
Dr Stephanie Doig Clinical Psychologist, Child anxiety expert
@dr_stephanie_doig

Most of it happens in the smallest, most well-intentioned moments. 1. Reassurance feels kind but teaches the wrong lesson. When anxious feelings show up and a child asks “will it be okay?” the instinct is to say yes. Every time. The problem is that reassurance works in the moment but quietly teaches their nervous system that it cannot cope without your answer. Over time it becomes part of the anxiety loop rather than a way out of it. What helps more is acknowledging the feeling without answering for it. This will look different depending on the child, their age, and what the worry is about. 2. Avoiding the thing that worries them keeps the worry in charge. When anxious feelings show up, avoidance feels like protection. The difficulty is that every avoided situation sends a message to the brain that it was genuinely dangerous, and next time the anxiety arrives bigger and faster. The question I always ask is: is this helping them recover, or is it slowly shrinking their world over time? 3. How you talk about their worries shapes how they understand themselves. Phrases like “you’re so anxious” or “you always get like this” become part of how children build their identity. Language matters. Helping children understand that worried feelings visit, that they are not the feeling itself, builds the psychological distance they need to respond rather than react. 4. Your own response to their distress is data they are collecting. Children are extraordinarily attuned to the adults around them. When a parent winces at the school gate or rushes to fix the worry, children register that as confirmation something is wrong. That regulation is hard to access when you are carrying your own stress or exhaustion. Getting support for yourself is not separate from supporting your child. It is part of it. None of this is about being a perfect parent. It is about small, informed shifts that change everything over time. 💬 Comment GUIDE below and I’ll send you something to help. Remember: this is social media, not personalised advice. Always seek professional support if you are concerned about your child’s mental health.
Likes
Diagramm
Gesponsert
Performance
45
Current Likes
—
Since Page Load
+0
Per Minute
+0
Per Hour
0.36%
Engagement Rate
104.44%
Comment Rate
Performance monitor
Next Likes Milestone
50.00%
0
0
0
0
Post-Details
Caption
Most of it happens in the smallest, most well-intentioned moments. 1. Reassurance feels kind but teaches the wrong lesson. When anxious feelings show up and a child asks “will it be okay?” the instinct is to say yes. Every time. The problem is that reassurance works in the moment but quietly teaches their nervous system that it cannot cope without your answer. Over time it becomes part of the anxiety loop rather than a way out of it. What helps more is acknowledging the feeling without answering for it. This will look different depending on the child, their age, and what the worry is about. 2. Avoiding the thing that worries them keeps the worry in charge. When anxious feelings show up, avoidance feels like protection. The difficulty is that every avoided situation sends a message to the brain that it was genuinely dangerous, and next time the anxiety arrives bigger and faster. The question I always ask is: is this helping them recover, or is it slowly shrinking their world over time? 3. How you talk about their worries shapes how they understand themselves. Phrases like “you’re so anxious” or “you always get like this” become part of how children build their identity. Language matters. Helping children understand that worried feelings visit, that they are not the feeling itself, builds the psychological distance they need to respond rather than react. 4. Your own response to their distress is data they are collecting. Children are extraordinarily attuned to the adults around them. When a parent winces at the school gate or rushes to fix the worry, children register that as confirmation something is wrong. That regulation is hard to access when you are carrying your own stress or exhaustion. Getting support for yourself is not separate from supporting your child. It is part of it. None of this is about being a perfect parent. It is about small, informed shifts that change everything over time. 💬 Comment GUIDE below and I’ll send you something to help. Remember: this is social media, not personalised advice. Always seek professional support if you are concerned about your child’s mental health.
Veröffentlicht
April 24, 2026, 06:50 PM
Dimensions
720 × 1280
Post ID
3882554849946775766
Mehr Posts von @dr_stephanie_doig
Anderen Post tracken
Paste an Instagram post or reel URL to view its live counters
Diesen Post im Sponsored-Bereich platzieren
Reach 100,000+ daily Instagram enthusiasts with your post displayed to real users browsing our site every day.
How to Track a Post or Reel
1
Open Instagram
Open the Instagram app or website and navigate to the post or reel you want to track.
2
Copy the Link
Tap the share button (paper plane icon) or the three dots (...) menu and select "Copy link".
3
Paste Here
Paste the copied URL into the search box above and click "Go". That's it!
4
Watch Live
See views, likes, comments, and shares update in real-time every 5 seconds.
Trending
Frequently Asked Questions
© 2016-2026 Instastatistics LLC
Public statistical data shown on this website is sourced from third-party services and public endpoints. Instagram does not control, approve, or endorse how this data is presented on Instastatistics.
The name "Instagram" is used for contextual and descriptive purposes only. Instastatistics is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by Instagram or Meta Platforms, Inc.
Quick Links