Calm Parenting Podcast - 3 Ways to Handle Your Triggers & Trauma
Episode Date: October 6, 20243 Ways to Handle Your Triggers & Trauma You have a strong-willed child who triggers you by talking back, dawdling, having a messy room, doing things the hard way and more. You’re also battling issue...s from your own childhood AND a spouse who seemingly undermines what you’re trying to do. Kirk shares three new ways to handle your triggers and trauma.  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. AirDoctor 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! OneSkin OneSkin is the world’s first skin longevity company. Get started today with 15% off using code KIRK at https://oneskin.co. SIMPLISAFE Protect your home with 50% off a new SimpliSafe system, plus a free indoor security camera, when you sign up for Fast Protect Monitoring. Just visit https://simplisafe.com/calm. There’s no safe like SimpliSafe. WILD INTEREST PODCAST FOR KIDS Wild Interest is the new podcast created and hosted by children, exploring nature, science, current affairs and much more! Wild Interest: find it wherever you get your podcasts. It’s wild! 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 you have a strong-willed child who triggers you by talking back, dawdling, having a
messy room, having to constantly have things be their way. When one parent is with this child,
they're awesome, but when you introduce the whole family, it's like they dominate the whole night,
and it's hard. On top of that, you're battling issues from your own childhood and a spouse who seemingly undermines
what you're trying to do. And that's a lot to deal with. A typical problem that parents experience is
typified by this email. Our child is struggling in school with blurting out, emotional outbursts,
not completing schoolwork. We've tried taking away things and grounding him, but nothing seems to work.
Our child's in therapy now to help with these things. But my husband and I struggle with
controlling our own emotions, and we're not always on the same page. So how do we handle this?
That is what we are going to discuss on today's episode of the Calm Parenting Podcast. Welcome, this is Kirk Martin. I am founder of CelebrateCalm.com.
I'm excited to share an idea at the end of this podcast that we used as a family,
but I've never shared it before on the podcast.
And I'm going to address these common issues over the course of two separate podcasts.
That way I can address each part in detail.
In this podcast, we're going to address your role as the parent.
And then in the next episode, I'll show you how to handle behavior issues
in a way that builds confidence instead of destroying it.
And we'll also address when it's helpful for your child to go to therapy and when it's not.
So here's the thing. Marriage and parenting
will likely be the two most challenging jobs or missions you'll ever take on in your life
because you are coming face to face with your own character deficits, right? Because you never knew
you could be this impatient or this easily frustrated, right. You're good people, but then it's like, oh,
the kids are driving me crazy and I'm exhausted. You're also dealing with hurts from your childhood
or bad modeling by your own parents. Look, all I knew to do was what I saw my dad do. So I repeated
that pattern, yell and scream, get upset, fear and intimidation.
And when I was a kid, I hid both physically and kind of metaphorically and emotional way. I hid,
why? So I wouldn't take the brunt of my dad's anger or his fist. And maybe you learned to be
a people pleaser because it guaranteed you got your parents love and acceptance
or you were kind of like the perfect child who always did everything well in school. Why? Because
maybe your parents were overachievers and you learned that maybe you wanted, maybe you had the
strong will child or sibling and you saw them getting in trouble and you're like, I don't want
to do that and my parents acceptance is based on how well i do in school so you buckle down or you may be the strong-willed child who grew up to
be strong-willed parent and you're actually starting to see yourself and understand yourself
for the first time through parenting your own strong-willed child that can bring a lot of
healing it can bring pain as well but it's interesting. So maybe you grew up in a chaotic home and you learned to take control
of situations because that kept you safe. And all of these things were very smart of you and I to do
when we were kids. But now these same strategies that served us well as a kid begin to sabotage
your relationships.
So we have to work through those.
We've got to break generational patterns.
And we all have these issues, so don't beat yourself up.
You will likely feel helpless and at your wit's end with a strong-willed child,
wondering, what the heck do we do with this kid?
All the normal parenting advice simply doesn't work with these
kids. And look, it usually backfires. It usually makes it worse. And then you get judged on top of
that. So some parents like me refuse to acknowledge this. We live in denial. That's what I did at
first. And so we double down on the tough approach. I'm just going to double down on the consequences. And then the strong willed child kind of quadruples down on the resistance. So it backfires. Other parents feel guilty. You second guess yourself and then you swing too far the other way. And now you become too sweet and you get walked all over by this child. And now you and your spouse are kind of
far apart on this spectrum. So I want to address two common scenarios that can sabotage your family.
