Why You Should Let Your Child Be Bored (And What the Research Says)
The gentle, evidence-based case for letting your child be bored, what the research actually shows, and...

Your toddler is on the floor. Screaming. Over a broken biscuit. Or because you peeled their banana wrong. Or because they wanted the blue cup and you gave them the blue cup but it was the wrong blue.
In that moment, it is easy to feel frustrated, embarrassed, or defeated. But here is the thing: your toddler is not giving you a hard time. They are having a hard time. And understanding what is actually happening in their brain during a meltdown is the single most useful piece of parenting knowledge you will ever acquire.
Dr Dan Siegel, a clinical professor of psychiatry at UCLA, uses a simple model to explain the developing brain. Imagine a two-storey house:
The downstairs brain (the brainstem and limbic system) handles basic functions and big emotions — fight, flight, freeze, anger, fear, hunger. It is fully online from birth. This is the reactive, survival brain.
The exact words to use when your brain goes blank: calm scripts for tantrums, bedtime, mealtimes and more. Free printable.
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The upstairs brain (the prefrontal cortex) handles reasoning, empathy, self-regulation, impulse control, and emotional modulation. Here is the critical part: this part of the brain is not fully developed until the mid-twenties. In a toddler, it is barely a construction site.
During a tantrum, the downstairs brain has taken over completely. The upstairs brain — the part that could reason, compromise, and see perspective — is literally offline. Your toddler cannot calm down because the part of their brain that manages calm does not work properly yet.
This is not a behaviour problem. It is a brain development fact.
Tantrums are not a sign that something is wrong. They are a sign that development is happening exactly as it should.
Between the ages of approximately 18 months and 4 years, children are developing at an extraordinary rate. They are acquiring language faster than at any other point in their lives. They are developing a sense of self, autonomy, and will. They are experiencing emotions with full intensity for the first time.
But their ability to experience emotions has far outpaced their ability to manage them. They feel everything at maximum volume with no volume control. The broken biscuit is not trivial to them — it is a genuine crisis, because their brain does not yet have the capacity to put it in perspective.
You cannot regulate a dysregulated child with a dysregulated brain. Before you respond, take one breath. Drop your shoulders. Lower your voice. Your calm is the scaffolding for their calm.
Get down to their physical level. Make yourself smaller and less threatening. Open body language. Soft eyes. This signals safety to their survival brain.
“You are really angry that the biscuit broke.” This is not permissive. It is neurological. When you name an emotion, research shows it activates the prefrontal cortex — literally helping to bring the upstairs brain back online. Dr Siegel calls this “name it to tame it.”
More on toddler tantrums and big feelings
Do not try to fix it, distract, or reason during the peak of the tantrum. Their upstairs brain is offline. Logic will not land. Just be present, be safe, and wait for the storm to pass.
When the intensity drops, offer comfort. “That was really hard. I am here.” Only then, when the upstairs brain is coming back online, can you problem-solve, offer choices, or set the limit about what happens next.
For word-for-word scripts for every common scenario, our Toddler Meltdown Cheat Sheet gives you the exact phrases to use when your own brain goes blank.
Understanding the science does not make tantrums easy. But it changes your response from frustration to compassion. And that changes everything — for both of you.
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