Calm Parenting Podcast - 10 Tips for Kids Ages 2-7
Episode Date: April 18, 202110 Tips for Kids Ages 2-7Tired of repeating things, threatening time-outs, and saying, “No!” or “Stop!” 378 times per day? Kirk shows you very specific, concrete ways to get younger kids to li...sten, focus, calm down when upset, stop from running away/into streets, succeed in school, and a lot more! Please share with other parents, teachers, and MOPS groups. Want more help, specifically for Kids Ages 2-7? We put together a special package for parents of Kids Ages 2-7 here: https://celebratecalm.com/get-the-bag/ Want a custom bundle? Email Casey@CelebrateCalm.com. Tell us your family situation and we’ll put together a custom package to meet your specific needs within your budget. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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about them. So please support our podcast and tell them we sent you. So do you have a child between the age of two to seven who struggles with listening?
Okay, let me rephrase that. They don't struggle with listening. They just plain don't listen to
you. Maybe they're very volatile like our son was and they get very, very frustrated and have these
awful tantrums and meltdowns and maybe they throw things or if they're in preschool, they bite other kids. If you
have one of those kids, I can tell you a couple things. One is you have a very, very, very bright
child because that's usually what happens is they're very bright and they're very frustrated
because they don't like other people telling them what to do and what they learn very early in life is if I bite another child or student,
now I've got everybody's attention and I've got their brain intensity and I'm kind of in control
of things. And so these kids, we used to call them like little chompers because they just go and bite
another child. It's awesome. So we'll help you with that. I didn't mean it's awesome that way, but I love
those kids. Maybe you spend your entire day saying, no, no, no, stop that. Get down from there. Don't
touch that. Stop, honey, please stop. And then you threaten to put them in the famous timeout chair,
which they'll never sit in for very long and it doesn't really work. So if that is you, welcome
to the Calm Parenting Podcast.
My name is Kirk Martin. I'm founder of Celebrate Calm. You can find us at celebratecalm.com.
If you want to reach out to us and need help with anything, email Casey, that's our son,
who was a very challenging toddler in two to seven, and he was kind of challenging 12 to 17,
but it was much better by then because I had changed.
But you reach out to him. His name is Casey, C-A-S-E-Y at CelebrateCalm.com. So this is going to be specifically for younger kids. And I hope if you find it helpful, you will share with moms
and dads and teachers of younger kids, with mops groups, preschool teachers, because a lot of this is coming out of
last week we did a training session for a preschool in Michigan. And then I just did a
phone consultation with a mom and dad that have a four and a seven-year-old. One of the children
is compliant. That was the first one born. So they got spoiled. And then the strong-willed
daughter came along and they're like, oh, we thought we were such great spoiled. And then the strong-willed daughter came along and they're like,
oh, we thought we were such great parents.
And then the strong-willed child comes along and it's hard.
So here are a few things that I wanted to go through for you.
Number one, set proper expectations.
The job description of a preschooler, of a child two to seven, is this.
They are not supposed to be productive or efficient. They're not. Their job is to explore
and to make messes and to follow their curiosity. And I don't want you to snuff that out in the name
of obedience. Their job is to crawl and get into things
and explore and do science experiments
and make messes, let them do it,
encourage them to do it.
You're going to run head on into your own control issues.
And if you struggle with perfectionism,
if you need everything to be just so,
then you're going to find out that's your issue.
And this child is going to help you find that out very, very quickly.
In the mornings, you may have like a long list for your child to do.
Make your bed, feed the rabbit, brush your hair, brush your teeth, all of these things.
I would simplify the list at first.
I would maybe start with three things for them to do.
Maybe make a song out of those three things that your child has to do because many of your
kids don't respond well to verbal commands. Some of them need it written down. They need visuals,
not just a list because most of you will have like a list, a chore chart and a list, but some of your
kids, it gets confusing in their brains. So I make pictures, visual pictures on a whiteboard of
what they need to do in the morning. Okay. Let's get a success early on because otherwise, you know
what it feels like? It's a test. First thing in the morning, I have to do all these things that
I don't want to do and that I'm not necessarily good at doing. And then my mom and my dad are on
me, on me, on me, and it's never good enough. And it just doesn't start the day off in a great way. So look,
there's plenty of time left in their lives to just check off the boxes and do what needs to be done.
And many of you are not that happy in life because that's what you've been doing your entire life is just checking the
boxes. So they're little. Let's make some themes out of the morning routine. Let's make it fun.
