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Tantrums & behaviourA public meltdown adds a crowd of imagined judges to an already hard moment. The trick is to parent the child in front of you, not the strangers around you.
Mentally let the onlookers go. Strangers forget in five minutes; your child remembers how you handled it.
If you can, scoop them to a quieter corner or outside. Less stimulation helps the nervous system settle faster.
'I've got you. We're going to the car to calm down.' Calm and brief beats bargaining in the cereal aisle.
Leaving the half-full trolley is not failure. A reset now prevents an hour of escalation.
Free: 5 word-for-word scripts for toddler meltdowns Grab five of our most-used calm-down scripts, free to your inbox — the fastest way to feel ready for the next hard moment. Send me the free scripts →Keep outings short and well-timed around naps and meals, bring a snack, and set simple expectations beforehand. When one hits, stay calm and relocate rather than negotiate.
Giving in to end a public scene teaches that big meltdowns work. Stay kind but hold the line — it's hard once, but easier every time after.