Overpowering Emotions: Tools for Child & Teen Anxiety and Resilience

Dr. Caroline Buzanko

Practical, science-based strategies to help kids and teens manage anxiety, navigate big feelings, and build resilience. Overpowering Emotions is the #1 resource for adults who want to confidently support children and teens through emotional challenges.Children and teens today are struggling with more anxiety, overwhelm, and emotional intensity than ever before—and adults are desperate for tools that actually work. This podcast is here to change that.Dr. Caroline gives you the knowledge and tools you need to support children and teens through anxiety, emotional overwhelm, and everyday challenges. Whether you’re a parent, educator, clinician, or caregiver, you’ll learn exactly what to do (and what not to do) right away to help young people feel calmer, braver, and more capable.Each episode delivers:• Clear, practical steps you can use immediately• Expert interviews with leading psychologists and researchers• Real-life examples that make complex concepts easy to understand• Tools for emotional regulation, anxiety mastery, confidence-building, and resilience• Effective approaches for home, school, and clinical settingsIf you’ve ever wished for a trusted guide to help you navigate child and teen anxiety, emotional outbursts, and overwhelming emotions, you’ve just found it.Subscribe now and join the movement to help the next generation thrive.About Dr. Caroline BuzankoDr. Caroline is a psychologist, researcher, speaker, and internationally recognized expert in child and teen anxiety. With more than 25 years of experience supporting children, teens, and families, she is known for her ability to translate cutting-edge research into practical, compassionate strategies that make a meaningful impact.In 2024, Dr. Caroline was honoured as Alberta’s Psychologist of the Year, a recognition that reflects her significant contributions to advancing child and youth mental health practices. Often called the “Yoda of anxiety,” she blends scientific evidence, clinical expertise, and real-world tools to help young people build confidence, emotional regulation, and lifelong resilience.

  1. 6D AGO

    226. Distress Tolerance vs. Emotional Avoidance | What Works

    Are adults accidentally making anxiety stronger? In this episode of Overpowering Emotions, Dr. Caroline Buzanko explains why accommodation, reassurance, and avoidance — even when well-intentioned — keep kids stuck in fear. Drawing from clinical work and real-world examples, she shows why discomfort is where learning lives and why confidence grows only when kids stay in the situation. This episode is for parents, teachers, school teams, and clinicians who want children to tolerate frustration, build resilience, and trust themselves. You’ll hear: Why avoidance fuels anxietyHow reassurance backfiresWhy stopping accommodation matters more than teaching skillsWhat validation sounds like without reinforcing fearHow adults regulate themselves so kids can regulate too 🎧 Free training mentioned in this episode: Avoiding Common Mistakes with Anxiety https://koru-learning-institute.thinkific.com/courses/avoidingcommonmistakeswithanxiety Listen, share, and support kids in becoming brave. Homework Ideas for Adults Start small. One change at a time is enough. Practise emotional neutrality When a child is distressed, your first job is managing your own response. Neutral tone. Neutral body language. Calm breathing. Kids borrow your nervous system before they can use their own. Spot one accommodation to pause this week Pick a single behaviour you’ll stop adjusting around anxiety. Not everything — just one. Common places to look: answering repeated “are you sure?” questionschanging routines to avoid discomfortallowing avoidance of tests, presentations, or social situationsstaying with a child longer than needed to reduce anxietyoffering constant reassurance instead of confidence Validate feelings without discussing outcomes Name the emotion and stop there. No fixing. No convincing. No explaining. Short responses work best. Use one steady script Choose a single line and repeat it calmly: “I know this is hard.”“I know you can handle this.”“Let me know when you’re ready.”Consistency matters more than wording. 👉 Free scripts you can use right away: 5 Phrases That Calm Anxious Kids (Without Reinforcing Anxiety) https://korulearninginstitute.kit.com/5phrasesthatcalmanxiouskids Model frustration out loud Let kids hear you work through something difficult. Show effort, pauses, mistakes, and recovery. This teaches far more than advice ever will. Hold the line kindly When resistance shows up — crying, whining, stalling — stay calm and wait. Courage grows through staying, not escaping. Enjoying the show? Help out by rating this podcast on Apple to help others get access to this information too! apple.co/3ysFijh Follow Dr. Caroline YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@dr.carolinebuzanko IG: https://www.instagram.com/dr.carolinebuzanko/ LinkedIn: https://ca.linkedin.com/in/dr-caroline-buzanko Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/DrCarolineBuzanko/ Website: https://drcarolinebuzanko.com/ Resources: https://drcarolinebuzanko.com/resources/articles-child-resilience-well-being-psychology/ Business inquiries: https://korupsychology.ca/contact-us/ Want to learn more about helping kids strengthen their emotion regulation skills and problem-solving brains while boosting their confidence, independence, and resilience? Check out my many training opportunities! https://drcarolinebuzanko.com/upcoming-events/

