3 Calm-Down Tools Every Parent Needs to Handle Tantrums Without Yelling
Toddler Tantrum Training
Courses Tailored to Your Child's Age
Tantrums are a normal part of toddlerhood, but we don’t want them to take over your life. Our Toddler Tantrum Trainings are designed to give you the tools, techniques, and support you need to handle meltdowns at every stage of your child’s development.
We know that tantrums at 12 months are completely different from tantrums at 4 years old, which is why we’ve created age-specific courses that address the unique needs and challenges at each stage. Whether you’re navigating the early signs of frustration or handling big emotions with an older child, we’ve got you covered.
Tiny Tornadoes (12-18 Months)
Your little one is on the move, full of curiosity, but not yet able to communicate their needs—cue the meltdowns! In this stage, tantrums come from frustration, separation anxiety, and sheer exhaustion. This module helps you understand their world, reduce tantrum triggers, and respond calmly when their emotions take over.
No-No Navigators (18-24 Months)
Welcome to the era of independence and resistance! Your toddler wants to do everything their way but lacks the skills to follow through—leading to outbursts, refusals, and even physical reactions like hitting or throwing. This module teaches you how to support their autonomy while setting boundaries that actually work.
Power Players (2-3 Years)
Everything is a battle of wills, from putting on shoes to leaving the park. With emotions running high and control at the center of every tantrum, this stage can feel exhausting. Learn how to navigate their power struggles, avoid unnecessary conflicts, and guide them through their big feelings with confidence.
Little Lawyers (3-4 Years)
Your toddler has discovered reasoning, negotiation, and the art of pushing limits. Tantrums may look different now—whining, bargaining, or dramatic meltdowns when logic doesn’t go their way. This module helps you handle their newfound verbal skills, support emotional regulation, and set limits without endless debates.
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COURSES
Frequently Asked Questions
If your child is in between two age groups, choose the course that best matches their current behavior and tantrum triggers. Here’s how to decide:
Between Tiny Tornadoes (12-18 Months) & No-No Navigators (18-24 Months)?
Between No-No Navigators (18-24 Months) & Power Players (2-3 Years)?
Between Power Players (2-3 Years) & Little Lawyers (3-4 Years)?
Each child develops at their own pace, so choose the course that aligns with their biggest tantrum triggers right now!
That’s completely normal! Many toddlers show behaviors from multiple stages at once. You can still use strategies from one course and adapt them as they grow.
Yes! Each course covers common tantrum triggers, including separation struggles, bedtime meltdowns, and frustration over daily routines.
If your child is on the younger end of a stage and hasn’t had full-blown tantrums yet, this course will prepare you for what’s coming. It’s always easier to prevent meltdowns than to manage them mid-crisis!
Once you enroll, you get lifetime access! You can revisit the content anytime as your child moves through different stages.
Absolutely! If your child is transitioning between stages or you want to be prepared for what’s next, you can take multiple courses and apply the strategies as they grow.
Mama, you are not alone. If every day feels like a battle of wills, and you’re constantly walking on eggshells, waiting for the next meltdown—we see you. We’ve been there. Nothing seems to work—timeouts, bribes, distractions—yet the tantrums just keep coming. And those public meltdowns? The ones that make you feel like everyone is staring, silently judging? They’re the worst.
Even the simplest things—getting dressed, sitting down for a meal, bedtime—turn into exhausting power struggles. Some days, you swear you’ll stay patient, but then the screaming starts, and before you know it, you’ve lost your cool. The guilt sets in, and you wonder, Am I making this worse?
It’s frustrating, overwhelming, and let’s be real—sometimes it makes you want to cry, too. But here’s the good news:
...it doesn’t have to be this way.