
Play Therapy Parenting Podcast S3E30 - Parent Companion for Play Therapy: Understanding Aggression in Kids (What's Really Behind It)
Feb 26, 2026
They dig into why children act out, showing aggression often comes from emotional dysregulation or as a mask for vulnerability. They describe how limited emotional vocabulary fuels physical acting out. They explain what aggressive play looks like in therapy and why safe outlets and limits help. They highlight research showing play-based approaches reduce aggression over time.
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Two Root Causes Of Childhood Aggression
- Aggression usually stems from either dysregulation plus limited emotional vocabulary or from masking vulnerability.
- Dr. Brenna Hicks explains that lacking both regulation and words forces kids to physically show upset, while some use anger to hide hurt.
Aggression As A Mask For Vulnerability
- Aggression can serve as a protective mask to avoid the vulnerability of expressing hurt or disappointment.
- Dr. Brenna Hicks notes children present as powerful and angry to conceal feelings of betrayal or sadness they won't admit.
Celebrate Aggressive Play In Therapy
- In child-centered play therapy (CCPT) aggressive play is not bad and should be expected, not feared.
- Dr. Brenna Hicks tells parents to celebrate hearing about aggressive themes because it means the child is processing emotions safely.