Let's get them up and hide their food, their breakfast in the backyard, in the basement.
Little kids love treasure hunts. It is a great way to start the day because you get your child
moving, you get blood flow
to the brain, you're getting some sensory needs met, and you're creating a success.
And they're actually following directions by having to problem solve and find something
that you hid somewhere in the backyard or the basement or wherever you want, right on
your roof.
It doesn't matter to me, right?
Just hide something.
Food's awesome to
hide because your kids will want to eat it outside. So remember these tools. We want to
give kids tools so that we create successes. And then we want to affirm those positives with
intensity because watch what we typically do. We just tell kids what to do all day long.
We don't really show them how, right?
And then when they don't do it well, we give them consequences.
And we give most of our energy to the times when they're not doing things well.
And that is setting them up for failure.
And it is setting your kids up to shut down and to not have a trusting relationship with
you and it won't work. It will be endless consequences and your child will feel like he or
she is a bad child. I don't want to go there. So instead, I want to give tools, create successes,
and affirm the positives with intensity. Look, some of your kids like to help. They like maybe
to cook, right? They like, many of your little kids, they like doing grown-up
things better than they do kid things. So start to use that to your advantage. Most of your kids
are not going to listen to you the first time you say it. Their brains are so excited to see
and touch and explore new things and you want that. So please relax thinking that
your child is just supposed to be some obedient little robot. That's not how it works. These kids
make things a challenge to stimulate their brains, right? Give them a time limit. Do the task backwards or blindfolded or to music because music has rhythm, which creates a rhythm
in the brain and actually helps them work better and remember things and move. It's like whistle
while you work. There was a reason we do that, right? You can do a thing like, hey, put your
shoes on before your favorite Bob the Builder song is over, right? And you know when they're little, they're going to listen to the same songs literally 4,000 times, but use music sometimes. Hey, bet you can't do this.
As soon as you make it a challenge, sometimes it wakes up the brain and helps it focus it.
Big principle, whenever you say no to something inappropriate, always say yes to something appropriate, right?
Hey, jumping on a sofa, not happening in my home.
But I really need your help stirring the soup, walking the dog, right?
Say no to the inappropriate, yes to something appropriate. I want to spend more of my time
saying yes to things they can do than no to things they cannot do, right? Remember, we get them to
stop doing things by actually giving them activities that focus their brain of things they
can do, right? Hey, you know what?
You're really good at doing X.
Could you help me with that?
See, that's much better than, you know what?
How many times do I have to tell you, stop doing that?
Sarah, if you do that again,
I'm gonna put you in the timeout chair and you're not gonna sit there
and then we're gonna get in a big fight
and everybody's gonna be upset, right?
I wanna stop that.
So toddlers respond a lot to energy.
So controlling yours is extremely important. When
you say no, use an even matter of fact tone with no emotion. Very few words. Don't explain things.
Stop moms. Stop trying to convince your kids and explain everything. They're not looking for an
explanation. They're never going to say, mom, I didn't really want to do that. But after you just
spend another five minutes, 15 minutes explaining and trying to convince me, all of a sudden the
light bulb went off and I realized that you're brilliant and I want to do what you want me to do.
That's not going to happen. Okay. So when I discipline, it's with no emotion. There's no, that's not happening in our
home. Nope. It's not the way I roll. No. But I give emotion and enthusiasm to leading them,
to transitioning, to what they can do. Right. Here's another one kind of related. Some of you
have kids who are run out in front of traffic or in a parking lot. And so it's
like, what do I say? And so you end up screaming. And look, there's nothing wrong with screaming in
order to save your child's life. Okay. But instead of always just saying stop near the roads, get the
child focused on what they can do. Have a game that you play as they walk down the sidewalk of
what they can focus on
accomplishing because you want to get that brain you want to paint pictures in
their brains and say things like hey right now our legs are going to move
like molasses see if you're a little kid just hearing like slow down honey you
need to stop walking now well I'm I'm pretty much going to start walking faster. But if you make it fun and say, look, our legs have to move like molasses. Well, now that's kind
of a challenge and that's fun. And it's a simple change in communication and your energy.
