Understanding your child’s behavior can feel confusing — especially when meltdowns, anger, clinginess, or big emotions seem to come out of nowhere. But what if behavior is more than “bad behavior”? Learn what may sit underneath your child’s reactions and what they might really be trying to communicate.
Sometimes, as parents, it can feel like our children’s behavior is specifically designed to do one of four things:
– embarrass us in public
– push our buttons until we combust
– leave us completely baffled,
– or, worry the life out of us!
You know how it goes – one minute things seem fine.
Then the next, there’s shouting over the “wrong” cup, tears over socks and refusing to get dressed, melting down at the school gate, or emotions so big they seem to appear out of nowhere.
And somewhere in the middle of it all, you’re left wondering – what on earth is going on?
It’s easy to assume behavior is attention-seeking, defiant, dramatic, or simply “bad behaviour.”
But what if there’s something deeper going on?
What if behaviour isn’t random, dramatic, or done on purpose to make life difficult?
What if behavior is actually communication?
You see, children often show us what they cannot yet tell us.
So when we learn to look beneath the behavior — rather than only reacting to the chaos — something important shifts.
Instead of being completely focused on: “How do I stop this behavior?”
We make space to start wondering: “What might my child be trying to show me?”
This small shift can be the key to understanding our child’s emotional world. And when we start to wonder what’s beneath behavior, our children often start to make a little more sense.
So, in this post, we’ll explore what behavior might really be trying to tell us, and why understanding it matters.
Understanding Your Child’s Behavior
Here’s what we’ll cover…
Trying to make sense of your child’s behavior? Then you might like this…
Behavior Is Communication
When we think of communication, we often think of words. But children communicate in so many other ways too.
In fact, when children are struggling emotionally, behaviour is often one of the loudest ways they tell us something doesn’t feel right.
That doesn’t mean behaviour is always intentional or even fully understood by the child themselves.
Often, it’s quite the opposite.
Because children don’t always have the emotional awareness, language, or nervous system regulation to pause and say:
- “I’m feeling overwhelmed.”
- “Something feels unfair.”
- “I’m anxious about school.”
- “I’m feeling disconnected from you.”
Instead, those feelings tend to spill out in other ways.
Sometimes through anger.
Sometimes through tears.
Sometimes through clinginess, arguing, avoidance, shutting down, or behaviour that suddenly seems “out of character.”
And while behavior can certainly feel frustrating in the moment (especially after a long day when your own patience is running low), it often makes more sense when we stop looking only at what a child is doing and begin wondering why.
Because behaviour is usually trying to tell us something.
A meltdown might be saying: “This feels too much.”
Clinginess might be saying: “I don’t feel safe right now.”
Anger might be saying: “Something feels unfair, scary, or out of control.”
Withdrawal might quietly whisper: “Everything feels overwhelming.”
Of course, this doesn’t mean every behavior should simply be overlooked or accepted. Children still need boundaries and guidance to learn healthier ways of expressing their feelings.
But when we understand what might be happening underneath behavior, something important happens.
Instead of seeing behavior as something to stop, we begin to see it as something to understand.
And this understanding is where change begins.
Why Children Can’t Always Explain Their Feelings
As adults, we often expect children to tell us what’s bothering them.
We ask questions like:
- “What’s wrong?”
- “Why are you upset?”
- “Can you just tell me what’s going on?”
But children don’t always have access to those answers in the way we imagine.
Even though children can talk, they’re still developing the emotional awareness and thinking skills needed to understand, organise, and explain what’s happening inside them.
Many of the feelings children experience are big, messy, and confusing. Sometimes they don’t fully understand them themselves.
And when emotions become overwhelming, something else happens too: The thinking part of the brain — the part responsible for reasoning, reflection, and putting feelings into words — becomes harder to access.
In other words: When emotions are big, words often disappear.
So instead of telling us what’s wrong, they tend to show us.
Behavior is one of the main ways children communicate — but it’s not the only one.
Children also show us how they’re feeling through their bodies, and through their play.
You might notice this in physical restlessness, changes in sleep or appetite, or in the themes that come up in their play.
If you’d like to explore this more deeply, here’s Why Kids Can’t Tell You What They’re Feeling — And How They Show You Instead
What Might Be Underneath Your Child’s Behavior
Unfortunately, there’s no perfect formula for understanding behavior.
Children are wonderfully complex, and – just to keep us on our toes (as if we aren’t already busy enough!) – the same behavior can mean different things in different situations.
A child who is angry one day may be overwhelmed. But the next day, they may simply be hungry, tired, or struggling with something they don’t yet have words for.
Still, things often begin to make more sense when we start asking ourselves: “What might this behavior be trying to communicate?”
Here’s a few common examples.
Meltdowns and Big Emotional Reactions
When children seem to explode over something tiny — the wrong snack, a broken biscuit, a sibling looking at them the wrong way — it can feel baffling.
But often, the thing they’re reacting to isn’t actually the whole story.
Sometimes a meltdown is a sign of:
- overwhelm
- exhaustion
- sensory overload
- bottled-up feelings finally spilling over
- feeling unsafe, disconnected, or out of control
Often, what looks like “overreacting” is really a nervous system saying: “This is all too much right now.”
Anger, Arguing, and Defiance
Children rarely wake up hoping to make life difficult — even though some days it really feels that way.
Anger is often one of the easiest emotions for children to express because it feels powerful — especially when underneath they may actually feel hurt, anxious, powerless, embarrassed, or misunderstood.
Sometimes behavior that looks defiant may actually be saying:
- “I need more control.”
- “I don’t feel heard.”
- “Something feels hard, scary, or unfair.”
That doesn’t mean boundaries disappear. But understanding the feeling underneath can change how we respond.
