emotional understanding
Helping Your Toddler Learn Emotional Understanding at Home
Help your toddler understand emotions by naming feelings in the moment, mirroring faces, reading and pausing over feelings in books, and staying calm during meltdowns. Between 12 and 36 months this grows through warm, repeated everyday interactions — not lessons.
Naming what we feel is the first step to understanding it — and your toddler learns that language from you, one ordinary moment at a time.
In short
You help a toddler build emotional understanding by gently naming feelings — theirs, yours, and those in stories — as they happen, all day long. Between 12 and 36 months, little ones are just beginning to connect inner feelings to words and faces, so warmth, repetition and patience matter far more than perfection. This is everyday play, not a lesson.Simple ways to help at home
- Name the feeling in the moment. "You're frustrated the tower fell — that's hard." Putting a word to a big feeling helps your child make sense of it.
- Mirror faces and emotions. Make happy, sad, surprised and cross faces together in the mirror, and point them out in books and family photos.
- Read and pause. During picture books, ask "How do you think the bunny feels?" Even before they can answer, you're modelling the link between face and feeling.
- Stay calm during big feelings. Toddler meltdowns are normal. Sitting close, breathing slowly and naming the storm ("so angry right now") teaches that feelings pass and you stay.
- Talk about your own feelings, gently. "Mumma feels a bit tired, so I'll have a slow cuddle." Children learn emotions are safe to share when they hear you do it.
The science, simply
Emotional understanding (ICF b152, emotion functions) grows through thousands of warm, predictable interactions — what researchers call "serve and return". When you respond to your child's feelings, you wire the early brain for self-regulation. Progress at this age is gradual and uneven, and that is completely typical.The Pinnacle way
A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care — never from a website or a worry. If you'd like a structured picture of where your child is, our team is here. Explore the AbilityScore®, our behavioural therapy support, and more ideas on emotional understanding.Trusted sources
Guided by WHO ICF emotion functions (b152), CDC "Learn the Signs. Act Early." social-emotional milestones, and the American Academy of Pediatrics' guidance on early emotional development through everyday caregiving.Next step — keep playing and naming feelings together, and if you'd like a gentle developmental check or a chat, reach our Pinnacle team on WhatsApp: +91 91001 81181.
This is general information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.
What to watch
Big toddler feelings and meltdowns are normal. If your child shows little shared joy, rarely looks to you when upset, or seems not to notice others' emotions across many settings by around 24–36 months, mention it at a general developmental check.
Try this at home
Narrate feelings out loud as they happen — yours and theirs — in short, calm phrases: "You're sad it's bath time. I'm here." Repetition is what teaches.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 540 days
This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.
Frequently asked
At what age do toddlers start understanding emotions?
Emotional understanding begins early and grows fast between 12 and 36 months. Toddlers start linking feelings to words and faces, though it stays uneven — a child can name a feeling one day and melt down over it the next. That is completely typical.
Are toddler tantrums a sign of poor emotional understanding?
No. Tantrums are a normal part of learning to handle big feelings before words and self-control are fully developed. Staying calm and naming the feeling is exactly what builds emotional understanding over time.
How long until I see progress?
Progress at this age is gradual and shows up in small everyday moments — a feeling word used spontaneously, a quicker recovery after upset, looking to you for comfort. Keep it warm and consistent rather than rushed.