    23 min
  2. JAN 26

    225. When Kids Can’t Tolerate Frustration, What’s Actually Missing?

    If kids melt down the second something feels hard, this episode is for you. Dr. Caroline explains distress tolerance — a core emotion regulation skill that helps children and teens handle frustration, anxiety, disappointment, and discomfort without blowing up, shutting down, or escaping. She shares why the brain needs uncomfortable feelings for learning, how the nervous system reacts in milliseconds, and why quick fixes can backfire over time. You’ll learn: - Why discomfort is where the brain rewires and learns - How “making it easier” can create long-term fragility - A simple 1–10 scale to lower intensity without minimizing feelings - “Ride the wave” + “storm” metaphors kids remember - How to keep the prefrontal cortex online during big feelings - A practical grounding/pendulation tool (often helpful for neurodivergent kids) - The three minds (emotion mind, rational mind, wise mind) using Smart Hulk, - Spock, and Captain Kirk - How to model this in real life so kids build confidence through doing hard things This episode is for teachers, school counsellors, parents, therapists, psychologists, and mental health professionals supporting children. ⏱️ Try this today: Ask, “How big is this feeling 1–10?” then, “What would bring it to a 7 or 8?” Chapters  00:00 Distress tolerance + why kids need it 01:40 Nervous system + stress response 04:21 “We keep robbing kids” of discomfort 07:06 Finding the 6–7 learning zone 08:03 The 1–10 scaling tool 10:16 Emotions pass (and what fuels them) 13:43 Ride the wave + storm metaphor 17:03 Grounding to keep the prefrontal cortex online 18:24 Pendulation (roots through the feet) 22:29 Emotion mind vs rational mind 28:36 Wise mind (Smart Hulk balance) 35:47 Pros/cons to slow impulsive choices 43:00 Stop making it easier (chips story) Homework Ideas to Support Kids & Teens A) The 1–10 “bring it to a 7” check-in (daily, 60 seconds) Script: “How big is it 1–10?” → “What would bring it to a 7 or 8?”Resource: feelings chart for younger kids; for teens, a Notes app tracking scale.B) Weather Report Feelings (younger kids + classrooms) Prompt: “If your feelings were weather right now, what would it be?”Follow-up: “What might your weather map look like later today?”Resource: paper + markers, or a whiteboard “weather wall”.C) Ride-the-Wave timer (build proof feelings pass) Do: set a timer and track how long the feeling stays intense.Script: “How long do you think this will last?” → timer → “What happened?”Resource: phone timer + simple log (date / feeling / intensity / time).D) Grounding to keep the thinking brain online (not to “calm down”) Prompts: “Where do you feel it?” “Left or right?” “Describe it.”E) Pendulation (“roots through the feet”) for big body sensations Practice: chest sensation → feet sensation → back to chest → back to feet.Resource: optional cue card with steps.F) Three Minds roleplay (Smart Hulk / Spock / Captain Kirk) Ask: “What would Emotion Mind say?” “What would Rational Mind say?” “What would Wise Mind choose?”Resource: character images (optional).G) Pros/cons (for impulsive urges) Do: “Pros now / costs later” list on a sticky note.Resource: sticky notes or Notes app. Enjoying the show? Help out by rating this podcast on Apple to help others get access to this information too! apple.co/3ysFijh Follow Dr. Caroline YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@dr.carolinebuzanko IG: https://www.instagram.com/dr.carolinebuzanko/ LinkedIn: https://ca.linkedin.com/in/dr-caroline-buzanko Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/DrCarolineBuzanko/ Website: https://drcarolinebuzanko.com/ Resources: https://drcarolinebuzanko.com/resources/articles-child-resilience-well-being-psychology/ Business inquiries: https://korupsychology.ca/contact-us/ Want to learn more about helping kids strengthen their emotion regulation skills and problem-solving brains while boosting their confidence, independence, and resilience? Check out my many training opportunities! https://drcarolinebuzanko.com/upcoming-events/