Clinginess and Separation Struggles
Sometimes children suddenly become more clingy seemingly out of nowhere.
They want to be carried. Follow you around. Struggle at drop-off. Need constant reassurance.
Often, clinginess is less about being “spoilt” and more about needing safety.
It may show up during times of:
- stress or change
- school worries
- friendship difficulties
- tiredness or emotional overwhelm
Sometimes, clinginess quietly says: “I need to feel close to you right now.”
Withdrawal, Moodiness, or Shutting Down
Not all behaviour is loud.
Sometimes children communicate through silence.
A child who suddenly becomes withdrawn, irritable, or distant may not know how to explain what they’re feeling — or may feel too overwhelmed to share it.
Instead, emotions can show up as:
- moodiness
- avoiding connection
- wanting to be alone losing interest in things they normally enjoy
Sometimes, what looks like pushing us away is actually a child struggling to cope.
School Refusal or Sudden Behavior Changes
When children begin resisting school, complaining of tummy aches, becoming emotional before drop-off, or acting very differently at home, it’s often worth becoming curious.
Behavior changes can sometimes signal:
- anxiety
- friendship worries
- overwhelm
- learning struggles
- pressure or fear
Children don’t always say: “School feels hard.” Sometimes they show us instead.
The truth is, behavior is rarely random.
And while we won’t always know exactly what’s underneath, approaching behavior with curiosity instead of frustration or assumption often helps us see children more clearly.
When we look beneath the behavior, we often discover a child who is struggling, overwhelmed, or simply needing support.
Why Looking Beneath Behavior Matters
Of course, understanding behavior doesn’t suddenly make difficult moments easy – unfortunately!
When your child is shouting, melting down, refusing to listen, or pushing every button you have, it’s completely normal to feel frustrated too.
You’re human.
But when we make the shift from – “How do I stop this behavior?” to “What might my child be trying to show me?” something important happens.
You see, beneath difficult behaviors there is often an unmet need.
And when we figure that out, we’re better able to support the child in the ways they need.
“Beneath every behavior there is a feeling. And beneath every feeling there is a need. And when we meet that need rather than focus on the behavior, we begin to deal with the cause, not the symptom.”
A child may be needing things like:
Reassurance.
Connection.
Support with overwhelming feelings.
More predictability.
A sense of control.
Or simply help understanding emotions that feel too big to manage alone.
While addressing unmet needs like these may sound complicated, it’s often simple things that help the most. It can look like:
Helping a child feel heard and understood, by reflecting their emotions.
Creating more one-to-one connection for a child who’s acting out for attention.
Offering our calm to a child who’s dysregulated.
Building predictable routines for a child struggling with transitions.
Or even offering small opportunities for independence and decision-making for a child who feels powerless or lacking confidence.
So, suddenly, instead of focusing on correction and how to stop the behavior, we find space to support children with empathy, understanding, and guidance — while still holding boundaries.
And the great news is – often, when children feel safe, understood, and supported, the behavior itself begins to soften too.
How To Respond With Curiosity Instead of Reaction
Of course, responding with curiosity is much easier said than done when your child is melting down or shouting.
But sometimes what helps most is slowing things down and becoming curious.
Here’s some good questions to ask yourself:
- Are they overwhelmed?
- Are they tired, hungry, overstimulated, or emotionally flooded?
- Has something changed recently?
- Are they needing connection, reassurance, or safety?
- Is there something difficult they don’t yet have words for?
Children need us to become detectives of what’s happening underneath.
Not to solve everything perfectly. But simply to understand a little more.
And often, when children feel safe enough, calm enough, and connected enough… the words begin to come later. Or the behavior begins to make more sense.
Sometimes what helps, looks like:
- sitting nearby instead of rushing to fix
- helping children name feelings gently
- offering comfort before problem-solving
- supporting regulation before reasoning
- staying curious about patterns beneath behavior
Children rarely learn emotional regulation through correction alone. They learn it through feeling safe, understood, and supported over time.
And perhaps most importantly: You do not have to get this right all the time.
Understanding behavior isn’t about responding perfectly.
It’s about learning to look beneath what we can see — and responding with a little more understanding when we can.
Understanding Your Child’s Behavior: Closing Thoughts
Children’s behavior can feel messy, confusing, and incredibly hard to understand at times.
But when we stop seeing behavior as something to simply “fix”…
And start wondering what a child might be trying to communicate…
We often begin to see things more clearly.
Behavior doesn’t tell us everything. But often, it gives us clues.
And when we learn to look beneath the behavior with curiosity — rather than only reacting to what we see on the surface — connection has more room to grow.
Because children don’t always tell us what they’re feeling.
Often, they show us.
If you’d like more simple, real-life ways to support your child’s emotions, I share ideas, insights, and tools like this regularly.
You can join below and I’ll send them straight to your inbox.
If you’d like to explore this more deeply, you might also find these helpful:
Why Kids Can’t Tell You What They’re Feeling — And How They Show You Instead
Child Meltdowns and Big Emotions: What’s Really Going On Beneath the Behavior
Why Play Is One of the Most Powerful Ways Children Communicate
How to Help Children Calm Down When Emotions Feel Too Big
21 Powerful Play Therapy Techniques Parents Can Use at home
The Magic of Guided Meditation for Kids: Discover Its Benefits
How to Calm Stress: Best Breathing Strategies For Kids
Don’t miss a thing…
Want to stay up to date? Sign up for the ‘Surviving the Crazy Beautiful’ newsletter here. Or join our communities on Pinterest or Facebook for the latest tips and support.
Pin to read later…

Image credit: Photo by Dimedrol68 @gettyimagespro via Canva
