Calm Parenting Podcast - Get Your Kids to Listen Without Being Mean or Asking 12 Times
Episode Date: March 17, 2024Get Your Kids to Listen Without Being Mean or Asking 12 Times Do you ever feel like you have to ask your child 12 times just to do something simple like put their shoes on and get in the car? And then... you rightfully get frustrated, adopt a demanding tone, trigger more resistance, and then end up yelling? Of course you’ve experienced this! Listen to learn three strategies to get your kids to listen without being mean or asking 12 times! Our Spring Sale Continues This Week: You get everything we have ever recorded delivered directly to an app on your iPhone, iPad, Android, or computer. Listen anywhere, anytime. You get 35 hours of practical strategies and concrete examples, along with multiple PDF workbooks. Make 2024 different. Click here to learn more and take advantage of our Spring Sale: https://celebratecalm.com/products/ Questions? Email Casey@CelebrateCalm.com and he'll be happy to help out personally. Try AG1 and get a FREE 1-year supply of Vitamin D3 & K2 AND 5 free AG1 Travel Packs with your first purchase exclusively at https://drinkAG1.com/calm. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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to get the most effective learning program out there at the best price. Do you ever feel like
you have to ask your child 12 times just to do something
simple, like put your shoes on and get in the car, and then you rightfully get frustrated?
You adopt a demanding tone and you trigger more resistance and then end up yelling. Well,
of course you've experienced this, and that's why we're going to address this with three specific strategies on this episode
of the Calm Parenting Podcast. So welcome. This is Kirk Martin, founder of Celebrate Calm. You
can find us at CelebrateCalm.com. If you need help, reach out to our strong-willed son who did
struggle with these things. His name is Casey, C-A-S-E-Y, at CelebrateCalm.com. Tell us about
your kids, ages of kids. What do you struggle with?
We get together as a family, discuss it. We reply back to you personally and try to give you very
practical tools because that's what we do. It's what we love to do. We want to help your family.
So here's what I want to do. I want to give you three different ways to handle a common situation
so you can get your kids to listen without being mean or begging them and pleading
and asking 12 times, right? And you can apply these strategies to countless situations, but I want you
to have lots of tools in your parenting tool belt, right? Because it's not like, well, I've won
discipline strategy and it works all the time. No, you've got to have different tools for different
situations. And that's also why I really want you to listen to the Calm Parenting Package on the new app because you can listen right on
your phone as much as you want. You just keep it on and it just really helps you because in the
moment, you know exactly what to do. So here's the situation. You struggle to get your child in the
car to go somewhere. And in previous episodes, I've detailed exactly what to do
when that is related to anxiety.
So I'm not covering that here.
But it often plays out like this.
You call out to your daughter,
Grace, come downstairs, honey.
We need to go.
Well, she doesn't move.
Come on, honey.
We're going to be late.
As if she cares.
She'd rather be really late. She doesn't want to
go. Hey, Grace, did you hear me? Come on. I'm not going to tell you again. Well, that's a lie
because you are going to tell her again, right? And then in a couple seconds, in an increasingly
frustrated tone that never works and only escalates into a power struggle that,
by the way, guarantees you're going to be late and it hurts your relationship,
you will likely unleash threats. You'll yell, create a lot more drama. We've all been there.
No guilt, no blame. Let's just stop going there over and over again. So here are three different
strategies to use, and you can use all of these.
Number one, I want you to learn how to be tough, firm, and direct in a no-nonsense manner,
because I like tough, firm, no-nonsense discipline. I like, right, this clear setting of expectations
and consequences delivered in an even, matter-of- fact, non-emotional, business-like tone that says,
I mean business, not messing around here.
So it may sound like this.
Hey Grace, here's how this is going to work from now on.
When I ask you to come get in the car, I expect you to come.
My time is important.
I'm not messing around with this.
See, you get 30 minutes of screen time each day.
And what I want you to know is that from now on,
for every minute that you are late getting into the car,
I promise you will choose to forfeit 10 minutes of your screen time each night.
So if you're three minutes late, then you forfeit 30 minutes. Is that clear? The appropriate tone is this. I'm
not joking. I'm not suggesting this. I'm not talking to you like this. I'm not
asking you to please help me, right? The tone is you don't have another option
because my time is important and it is more important than yours. Don't mess with me here, right? And I like that tone. I'm not messing around with this.
And the consequence, oh, it will be swift and it will be severe. Just not mean or personal. See,
that's what's different. I'm not getting frustrated, angry, and taking it out on the child. I can have a severe and swift consequence without making it personal or being mean.
I can say, look, test me.
I will follow through on this no matter how much you whine, cry, complain,
because I keep my promises and you can trust me.
In the discipline program we have, we go through that of instead of just
enforcing consequences, I keep my promises. So see, I said, I promise for every minute you make
me late, you forfeit 10 minutes of yours. So then when I follow through on that, I'm just keeping my
promises so you can trust me. I want you to know this, moms and dads. There's nothing mean about
this. I'm not making it personal. I'm not bringing up all of her past failures. You never come on
time. You always make me late. See, watch those absolutes, the never, the always, because they
doom your child to failure. I'm not physically or emotionally threatening her.
You know, I'm going to withhold my love and affection for you
if you inconvenience me.
Not at all.
By the way, no sweet tone.
Please stop with the really sweet tone
because it sounds patronizing and weak.
It sounds like, you know, honey,
it's really important that you learn to respect people's time,
blah, blah, blah. They don't care, right? It's not the way that you teach these kids. You teach your
child to respect your time because that's a priority and you respect your own time, right?
The greatest way to get respect is to demonstrate self-respect. No lecturing, no trying to convince,
right? Honey, when you're late, it makes me late for work
and then my boss gets upset
and then we won't be able to afford to pay our bills, right?
