Calm Parenting Podcast - 3 Ways to Change Your Child’s Irritating Behavior (And Yourself!)
Episode Date: September 15, 20243 Ways to Change Your Child’s Irritating Behavior (And Yourself!) Your kids are going to do things that are annoying, irritating, and sometimes just wrong. You will be justified in getting angry an...d correcting them. But I want you to turn what usually separates you from your child…into a bonding opportunity to draw you closer. I want you to deal with your own triggers and control yourself…because that will change their behavior more quickly. Our Back-To-School Sale Continues This Week. Don't begin the school year with power struggles. Visit https://celebratecalm.com/products/ to purchase the Get Everything Package at the lowest prices of the year. AG1 Visit https://drinkAG1.com/calm for a FREE 1-year supply of Vitamin D3K2 AND 5 free AG1 Travel Packs with your first purchase. SIMPLISAFE Protect your home this summer with 20% off any new SimpliSafe system when you sign up for Fast Protect Monitoring. Just visit https://simplisafe.com/calm. AIR DOCTOR AirDoctor comes with a 30-day money back guarantee so if you don’t love it, just send it back for a refund, minus shipping! Head to https://airdoctorpro.com/ and use promo code CALM and you’ll receive UP TO $300 off air purifiers! PHYLA Tackle acne’s root causes for clearer, healthier skin for your child. Get 25% off your first order of Phyla with the code CALM. Go to https://phyla.com and type in the code CALM. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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kids who are going to do things that are annoying,
irritating, and sometimes just wrong. And you'll be justified in getting angry and correcting them.
But I want you to take a different approach this week. I want you to turn what usually separates
you from your child into a bonding opportunity to draw you closer. I want you to deal with your own
triggers and not allow that to cause you to simply correct your child all the
time and reinforce that there's something wrong with them. Because if you
react and correct continually, your child will eventually either shut down or get
angry and wreak havoc. So I want to give you three examples of controlling your own anxiety,
controlling your control issues.
And instead, we're going to turn irritating behaviors
into bonding moments with both little kids and teens.
And that is what we're going to do on today's episode
of the Calm Parenting Podcast.
So welcome, this is Kirk Martin,
founder of Celebrate Calm.
And you can find us at CelebrateCalm.com or on Instagram at the Calm Parenting Podcast, where I'm very active.
And by the way, I just thought of this. That's kind of a perfect example. I generally hate social
media, and I vowed to my family last year that I would never be on Instagram. And now it is my
favorite platform for interacting with parents on a daily
basis. And I think we've actually taken what is irritating and actually created a supportive
community there where people don't judge each other because you all have strong-willed, difficult
kids. And it's so nice for parents to say, yeah, my child does that. Yep. Mine does that as well. So let's dig in. Here's example number one. Let's start with like a really little kid. So one of our strong willed little kids, just think about this. They do look, they do these things so differently. And what this little kid was doing is he tears his pancakes into pieces with his hands rather than using a knife or fork.
Dad predictably gets upset and corrects his son.
The son probably or predictably ignores his father and drowns his pancakes in syrup.
Dad then takes the cue from the dad handbook and yells,
you're no longer allowed to use syrup or food I buy if you're going to waste them.
And then after snatching the syrup from his son's hands, true story by the way,
the son runs out of the house.
Sure, dad proved his point and won, I guess.
But what really happened?
Dad missed a huge opportunity to bond to learn about his son
and grow closer in the process so a few points one model the behavior you want your kids to emulate
they will do what you do just not right now and never on your timeline by the way the more you
push the more they will resist I promise you when you step back and you give them some space to step up, they will.
But it will be, look, it's especially after you stop trying to fix them all the time.
Model correct manners.
Model eating healthy.
Exercising.
Open doors for people.
Let someone cut in front of you in traffic.
Be generous.
Leave good tips.
Live with gratitude.
Model it.
Don't lecture it.
It will be in their DNA. It just takes a few years to express, especially when you stop trying to force it.
