Episode
Why School Quietly Fills Your Child’s Stress Cup (And Most Adults Miss It) | Emotional Dysregulation | E407
- Published
- May 13, 2026
- Duration seconds
- 980
- Processing state
not_requested- Canonical source
- https://drroseann.com/podcast/
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Summary
Ever wonder why your child melts down after a “good” day? Understanding why school quietly fills your child’s stress cup reveals how hidden stress builds all day. Dr. Roseann Capanna-Hodge, expert in Regulation First Parenting™, shows how to calm dysregulation at its source. Ever wonder why your child falls apart the second they get home—even after a “good” day? Understanding why school quietly fills your child’s stress cup helps you understand what’s really happening beneath the surface. It’s not misbehavior—it’s a nervous system that’s run out of capacity. When we calm the brain first, we can finally decode what those after-school meltdowns are trying to tell us. Why does my child melt down right after school even if nothing went wrong? You’re not imagining it—and you’re definitely not alone. After-school meltdowns aren’t about what just happened… they’re about everything that built up all day. Your child’s nervous system has a limited capacity. Every demand, transition, and social moment adds a “drop” to their stress cup. By the time they get home? It’s overflowing. Meltdowns = nervous system overflow , not bad behavior Home feels safe , so emotions finally release “Good at school” often means “holding it together all day” Picture this: A teacher says your child had a “great day,” but at home, they explode over homework. That’s not defiance—it’s regulation fatigue . What is the “stress cup” and how does school fill it? Think of your child’s brain like a cup. Every stressor adds a drop—big or small. School quietly fills that cup faster than most adults realize. Here’s what’s happening behind the scenes: Sustained attention: Long focus periods drain mental energy Constant transitions: Switching tasks adds cognitive load Social pressure: Navigating friendships and grou…