    44 min
  3. JAN 20

    224. When emotions take over, is impulse control even possible to teach?

    Impulse control is a foundational skill for emotion regulation—and many kids don’t have it yet. In this episode of Overpowering Emotions, Dr. Caroline continues her series on impulse control and explains how impulsive reactions block learning, problem-solving, and emotional growth. You’ll learn how to help kids and teens slow down, map their emotional patterns, and practise new responses before big emotions take over. Topics covered: Why impulsivity makes emotion regulation harderHow to map thoughts, feelings, body sensations, urges, and behavioursUsing environment changes to make self-control easierIf-then planning that works in real lifeHelping kids practise new behaviours without shame or power strugglesWhy reinforcement and recovery time matter This episode is designed for parents, educators, school staff, and mental health professionals working with kids who react fast and struggle to pause. 🎧 Listen, share, and subscribe for more practical tools to support emotional growth. Enjoying the show? Help out by rating this podcast on Apple to help others get access to this information too! apple.co/3ysFijh Follow Dr. Caroline YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@dr.carolinebuzanko IG: https://www.instagram.com/dr.carolinebuzanko/ LinkedIn: https://ca.linkedin.com/in/dr-caroline-buzanko Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/DrCarolineBuzanko/ Website: https://drcarolinebuzanko.com/ Resources: https://drcarolinebuzanko.com/resources/articles-child-resilience-well-being-psychology/ Business inquiries: https://korupsychology.ca/contact-us/ Want to learn more about helping kids strengthen their emotion regulation skills and problem-solving brains while boosting their confidence, independence, and resilience? Check out my many training opportunities! https://drcarolinebuzanko.com/upcoming-events/

    19 min
  4. JAN 13

    223. What do kids need before impulse control can improve?

    Impulsivity doesn’t come from nowhere. It shows up when emotions move faster than skills. In this episode of Overpowering Emotions, Dr. Caroline moves into part 2 of impulse control, unpacking what kids actually need to slow impulsive reactions and make better choices when feelings surge. You’ll hear why impulse control cannot be taught in isolation, how emotional literacy lays the groundwork, and why kids need repeated, real-world practice, not lectures, to change behaviour. We talk about recognizing emotional patterns, mapping triggers across the day, teaching opposite actions, building self-coaching language, and creating safe opportunities for kids to practice responding differently while emotions are active. This episode is packed with practical strategies for parents, educators, and clinicians who want to help kids build real pause, choice, and follow-through. Homework Ideas Track daily emotion triggers using simple ABC notes (Antecedent, Behaviour, Consequence)Help kids identify body cues that signal rising emotionCreate a short list of opposite actions for common emotionsPractice self-coaching scripts out loud, then quietlySet up safe, repeatable practice moments at home or schoolReinforce effort with specific feedbackRotate practice across settings, people, and times of day Helpful Tools Coping cardsChoice boardsEmotion–action–outcome mapsVisual stop cuesProgress tracking charts Enjoying the show? Help out by rating this podcast on Apple to help others get access to this information too! apple.co/3ysFijh Follow Dr. Caroline YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@dr.carolinebuzanko IG: https://www.instagram.com/dr.carolinebuzanko/ LinkedIn: https://ca.linkedin.com/in/dr-caroline-buzanko Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/DrCarolineBuzanko/ Website: https://drcarolinebuzanko.com/ Resources: https://drcarolinebuzanko.com/resources/articles-child-resilience-well-being-psychology/ Business inquiries: https://korupsychology.ca/contact-us/ Want to learn more about helping kids strengthen their emotion regulation skills and problem-solving brains while boosting their confidence, independence, and resilience? Check out my many training opportunities! https://drcarolinebuzanko.com/upcoming-events/

