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Dysregulated Kids: Science-Backed Parenting Help for Behavior, Anxiety, ADHD and More

Why Reassurance Backfires and Leads to Worse Behavior (and More Nervous System Dysregulation) | Regulation First Parenting l E402

April 27, 2026·19 min
Episode Description from the Publisher

Stuck in endless reassurance loops? Understanding why reassurance backfires and leads to worse behavior and more nervous system dysregulation helps you shift from short-term relief to real calm. Dr. Roseann Capanna-Hodge, founder of Regulation First Parenting™, guides parents to build lasting regulation.You answer, reassure, explain—and five minutes later, it starts again. It’s exhausting, and it can make you question everything. You’re not alone and it’s not bad parenting—it’s a dysregulated nervous system. In this episode, learn why reassurance backfires and leads to worse behavior and more nervous system dysregulation—and what actually helps your child feel calm and safe.Why does my child keep asking the same anxious questions over and over?If your child asks, “Are you sure I won’t get sick?” or “Are you sure the door is locked?” on repeat, it’s not because they didn’t hear you.It’s because their nervous system isn’t regulated.Reassurance gives quick relief—but not lasting calmThe brain gets a dopamine hit, then craves moreAnxiety learns: ask → get relief → repeatBehavior is communication. Your child isn’t looking for facts—they’re looking for regulation.Real-life example:One parent shared her daughter asked 40+ questions every night. No matter how many answers she gave, it was never enough. Why? Because the brain wasn’t seeking truth—it was seeking relief from distress.Why does reassurance make anxiety and OCD worse over time?This is where things get tricky—and honestly, surprising.Reassurance doesn’t calm the brain long-term. It actually feeds the anxiety loop.It avoids discomfort instead of building toleranceThe brain stays in threat mode (fight-or-flight)Dependence on you increases instead of resilienceOver time, this can escalate:Anxiety → OCD patternsAnxiety → Shutdown or depressionChronic stress → nervous system overloadIt’s not misbehavior—it’s dysregulation.How do I help my child without reinforcing their fears?Here’s the shift that changes everything: 👉 Validate the feeling, not the fearInstead of:“You’re fine. Nothing bad will happen.”Try:“I can see your brain feels worried right now.”Then gently guide them toward coping:“What can you tell your brain right now?”“Let’s take a few slow breaths together.”“We got through this yesterday—what helped?”You’re not ignoring them—you’re teaching them how to self-regulate.What should I do instead of giving reassurance?Let’s calm the brain first—because no learning happens in a stressed state.Start here:Co-regulate firstSit close, soften your tone, slow your breathingShift from answers to copingHelp them build internal safetyAllow small discomfortThis is how resilience growsIt’s gonna be OK—even if it feels hard at first.Want to stay calm when your child pushes every button?Become a Dysregulation Insider VIP and get the FREE Regulation Rescue Kit—your step-by-step guide to stop oppositional behaviors without yelling or giving in.Go to www.drroseann.com/newsletter and grab your kit today.What happens when I stop reassuring my child?Here’s what most parents fear: “It’s going to get worse.”And truthfully—it might, briefly.That’s called extinction learning.Anxiety may spike at firstThen the brain learns: “I can handle this”Over time, the baseline anxiety decreasesReal-life shift:One mom stopped answering reassurance questions and instead said, “Your brain is worried—let’s breathe.”Week 1: ToughWeek 2: Fewer questionsWeek 3: Child says, “My brain is doing that worry thin

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