Number two, learn to control yourself and your own control issues. You need your kids to do things
your way. They aren't always going to do that that so let go of it or you will be
creating countless power circles look I'm tougher on you because you're a
grown adult I look you're always like well my kids are doing that because they
have control issues I'm like really where do you think they got that from we
all have control issues and I'm asking you to stop creating all these
unnecessary power struggles and creating some of you create
drama and there's no need for that. Number three, you are anxious because you fear your child is
going to be tearing his pancakes apart at a business breakfast when he's 28 or when he's at
a neighbor's house and you'll be embarrassed and I get that. That's a legitimate thing that you feel that we all do as parents.
But honestly, that's your own immaturity,
allowing fear of being judged by others to change how you engage with your child.
Do not project into the future or you will parent out of fear.
And I always like to remind men, you were a dopey kid once too and you
turned out just fine so relax with some of that stuff number four when you react out of your
anxiety and perceived defiance right I know as a guy I thought everything my son did was just
defiance he's just defying me it's not not always. They're just being kids. All that happens is we escalate situations and it never really works. So number five,
try this script and attitude next time. For some of you, this is going to crush you. You're going
to be like, I can't do that. If you're doing that, I want you, you of all people, I want you to do it.
Hey, you know what, son? I never would have thought to eat my pancakes like that.
And I know in your head you're like, because it's stupid and it's not right.
I get that.
Think all the sarcastic and awful thoughts that you want.
Just don't say them or act upon them.
So you know what, son?
I never would have thought to eat my pancakes like that.
I'm curious.
Does that make them taste differently?
Do you like how it feels tearing them up like that?
Be curious.
And then do the same exact thing.
Tear up your pancakes.
Look, we're not talking about a moral issue here.
We're just talking about a preference and something that a little kid is doing. So,
tear up your pancakes and say, you know what, when I tear these up, it allows me to soak in more
butter and syrup on each piece. That's a cool discovery, Evan. Now, notice your child's response
to this. I guarantee you that will elicit a smile. And perhaps for some kids, the first time they feel understood or accepted, even though they know they do odd things.
And I cannot tell you how important that is for changing the dynamic for some of you in your relationship.
That will change behavior more quickly than anything else.
So stop fighting everything and enter into their world.
You will discover it's a really interesting place the way their brains work,
even if it annoys you.
Otherwise, I promise you this is what's going to happen.
Dad and son will slowly drift apart.
Son senses dad doesn't like him and is never pleased.
The chasm widens and before long, there's hostility.
Both sides dig in.
It gets ugly and you'll end up living with regrets.
And it usually leads to more marital issues, less sex, more divorce, less money.
Number six, use this as an opportunity to learn about your child's brain and how he or she
sees the world. See, because you are too busy getting upset and correcting your child all the
time, we miss these clues. He's a tactile kid who probably learns best by manipulating things with
his hands. Oh, see, you can use that in a classroom and during homework time to teach
him more effectively. This is a sensory kid who likes how things feel in his or her hands. Perhaps
he likes to solve puzzles or he's a visual learner who sees in three dimensions and makes different
shapes with his pancakes. So maybe you could teach him math and science with pieces of pancakes. Number seven, we talked
about this on the last podcast, bond with your child over things that irritate you. These moments
can drive a wedge between you and your child that get really bad over time or you can have the
maturity, the wisdom, and presence of mind to enter in and bond with your child over something that usually
irritates you. And when you discover that place, it is beautiful and you're connected instead of
fighting. So I want you to do this more. Look, it's easy to justify being frustrated because
you're technically right, but relationships change behavior, not all your lectures. Okay, example number two, slightly older child.
You've got a daughter who doesn't clean up her room despite being asked 47 times a day. And my
guess is she is one of those kids with busy brains who's very creative and strategic,
but struggles with executive function a bit. So before long, her room is out of control
and so beyond help that she's too overwhelmed to even know where to start.
So she kind of just checks out and ignores it.
And you'll wisely say, well, honey, if you just spent three minutes a day, you could stay on top of it,
which is a perfectly reasonable, rational, and wise time management idea
that unfortunately will probably not work with many of our
strong-willed and neurodivergent kids and that's one of the hardest parts of
raising these kids is that you're not always doing something wrong it's just
that the things that you do don't work with these kids and so here's what
happens every time you walk by her room it makes your skin crawl you feel
anxious you may feel like she's not respecting your home because you value order and you like things neat. So this is a big trigger for you,
understandably. And it bothers you on a deep level. You wonder how she'll ever be able to
function in the real world with all its responsibilities if she can't even keep her
room neat. And you'll be tempted to lecture a lot and give consequences,
take away playdates and screens, impose fines. I get it. But let's choose to do this instead.