    26 min
  5. JAN 6

    222. Why do kids react before they think?

    Many kids struggle with impulse control, and adults are often left wondering why strategies don’t stick. This episode breaks down the foundations of impulsive behaviour and why so many kids react without thinking — especially when emotions are high. Dr. Caroline explains the building blocks kids need long before self-control can happen: emotional safety, a developing prefrontal cortex, attention regulation, and the four types of impulsivity that influence behavior. You’ll learn how urgency, acting too fast, difficulty sticking with tasks, and sensation seeking show up in everyday life. This episode helps parents, educators, and mental health professionals finally understand the why behind big reactions — and sets the groundwork for change.   Homework Ideas Track patterns (simple, daily). Write down: When impulsivity happenedWhat emotion was presentWhat urge the child feltWhat behaviour followedThis reveals triggers and themes. Build “urge awareness.” Ask your child: “When you feel angry, what does your body want to do first?”“When you're excited, what do you want to do right away?”This grows self-observation before action. Watch your own impulse moments. Kids mirror adults. Choose one moment this week to pause before reacting. Enjoying the show? Help out by rating this podcast on Apple to help others get access to this information too! apple.co/3ysFijh Follow Dr. Caroline YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@dr.carolinebuzanko IG: https://www.instagram.com/dr.carolinebuzanko/ LinkedIn: https://ca.linkedin.com/in/dr-caroline-buzanko Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/DrCarolineBuzanko/ Website: https://drcarolinebuzanko.com/ Resources: https://drcarolinebuzanko.com/resources/articles-child-resilience-well-being-psychology/ Business inquiries: https://korupsychology.ca/contact-us/ Want to learn more about helping kids strengthen their emotion regulation skills and problem-solving brains while boosting their confidence, independence, and resilience? Check out my many training opportunities! https://drcarolinebuzanko.com/upcoming-events/

