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Tantrums & behaviour

What to Say During a Toddler Tantrum: Calm Scripts That Work

In the heat of a meltdown most parents go blank, and whatever comes out tends to make it worse. Having a few short scripts ready means you respond calmly on autopilot.

'I won't let you...' + the boundary

'I won't let you hit. I'll hold your hands.' Calm, clear, physical safety first — no lecture.

'You really wanted ___. It's so hard to stop.'

Naming the want behind the tantrum makes them feel understood, which is what shortens it.

'You're safe. I'm right here.'

Repeating one short, steady phrase is more regulating than a stream of reasoning.

Fewer words, slower words

Toddlers in meltdown can't process much language. Lower your voice and leave long pauses.

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 →

Frequently asked questions

Why doesn't reasoning work during a tantrum?

The thinking part of a toddler's brain goes offline when they're flooded. Logic only lands once they're calm — connection first, conversation later.

What if nothing I say works?

Sometimes the best script is near-silence: staying calm and close. Not every tantrum needs words; some just need a safe adult to ride it out.

The whole toolkit, in one place The Tantrum Script Book and the full Calm Parent Collection — gentle, practical, instant-download guides for the toddler years. Browse the guides →