After School Meltdowns: The Coke Bottle Kid
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If your child is "fine" at school and then absolutely falls apart at home—over homework, the wrong snack, or a sibling breathing—this episode is for you. Dr. Amy Patenaude explains after-school meltdowns with the Coke Bottle Kid metaphor: school is the shaking, home is where the cap comes off. You'll get a simple stage map (shaken → fizzing → cap-tight → pop → recovery) plus a practical strategy to release pressure before things explode.
In this episode you'll learn-
Why after-school meltdowns are often nervous system "pressure release," not bad attitude
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How to spot the 5 Coke Bottle stages so you can intervene earlier
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The "Burp the Bottle" strategy: tiny pressure releases that prevent the full pop
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What to do in the moment when your child says things like "I want to hit" (safety + boundaries, without shame)
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How to use the Pattern → Hypothesis → Two-Week Experiment script with school when they say, "We don't see that here"
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Create a "refuel station" at your kitchen island: water + two snack options (strategy, not a buffet).
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Protect the first 10–20 minutes after school: no homework talk, no interrogations. Reset first.
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Swap your homework opener: instead of "What homework do you have?" try "Show me your folder—after snack, we'll do the five-minute start."
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Use a sibling buffer rule: first 10 minutes after school = space (different rooms, headphones, "no touching/no commenting").
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Send the two-week support sprint email and ask for one "release valve" at school (movement break or end-of-day decompression).
Pick one. One is enough.
Free resources-
Big Feelings Decoder — Decode big reactions into "what's underneath this?" plus simple scripts for the next hard moment: https://psyched2parent.myflodesk.com/bigfeelingsdecoder
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Many clinicians describe a pattern where kids hold it together all day at school and then "release" that effort at home—often with their safest people.
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After school is commonly a low-capacity window, so adding demands (like homework processing) immediately can intensify meltdowns rather than prevent them.
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"Big reactions to small things" can reflect anxiety, ADHD traits, learning stress, sensory overload, or other neurodivergence—so curiosity and support tend to work better than character judgments.
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Self-regulation grows through coaching + practice, especially when adults help kids notice early body cues and use tools before escalation.
This podcast is for informational and educational purposes only and is not medical, psychological, or legal advice. Listening to this podcast does not create a provider-client relationship. If you're concerned about your child's mental health, safety, or development, please consult a qualified professional in your area.