Sibling Conflict
Squabbles are part of growing up; they teach negotiation, empathy, and problem-solving. Trouble starts when teasing turns to daily shouting, hitting, or one child feeling chronically “less loved.” Good news: conflict patterns can be reshaped with a few consistent tools.
Why siblings clash
- Limited resources—“my toy, my turn, my parent.”
- Different temperaments—fiery meets sensitive.
- Developmental gaps—older kids want privacy; younger kids want in.
- Hidden worries—anxious, tired, or overstimulated kids lash out at the nearest target.
Quick strategies that calm the storm
- Coach, don’t referee—describe the problem (“two kids, one remote”) and invite solutions.
- Name feelings first—“You sound frustrated; you wanted the game.” This lowers reactivity.
- Special time—10 minutes of one-on-one attention per child reduces competition.
- Family rules—post 3–4 positives (“We use gentle hands”) and practise them in play.
- Teach repair—apologies, drawing a “sorry” picture, or helping rebuild the Lego tower.
When to bring in help
- Fights involve injury, scary threats, or property destruction.
- One child regularly plays the role of victim or bully.
- Your own stress rises fast and you dread their time together.
Support at FFEW
- Tailored parent coaching for conflict scripts and consistency
- Child-focused individual therapy to build emotion regulation and problem-solving
- Parent groups like Emotionally Healthy Parenting or Parenting Emotionally Intense Children to practise calm limit-setting
- Kid skills groups such as Coping with Anxiety Kids—reduces tension that fuels fights
- SPACE treatment if anxiety and parental accommodation drive rivalry
Clinicians who guide peaceful sibling dynamics
- Dr. Zia Lakdawalla – CBT/DBT plus family coaching
- Dr. Lana Zinck – SPACE and collaborative problem-solving
- Dr. Tamara Meixner – attachment-focused CBT for family systems
- Cassandra Harmsen – EFFT to rebuild connection
- Ola Obaro – Circle of Security and gentle limit-setting
- Charlotte Johnston – DBT skills for emotional balance
- Jaydon Frid – family-systems CBT and DBT for conflict cycles
FAQs — Sibling Conflict
Should I separate them at the first sign of yelling?
Step in for safety; otherwise, coach them to use words before you decide to separate.
What if one child always “wins”?
Rotate privileges (who chooses TV show) and teach assertive scripts to the quieter child.
Do consequences stop fighting?
Logical, brief consequences help, but teaching negotiation skills and offering individual attention prevents repeat battles.
They fight more when I’m stressed—why?
Kids mirror parent tension. Practise quick self-regulation (slow breath, shoulder roll) before intervening.
Can therapy really help siblings like each other?
Yes. When children learn emotion regulation and parents shift responses, warmth—and even teamwork—often follows.