Calm Parenting Podcast - Crash Course: Kids Who Don’t Comply, Listen, or Care About Consequences
Episode Date: November 29, 2024Crash Course: Kids Who Don’t Comply, Listen, or Care About Consequences You have kids who don’t always listen, want to do things their way, and don’t care about consequences. What DOES work with... these kids? In less than 20 minutes, Kirk shares 10 rapid fire ideas to show you exactly how to get strong-willed kids to be responsible for themselves…when nothing else works. This is a must listen. Share with your spouse and family! Our Black Friday Sale Ends Saturday at 11:59pm. 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. 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 you have kids who don't listen all the time. They don't always do what you want them to do.
They want to try to do it their way. They're stove touchers.
I understand this is really frustrating when you have a strong-willed child
because the more you push, the more they resist, the more you lecture, the more they tend to shut down.
These are assertive, persistent kids who get a vision of what they want to do in their brains.
And then they go to carry it out and they tend to tune everything else out.
And one of the first things we go to is consequences.
Because that's all we've been taught as parents is, well you just need to give them a consequence and that will change their behavior.
But it doesn't work and I've seen this on Instagram and
even on Thanksgiving Day we got email after email about this so I thought I
would record a special kind of crash course in understanding how we approach
things how strong will kids work and I'm gonna try to keep this around 20 minutes
because of the holidays so forgive me because I don't have it all scripted out,
but I think you'll find this helpful,
especially those of you who aren't as familiar
with what we do.
So welcome.
This is Kirk Martin.
I'm founder of Celebrate Calm.
You can find us at Celebrate Calm.
This is the Calm Parenting Podcast.
So here's the thing about external consequences.
They tend not to work at changing human behavior.
Look, we have, there are consequences,
deadly consequences for eating too much and unhealthy, for drinking too much, for smoking, for speeding, and yet human beings do
all of those things every single day. Why? Because we're usually trying to address that outward
behavior that a child or adult is engaging in, but we're not
getting to the underlying reason. There's an assumption when you give a
consequence that behavior is driven by rational thinking. It's not. Almost
everything you and I do is irrational. It's driven on by something that's
emotional. There's usually something deeper going on and so we react to the outward behavior given external consequence and then wonder why
it isn't motivating to our kids inside. Because you can't always consequence a
child into doing something right? Like if your child's not doing schoolwork
whereas kind of shut down it's like well I'll just take away everything they own.
Your kids don't care because that doesn't change the fact you haven't given them tools to do their schoolwork
differently and
You also haven't sparked the internal motivation. And so there are real
limitations to this and the other part of this is
When you have a strong will child you have to understand that they value things different. The things that they value are
very different than you do because we go in thinking, well they just care about
making good decisions and pleasing people and being a compliant person and
caring about school and making their bed. No, they actually don't. What they value
more than anything else is their own agency, their autonomy, their independence.
They want to touch the hot stove. It is part of the process. It is a good part of the process.
It's just irritating and annoying for you as a parent. But you know, I talk bluntly and I don't do guilt or blame.
But it's also annoying that you continue to try to change their very nature.
This is how they came out of the womb, is it not? And yet we continue to fall back on our
kind of ineffective and sometimes it just becomes lazy. When I see the con... well if you give them a harsh enough consequence.
No, it won't work. They will fight you harder or they will just give up for right now, shut down and you have
nothing left.
And we have to be honest that sometimes we're just trying to change kids behavior for our
own convenience because it just irritates us.
I know as a dad sometimes I just wanted my son to listen to me because it was just easier that way. I just barked things out because
that's what my dad did. That was what what I was raised with. And so I want you
to know that just getting kids to behave and listen to me is not my ultimate goal.
It is to teach kids to be responsible for themselves. And as
long as I'm micromanaging and controlling their behavior, I'm actually
being responsible for my child's behavior because we all have control
issues and we have anxiety. And so I encourage you to approach this in a
different way. So the question becomes, well, do we just let kids get away with things?
Absolutely not.
This is not permissive parenting.
This isn't just do whatever you want.
Not at all.
So one concept we go through all the time, and I encourage you listen to past episodes.
There's an episode from August 4th on a child who won't accept
responsibility and it goes through the idea of ownership. So I believe, we all
believe very clearly in giving kids very clear boundaries and expectations. It's
just that I create larger boundaries for the strong willed child because I know
they're going to push. It's in their DNA. And so ownership
says this, hey I'm going to create a big box for you to live in conceptually. I have very clear
expectations, very clear boundaries. This is what my objective is, what I want you to do. But within
within within my boundaries, I give you some space, some space to do things differently than I would do them as long as we accomplish the same goal.
See, I'm not saying if you do your homework, if you get your chores done, if you get this
done.
No, it's getting done.
I just relinquish control over how you accomplishment accomplish it because with
our kids I want to make things a
challenge. Our kids love a challenge. They
like doing things in a different way. See
when you give them a challenge it does a
couple things. Your kids are very big
into needing brain stimulation. That's why
they procrastinate. It's why they push
people's buttons. It's why they pick on their siblings. That's why they procrastinate, it's why they push people's buttons,
it's why they pick on their siblings,
it's why they argue with you,
it's why they tap pencils and bounce their legs
and they chew on things.