And these are scenarios I've never really covered in a lot of detail on the podcast. But then I want
to give you a cool idea to try as a family, or you can do this as a single
parent. So first situation, oftentimes men rough house with their kids and it can make moms anxious
or nervous. I know as a dad, I played rougher with our son when he was young, and I'm not talking
about hitting, abuse, yelling at, or constantly
criticizing a child. That'll destroy them. And I'm not talking about doing anything out of anger or
resentment. It was simple roughhousing while we were playing. It's a very common way for men
to connect with their kids. And if you look up the research, roughhousing is absolutely
essential for a child's healthy brain development. And I covered sibling roughhousing and how to
handle that in a new updated discipline program. And in doing so, I did some research. This is a
really important thing. So you have to understand the importance of this. I was also
tougher on our son in many situations. And look, a lot of moms, wives are tougher on the kids and
dad is a little bit more laid back. So it works both ways. But with our son, look, if he was sick,
I might've said, hey, I know you're not feeling well, but I expect you to work today and know
you can overcome this adversity.
And my wife would be more likely to say, oh, honey, just get your rest.
And each response was perfectly appropriate.
Now, here's the dynamic to watch out for.
Sometimes a wife will interrupt or interfere and say, oh, honey, husband, don't play so rough with our child
or you're being too tough on our son or daughter.
And then the dad, the husband will kind of shut down
and feel left out of the parenting process
like nothing he ever does is ever right or good enough.
That's very common.
I want you to be aware of it.
I want, we want dads to be involved.
So have an honest conversation about this in your home.
Look, learn how to do that.
Learn how to say, honey, it just makes me really uncomfortable when you're being rough
with our kids.
And a husband, you can say, I know, I understand that.
It can sound a little bit chaotic and sounds like we're getting hurt,
but I'm not doing it out of anger and I'm in control of myself.
And this is really important.
And so will you trust me with this?
Talk about that.
Again, I am not talking about hitting abuse, relentless criticism, demeaning a child.
I'm not talking about being
angry and lashing out. I'm talking about having sometimes a more stern tone, which does not mean
it's just more stern and serious, or physically roughhousing. A mature way to handle this would
be to say, hey, I've realized after listening to this guy's podcast, and you fill in the blank,
I'm too reactive. I lecture too much. I let the kids get away with too many things.
I don't hold boundaries. I yell. I'm too critical. Could you help me make some small changes?
That kind of humility in your relationships is very powerful. Otherwise, you know what you're
going to do? You're just going to point fingers at each other, you know what you're going to do?
You're just going to point fingers at each other
and then you're just going to lose your whole family
and your marriage.
It just doesn't work that way.
But if you work together on this,
not trying to make like one is better than the other,
you'll change things very quickly.
Okay, number two.
We often try to fix the child
because the parent refuses to change.
Over the years, I guarantee you I have received thousands of emails from moms.
The first six paragraphs detail the child's behavioral issues, big emotions, and meltdowns.
And then the last sentence is almost an aside.
Oh, by the way, my husband has anger issues.
And I'm like, oh, I didn't need to read the first six paragraphs, just that last sentence. Because
look, if mom or dad have anger issues and can't control themselves, the strong willed child will
likely have emotional outbursts. You can't separate the two. No blame, no guilt. It's just how it works.
Sometimes the roles are reversed, but this is most common. So here's what's really happening.
A mom has most likely asked her husband to change repeatedly, even dozens of times, to work on his
anger, reactive issues. Honey, please stop yelling at the kids. Stop being so critical. Please deal with your
anger issues. But he denies or dismisses her as I did before I changed. And so then what she
is desperately asking me, right, a stranger is, hey, can you please help me to get my child to calm down and stop reacting so that my husband
doesn't get upset and yell? See how that works? I want you to help me change my child precisely
because my husband won't. And so I don't have to be caught in between and manage everybody's
emotions and be the referee. And look, I always want to respond,
hey, you just need to talk to your husband instead of trying to fix your child.
But that's easy for me to say sitting in the comfort of my own home
because what I'm really asking a woman to do quite often is this,
hey, you know that guy who's most likely bigger and stronger and more aggressive than you?
You know, the guy with the anger issues
who gets triggered, melts down. Yeah, go tell him he needs to grow up and work on his anger issues.
And that can be scary depending on the situation. It can be a terrifying, vulnerable, and lonely
place to be. So I do always try to help out with the child but it's not right to ask the child to change
when the grown adult can't and it's not right to put a wife in that position and I'm also going to
add this for the moms you're not crazy you're not imagining this I know that controlling people
often isolate their spouses live far away from family and any support, and they turn things
around on you to cause you to doubt yourself and blame yourself and question yourself.
And I just want you to know, moms, you're seen. You're not alone. So what can we do in this
situation? So I like to use analogies with men because we tend to relate to those well.
