Calm Parenting Podcast - Boy Can’t Lose Games, Girl Hanging Out with “Wrong” Friends
Episode Date: March 24, 2021BONUS PODCAST!Boy Can’t Lose Games, Girl Hanging Out with “Wrong” FriendsYou have a child who gets upset when he loses games, is hanging out with questionable friends, or is questioning her fait...h. How can you use this to your advantage? Kirk helps you see these situations in a completely different way. Want personal mentoring with Kirk via Phone? Click here to learn about mentoring packages. We are including the No B.S. Program FREE with all mentoring purchases OR you can get it here for $99: https://celebratecalm.com/nobs/ Want to book a LIVE EVENT in 2021/2022?! We are now booking IN PERSON and Zoom events for schools, PTAs, churches, synagogues, corporations, and agencies! Simply email Casey@CelebrateCalm with LIVE in the subject line and he'll share a one-page proposal within hours. It's EASY! Questions? Need help deciding on the best tools for your family? Email Casey@CelebrateCalm.com and Casey will help you personally! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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who doesn't lose well, right? So when he loses, gets really
upset, or many of our kids will change the rules of the game, they'll cheat or they'll quit, right?
You've experienced that. Or maybe you've got a daughter who is questioning her faith, who's
struggling in her friendships, maybe choosing the so-called wrong friends. Well, that's what we're
going to talk about today on today's episode of the Calm
Parenting Podcast. This is actually kind of a bonus episode. I just got off the phone with a
couple and I've done a couple of phone consultations today. And I wanted to take some of the main
learnings and really drill down. I'm not going to do the whole thing. I'm not going to go on for 20
minutes on this, but I want to make it very quick so you can get some key insights that are
fresh in my mind. So first one is child who doesn't lose well. That is many, many, many of your kids
because many of your kids feel like life is out of control. They don't always feel in control of
their brains or even their bodies, those with sensory issues. And so they try to control
everything else. They control other people, they're bossy. They're demanding. They change the rules of the game. They cheat. They quit. They often struggle with transitions.
New experiences are difficult. These are all related to the same thing. And so when they lose,
they get really upset. And so just giving a consequence for that won't really change anything.
Long-term, a couple things we
want to do. One is we want to build a child's confidence because a child who feels confident
about himself, who feels good about himself, who has his place and space in the world and in the
family, who doesn't feel like he's the black sheep of the family, the one who's always in
trouble and everybody's teaming up on him and you like his siblings better. Well, a child who feels good about himself doesn't need to cheat, doesn't need
to put down his brothers and sisters, right? There's all the same root in a lot of these things.
And so a couple of things I encourage them to do besides that is one, practice losing. Practice it.
So when we had all these kids at camp, for those who don't
know, we used to invite kids into our actual home. And we had about 1,500 of them come through our
home over the course of a decade. Most of the kids couldn't lose well. So I had this kid and he played
goalie. Well, he'd get furious when someone scored on him and he'd yell at his defenseman. He'd be
like, you guys aren't playing well. And he'd throw the ball out the ref. And it was just kind of a mess. And his parents got
embarrassed. So when he came to our house, I said, hey, here's what we're doing today.
We're going to go up to the soccer field. And I would actually practice scoring on him.
I would score on him. And I would kick the ball right past him into the net. And I'd say,
so what does that feel like? He's like, well, just, you know, you're, you're not playing fair. He's like, we're not doing excuses. What does it feel like?
And he's like, well, just, you know, I feel like a loser. I'm like, you're not a loser.
