Calm Parenting Podcast - 8 Ways to Build Confidence & Stop Misbehavior (Sibling Fights, Lying, & More) Part 1
Episode Date: November 17, 20248 Ways to Build Confidence & Stop Misbehavior (Sibling Fights, Lying, & More) Part 1 Do you have kids who pick on siblings, lie, make excuses, won’t admit when they do something wrong? Who che...at or quit at games, act silly in class? All of these behaviors have the same root cause. Kirk gives you 8 practical, concrete strategies to build your child's confidence...and stop the misbehavior. Visit https://celebratecalm.com/black-friday/ to purchase the Get Everything Package at the lowest prices of the year. Get practical strategies that really work with your strong-willed kids. Visit AG1 Every week of November, AG1 will be running a special Black Friday offer for a free gift with your first subscription, in addition to the Welcome Kit with Vitamin D3+K2. So make sure to check out https://drinkag1.com/calm to see what gift you can get this week! HAPPY MAMMOTH It's time to feel like yourself again, Moms! For a limited time, you can get 15% off on your entire first order at https://store.happymammoth.com/ with the code CALM at checkout. SIMPLISAFE This week only, you can get 60% off any new system with a select professional monitoring plan. This is their best offer of the year! Head to https://simplisafe.com/calm. There’s no safe like SimpliSafe. 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. AQUATRU WATER PURIFIER AquaTru comes with a 30-day Money-Back Guarantee. My listeners receive 20% OFF any AquaTru purifier. Go to https://www.AquaTru.com and enter code “CALM “ at checkout. MeUndies Kids To get 20% off your first order of MeUndies Kids, plus free shipping, go to https://www.meundies.com/calmpod and enter promo code calmpod. MeUndies—comfort from the outside in. Skylight Frame Get $20 OFF your purchase of a Skylight Frame when you go to https://www.SkylightFrame.com/CALM Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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So if you follow us on Instagram, you know that we're out in the sun and wind almost every day and yet our skin looks and feels
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happymammoth.com with the code CALM. So do you have a child who picks on or even lashes out at their
siblings? Kids who lie and won't admit when they do something wrong? How about a
child who makes excuses, bosses other people around, or cheats or quits when
playing games? Some of your kids may act silly or say inappropriate things in
class or just make things up. You might
be tempted to think that this child is a sociopath, a jerk, and fear he or she
will never be successful in life. But these are very common traits with our
kids and all of these qualities have the same root. So on today's episode of the
Calm Parenting Podcast, I'm going to show you the root of these behaviors
and four of eight ways to change this dynamic
in this two-part series.
So welcome, this is Kirk Martin, founder of Celebrate Calm.
You can find us at CelebrateCalm.com.
If you go there, we now have our biggest sale of the year
going on on all of our programs, wahoo.
So when we had 1,500 kids in our home,
I would notice all the behaviors we talk about on this podcast.
Kids who appear thin-skinned and would always make excuses rather than just owning their behavior.
We called many of these kids
seven uppers because instead of trying to one-up other kids, they had to go to the extreme. Oh yeah, you have five of these?
I have 150 of these at my house.
And forget about playing games with them.
They've changed the rules of the game, cheat or quit.
And they can be pretty brutal verbally and even physically with their siblings.
And at first I was overwhelmed and thought, man, we have a lot of issues to work on with
these kids. But as I dug under the surface, I realized that the root was a
lack of confidence, a lack of feeling good about their place in the world. So
think about this. If I don't feel good about myself, and if I'm kind of always
in trouble either at home or in school, always on read on the behavior chart, if school is harder for me than my siblings
or classmates so that I internalize that I'm stupid or I'm the bad kid, I will
likely lash out at my good siblings so that I feel better about myself or it's just an avenue for resentment.
I'll make up things, lie or act silly in class so that other kids will like me or think I'm cool.
I'll never admit that I'm wrong or lost a game because if I admit I lost a game that makes me a
loser. And see all these things are about projecting, protecting my fragile ego or sense
of self. It's a confidence issue. It also means, and this is what I really need you to watch out for,
many of these kids grow into adulthood feeling like they're never good enough, that there's
something wrong with them because they don't fit in or because
they could never quite live up to the supposed standards that were expected by everyone of
everyone. So they live with this kind of silent but always present feeling that says, you're not
good enough. You'll never really be good enough. You're different. You're less than.
You don't fit in.
And that can have devastating effects on their personal relationships,
career advancement,
and just happiness and contentment in life.
It can lead to some dire consequences,
but we can counter this negativity
and build your child's confidence in practical ways.