In school, right? Same thing. I want to give these kids a job. If I have a younger child in my
classroom, the first thing I'm doing as soon as they walk in, I'm giving them a job to do. Something they're good at doing,
something I need to help with. And I will, I'll just be blunt with this. Your child, strong-willed
child, if you have a strong-willed young child, they're probably going to struggle in preschool
and kindergarten, first grade, and you're going to get calls from the school, your daughter isn't
paying attention. She's not following directions. She just wanders around. Your son cannot sit still
in circle time. And you're going to get a little bit freaked out of like, oh, what does this mean
for the future? How is this child going to ever keep a job? Who's going to marry them? Right? And
all this anxiety dumps on the child over something that
isn't even wrong because the truth is no do I want a young child jumping on tables and running around
and doing whatever they want no but within my boundaries I'm going to relax a little bit because
watch this is really really important I don't want you to get freaked
out because your child is just doing what he or she is supposed to be doing at that age which is
explore and be curious. So instead of shutting that down and crushing the child's spirit, I'm going to give them missions
to be my helper, jobs to do, challenges, lots of positive intensity when they do things well,
instead of nitpicking everything they don't do well. And I'll give you a warning here, right?
This age is when your child is very susceptible to having their little, their spirits, their souls that are getting formed.
Their self-identity, how they feel about themselves is getting formed during this time and it often gets crushed.
And you know what's, look, if I'm a little kid, all I know is I wake up in the morning and everything's new and I see new things and I want to touch it and I want to explore and I want to do things and I want to fail and I want to touch the hot stove to learn from it.
And I'm doing this and this is all natural to me and it's what I should be doing.
And then all of a sudden what I start to find out is in school and at home, I'm getting in trouble for that.
And people are looking at me disapprovingly. And I'm getting negative words and a lot of intensity
and saying, you're not being a good child. And I'm getting shaken heads and notes sent home.
And the parents are getting on me. And this is a very dangerous thing because this is when that child
sometimes can begin to internalize I'm a bad kid I'm a dumb kid it's when they
can also start to dig in and this sets a pattern that continues to happen all
through school into middle school because they never measure up to their
parents or the school standards and you do not want that because
they will fight worse than them fighting you and digging in or the opposite they'll just shut down
entirely is now you have a child with really negative self-talk and you don't want that
and and and and what happens at home is same thing. You start getting negative, saying no all day long
and you're worn out and your buttons are getting pushed and you'll begin saying negative things.
And then it begins forming in your child's mind, oh, you like my sister or brother more than you like me. And dads, because I did this, unfortunately, dads begin
pulling away from this child, kind of slightly withholding affection because this child needs
to learn to step up and do things the right way or else they're not going to get that from me. And this is a downward spiral you do not want. And so I don't, look,
I don't want to dramatize that, but it is absolutely true. And it's really important.
So I encourage you to listen to this. So we'll keep going in a second. If you need help,
I encourage you. The great thing is your child is young. I didn't start changing things in our home
until Casey was about nine or nine and a half. I almost ruined him and my relationship with him and I'd encourage you whatever it is that you
need reach out to Casey C-A-S-E-Y at CelebrateCalm.com you can look on our website we've got the calm
parenting package I'd encourage you get it it's got so much stuff in there that will help you
if you if you want us to put together a
customized package with just a few things for you, reach out to Casey and we can do it. We have a
program just called for kids ages two to seven, like an entire program on that. So reach out to
us and we can also, if you're a teacher, we can help train teachers in this too, right? But we
want to help if you want to do phone consultation, whatever it is.
But a couple more things for your younger kids.
Sometimes younger kids don't always hear you because they're caught up in their own world.
And so they're so curious and focused on what they're curious about that they tune everything
else out.
And so I encourage you, cut through the clutter.
Use nonverbals like
music, like flicking lights on and off. You can also say something like this. This is cool for
teachers or parents. Hey, you know what? That's really cool what you're doing right now. Why do
you like that so much? And then transition with some energy to, hey, here's what I need some help with if you want to be a good helper with me or if you want to be a grown-up, right?
So don't be afraid to do that.
If they're in their own little world, sometimes you can look at them and say, I bet in your imagination right now there are some really cool things going on.
What are you thinking about?
Because I'm really curious about it. See, you're affirming them for doing what's natural. You
engage them so they tell you. Then you can always say, that's really cool. Hey, we'll pick up that
later. We'll work on that later. We'll build with those Legos. We'll color. We'll do those crafts
later. Right now, here's what I could really use some help with. See, that's a lot better transition than, hey,
you know that thing that you love doing that brings you a lot of pleasure and a lot of
satisfaction. It's great for your growing brain. Stop it right now and come do something that you
don't want to do, right? Because that's really what we're usually saying. I can still get them to do what I want them to do.