    28 min
  6. 2025-12-30

    221. Resilience Goals for Kids: Celebrate Growth, Set Intentions

    As we close out the year, this holiday replay of Overpowering Emotions focuses on helping kids reflect on how far they’ve come and set resilience intentions for the year ahead without pressure, perfectionism, or overwhelm. Dr. Caroline talks about why small victories matter, how to help kids notice their own growth, and how to set one or two realistic intentions that actually stick. You’ll hear how to make these conversations feel collaborative instead of corrective, how to invite kids into the process as leaders of their own growth, and how adults can act as supportive consultants rather than fixers. This episode is for parents, educators, and professionals who want goal-setting to build kids' confidence, emotional regulation, and follow-through. Homework ideas The 10-minute “Year in Review” chat Use 3 prompts: “What’s something you’re proud of from this year?”“What was hard, and what helped you get through it?”“What’s one skill you’re stronger at now than you were last year?”Tip: If they shrug, offer choices: school, friends, sports, family, hobbies, health, handling stress. Pick ONE resilience goal using the “Tiny + Clear” rule Have your child choose one: Body goal: “When I’m stressed, I’ll take 10 slow breaths before I talk.”Mind goal: “When I make a mistake, I’ll practice one re-do instead of quitting.”Connection goal: “Once a week, I’ll ask for help when I’m stuck.”Bravery goal: “I’ll do one small uncomfortable thing each week.”Make it specific: when / where / how often. Create an “If-Then” coping plan (especially for anxiety/overwhelm) “If I feel overwhelmed, then I will ____.”Examples: get water, step outside, text a parent, use a coping card, take a 5-minute break. Weekly check-in that doesn’t feel like nagging Once a week, ask: “What worked?”“What got in the way?”“What’s one small tweak for this week?”Keep it short. Aim for progress, not perfection. Free Resources  The Emotional Literacy Book (https://korulearninginstitute.kit.com/emotionaliteracy)Holiday Guide with essential tips to support emotion regulation over the holidays (https://korulearninginstitute.kit.com/2025holidayguide)Goal setting blog (https://korupsychology.ca/setting-goals/)Episode 99 for an episode on goal setting for academicsProblem-solving (https://korupsychology.ca/develop-problem-solving-skills/)  Goal Ladder Template  (Big Goal → Small Steps)   My Big Goal (Something I want to get better at)   Step 1: My First Small Step What I will try this week:   When I might practice this: ☐ At school ☐ At home ☐ With friends ☐ Other: __________   Step 2: My Next Small Step What I will try next: How I’ll know I’m making progress:   Step 3: My Stretch Step What I’ll try when I’m ready:   What might help if this feels hard: Celebrating Progress One thing I’m already proud of:   One way an adult can support me: Coping Card Template  Front of Card When I feel: ☐ Angry ☐ Anxious ☐ Overwhelmed ☐ Sad   ☐ Frustrated ☐ Disappointed  ☐ Other: __________ My body might feel like:   Back of Card I can try: ☐ Take 3 slow breaths ☐ Take a short break ☐ Get a drink or snack ☐ Ask for help ☐ Use my words ☐ Move my body ☐ Remind myself: “__________________________________________________” If this doesn’t help, I can:   An adult who can help me is: Enjoying the show? Help out by rating this podcast on Apple to help others get access to this information too! apple.co/3ysFijh Follow Dr. Caroline YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@dr.carolinebuzanko IG: https://www.instagram.com/dr.carolinebuzanko/ LinkedIn: https://ca.linkedin.com/in/dr-caroline-buzanko Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/DrCarolineBuzanko/ Website: https://drcarolinebuzanko.com/ Resources: https://drcarolinebuzanko.com/resources/articles-child-resilience-well-being-psychology/ Business inquiries: https://korupsychology.ca/contact-us/ Want to learn more about helping kids strengthen their emotion regulation skills and problem-solving brains while boosting their confidence, independence, and resilience? Check out my many training opportunities! https://drcarolinebuzanko.com/upcoming-events/