Someone just scored on you. That's all it is. It went in. And then half the time you're going to
get it and you're going to save it. And half the time, it's going to go in. It doesn't make you a loser. So he's like, I know. And I was like, so here's the deal. You're
competitive. You're strategic. When the other team scores a goal on you and you overreact and you get
upset and you throw a little tantrum, you throw the ball back at the ref, they know that they got
under your skin. Now, here's what I know about you. You're really good. You're really good at
pushing people's buttons. And the reason you do that is you. You're really good. You're really good at pushing people's
buttons. And the reason you do that is not because you're a jerk. It's because you understand human
nature. You like to tinker with things, with Legos, with taking things apart. And you also
like to tinker with people's brains. You know exactly how to push your dad's buttons and your
mom's and your sister's. You're really good at it because you've got a
strategic brain and you're a good thinker and you understand human nature. But here's where you're
not applying that. On the soccer field, you let the other team see you sweat and they know that
you're upset and they're in your head now. You're the one that's usually in other people's heads,
so let's apply that on the soccer field. So here's what's going to happen. I'm going to score on you. I'm going to score on you relentlessly. And every time I score, you're
going to turn around, you're going to walk back, and you're going to get that ball. Now on the way
back there, you can say some things under your breath. You can scowl if you want. But as soon
as you bend over and pick up that ball, it's done. It's done and you've moved on. And you will roll
that ball back to the ref and not let
them see you sweat because I want them to see you as big and confident and strong. Right? And so we
would practice it. Sometimes you actually have to practice losing. I used to practice teaching kids
how to lose at Monopoly. And I would walk them through the game and what it felt like. And we
would practice saying, good game. You won. I lost. Right? So there's some value to that. I would
encourage, I encourage these parents. You know, a lot of what we do in the phone consultations is
not really focus on the negative things. I already know all the negative things about your kids,
right? I've lived through that.
What I want to find out is what do they love? What are they good at? What really animates them?
And we build on strengths. See, when we find out something your child's really good at,
we can use that to help him overcome some of his weaknesses. Well, this family had lived overseas and their son actually speaks German. So I was like, okay. So when he's
playing, instead of yelling from the sidelines, you need to calm down, control yourself, son,
because that always works. Instead, have a German code word that you yell. Allow him to speak to
himself in German when he's upset. Sometimes things like speaking in German or singing a particular song bring a measure of comfort.
It's unique. It's different. It throws you off.
It gets you into a different mindset.
Just be creative in all these different ways.
And we talk a lot about this mom we were talking to when they played a game and she
won. She started to understand that when he says, oh, you're being mean, you're cheating and doing
all of those things. What he's really do is internalizing certain things. And what he hears
is you're a loser, right? That's what a lot of
kids experience. When they lose, they associate it with, you're a loser. And they already feel
like losers because they're always in trouble, always red on the behavior chart. Because all
we focus on is behavior, not building these kids up inside. So they feel like that. So when they
lose, it just reinforces that. And that's why we've got to spend more time affirming what's right and giving them tools
to succeed. I hope you don't get tired of me telling you that, but it's more important than
you can possibly imagine. Most of the time on the calls, look, we get to consequences sometimes,
but you know what I'm using for consequences? And this is really good. I'm just going to throw this in as a bonus. Instead of
taking something away, the best consequence sometimes is a child doing a service project,
an act of service, an act of contrition for that teacher, that principal, that parent, that sibling.
It's a really valuable tool that's really cool and it works better.
So talking to the next set of parents, and they've got a teenage girl who had pretty
much spent all of her life in a Christian school, but now she is going to a regular
public school.
So a couple things are happening.
One is she is going against and testing her faith. And she's questioning her faith.
And you know what that really is? See, we get all defensive. Oh, I can't believe that she's doing
that. She's turning her back on all the things we have deeply held beliefs and all that. I get that.
It's scary if you're a person of faith. But here's what we miss. What if we turned that around and
said, honey, I admire you. I admire you because you actually have the courage
to speak up and say things that I've been afraid to say for many years or even decades. I admire
you because you're smart and you really think about these things. And the fact that you're
questioning your faith shows me that you care enough to get it right. See, parents, please look beneath the surface.
Oh, she's questioning our faith. No. Here's what it really is. She cares enough about it to actually
question it because she wants to get it right. Because what she's saying inside is, if I'm going
to follow this system of belief or this person, I want to do it right.
