

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