    13 min
  7. 2025-12-23

    220. How to Build Emotional Resilience in Kids During Holiday Stress

    Holiday break can bring joy… and a whole lot of overwhelm. In this Holiday Special Replay of Overpowering Emotions, Dr. Caroline shares what holiday dysregulation looks like in real life (including her own family’s “never leave the house on Christmas Day” boundary), why kids melt down when routines shift, and how adults can turn everyday holiday stress into practice for emotion regulation and resilience. You’ll hear concrete ways to keep just enough structure, reduce sensory overload, handle screen-time battles without power struggles, and teach kids to “catch it early” before emotions take over—using body awareness, code words, coping cards, and simple family rituals that build flexibility and calm. Homework Ideas   Pick 2 “anchor routines” and protect them all break Try: Same wake-up time most days (even if bedtime shifts)One bedtime ritual piece (hug + story, even if it’s late)One daily quiet-alone-time block (10–30 minutes)  Create a “Holiday Overwhelm Plan” with your kid (10 minutes)   Write together: My early warning signs: (snappy, clingy, quiet, stomach aches, tears, silliness that won’t stop)My resets: (bathroom break, headphones, snack, walk, quiet room, doodle)My help request words: “I need a break.” / “Can we do puppy?”Parent response script: “I see it. We can take five.”  Choose a code word for public situations Do: Pick something neutral (“puppy”) and practice it once at home. Use it when: you notice irritability, withdrawal, or escalating volume. Goal: exit early, reset, return. Practice “drop into the body” once a day Do (kids + teens): “Where do you feel it right now?” (chest, throat, belly, head)Or start silly/easy: “What does your right elbow feel like?”Why it helps: builds noticing skills before emotions hijack behavior. Resource: Emotion wheel or feelings chart (print one and keep it visible). Check out the emotional literacy toolkit to help!   Screen boundaries that don’t become a daily war Try one simple rule: Tech-free zones (bedrooms, meal table) orTech-free time (first hour after waking, last hour before bed) orTech-free day blocks (two afternoons a week)When pushback hits: mirror the feeling. “Ugh. You really wanted Minecraft today.” (Stop there. No lecture.)   One “resilience tradition” for the week Pick ONE: Gratitude jar (read on New Year’s Eve)Resilience ornament/tree (write a “hard thing I handled” on paper)Family story night: “A time I messed up and what I learned.” Resources Mentioned: The Emotional Literacy Book (https://korulearninginstitute.kit.com/emotionaliteracy)FREE Holiday Guide with essential tips to support emotion regulation over the holidays (https://korulearninginstitute.kit.com/2025holidayguide) Enjoying the show? Help out by rating this podcast on Apple to help others get access to this information too! apple.co/3ysFijh Follow Dr. Caroline YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@dr.carolinebuzanko IG: https://www.instagram.com/dr.carolinebuzanko/ LinkedIn: https://ca.linkedin.com/in/dr-caroline-buzanko Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/DrCarolineBuzanko/ Website: https://drcarolinebuzanko.com/ Resources: https://drcarolinebuzanko.com/resources/articles-child-resilience-well-being-psychology/ Business inquiries: https://korupsychology.ca/contact-us/ Want to learn more about helping kids strengthen their emotion regulation skills and problem-solving brains while boosting their confidence, independence, and resilience? Check out my many training opportunities! https://drcarolinebuzanko.com/upcoming-events/