And I want to do it with my whole heart. And as long as I have all of these doubts, I can't throw
myself into it fully. So I need to express these doubts. I need to question these things. And then
what do people like that encounter? Well, I can't believe that you don't believe and you're just doing... And now they're shut down. Why do you think there's so many people
who are angry when they shouldn't be, right? When they shouldn't have experienced that
because we get so defensive when we shut down communication, when in fact we should be
celebrating the fact that someone is curious enough to act and cares enough to actually to
question it so that they can get it right so that then they can be fully into it and behind it.
That's what we really want. But instead as parents, we just want, well, you just need to be
obedient to what I said. Why? Why? Am I that fragile? And in this case, is God that fragile that he can't stand someone
would question something? Look, so many of the things that we believe need to be questioned.
They should be. The world would be a better place if we question those things, right? So celebrate
that and tell her and say, I admire you for that. And I'm open to your questions. And by the way,
I've had a lot of those same questions myself. I was just afraid.
I was too much of a people pleaser and afraid that I was going to be rejected.
And thank God you came along because you're asking the right questions.
Right?
What would that do to your conversation?
What would that do to your relationship with this girl?
Right?
And what really hit me partway through the conversation is, why are we talking about this girl, right? And what really hit me partway through the
conversation is, why are we talking about this girl's behavior? She's a good kid.
And what I see from the outside is, I see a curious girl with a really big heart who,
when she passes a homeless person, asks her parents to stop and gives her own money to the
homeless person. Who, when they got in
trouble, she and her friends got in a little bit of trouble at school, she defended her friends
and she took the blame. Is that not what our faith teaches us to do, right? Oh, she's questioning her
faith. No, she's actually started freaking living out her faith. She's doing what we want her to do. We just don't like the way
she always does it. And we're uncomfortable with her questioning when we should welcome that with
open arms and with her friends. Guess what's happening? She went from a Christian school to
a public school. So guess what? She's a curious kid. She's hanging out with different friends.
And again, good parents will get defensive like, oh, she's not hanging out with the right kids.
So instead of fighting it, being defensive and being afraid of it, enter into it. Hey, honey,
I'm curious. What about these other kids? What intrigues you about them? And you open up the
conversation and make it safe for your daughter to say, they're really intriguing to me
and they're interesting and they see the world in a different way. Well, in what kind of ways? What
are you learning from them, right? And you're helping your daughter actually figure it out
and her place in the world. You're helping her figure it out because I guarantee you in this
particular case, this is a sensitive girl and I can almost guarantee what she's doing.
She's befriending these kids, not just because they're different and unique, and that's interesting to her,
but because they're the outcast kids who get denigrated and who get judged, and she has a big heart.
And I guarantee you, look, for the religious people, my Christian friends out there, she's doing what Jesus did.
She's going and befriending the outcasts who weren't popular and didn't behave and dress and look the right way.
And she's doing something wrong.
When in fact, we should be admiring this girl for having the courage to reach out to the kids who are not the popular ones.
Right?
Like, see how that works.
We get so defensive over these things. This girl who's a curious girl with a really big heart who we should want to be more like
instead of trying to change her just because we're not comfortable with it and just because
we have our own hang-ups.
See how that works?
See, it's relationships change behavior.
Look, if we can help you in any way, reach out to us.
Email our son Casey, C-A-S-E-Y, at CelebrateCalm.com.
Tell us what you're struggling
with. We'll try to give you some ideas, some insights. We'll provide the right resources
that you need within your budget. If you want to do a phone consultation or mentoring with me,
sign up for it. It's at CelebrateCalm.com. But let us know how we can help. But please take this to
heart and start seeing your kids in a different way and giving them tools to succeed. It will
change things. It will change things more than any consequence that you give. All right. Love you all.
Talk to you soon. Bye-bye.