So I'm gonna go through four different ways on this episode and then on the
next episode four more ways and the final way is gonna be like a killer idea
that I love and I am waiting it for the end because it all builds toward that.
So number one, accept your kids as they are. And this is going to rub you the wrong way
and challenge you, but it's critically important.
You have kids who are different.
They value different things than you do.
They don't care about the things you care about most.
And look, if you continue to try to push your way
on these kids, it just won't work.
Remember one of our phrases is,
when we step back, it gives our kids space to step up
because as long as you're trying to kind of micromanage
and control them,
they're not really being responsible for themselves.
And see, think about this.
This is the hard part for you as a good parent.
All these things that you want,
like good study skills, trying your hardest, having lots of friends, playing sports, starting the
day with a win by making your bed, being well-rounded, taking honors classes, all
those things have served you well in life. They've led to you being successful
and happy and so naturally you become a parent and think, well, this is what I did to be happy and successful,
and this is what everybody else focuses on, so I shall as well.
And then you have a strong will child, a neurodivergent child, a child on the spectrum,
and they simply don't care about these things, and they are usually not good at these things. But you and I keep
pressing and forcing and trying to convince them to care about these things.
You bribe, threaten, lecture, wring your hands over it, email me at midnight about
it, and nothing ever works. So I'm going to ask you to do something for the next
week. Stop. Just stop with your... sorry for this, but I, I, stop with your effing
agenda. And I say it like that because I want there to be some intensity around
this to know this isn't like, well you should really just try this. No, you have
to do this. Let go of your effing agenda that drives you, that compels you to push
and push, and what you
think they should focus on instead for the next week, listen to your child. And I
mean really listen so you hear, observe them, slow down, let go of your anxiety
about their future and your control issues over how you think they should do things
and the peer pressure and the embarrassment you feel because your child isn't living up
to your and societal expectations and there will be embarrassment and that's your issue
because you're letting your own immaturity
Determine how you parent your child and I'm not saying that you know, I don't do guilt or manipulation
But I really want you to get to the root of this inside of it. Let go of that instead
Look instead of just living inside your brain and your heart and all of that anxiety there
Get inside your child's head and heart. Try to understand how they see and view the world. Because
if your child could verbalize what he or she is feeling, it might sound something
like this, Mom, Dad, you're not f-ing listening to me. I have told you it is not the way my brain works. It isn't
It's not something that I value or want to do and you keep putting pressure on me
to do it in subtle and overt ways and it makes me feel angry and
misunderstood and want to do the opposite it
and misunderstood and want to do the opposite. It continually makes me feel like a failure and like I can never please you. Look, do you know how much
damage this does to continually try to make someone fit into a personality or
way of life that's not meant for or good for them. It's
Devastating it always feels like you're doing something wrong. It makes you feel
Misunderstood and it makes it worse when you're compared to a good sibling, right?
And it is a source of anger and frustration in many of your kids and to be quite honest
I meet kids and young men and women in their 20s and 30 And to be quite honest, I meet kids
and young men and women in their 20s and 30s. And look, some of you are like this
because this is what your parents did to you. And so all of this frustration and
anger will come out. And we spend so much of their lives trying to change them
instead of accepting them as they are. Instead of
helping them navigate the path they are supposed to take and they're going to
take it no matter how much you lecture. How much you bribe, convince, or threaten.
Look, you've done it your way and you've tried it so hard and nothing's worked
and it won't work. So dig into this. Really give some thought to this
and accept your kids as who they are. Number two, tell your kids the truth. Give them perspective
about what's important and what's not. See we kind of do this dance in life around these issues
during their entire childhood. We play this game
to see if we can somehow win at it. Because here's the truth, we know that much of what is required
in school is simply arbitrary and it is not necessary for success in life. This is not a
knock against teachers. It is just the system. When you have a strong-willed
child, you are going to have to wrestle with these ideas. Here are a few examples
to me. Here's what's arbitrary. Sitting still in class for seven hours a day. You
never ever ever have to do that after you get out of school. Listening to
someone talk about things you're not interested in. You don't have to do that every day except for your spouse. Reading books you
don't care about and then writing essays on it. That's not real life. In my 20 years
in the corporate world, I chose jobs in industries that I was interested in and
now I didn't always love my job, but at least I was in an industry or had a focus that I cared about.
Here's another one.
Memorizing information for a test and then forgetting the information.
That is basically what grades are based on. I never had to memorize
information in the corporate world. I had
to analyze information, think about it. I had to present my ideas in a persuasive
way, but that is a hundred percent diametrically opposed to just
memorizing information. How about this one? Being grouped only with kids your
own age. It's arbitrary. You don't do that.