    39 min
  8. 2025-12-16

    219. Overstimulated, Overwhelmed, and Over It: Emotion Regulation During the Holidays

    The holidays are supposed to be joyful—but for many families, they quietly amplify stress, overwhelm, and emotional reactivity. In this special crossover episode with Parents of the Year podcast, Dr. Caroline and her husband Andrew step away from “perfect holiday” pressure and take a psychologically grounded look at why emotions run hotter during the holidays, for both kids and adults. We explore how disrupted routines, sensory overload, social comparison, family dynamics, and unrealistic expectations tax the nervous system—and why emotional meltdowns, irritability, withdrawal, or disappointment are not signs of failure, but signals of dysregulation. This episode bridges emotion regulation science with real-life parenting moments, including: ·       Why overstimulation is often behind kids’ holiday meltdowns ·       How social media comparison fuels anxiety and emotional exhaustion ·       The role of structure, predictability, and proactive planning in regulation ·       Why parents’ emotional regulation sets the ceiling for their children’s ·       How to identify non-negotiables, let go of the rest, and reduce emotional load ·       Practical strategies for creating “magical moments” without emotional burnout Rather than trying to make emotions disappear, this conversation focuses on helping families anticipate emotional needs, regulate proactively, and respond with intention instead of reactivity. Want to learn more about boosting resilience during the holidays? Check out these episodes: Holiday Stress? Here's How to Build Real Resilience (https://youtu.be/jXgq7dn-hR4) How can we nurture kids' emotional resilience during the holidays? (https://youtu.be/jXgq7dn-hR4) Homework Ideas Do a “Holiday Load” Scan (5 minutes)Goal: Reduce dysregulation by identifying what’s actually taxing the nervous system. Do: Write down the top 3 things that reliably spike stress for your child/teen (e.g., crowds, late nights, lots of visits, too many transitions) and the top 3 that spike stress for you. Use it: Pick one lever to change this week (sleep, pacing, fewer events, quieter mornings, etc.). Resource: A simple “HALT” check (Hungry, Angry/Anxious, Lonely, Tired) + add S for Sensory. Choose 2 Non-Negotiables + 2 FlexiblesGoal: Lower conflict and decision fatigue; clarify boundaries ahead of time. Do: Non-negotiables (examples): “We don’t do three houses in one day,” “We eat before we go,” “We leave by 7:30.”Flexibles: “Which movie?” “Which dessert?” “When we open gifts (within a window).”Share it with your child/teen (and any other adults involved) before the big day.Resource: Brief script: “Here’s what matters most to me so everyone’s nervous system is okay…”“Here’s what you can choose so it still feels fun for you…”Build a Regulation Plan: Before / During / AfterGoal: Move from reactive parenting to proactive emotion regulation. Do: Create a 3-part plan: Before: sleep, food, hydration, quiet time, predict the tough moments During: micro-breaks, movement, sensory supports, time limits After: decompression time, low-demand evening, early bedtime when possible Resource: “30/30 Rule” for high stimulation days: every ~30–60 minutes of stimulation, aim for a brief downshift (bathroom break, fresh air, water, quiet corner). Replacement Behaviours for Screen/Scroll TrapsGoal: Reduce comparison + mindless scrolling (a major holiday stress amplifier). Do: Choose a replacement behaviour you’ll do instead of scrolling when stressed: 5-minute walkshort stretchtea + 3 slow breathstext one friend directly (real connection)Resource: Set a phone boundary: “No social media before noon” or “10 minutes max, with a timer.” Create a “Code Word” + Exit Plan (Kids and Teens)Goal: Give kids a dignified way to signal overwhelm without melting down. Do: Pick a code word (e.g., “yellow light,” “reset,” “quiet break”). Define what happens when they use it: you step out togetherthey go to a quiet spotheadphones/hoodie breakshort car break if neededResource: Collaborative language: “Your job is to notice overwhelm early. My job is to help you reset.”Practice “Containment” When Volume or Energy RisesGoal: Prevent spirals by regulating yourself first. Do: When you notice irritation rising: Pause (one breath)Name internally: “My nervous system is activated.”Do one downshift: step away, splash cold water, 10 slow exhales, or a short walk.Resource: A simple mantra: “I can be the calm, even when it’s loud.” Set Expectations Explicitly Goal: Reduce disappointment driven by vague, magical expectations. Do: Ask: “What are you most excited about—specifically?”“What would make the day feel like a win?”Then set realistic anchors:one meaningful momentone active thingone connection pointResource: “Lower the bar, deepen the moment.” (Connection > performance.) Plan for Sensory Needs Goal: Prevent overload (lights, noise, crowds, scratchy clothes, social demands). Do: Pack a “regulation kit”: headphones/earbudsgum/mintsfidgethoodie/comfort itemsunglasses/hatsnack + waterResource: Let kids opt into brief “parallel play” (being near others without forced interaction). Use “Let It Go vs. Address It” Sorting Goal: Avoid adults getting pulled into old roles and conflicts. Do: Before gatherings, decide: 2 things you’ll let go (minor irritations)1 thing you’ll address if needed (a true boundary)Use a short phrase to hold it:“Not today.”“That’s not up for discussion.”“We’re keeping it simple this year.”Resource: “Boundaries are kind when they’re clear.” End-of-Day Debrief: 3–2–1 ResetGoal: Teach emotional learning without shame; build resilience over time. Do (at bedtime or next morning): 3 things that went okay2 moments that were hard1 tweak for next timeResource: Keep it brief and neutral. The point is learning, not blame. Bonus The holidays represent a perfect storm for dysregulation: ·       Increased sensory input (noise, crowds, events) ·       Disrupted routines (sleep, meals, schedules) ·       Heightened expectations (“This should be special”) ·       Social comparison (especially via social media) ·       Relational triggers (family dynamics, unresolved patterns)   1. Emotions Escalate When Predictability Drops   When structure disappears, the nervous system has to work harder. For children especially, this can lead to: ·       irritability ·       emotional outbursts ·       shutdown or withdrawal   The solution isn’t stricter control—it’s intentional scaffolding: ·       spacing events ·       building in rest ·       protecting sleep and nutrition ·       pacing stimulation   2. Overstimulation Looks Like “Bad Behaviour”   Holiday meltdowns are often mislabeled as entitlement or attitude. In reality, they are frequently signs of: ·       sensory overload ·       emotional saturation ·       unmet regulation needs   This episode reframes behaviour as communication—consistent with an emotion-coaching lens.   3. Parents’ Regulation Is the Regulating Force   Children borrow regulation from adults.   When parents: ·       anticipate their own limits, ·       step away before exploding, ·       name and honor boundaries, they are modeling exactly the skills we want children to internalize.   This is co-regulation in action.   4. Expectations Drive Emotional Pain   Disappointment often comes not from what happens, but from the gap between: ·       what we imagined, and ·       what actually unfolded.   This episode emphasizes helping both adults and children: ·       name expectations, ·       reality-check them, ·       and flexibly adjust rather than collapse into frustration.   5. Emotion Regulation Is Proactive, Not Reactive   Regulation works best before emotions peak so it’s important to use proactive strategies such as: ·       identifying non-negotiables in advance ·       planning recovery time ·       setting clear internal boundaries ·       collaborating with children ahead of time   Suggested Listener Reflection Questions ·       What parts of the holidays are most dysregulating for me? ·       Which expectations am I carrying that may not be realistic? ·       Where could less stimulation create more connection? ·       What would it look like to model emotional boundaries for my child? ·       How can I help my family “ride the wave” rather than fight it?  Enjoying the show? Help out by rating this podcast on Apple to help others get access to this information too! apple.co/3ysFijh Follow Dr. Caroline YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@dr.carolinebuzanko IG: https://www.instagram.com/dr.carolinebuzanko/ LinkedIn: https://ca.linkedin.com/in/dr-caroline-buzanko Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/DrCarolineBuzanko/ Website: https://drcarolinebuzanko.com/ Resources: https://drcarolinebuzanko.com/resources/articles-child-resilience-well-being-psychology/ Business inquiries: https://korupsychology.ca/contact-us/ Want to learn more about helping kids strengthen their emotion regulation skills and problem-solving brains while boosting their confidence, independence, and resilience? Check out my many training opportunities! https://drcarolinebuzanko.com/upcoming-events/