That is all the need for brain stimulation in your kids.
And when you make it a challenge,
oh, you're stimulating the brain.
They also like to do things differently
than other people do it.
So that's why you will tear, rip your hair out thinking, I just asked you to do simple things and you won't people do it. So that's why you will tear rip your hair
out thinking I just asked you to do simple things and you won't even do it.
It's so easy let me show you how. Well as soon as you show them how they're like
well I don't want to do that. That's duh. That's boring. That's stupid. So I give
them some space to own it a little bit. Listen to that past episode. By the way
the episode we
recently did on why consequences don't work, that's October 2nd. I'm trying to
keep this short and giving you some reference points here. So here's another
thing I want you to think about is, one of our big things is I like to
give kids tools to succeed. See, consequences are, hey, if you don't
stop doing that you lose X. In a sense what we're doing is we're punishing a
child for failing, but instead I come alongside and I give them tools to
succeed. Right, it's an example of a kid who's blurting out in class, hey, if you
don't stop blurting out you miss recess. Well, they're just gonna miss recess because we haven't given them
any practical tools to help them with blurting out and we assume they're just
being rude, blurting out. That's not what's happening. These are kids with
very busy brains and so then they also have a lot of ideas but they struggle
with short-term memory so they're afraid they're going to forget their ideas. So
what do they do? They blurt out and then we just say hey cut it out or
else. Instead I go and I give them some talk tickets. I've been through
that in podcasts before of something tangible, physical they can hold up
instead of blurting out. It is a tool to create a success because then I get to
say as a teacher hey nice, nice job controlling yourself.
You held up your talk ticket.
Hey, go ahead and share your amazing off-topic idea
because it's always gonna be off-topic.
And now I get to praise the child and affirm
and say, hey, that was really good self-control
that you just exhibited.
So that whole idea of giving kids tools to succeed,
I would look up the August 7th episode on creating successes.
It's really, really helpful.
So we mentioned this before.
So let me get to something control issues, right?
You have to control your own control issues.
You and I get very rigid.
We grew up a certain way.
And so we carry all of our baggage
and just all of our life into parenthood
and say, well, this is the way I did it as a kid,
this is the way my parents did it,
it's the way I prefer doing things in life,
so just do it this way.
And that makes total sense
because that has helped you be successful.
But now you're imposing what you think is the right way,
your way, on a child who will naturally resist that.
And so you've got to control being so rigid. I believe 80% of power struggles with our kids
begin with us as parents. That's not blame or guilt. It's just reality of how it happens.
You have to control your own anxiety. You and I have anxiety about our child's future because we
don't see them living up to their potential and they're capable of so much
more so we lecture and we get on them and nitpick them and they tend to do the
opposite. And I also want to give them space. Hugely important if you are
unfamiliar with us go back through the past podcast. We talk about giving kids
space to process their disappointment,
space to make a decision. If you stand over a strong-willed child and demand that they do
something, I will bet you a thousand dollars that almost every single time they will resist you even
more. But if you give them a little space to figure it out themselves, which is what we want in the long run anyway.
We want kids being responsible for it themselves,
not being micromanaged.
The strong willed child is not gonna grow up
and have a corporate job where someone micromanages
him or her all the time.
So I wanna raise them according to their nature,
but I don't have to let them get away with things.
I have very clear boundaries.
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Look, when I enforce my boundaries, enforce consequences, in our terminology, if you ever
go through our programs,
it's called I keep my promises.
Hey, I promise you if X happens,
if you choose X behavior, this will happen.
Then when I go and do it,
I'm just keeping my promise to my child
because that speaks of integrity.
I don't do a lot of consequences because they don't work.
But when I do, it's even even matter of fact, there is no drama
when I discipline. But the truth is I put so much more energy into giving kids ownership of their
choices, giving them space, making it a challenge. And here's another one, creating successes. I want
to purposefully, especially with younger kids, instead of always just waiting for them to do something wrong, one of our phrases is,
whenever you say no to something inappropriate,
always say yes to something appropriate
because otherwise their whole child is gonna be,
no, no, stop that, don't do that, stop it, stop it.
Instead, I work with their nature
and I set them up for success.
So more often than not, I'm saying, hey, that was a nice job with that hey that's good progress remember you
praise for progress not perfection because perfection doesn't exist
especially with these kids so listen to some of those past podcasts on creating
successes so here's here's the difference right most of us were raised
in kind of this very authoritarian mindset, right?
Fear and intimidation that our parents use, that's what I grew up with and that's what
I started to use with our son, as if that will motivate them to behave.
But think about this when you're using that approach. When I'm doing that, I am actually in a way being responsible for
their behavior. I'm bringing so much energy to my fear and intimidation, to
me getting on them, micromanaging and lecturing, that in a sense I'm actually
being responsible for their behavior for them. And think about this, then the child only
learns to make good choices under fear or out of a threat of force.