Because the other way is not going to work. Because look, if the normal ways worked,
you wouldn't even be listening to this podcast. So I appreciate you being open to doing things differently. So let's do this.
I want you to go in happily with a smile on your face and do a good, not perfect job organizing her room and cleaning.
That means you're actually doing it.
And I know that's going to irritate you and bug you, but just do it.
See, now we have a good baseline for her room being
organized. Now take a picture of her room. Do the before and the after picture when you organize it,
and you can hang those pictures on her wall because many of our kids are very visual. They
don't respond to all the words. We use way too many words. A lot
of our kids have auditory processing issues. So it all gets jumbled in there. It's too much.
But that visual can be extremely helpful because she can look at it as a guide and she'll know
what an organized room looks like. Next step, which I think is cool, make an Instagram or YouTube video
of how to tidy up. You get your kids to do that. They can add music to it. How I keep my room clean.
She could actually watch the video and let's say you do five steps in five minutes to keep it like
that because kids love videos and that may be a fun way to show and teach her.
I really like that idea. Five steps in five minutes and it's visual and it's fun and there's
music and it doesn't have to be your annoying voice just lecturing her all the time. And I
want you to turn this into something you bond over. Instead of expecting her to do this on her own
for three minutes or five minutes every day, make it a bonding time together. Mom, Dad, play some
music she loves. When you walk into her room, most songs are about three to four minutes long,
and you can walk in and say, hey, we're gonna do one song clean up or we're gonna do a two-songer
today. Make it fun. Go alongside her. If you feel like it,
dance a little bit while you're doing it. Get it tidied up. It was three to four or five minutes
of your day, which is a lot quicker and easier than bugging her for 17 minutes or two hours every
day. Then give her a hug and leave the room, even if you did most of it, because you probably will.
And I can promise you, I can guarantee you, I've worked with almost a million families.
I know these kids.
I know you're going to think, but I did most of it.
How's she ever going to do it?
They'll do it when they grow up and when they value this and when they care about it, when it's their own home.
I promise they will.
And don't think, well, I'm just creating an entitled child. Well, you create
an entitled child if you do everything and you just give them a lot of stuff. This, you went in
and bonded. You helped her out. You were patient and watch. You know what she's, I guarantee that
this is more important than you think. I can tell you one day, this will all be a distant memory. You're not going to
remember like, oh my gosh, when she was a kid, she didn't keep our room cleaned. You will regret
hurting your relationship over this if you do not change. But if you do it right, your daughter
will remember that you were patient with one of her weaknesses, that you smiled and had fun with her, instead of just constantly
correcting and getting on them. And you know what else? You still got what you wanted,
an organized room, or you can just fight over it for 18 years. It's your choice, but you do have a choice in this. Okay, example number three. Maybe
this is a tween or teen, and these are all true stories, by the way. They're examples from real
life people I've worked with. This is a teen or tween who barges into your bedroom late at night.
You're lying in bed at 11 p.m. on a weeknight, exhausted by work, exhausted raising a strong-willed child or three.
You're ready to sleep.
And in barges your son, who flips on bright lights,
takes off his shirt, and proceeds to flex in front of you.
And you would be justified.
You'd be normal in being angry and frustrated,
yelling at your son to turn off the lights.
I heard that the first time I
worked with this parent. I was like, oh man, what came up and what are you doing? You don't come
into our room and just turn off the lights, bright lights when we're trying to go to sleep.
That's rude. What were you thinking? That is easy for me to do. I can just, I could lay into this kid for three or four
minutes like that. It just doesn't work. It doesn't do anything good. So you're justified. That would
be very normal. You're lecturing about how he's rude and selfish behavior. You wouldn't be wrong.