    37 min
5
out of 5
11 Ratings

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Practical, science-based strategies to help kids and teens manage anxiety, navigate big feelings, and build resilience. Overpowering Emotions is the #1 resource for adults who want to confidently support children and teens through emotional challenges.Children and teens today are struggling with more anxiety, overwhelm, and emotional intensity than ever before—and adults are desperate for tools that actually work. This podcast is here to change that.Dr. Caroline gives you the knowledge and tools you need to support children and teens through anxiety, emotional overwhelm, and everyday challenges. Whether you’re a parent, educator, clinician, or caregiver, you’ll learn exactly what to do (and what not to do) right away to help young people feel calmer, braver, and more capable.Each episode delivers:• Clear, practical steps you can use immediately• Expert interviews with leading psychologists and researchers• Real-life examples that make complex concepts easy to understand• Tools for emotional regulation, anxiety mastery, confidence-building, and resilience• Effective approaches for home, school, and clinical settingsIf you’ve ever wished for a trusted guide to help you navigate child and teen anxiety, emotional outbursts, and overwhelming emotions, you’ve just found it.Subscribe now and join the movement to help the next generation thrive.About Dr. Caroline BuzankoDr. Caroline is a psychologist, researcher, speaker, and internationally recognized expert in child and teen anxiety. With more than 25 years of experience supporting children, teens, and families, she is known for her ability to translate cutting-edge research into practical, compassionate strategies that make a meaningful impact.In 2024, Dr. Caroline was honoured as Alberta’s Psychologist of the Year, a recognition that reflects her significant contributions to advancing child and youth mental health practices. Often called the “Yoda of anxiety,” she blends scientific evidence, clinical expertise, and real-world tools to help young people build confidence, emotional regulation, and lifelong resilience.

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