The Basics of Emotional Control
The Basics of Emotional Control
The Basics of Emotional Control
Before we talk about the basics of emotional control, let’s begin with a story:
Sam is a sixteen-year-old student with autism and ADHD who struggles with homework tasks. Sam likes
drawing complex sketches of buildings and wants to be an architect someday. However, her smartphone
sometimes gets in the way after school, and she regularly procrastinates with projects and assignments
late into the evening. Her parents must ask her repeatedly to get started on her homework, each time
more and more insistent. Sam thinks her parents are constantly nagging at her, so she spends as much
time in her room as she can.
On a typical Tuesday evening, it’s around 10 pm when Sam finally gets around to doing homework. She’s
tired and rushes through the project so she can go to sleep. The next day Sam turns in her assignment.
Her teacher can see that Sam didn’t do her best work, so while her friends get time to talk and text at the
end of class, Sam has to keep working.
Frustrated and angry, Sam yells at her teacher. “You’re just another person out to get me!” storms out of
the classroom, bumping another student hard into the wall on her way out the door. As Sam storms
down the hallway, she knows her teacher is already calling the principal…
The example above showcases a breakdown in emotional control. Sam’s response to her teacher’s
feedback and not getting to relax at the end of class happens in thousands of homes and classrooms
every day. As students like Sam grow into adulthood, the negative consequences for challenges in
emotional control only increase.
As a parent, educator, or coach, what we know about emotional control can be a game-changer in
promoting success and achievement in students like Sam.
We know that teens and young adults experience both positive emotions (excitement, joy, happiness,
pride, etc.) and negative emotions (disappointment, sadness, guilt, frustration, overwhelm, etc.).
Experiencing emotions can include thoughts and different sensations in the body.
Teaching our children to respond to positive and negative emotions is the essence of emotional control.
Examples Of Emotional Control
Teens and young adults can rely on healthy and unhealthy behaviors to respond to stress and
challenging situations. Even though your teen might be controlling emotions outwardly, they may be
using unhealthy strategies to cope. Here are some examples of how we regulate our emotions
successfully:
For other learners, teaching skills in time management, organization, and task initiation may be more
difficult without addressing emotional control first. Learners who don’t have strong skills to respond to
frustration and failure may need to work on those strategies first. For these learners, focus first on
keeping emotions in check and ultimately learning other executive functioning skills becomes more
manageable.