Nobody here works in a company with only 34 year olds. So I'm not saying these
things aren't valuable because but we can learn from those things. But these
are not skills that are ever replicated after kids graduate and go into the real
world. And yet that's what we focus on
their entire childhood. Can you see how that would be devastating to many of
your kids who aren't naturally good at this? And we have this little dance
where we kind of play like it really is important because we don't want to upset
the school and we want to kind of fall in line and have our kids go through the motions
so that gives an appearance that they'll be successful in life. But it's devastating for
many of these kids. I never had to do most of those things in the corporate world and that we
yet we treat it like it's essential and important and our kids are not naturally good at these things
and important. And our kids are not naturally good at these things, but it's all that most parents and teachers focus on. Very few people ever have the courage or the guts to simply be honest with
these things with your kids. It's a broken system that works really well for neurotypical kids,
but is extremely difficult and even damaging for kids with brains,
for kids with brains like they have, right?
So help your kids distinguish
between what is important and what's not.
Now, here's an example,
some of the talks I had with our son.
Look, you're gonna naturally struggle in school
because success in school requires short-term memory skills in order to do well on tests.
But you naturally struggle with that.
And that's okay because you have excellent strategic and critical thinking skills and
you can see patterns.
Now those are the qualities that you will use and get paid for throughout your entire
life because that's what companies value. Look, you're slower at doing
your assignments, but that's because you're a deeper thinker. You look for different ways to do
things. Well, school won't reward you for that, but life and companies will. So don't ever think
you're stupid because you struggle in school with remembering things you don't care about and because you work a little bit more slowly.
School is only for childhood, but you're made for the adult world and you're going to spend
most of your life in the adult world.
And you've probably noticed this because you feel more comfortable around and connect well
with older people, but you struggle with kids your own age and that's natural.
It doesn't mean there's something wrong with you.
You just don't find kids interesting and that's hard because you're a kid grouped with only
kids your own age but most of your life will be spent with adults doing adult things and
you crush it when you do adult things. See, I wish someone had told me that when I was a
kid so I didn't feel so awkward and like I was failing at childhood. And you can add
to that all the ones you want, right? Like sitting still in school. When your kids are
going to grow up and have jobs that they will choose jobs in which they can move a lot all the
time. A kid and someone in sales, you're not sitting in a corporate office in a
desk the whole time. So have those talks with your kids and I know you are going
to worry well if I tell them that does that mean they're just going to shut
down in school? What's not like they're really working that hard at it anyway
and we're gonna get to how to motivate them in school anyway. But have that talk give
them honest perspective. So I'm a lot like your kids. I love my routines because
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So money is a thing, but it's not everything.
I think you really look at the importance of what are you doing with your time?
The conversations that we've had with our financial advisor
is very much building what that framework looks like
that helps support those important things.
The places where you're investing your time and your resources,
your family clearly, and those closest to you.
Edward Jones. We do money differently. Visit edwardjones.ca slash different.
Okay, number three. Affirm your kids with specifics. Here's my best advice.
Affirm what your kids are already doing well without adding but this is more important than
you may realize with strong will kids they tend to shut down with any
negativity so notice what they're already doing well just observe and
recognize it I promise if you do this it will be highly motivating to your kids
they will work harder for you because they want to please you and
they crave that positive recognition. They just usually feel like nothing is
ever good enough for us as parents. So do this without adding but if you would
just apply yourself or try your best because that's destructive. So I want you
to learn how to give positive intensity to the good choices and do that in a purposeful way like for the next two weeks
Catch your kids making good choices give fist bumps. Well done son that shows me you're growing up
By the way, you know with strong will kids when you give them praise
It's short and sweet and then you walk out of the room. Don't give a lot of attention to it
But the specificity of this can be really helpful. And I'm just going to
go through some. I just did this on the updated discipline that works program. I go through a ton
of these very specifically. So, hey, someone, your sister looked at you and said that to you. You
walked away. That shows me you're growing up. Hey, I noticed you lost at that board game earlier. And
I heard you start to complain,
but then you caught yourself and you said,
good game to your brother.
A lot of adults can't even do that, proud of you.
Hey, I know you took that money off the counter,
but later you brought it back and apologized.
That's a really mature way to handle that.
Hey, I heard you playing video games with your friends
and it sounds like you're a leader there.
I heard you sticking up for one of your teammates. It's a really great quality.
Hey, the Henderson's down the street stopped me on the way home to tell me how great a kid you are.
That you stopped by to check on them the other day and help Mr. Henderson by taking out his trash.
That's just awesome.