And yet in this case, it's not the right or helpful thing to do. Besides, what are you going to do
anyway? Lecture him? Give your child consequences and take away things you've probably
already taken away everything they own like that's worked for the past four
seven ten or fourteen or seventeen years of his life and here's why I want you to
do it differently think back over the typical strong-willed child's life
probably came out of the womb fighting. They feel like they're swimming
upstream in life, like everybody's against them. They fight with their siblings. They struggle to
connect with peers. They're impulsive. They're in trouble a lot. They're unread on that behavior
chart. They feel fear to siblings and classmates who are naturally good at everything. They're
accustomed to being judged. They feel very misunderstood. So you have to decide who you're looking at right now. And you only get so many
of these moments throughout their childhood. Too many times I reacted with anger and frustration
and further drove, I drove this deep into his heart when he was little, that I didn't really like him, that he couldn't really
please me. And that hurts, that sticks, that destroys. So is this child acting in a disrespectful,
rude way right now? Absolutely. But this is the kid I want you to see. And more importantly who he wants you to see this is a kid who feels so badly about himself
that he knowingly does something incredibly irritating to his parents precisely because he is
desperate for them for anyone really to notice one good thing about him. And if you really think about that, it will hit you
inside that this kid has such a lack of confidence inside that he's used to everything being negative
that he risks this and he knows it's going to irritate you because he's desperate to notice one good
thing because I'm not good at sports. I'm not good at grades. I'm not good at behavior.
And yeah, I know this kid probably stinks right now, but inside is a little boy who's felt
different since he was little. Never lived up to your expectations. Desperate to be affirmed
for what he's doing well instead of feeling like nothing he ever does is
good enough. He doesn't get good grades or good behavior like his sister. So instead of reacting,
you curse softly into your pillow. Look, I'm a realist. I don't expect you to say,
son, I'm so glad that you burst into our room. No, you should be irritated. You should curse, but I want you to curse into your pillow,
not at the kid. Then you sit up in bed and you take notice and you change your tone of voice.
You change the look on your face. Hey, wow, Peter, I can tell you've been putting a lot of effort
into your workouts. That's really paying off, man. You're getting jacked. Why is that so hard to do? Can you do that? You're not saying it's okay for him
to barge in and wake you up. You're being the grown-up who realizes there's something larger
at stake here, which is your son's confidence, your son's well-being, emotional
well-being, mental health. What's at stake is your relationship with this child because this kid,
your kid, expects you to lecture and yell and knows you wouldn't be wrong to do it. But he's being vulnerable and he's taking a chance that
maybe this time it will be different and you only get so many chances. And a few days later,
you ask your son this, hey, you know what? I could actually use some help getting in shape.
Could you show me a few exercises at the gym? Because it's clearly
paying off for you. So you remember in the last episode of the podcast, we talked about this
briefly, that one of the best ways to bond with a child is to ask the child to teach you something,
to teach you how to get in shape, something he or she is good at doing, right? Now look, I honestly,
I hope you can go at a better
time of day than later at night than when your child wants to go. But who cares? If you lose a
little sleep and you go work out at eight o'clock or nine o'clock, or look, heck, with some of your
kids, with some of your teenagers, going out with them at 10 o'clock at night is an incredibly
great bonding opportunity to do now and then. So if you
lose a little sleep and you go work out late, even if it's not when you like to work out, look, I like
to work out in the morning. I don't even like working out in the afternoon. I would hate, I would,
I would hate going out with my son to the gym or down in the basement, gym basement at nine o'clock
or 10 o'clock at night. I would hate that, as you should, but I guarantee you, if I did it, it would be worth it in the long run.
Don't you think that will change his behavior more than another lecture or another consequence?
It is relationships that change behavior more quickly than anything else. You only get so many moments like this.
So I want you this week, here's your goal, turn what is irritating into an activity that you can
bond over. I promise you, you will never regret this. You and your child will look back on this,
I promise you, because my son and I do, decades later. and if you don't do this you're going to
have regret over this but I want you to pass the test in these tense moments okay you've got your
goal think about something your child does that is irritating not hard to do and then really dig
deep to find a way to bond over this it will radically change your relationship with this
child and when you change the relationship, behavior usually
follows. All right, moms and dads, I know you can do this. Thanks for letting me be tough on you.
And thanks for taking on this challenge.