It's just a change in how I approach it.
But that also goes back to the first thing we mentioned,
that the young child's job is not to be productive or efficient.
Well, Kirk, you know, one day they're going to have to exist in the real world.
Yeah, one day they will, but not at two or three or four or five or six or seven.
Okay. I can get them to put their shoes on. We can make things a challenge. I can get them to do that,
but don't, don't be so far out in the future. Well, I'm just really concerned that he's not
going to be able to keep a job. He doesn't have to keep a job. Okay. He's six. Okay. He's not
applying for jobs yet. So don't project out in the future. Your's going to be oh look you're this just hit me
here's what's going to get your child it and and make life very difficult not an inability at age
six to be obedient and do everything you want them to do and follow through on everything
what's really going to hinder them in life is that negative self-talk
and that squashing that curiosity and beginning to internalize that I'm incapable, I'm a bad kid.
That's what I want to be on guard at this age about. Not about how efficient and productive
they are at getting stuff done that's largely arbitrary, that we're just choosing for them, right? So here's another one. Oh, this
is from the No BS program. This is awesome. I'll save you some time. Strong Willed Little Child
is not going to pick up his or her toys alone. They're going to dump 43,000 little things on
the floor and you're going to say, honey, you need to pick that up. Honey, if you don't pick
that up, I'm going to take it away and I'm going you don't pick that up, I'm going to take it away, and I'm going to take it to Goodwill, and I'm going to give it away. And they will just get
up and walk away. They don't care. I will tell you, because we've worked with a million families,
I will tell you, you are going to be down on your hands and knees picking up little toys that you
didn't dump out, wondering, is your child ever going to be responsible in life?
And are we giving in? Because what are we teaching this child that if they dump their things out,
they don't pick them up? That's what you're going to be thinking. And you're probably going to be
swearing under your breath. But what I want you to know is that's just the way it works.
And you can fight that if you want. I don't have any problem with saying, look, if you don't pick
up your toys, I'm going to take them to Goodwill, or I'm going to put them in a bag and put them in
their trunk and they're in the garage and you're not going to get them anymore. Fine, do it. But
you're going to find that a lot of those things don't work with these kids. And so just get down
on your hands and knees and make up a work song with them and work along with them and enjoy them.
But just know that's what happens. Sensory needs.
I'm running out of time here.
Most of your kids, many of your little kids
have sensory needs.
They seek that sensory pressure.
So you'll notice them bumping up against things,
constantly touching, grabbing at someone passing by,
hitting even, being too rough with a new baby.
You have to proactively meet these kids' sensory needs.
I want all families with little kids to have an obstacle course,
a cheap little one that you build in the backyard, in the basement, somewhere,
where they have to do physical activities to crawl under things,
climb over things, pull on rope, push, shovel mulch, carry heavy objects.
I don't care. Have them do this.
The treasure hunts, gymnastics, swimming, martial arts as they
get older. Very, very, very helpful to work off some of this and make their bodies just feel
settled. It is so helpful. And then what we do is when they get upset and start to get physical,
we lead them to one of these physical activities that they actually enjoy because that actually helps them process their emotions
and their frustration.
So the final thing I will encourage you with is enjoy them.
Enjoy these little kids.
I know they can be irritating and nonproductive and annoying
and it can get under your skin.
Well, good.
We use that as a clue
to identify your triggers, right? And the fact that you have control issues and you're too rigid
because you are the compliant child, right? And stop letting this child control you because you
have toddlers who, you have little kids who are controlling you because they push your buttons.
You need to work on that yourself and you and your spouse need to get on the same page.
Otherwise, as they grow older, they will exploit that and it will be miserable.
And then you're going to find out, as I talk about in the other podcast,
you're going to be that couple who was so full of promise with the young little kids
and it was going to be so great.
And then later on, you will have been married 8, 10, 15 years with older kids
and you will have grown apart as a couple.
Work on that now.
If we can help you, reach out to Casey, C-A-S-E-Y, at CelebrateCalm.com.
Go to CelebrateCalm.com.
You will find we have a big sale on the Calm Parenting Package.
If we can put together a special package for you, let us know.
We can do it within your budget, but we're here to help.
Enjoy those little kids and we'll talk to you soon. Let us know how we can help you. Okay.
Love you all. Bye-bye.