Benjamin, age 8, was playing with his Lego when his younger brother, age 4,
decides he wants to play too. Benjamin doesn't really want his brother to play
with him but he gives in reluctantly. Within a very short time, however, his
brother has dismantled everything he has worked on for the past hour. Benjamin
is furious and he starts to yell at and even hit his brother. His brother goes
screaming up to his room and at that point his father, who had been trying to
read a book, screams at Benjamin because he is "too selfish," and
"won’t share with his brother."
There's a lot of talk about anger management these days because there's a lot
of people, children and adults alike showing a lot of anger and in the process
hurting a lot of people or at least creating a lot of fear in the world. Getting
control of anger is really learning about self control. Here’s how I do this
with children. It goes something like this.
I don’t talk about anger I talk about the game of baseball. Most kids know
how this game is played even if they don’t actively play it. In the game of
baseball there’s a pitcher and a batter. The dialogue goes something like this:
Adult: In the game of baseball what’s the job of the pitcher?
Child: To throw the ball and get the batter out.
Adult: Correct! Now, how does he/she do that?
Usually at this point there’s a little hemming and hawing, which is good.
This means there’s a bit of thinking going on.
Adult: Does he/she always throw good pitches or does he/she sometimes throw
bad pitches? Child: He sometimes throws bad pitches.
Adult: Correct! And does he sometimes throw a pitch that looks like it’s
going to be a good pitch but at the last second turns into a bad pitch?
Child: He throws bad pitches and ones that look like good pitches.
Adult: Correct!! Now let’s look at what’s happening in your life. When other
kids say mean things to you or tease you, or whatever, are they good pitches
or bad pitches?
Child: They are bad pitches.
Adult: And when you end up fighting or swearing or reacting in any way, are
you swinging at a bad pitch?
Child: Yeah.
Adult: So what would happen if you stopped swinging altogether? If you just
let those bad pitches go by? What happens when the batter does that?
Child: He gets a ball.
Adult: Correct! And what happens if you let four balls go by?
Child: You get on base.
Adult: Correct! And that’s a pretty good thing, isn’t it?
Child: Uh Huh.
In the example given above, Benjamin is the batter and his brother has thrown
him a bad pitch by intruding on his lego play. This conversation can go on and
on as the analogy gets played out. The difference between the game of professional
baseball and the real life of a child, for instance, is that the batter in baseball
has an instant to make up his mind whether he is going to hit or not. The child
has much longer than that at least a few seconds, but not always. We talk about
smart batters, who wait for good balls, and not so smart batters, who go after
bad balls. We talk about what good and bad balls look like in real life. We
talk about how the pitcher tries to control the batter and what the batter needs
to talk to not be controlled by the pitcher.
I have helped countless fighters become smart batters with this analogy. After
introducing this framework, we talk about bad balls and the score rather than
what a "bad person you are for expressing your anger that way," and it’s a lot
more fun for all of us.