What to Do When Kids Say, "I Hate You!"

Learn how to keep calm during conflicts with your children.

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The best way to cope with a child's anger is to stay calm and focus on the emotions, not the words.
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What can we do to make sure we don't have this fight again?
I'll never forget the first time my oldest son, then about six, screwed up his face, already contorted in anger because I wouldn't buy him a new action figure, and spat out the words, "I hate you, Mom."

I felt the mixture of emotions most parents do. Part of me was tempted to laugh because I knew he didn't mean it -- he was parroting something he'd heard from his friends. But another part of me was crying and upset. How could my son, whom I loved so dearly, say he despised me? At the same time, I recognized how brave it was. There he was, a little pipsqueak, standing up to his powerful mom. Announcing that he hated me was his way of serving me notice that he was separate enough to fight on a more grown-up level and felt secure enough to show me the full force of his fury, in a way I never could as a child.

"I hate you!" is just the first of many personal zingers our kids throw when they're angry with us. As they grow from ages five to thirteen, most of us hear any number of them, such as: "You always say no!" "Dad (or Mom) is nicer than you are!" "You're so unfair!" "You're such a hypocrite." It's worth remembering that one way kids and especially adolescents develop is by arguing and defying us, sometimes using withering scorn.

Don't Overreact
Though it's very hard not to boil over at moments like these, the best way to weather our children's expressions of hatred and anger toward us is to take a deep breath or two or even three, and not allow ourselves to get drawn into an on-the-spot protracted argument. Focus on the emotions, not the words, and stay calm.

"I know that you're very angry at me," I told my son. "We'll talk about it, but not right now. Let's wait until you're calmer."

It's important that kids hear you acknowledge their underlying feelings without trying to contradict or deny them, experts advise. To say, "You don't really hate me" or "I'm not being unfair" flies in the face of their own perceptions and feelings at that moment. At the same time, we do our kids a favor by helping them realize that erupting angrily and personally during an argument isn't appropriate.

Air Grievances
The timing of follow-up discussions is also important. You don't want to wait too long! Try to gauge how long it takes for your child -- and you -- to return to some kind of emotional equilibrium. "I know I can approach my son after a blowup when I hear him humming in his room," observes Sheila, eight-year-old Jonah's mom. "If he's still angry, he's conspicuously silent."

Once you sit down to talk, forget personal feelings and think of the discussion as a fact-finding mission. "I focus on asking questions and listening," says Lila, mother of eleven-year-old Marta. "I want to get her talking about what's bothering her, what I did that made her so angry. I have to work extra hard at not being defensive when she accuses me of purposely trying to ruin her life by not letting her go to the mall, though she knew she shouldn't go -- she had a test the next day. But I just nod. From her perspective, it was my fault. I can explain my view at a later time."

Lila has also learned that if she interrupts her daughter during a gripe session, Marta, like most kids, ends up feeling frustrated all over again.

Ask for Their Ideas
Swing into action only after your child has aired the entire list of grievances, advises Lila. She asks, "What can we do to make sure we don't have this fight again?" By asking your child to come up with a specific solution, you're putting the ball in her court. Not only does she feel you value her opinion, but she has the challenge of coming up with something that will make her feel better.

Remember, too, that our kids' gripes are sometimes justified. Parents do promise to buy something and then renege, impose unrealistic expectations, or blame the kids for something they didn't do.

Usually our children's requests for a change prove easy to comply with. Evelyn's seven-year-old son complained that he hated it when she talked on the phone after dinner because he wanted her to be available for help when he did his homework. She realized she could make her calls later and rearranged her schedule to accommodate his wishes.

End With Love
It's also comforting for kids to hear that we all have feelings of intense anger, even hatred, but that these are natural and don't last long. "Even when I'm angry at you I still love you," I told my sons when they were little, and they still repeat this back to me after our fights. I see that they feel reassured. Violent emotions leave everyone feeling tempest-tossed, and kids of all ages need to be reminded that once the storm abates, they'll find themselves in a harbor where they are safe and loved.

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I am a firm believer in you get what you give. If you give respect, you get respect. You teach by example. Parents of the past two decades have lost sight of their priorities. Kids need and want the love of their parents, and not just in materialistic expression. They need the emotional and physical interactions more than the other. Children are little people, they respond to us the way we respond to them. Boundaries and expectations must be outlaid from the start.

By , on 10/21/2009

I am a grandmother, and am dealing with this lack of love, care, etc. from them, 2 granddaughters, and when I think of all the love I gave them from the time they were babies, I am crushed, so crushed, that the remaining years I have, are not going well enough to make me positive about anything in my life. I just cannot believe it! From observing the youth of today in areas of theatres, lobbies, stores,etc, I'm not surprised at this bad behavior shown to me, thanks to lack of stay at home moms.

By cava911, on 06/29/2009

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