Hey, I heard you apologize to your mom earlier.
A lot of grown-ups can or won't even admit their mistakes. And that's really mature. Hey, I heard you apologize to your mom earlier. A lot of
grown-ups can't or won't even admit their mistakes and that's really mature.
Proud of you. See, those kind of specific affirmations, I promise your kids will
listen to that and they'll think about those things over and over again. Tell me
what child would not rather live up to high expectations than down to
the low ones.
See, I want you to be a prophet of promise, not doom.
Watch the words you speak over your child.
Do not assume that the child who is nine today will just be the same way when he's 19 or
29 or 39.
Your kids grow up immature, so don't say things like, oh, you've always been so lazy.
You're never on time because those become self-fulfilling prophecies.
You know, if I'm always late, why should I change now?
Instead speak those positive things.
You know what?
You're becoming a responsible young man, responsible young lady.
You're going to have a great future ahead of you.
Look, most of your kids, they hear 10 negative comments for even
one positive affirming statement.
So retip the balance of that.
I know it takes some work upfront, but it will save you and your child so much aggravation
in the long run.
And I guarantee your kids will want to and begin living up to your higher expectations.
So do that this week.
Okay.
Here is a really cool idea.
Number four, use their particular gifts to help you.
Ask your kids for their help.
You know one of our favorite strategies is to take what usually annoys you and use that
to your advantage to motivate your child and bond with them.
I used to hate when Casey played video games.
It was dumb to me.
I grew up playing sports outside with my friends,
so it kind of drove me crazy.
But after discovering that lecturing,
dismissing and denigrating his interests
wasn't motivating, I decided to enter into his world
and use this to my advantage.
I stopped reacting and
getting irritated and instead I just observed. And I noticed when he played
Call of Duty with his friends online that he was actually confident and a
leader. He would direct his team, build up the kids who weren't so good. He'd
give them tips. He'd lead them strategically. He was actually problem solving on the fly. So I decided
to do something different. I would occasionally say this, hey Case, I could really use your
problem solving help with a situation this morning. Now at first he'd look at me like,
why are you asking me for help? And I just kind of casually and factually say, well I know from
listening to you play your video games, watching you, you're actually really good at this. And I just kind of casually and factually say, well, I know from listening
to you play your video games, watching you, you're actually really good at this. So I'm
wondering if I could get your thoughts on this situation. So I would share a situation
or something even within our home and I'd ask how he would think about it. And I'd ask
his opinion. It doesn't have to, it doesn't mean you have to do what they say. It means you are involving them and instead of trying to change them or just
be negative, you're actually engaging them and you're reinforcing. Yes, you have
these qualities. I have seen them. Now here's the hard part for you as a parent.
You just don't see these qualities with them trying their hardest at school work and doing chores.
But you do notice them if you want look for it. A mom just emailed and said this,
I got your programs with the Black Friday sale. They are way more helpful and less expensive than
any therapy we've ever done. But the biggest change I've noticed since going through your programs is the shift in how I see my son and interact
with him. I now realize I have been perpetually irritated by him and he
must have picked up on that. But now when he complains about something, I am able
to respond truthfully, you know what your brain is so good at solving problems. I can't wait to see how you find a solution to this. And recently he started solving
problems before even telling me and I can see his self-efficacy, that's a great
word, has increased. So thanks for the great perspective shift. And my response
is, no, thank you.
You're the ones moms and dads who have to do this hard work
to wrestle with like, oh, I've always been led to believe
I'm supposed to do this as a parent
and kids are supposed to do this.
And then you have a strong willed child
and it blows all of that up.
And then you have to really wrestle with these ideas
and come to terms with your own anxiety
and control issues and say,
you know what, I think this kid is on a different path,
so I'm going to raise him or her differently.
So I dare you to do this this week.
Let's work on these four strategies
for the next few days, next couple of weeks.
And I bet you'll begin to notice a shift
in how your child sees himself or
herself and how you see them. In the next episode I'm going to go through how to
get teachers to see them differently. And when your kids start feeling some
competence and confidence and mastery over something. It will impact the sibling issues.
They will be able to play games and lose.
They will begin to take more responsibility for themselves.
So in the next episode, I'll give you
an absolute killer idea.
I haven't shared this in a long time.
And I'm actually gonna show you
how you can use chicken nuggets to motivate your kids
So take advantage of black Friday sale if we can help you in any way if you need to help financially anything
Just reach out to our strong will son Casey moms and dads. Thanks for and grandparents, too
Thanks for working so hard at this. I know it's hard and thanks for sharing the podcast with others
We'll talk to you next time. Love you all. Bye. Bye