tantrums → using words for feelings
Helping your child move from tantrums to using words for feelings
Putting feelings into words instead of tantrums is a skill that develops gradually across the toddler and early-preschool years, often still unfolding at three or four. You build the bridge by naming feelings calmly, staying alongside your child, teaching feeling words when they're settled, and praising attempts. Seek a developmental check if tantrums are very frequent, intense or long, or come with very few words or difficulty connecting — not as a diagnosis, but because early support works best.
Tantrums are how little ones say "I'm overwhelmed" before they have the words — and you can gently teach those words, side by side.
In short
Moving from big feelings shown through tantrums to feelings put into words is a real developmental skill, and it usually unfolds across the toddler and early-preschool years. Many children are still mid-journey at three or even four — tantrums fade gradually as language, self-control and emotional understanding grow together. Your loving, everyday narration of feelings is exactly what builds this bridge. A developmental check is wise if tantrums are very frequent, very intense, last a long time, or come alongside few words or difficulty connecting with people.How the bridge from tantrum to words is built
A child can only name a feeling once they have the words and the calm to use them — and both are still maturing in early childhood. You help most by being their "feelings translator":- Name it for them, calmly. In the moment: "You're so cross the tower fell. That's frustrating." Hearing the word attached to the feeling, over and over, teaches the link.
- Stay alongside, not above. Get low, soften your voice, offer a cuddle. A regulated adult helps a dysregulated child settle — this is co-regulation, the foundation of self-regulation.
- Teach words when they're calm, not mid-storm. Picture books, simple feeling faces, and "I felt happy / sad / angry today" chats at bedtime grow the vocabulary they'll reach for later.
- Offer small choices and language tools. "Do you want help or a turn first?" gives words and a sense of control, the two things tantrums are often reaching for.
- Praise the attempt. When they manage even "I'm mad!" instead of throwing, that deserves warm notice — it's the skill blooming.
Progress is gradual and uneven. A tired or hungry child loses words first — that's normal for all of us.
When a gentle check is wise
Consider a developmental review if your child is over three and tantrums are very frequent, very long (well beyond 15 minutes often), involve hurting themselves or others, or if they have very few words, struggle to follow simple requests, or find it hard to connect, share attention or play with others. This isn't a diagnosis — it simply means a clinician's calm look now opens early opportunities, because support works beautifully at this age.The Pinnacle way
A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care — never from an online list. Our clinicians watch how your child communicates and regulates during play, and shape support around your family's daily rhythms. Our speech therapy team helps grow the emotion vocabulary, and our occupational therapy team supports self-regulation and calming strategies — and you can start anytime at [Pinnacle](/).Trusted sources
American Academy of Pediatrics (healthychildren.org) guidance on temper tantrums and helping toddlers manage emotions; CDC developmental milestones on social-emotional growth in early childhood; ASHA (asha.org) resources on early language and emotional expression.Next step — Keep being their gentle translator. Book a developmental assessment for a calm, clear picture of your child's language and emotional growth.
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
Consider a developmental review if your child is over three and tantrums are very frequent, very long (often well beyond 15 minutes), involve hurting themselves or others, or come with very few words, difficulty following simple requests, or trouble connecting, sharing attention or playing with others.
Try this at home
Name feelings out loud during calm moments and in the storm: "You're cross the tower fell — that's frustrating." Hearing the word attached to the feeling, again and again, teaches your child the words they'll reach for later.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 365 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 children usually use words for feelings instead of tantrums?
It's gradual. Toddlers often peak in tantrums around two to three, and many children are still learning to name feelings well into their fourth year as language and self-control mature together. Uneven progress is normal — tired or hungry children lose words first, just like adults.
How can I teach my child feeling words?
Name feelings calmly in the moment ("You're sad the game ended"), and teach during calm times too — picture books, simple feeling faces, and bedtime chats about the day. Praise warmly whenever your child uses words instead of throwing or hitting, as that's the skill blooming.
When should I be concerned about ongoing tantrums?
A gentle check is wise if your child is over three and tantrums are very frequent, very long, involve hurting themselves or others, or come alongside very few words or difficulty connecting with people. This isn't a diagnosis — it simply means a clinician's calm look now opens early opportunities.