And I always kind of joke with men when they get our get everything package. It has 14 programs
and I'm like, hey guys, look, your wife is going to listen to all 14 programs. I just want you to
start with a straight talk for dad's program. It's concise. It's direct, very easy. It's a guy, me talking to them like we
talk. Concise, direct, actionable. And I always make this analogy. In every sphere of life, men respect
other men who stay cool and calm under pressure. We like following the quarterback, platoon captain,
the ER doctor, the business leader who stays cool when everything is
falling apart. We're not going to follow a quarterback who's like, you don't know what
route to run. How many times have I told you? You don't run that route. You keep fumbling. Let's go
score. Nobody's following that guy. And so like when we're at work, we tend to be very good at,
we stay calm, we assess the situation and we problem solve. But for some reason, we walk
through the door of our home, and then we just lose it. And so for the next week, sometimes I
challenge dads, instead of just being the reactive dad who's kind of always irritated, be the
quarterback in your home. Assess what's going on. Look at the defense. see what they're throwing your way. And then you adjust to that and you
lead your team. You lead your kids. If your husband happens to be watching a football game,
you could always say, hey, could we use this whole quarterback model with the kids this week?
And he may be like, what do you mean? I'll be like, well, the team follows the quarterback
when the quarterback stays cool and calm under pressure and leads his team.
And I would keep things simple.
Maybe you can agree on a couple goals for the week.
And whatever your weakness is, be vulnerable and start with that. Hey, I struggle with X.
Hey, I struggle with holding the kids accountable, with holding boundaries.
This week, I'd like to learn how to be a little tougher.
I'd like to learn how to not be moved by their emotions and get manipulated by them.
I need help learning to say, no, could you come alongside me and help me?
Because you're actually really good at that, and I could use your help.
See, that's kind of nice. And maybe your spouse
practices not reacting and not getting upset when the kids misbehave and your spouse sits,
problem solves like they do at work. And I think an easy goal for both of you to get on board with
is very foundational. Hey, could we just practice this for one week? We're simply going
to affirm your kids for what they're already doing well. Short and sweet, make it specific.
Hey, I appreciate you helping me clean up. Hey, I noticed how you handled that with your sister.
That shows me you're growing up. And you just walk out of the room, short and sweet with your praise.
Hey, I heard you apologize to your mom earlier. A lot of grown-ups can't and won't even admit their mistakes.
It's really mature of you. Hey, I noticed you lost at the board game earlier and I heard you start
to complain, but then you caught yourself and you said, hey, good game to your brother. Man,
I'm really proud of you. Do that for a week. Watch how the kids respond.
Start with small things.
I'm telling you, small things that you change can have a big difference.
Changing your tone of voice and going with this even, matter-of-fact tone is very grounding.
Sitting in a situation instead of standing there with your arms flailing and you flailing, it can be helpful.
Affirming your kids, just do it for a week.
If you have it and if you're up for it, listen to that updated Discipline That Works program as part of the package.
And decide on two or three things that you'll both agree to do.
Look, you can't say like, you know, we need to completely redo our whole parenting paradigm.
It's too big.
It's too broad a goal.
I want you to make small, simple adjustments, see progress, and then keep working at it.
Now, here's the idea that I alluded to earlier.
And it is an idea I introduced into that new program.
It's what we used as a family.
And even if you're a single parent, you can do this.
And you can do it even if your kids don't participate.
So in many homes and classrooms,
adults create behavior charts
with rules and consequence for each misbehavior
that don't work.
They just don't.
And it focuses way too much effort
on just getting good outward behavior.
And most of our strong will kids just live on red on the behavior chart. They're always in trouble,
so they just stop trying. Or they'll do even worse. They internalize, I'm a bad kid. I'm the
black sheep of the family. Nobody likes me. We don't want that. But what if instead of a behavior chart, you created a trigger chart or a trigger board for your entire family, especially as the kids get older?
So you get a whiteboard or a piece of paper and you list out each person's name at the top, mom, dad, each child, and then one trigger each person struggles with.
What does trigger you?
What bothers you?
What makes you react, sets you off, ruins your sense of order and peace?
When you take the lead on this, you are modeling humility and you are working on yourself.
It is the greatest lecture you can give to your kids is to have them actually just watch
you change right in front of them.
And so you need
to be honest. Hey, my triggers when things are kind of askew in the house and there's a mess
and you can tell your kids why that bothers you so much might be something from your childhood,
right? You don't have to, don't share your trauma and horrify your kids, but you can share small
things. You can explain why this bothers you, the physical feeling you feel in your body,
how you typically react to it. They already know this because they've seen you do it.
But most importantly, one or two ways you are going to begin responding to overcome this trigger.
Maybe yours is, hey, my trigger is being late. When I was a kid, we got yelled at a lot,
even if we were on time, because my dad was
career military.
So when you guys move slowly, have you ever noticed that I try to rush you?
Then what happens?
You guys move more slowly.
And you're not rejecting me or my authority.
