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Repair After Conflict

Big feelings spill over in every family. What strengthens bonds is what happens next—coming back together to own mistakes, soothe hurt, and rebuild trust. A solid repair teaches children that relationships can bend without breaking.

Why it matters

  • Lowers lingering stress and shame for both parent and child
  • Models healthy accountability and forgiveness
  • Restores a child’s sense of safety, keeping the nervous system flexible

Quick repair roadmap

  1. Regulate first – Pause, breathe, sip water. A calm body delivers a sincere apology.
  2. Acknowledge impact – “I yelled and that was scary for you.” Describe their feeling, not your intent.
  3. Own your part – Brief “I’m sorry” without excuses.
  4. Offer reconnection – Hug, play, or a shared snack; sensory closeness cements repair.
  5. Problem-solve together – Brainstorm how to handle the trigger next time (“Code word when voices get loud”).

Helpful tools

Try repair phrases

  • “I’m sorry I grabbed the tablet. I was frustrated and forgot to breathe.”
  • “You looked hurt when I laughed. I get why. Can we try again?”
  • “Let’s redo that moment with calm voices.”

Clinicians who coach repair

FAQs — Repair After Conflict

Doesn’t apologising weaken authority?

No—children respect leaders who admit mistakes; it builds authenticity.

What if my child refuses my apology?

Give space, then leave a small repair gesture (note, favourite snack). Trust grows with consistency.

How long after a blow-up should I repair?

As soon as everyone is calm—often 10–30 minutes for kids, longer for teens.

Should my child apologise too?

Model first; invite, don’t demand. Over time kids mirror sincere accountability.

We fight daily—where do we start?

Practise micro-repairs and build self-regulation through strong-willed child coaching or the Parenting Emotionally Intense Children group.