When children struggle with big emotions like anger, anxiety, or frustration, our instinct as adults is to introduce strategies like deep breathing, distractions, calm-down corners, or mindfulness exercises.
These tools can be helpful, but tend to be more successful after something deeper develops first: awareness.
Awareness is the ability to notice what is happening in the current moment. This includes (and is not limited to) a child’s ability to name what they feel in the moment, where they feel it, and what might have triggered it. This awareness becomes the bridge between emotion and regulation.
Without a child’s awareness, using other strategies is a bit like giving them a toolbox but not teaching how to know when a particular tool should be used, and will keep these other strategies from being as effective.
Awareness Before Regulation
Developmental psychologist Dr. Gordon Neufeld reminds us that children don’t learn regulation by being taught techniques, but that they develop it as their brains mature and they feel safe and connected. Emotional regulation grows from the inside out, not from external strategies.
Awareness, then, isn’t just a cognitive skill; it’s an emotional unfolding. When a child can feel and notice their emotions, the prefrontal cortex (the “thinking brain”) begins to integrate with the limbic system (the “feeling brain”), and this integration is what allows true self-regulation to form.
As Neufeld often says, children must first feel their emotions before they can manage them.
How Counselling Helps Build Awareness
Counselling provides a space for children to slow down, reflect, and notice – something they might not have access to in their everyday environments.
In counselling, awareness grows through gentle guidance and connection.
A counsellor helps a child:
- Name what they feel without judgment or shame.
- Build a language for their inner world, so they can communicate what they feel inside.
- Notice and discuss body signals, tightness, warmth, fidgeting. This shows how emotions live and show up in their body.
- Understand patterns, what situations spark certain feelings and what helps them settle.
For younger children, this often happens through play, storytelling or creative expression. Through therapeutic play counsellors can help children express what they can’t yet verbalize, and begin to see connections between thoughts, feelings, and actions.
For older children and teens, counselling can help make sense of confusing emotions and normalize that all feelings have a purpose – even anger or anxiety. Over time, awareness becomes the foundation for healthier coping and more confident emotional expression.
Ultimately, counselling isn’t about “fixing” behaviour; it’s about helping a child understand themselves. Counselling first provides a safe space to lay the foundation of awareness, building the scaffolding that later strategies will need to be effective.
Need parenting help when it comes to your child’s awareness of emotions? We can do that – connect with us today.