You're rejecting my anxiety.
So from now on, here is what I'm going to practice doing instead.
And it's not like you sharing your triggers is going to surprise your kids.
Your kids already know your triggers before you do.
So help them identify their triggers.
Hey, I've noticed a pattern, something that really upsets you,
is when plans change suddenly.
When you don't get what you want.
When you lose at games so normalize
it everybody has triggers in this family in the world and then teach and show
them how to handle those triggers differently now your kids don't have to
participate but you're normalizing the fact that we all have triggers and we're
modeling for them how to deal with their own issues so they learn how to get to the root of it.
But this is way more important than anything your kids are going to learn in school.
How many people with master's degrees and PhDs can't handle human relationships and their lives become a mess?
You can have all the knowledge in the world and be
really good at studying, but if you don't know how to handle your own triggers and handle
relationships with people that trigger you, education doesn't matter. It's really important.
I wish someone had taught me this before I was 35. It almost ruined all my relationships. So, okay, I'm just checking time.
So here's the deal. I try to keep these podcasts around 22 to 25 minutes so they're bite-sized and
actionable, but I've got a couple of minutes. So if you're okay with it, and it doesn't matter,
you can turn this off whenever you want. I'm going to try to demonstrate off the top of my head
how I handled one of my triggers. It's one of my favorite things to do. If you ever
go through our programs, you go through the 30 Days to Calm program, I'll help you with your
triggers. I love doing this with people. Okay, so here's how you begin. First, simply identify your
trigger. And if you don't know what they are, ask your strong willed child because he or she knows
all your buttons to push. They knew it. So own it. I am triggered when my kids dawdle because that means we'll be late
and I'll feel guilty. And I think it's unruised. I think it's rude. It causes me anxiety. I don't
see why they can't just be organized and be ready on time like I was as a kid. And my dad would be
upset if we were late. So I learned to always be ready because I didn't want to face his disapproval.
And this was an area where I could get his approval because my brother was late
and he always got yelled at. And so there can be a lot wrapped up in your triggers and you don't
have to tell your kids all those, but tell it to yourself. The next step is basically diagram out
how this unfolds in your home. When my kids dawdle, my tone changes. It becomes irritated,
demanding. That kind of clip. Guys, guys,
can you hear that kind of clip thing? My body posture changes. I lean into my kids.
I look irritated. I become less patient and more anxious. Okay, so how does that cause your kids
to react? Well, my kids pick up on my anxiety and my tone. They argue more or they simply go more slowly, which then triggers
me to become more demanding and upset and then everything unravels. Okay, good. You're just
honestly assessing the situation. What can we do differently? What can you do differently next
time? I'm just going to spout these off the top of my head. Do the opposite of what you normally do. Instead of barking orders, ask questions instead
because that way you're leading your kids.
Instead of my sole focus being, I need you to move,
slow down just a bit and connect with your child
over something important to them.
Get outside of your agenda and realize what's holding them up. In this case,
it was often anxiety because your kids struggle with going to new places and experiences or going
to school. So it's an anxiety issue. And so you rushing them will actually make that worse and
trigger a big meltdown. So when I stop for just a second, I say, oh, that's what's going on.
Now I can normalize it and
say, you know what? Yeah, I wouldn't want to go to this thing either. It's all these new people
that you've never met before. That could be kind of scary. I feel the same way when I'm going to
have to go to an after work party with people or have to give a presentation. New things are a
little scary. See, that's normalizing it. That settles your child.
Hey, on the way to school, doctor's appointment, type window class, I have an idea to make this easier for you. See, now you're coming along and you're bringing solutions. You're a problem
solver instead of the problem creator. So here's another one. In that moment, simply affirm them for one good choice they've made lately.
Hey, I really admire how you handled that situation with your friend yesterday.
See, that will break all that tension.
It changes the dynamic.
And when you connect with kids, they tend to cooperate better.
Give them some space sometimes. Hey, I'll meet you
guys in the car in seven minutes. And then sometimes sit and don't say a word. Make yourself
relax. Use an even tone like you've got this, like they've got this. And at all times, I always go
back. I give kids tools to move more quickly. Oh, I just remembered. Do you think you're strong
enough, big enough, responsible enough to do X
in the car, on the way to the car in order for us to go? See, the point is that instead of trying
to fix a kid, really work on yourself instead. No blame, no guilt. It's just acknowledging,
I've got issues. When you yell or react or get upset, apologize and reset yourself. All right, we've covered a lot
of ground today, so you know what your homework is. You can do this. Change yourself first,
and your kids will change more quickly. Thank you for listening to the podcast.
Thank you for sharing the podcast. I got it under 25 minutes, so thank you for listening.
We really appreciate it. If we can help you in any way, let us know. Love you all. Bye-bye.