So they're not actually learning how to make good decisions. They're only
learning to make these good choices to avoid being punished, that's not good in
the long run. Now I understand why we want to do it because in the moment
guess what happens? Well their outward behavior is usually better for a little
while. That makes it more convenient for us. It allows us to lie to ourselves and
say, hey starting to behave more effectively. No, they're just doing it out of fear and out of punishment.
That's not what I really want.
And the other part of this is sometimes, well, I just need to shut down that behavior.
Well, you can shut it down, but now you have a child who either internalizes that anger
and turns it inward on themselves, or you get a child who can't speak up never learns
how to speak up for themselves and mom's listening you know exactly what I mean many of you were shut
down and you never learned how to say no to men to different people to your friends and you get
walked on because you never learned how to speak up and you didn't trust your voice.
I don't wanna shut kids down.
I want to teach them how to control themselves.
I wanna teach them how to problem solve.
Let me come back to that.
So I tried the authoritarian approach, many of us have,
but then our society swung all the way over
to where we talk really sweetly to our kids,
and in some
ways we excuse their behavior and it sounds weak and condescending. When we
talk to a strong, when you talk to a strong willed child in that really sweet
tone, honey do you want to talk? You know what they're thinking? Why are you
talking to me like this? I know I'm only four but I'm four going on 14. They don't take it seriously.
It creates instability, and the kids are like,
wait, why is there not an adult in charge here?
So where we come in, if you're new to us,
is right in the middle there.
Hey, I am the calm, authoritative leader.
I'm patient, I listen, I'm not reactive, I can understand, but I'm also
firm and I have very clear boundaries. I just, when I enforce them, I just don't
get all emotional and I don't blame the child and I don't make it personal. And
so I keep my promises. I have integrity and I practice controlling myself first. And
when I do that, here's the benefit. Here's what I'm really after with kids. It's not
really changing their behavior outwardly. It is giving them the tools to control
themselves. See, the greatest discipline is not disciplining a child outwardly. It
is them learning self-discipline, but they learn that by me modeling it. And
when I slow my world down and in situations instead of reacting, I can't
believe that you lied to me, why would you steal something, why don't you ever
listen to me, see how that becomes and? Why don't you ever listen to me? See how that
becomes and after a while with the strong willed child all they internalize is, I'm
a bad kid, I'm the black sheep of the family, my dad doesn't like me, why can't
I ever succeed? And they'll even rebel even harder, especially in the teen years,
or they'll just shut down and internalize that something's wrong with
them. But when I slow my world down and Iize that something's wrong with them.
But when I slow my world down and I can normalize this of like, of course,
totally get why you would stay up late. I get why you would steal that and take that. I'm not excusing it.
I'm just normalizing it that that's what human beings have done for since the beginning of time.
Of course you didn't do that. And then I can show them how to do it a different way.
Because discipline means to teach and I want to show them a different way to handle their behavior
and then when I do I can say, oh that was really cool how you handled that. Hey I saw how your
brother was picking on you, was provoking you, and you walked away.
Fist bump, that shows me you're growing up.
That shows me you're mature.
And I can teach them.
We've done whole podcasts.
In fact, if you go to celebratecalm.com and look up under our podcasts, there's a directory
there.
And we go, we have it listed out, like the ones that are on Stealing in Line on big emotional
meltdowns.
There's a
podcast there we list for dads
specifically for all kinds of different issues
So go back and kind of binge listen to those
Over them over the holiday weekend, by the way
Let your kids listen because you know what they're gonna say if you let them listen
It'll be like that guy's right. Like who is this guy? That guy's describing exactly how it feels to be me.
This is what's happening in our home. Ask them if that's true. You don't have to do some big
groveling. I'm so sorry. I don't do that. I'm just like, hey, I didn't understand that. So
what do you guys want to do moving forward? Because here's what I'm really after teaching and problem solving for the guys out there
This is what we do and the moms but this is what we do in the corporate world on the football field
Everywhere we go we encounter situations that are difficult at the office
We're not throwing our hands up in the air and screaming and yelling at people and sending them go to your cubicle
No, we're bringing them into a room
and we're saying, hey, what we're doing isn't working.
So I wanna understand what's going on,
what's the root of the problem.
And then let's come up with a different strategy
to make this work.
And then we break the huddle and we go,
we execute our play and we problem solve.
That's what I'm after.
That has nothing to do with using fear intimidation,
but it also has nothing to do with just letting kids do
whatever they want to do.
Not at all.
So thank you for listening.
I know I talked really fast in this
because I wanted to get it under 20 minutes
and try to fit in a lot.
So binge listen to the podcast.
If you happen to have our programs listen
on the app share it with your spouse share it with your relatives we can send
the programs to your child's teachers so they understand their brain like that
ADHD University program all teachers should listen that they'll know exactly
how to work with our kids let your kids listen to our podcasts to our programs
because I think it will really help.
If we can help you in any way, please let us know.
We're at CelebrateCalm.com.
We do have a huge sale going on.
And if you ever need help financially,
don't let that stop you.
Reach out to us because we want to help everybody.
I have enormous respect for parents who are working so hard to change themselves
and understand these strong willed kids.
These kids have a great future ahead of them.
So, love you all.
Talk to you soon.
Bye-bye.