You don't need to burden your child with this
and you're never going to convince your child.
Instead, you lead your child, right?
And this was inspired by a really great mom
who emailed this.
Kirk, it wasn't until I started listening
to your stuff daily on the app that this tone finally sunk in for me.
See, it's hard for me as a mom because my go-to is to first be overly sweet.
And then when that doesn't work, I get snotty and harsh.
And she said, listening to your programs for hours helps.
So I want you to do that, right?
Because in between the sweetie, the lecturing, the convincing,
is me just being firm and direct, right?
And by the way, we have a spring sale going on now.
So go to CelebrateCalm.com or email Casey.
He'll help you out with a sale.
So let's try that this week.
Practice even firm matter of fact.
It's really cool how it works.
Number two, connect.
See, connection often leads to greater compliance.
So let's go back to that scene.
Grace is upstairs in her room,
and you yell upstairs for her to come down,
and she doesn't.
And you pause here,
because part of what we want to teach you
is how to slow down your world inside
so that instead of reacting and escalating very quickly, you learn to read the moment.
See, in this situation, it's been a long week.
She's tired. You're tired.
So you take the extra minute and you walk up the stairs to her room,
even though you don't feel
like it. And even though you shouldn't have to, because other humans should just do what you say,
ASAP. I get that. But in this moment, you walk upstairs and you sit next to her and you say,
I know you're tired. I wouldn't want to go either. I'm tired too. But see, you say this with some energy. I have an idea for what we can
do afterwards to celebrate our week together. Or, but I bet on the way there, I bet we could
brainstorm a way to have your friend come for a sleepover this weekend. Or, hey, but on the way
there, I'd love to hear about X or Y or something your child's interested in. See, you don't have to bribe with a reward, but do connect.
And you can empathize, right, without saying, I know you're tired.
Let's stay home.
I don't have to do that.
I know you're tired.
I'm tired too.
If I were you, I wouldn't want to go either.
But here's what we're going to do.
And I lead with a little bit of energy.
But oftentimes what helps is that connection rather than barking, which you have the right
to do as a parent, right?
But instead of barking from downstairs, you take the extra 60 seconds, you go upstairs,
you sit and you spend a minute.
So that took maybe two extra minutes, but it may have saved a five, 10, 15, two hour
fight that you have.
Compliance is usually motivated or cooperation, connection leads to compliance and cooperation
and it's just helpful.
Number 3 option, lead your kids.
This is really important moms and dads.
So let's use this as an example.
I was on a recent phone consultation and dad says, hey, I want to get my kids outside after
school or else they kind of get sucked into screens. So here's what I want you not to do.
Never ask this. Hey kids, do you want to go to the park? Well, the answer is going to be no 99%
of the time. I don't want to expend any effort and go outside. I'd rather sit on these screens,
right? So once they say no, then you're going to want to lecture
and convince your kids why they should want to go,
how important it is to get fresh air,
and how fun it will be, and so on.
Stop, right?
Instead, lead them.
Use it like an assumed close.
You get your jacket on, you pack some snacks,
and then you lead.
Hey guys, we're going to the park for 47 minutes.
And you say that confidently, matter-of-factly. You're not looking for their assent, right? You're
not looking for their agreement. You're not even looking for a good attitude because you're not
going to get it. You're making a statement of fact. Hey, we're going to the park for 47 minutes.
You don't have to ask for permission or get their buy-in, all right? And you're also not
going to get a great attitude. Look, I like saying we're going for 47 minutes. Specificity is really
important because it means you're intentional, means you've got a game plan, and it sticks in
the brain, and there's an end game. You're not saying, hey, let's go there for a while. That's
too generic at times, right? So you say that and you begin walking to
the park. But please know and be prepared for the following. Your kids are going to complain.
So expect the pushback and the excuses and the whining of how it's too cold or too hot or I'm
too tired or my legs are going to fall off, right? Don't take it personally.
Girls, you know what? I'm trying to do something fun for you, and this is all I get. I don't see
any other parents out here doing this. A little bit of gratitude would be nice. When we were kids,
look, I don't even want you to turn around and look at their sad little faces and try to reason
with them or convince them or threaten them.
And don't bring up your childhood, right? It just makes you sound old. I just want you to keep
walking. Lead them. Because you know this, once they do get to the park, they'll have a great time.
Make it fun. Play, run, fall in the dirt, let them be kids, chase them, laugh, get some sensory exercise and
pressure on their bodies and enjoy this time because now you are being the leader of the home
instead of hoping your kids just love your amazing idea, right? Now, I want you to try this too. If
you want for fun, try leaving after exactly 47 minutes. Girls, 47 minutes is up. We need to go. And now
see if they complain about leaving because you can do that sometimes just for fun. So let's choose
a situation today or this week and try one or more of these strategies. I want you to get used to
tough, even, matter-of-fact tone. Learn that voice.
It's one of the reasons if you get the spring sale
or if you already have our programs,
listen to them on the app because I model this
again and again and again how to do this.
And act like you mean it.
Keep your promises by enforcing consequences
without emotion or anger.
Connect with your kids.
See how they respond.
And lead your kids without reacting.
This will get them to follow you. If you want more ideas, then just keep listening, right?
If you need help with any of this, if you want to book a live event, be sure to reach out to Casey,
C-A-S-E-Y, CelebrateCalm.com. Thank you for listening to our podcast. I appreciate you
rating it online so that more people get to see it. If you like our podcast, give it a five star.
But most of all, I encourage you and appreciate you sharing it with other parents who are
struggling. Why? Parenting's really hard. Parenting a strong-willed child is extremely difficult.
And we want to help. So thank you all. Love you all. Talk to you soon. Bye-bye.