Calm Parenting Podcast - Handling A Demanding Child Without Losing Your Mind (Give Their Brain A Win)
Episode Date: July 7, 2024Handling A Demanding Child Without Losing Your Mind (Give Their Brain A Win) Do you have a child who comes downstairs in the morning (afternoon and evening) DEMANDING things or with a single-minded fo...cus on doing something? You rightfully and reasonably say no to their request and it sets off a huge power struggle, meltdowns, constant arguing, throwing things and words around. How can you handle these situations without losing your mind or your relationship? Kirk shows you how. We are extending our Summer Sale for the month of July. Visit https://celebratecalm.com/products/ to purchase the Get Everything Package at the lowest prices of the year. BETTER HELP The Calm Parenting Podcast is sponsored by BetterHelp. Take a moment. Visit https://BetterHelp.com/CALMPOD today to get 10% off your first month. SIMPLISAFE Protect your home this summer with 20% off any new SimpliSafe system when you sign up for Fast Protect Monitoring. Just visit https://simplisafe.com/calm.  AIR DOCTOR 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!  AQUATRU Today my listeners receive 20% OFF any AquaTru purifier! Just go to https://AquaTru.com and enter code “CALM “ at checkout. PHYLA Tackle acne’s root causes for clearer, healthier skin for your child. Get 25% off your first order of Phyla with the code CALM. Go to https://phyla.com and type in the code CALM. ACORNS Head to https://acorns.com/calm or download the Acorns app to start saving and investing for your future today! K12 Join the more than 2 million families who have been served by K12, and empower your student to reach their full potential now. Go to https://www.k12.com/CALM today to learn more and find a tuition-free K12-powered school near you. 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. So do you have a child
who comes in the kitchen in the morning or greets you when
you get home in the afternoon demanding something or they've got this single-minded focus that
they're going to do something and they don't walk in and ask, they just start doing it. So you
rightfully and reasonably say no to their request and then it sets off a huge power struggle,
meltdowns, constant arguing,
throwing things, throwing words around. So how can you handle these situations without losing your
mind or your relationship? That is what we're going to discuss on today's episode of the Calm
Parenting Podcast. So welcome. This is Kirk Martin, founder of Celebrate Calm. You can find
us at CelebrateCalm.com. Two quick notes. We are still enjoying
our son's wedding and extended family time. So I'm going to ask you to wait another week before
emailing about specific issues you're encountering. And here's an unexpected benefit to that. Just
last night, a couple from the Netherlands emailed and said, Hey, we're thinking about emailing you
about these two issues. But instead, we listened to the
Stop Sibling Fights and Stop Battles Over Screens programs. Those are two of the programs in the
package that you get. And asked, what would the calm guy do? And they said, I'm happy to tell you,
we figured it out ourselves, and it's working. Look, that's the coolest part of this. I want to
give you, I want to equip you. I want to empower you.
I hate that word.
I want to give you tools so that you can internalize this.
And I can tell you, as you listen to the programs on the app and you get it inside of you, your tone of voice, how you see situations, it begins to become more automatic, more natural.
Your response, all the scripts start to add up.
And so what's really cool is now you feel confident.
This couple feels confident like, hey, we handled that.
We applied the principles.
So they ended the email and said, we would say it's like falling with your nose in the
butter.
And I guess that's a Dutch phrase for it was an unexpected surprise.
So to our Dutch friends out there, bedankt. And this episode is dedicated to Carmine. Carmine is
an amazing young man who listens to the podcast with his dad before bedtime. Hey, Carmine,
thanks for listening. You've got a great future ahead of you, and I'm proud to know you're
listening. So here's some insight into your strong you, and I'm proud to know you're listening.
So here's some insight into your strong will kids.
These are kids with busy brains who are often visual,
and they get excited about their ideas.
Look, think about this. They begin, they wake up,
they picture something in their brains,
and now they've got a mission, they've got a vision,
and they wanna carry that out.
That is going to serve them so well in life.
It is also going to cause endless power struggles with parents and teachers because their ideas are
going to come into conflict with what you and teachers want them to do each day. And if you,
look, if you can teach your kids to craft their lives correctly, they'll get to pursue their curiosity
more often than they just have to simply follow the dictates of others. And I know it's a balance,
but this is the way your kids are made. So be intentional about this. You're not going to change
their nature, but you can teach them to be patient, to be selfless, to be responsible.
And we're going to get into that. It's really cool. I'm excited about this podcast. So
let's say your child wakes up and already has an agenda. And this is an example from a family I
was working with and their son geeks out on doing new things. And like many of our kids, this child likes doing adult type activities.
Do not dismiss or ignore this insight, that trait. Use it to your advantage. Your kids are often not
that awesome at being a kid. They're not that great at navigating the kid world. The really
good news is we're not raising our kids to be kids. We're raising them
to be adults. And these kids actually happen to be very good in the adult world. It just means
you're going to have to shift your perspective. So use that to your advantage. So here's a common
situation. You can plug in your own, but let me use this because it's a good one. So in this case,
their son wanted to come downstairs
intent on making coffee. And that's not that weird. Casey drank coffee from a young age. It actually
calmed him down and actually helped him focus brain stimulation. So child comes in and intent
on making coffee. Now you as the mom or dad have 13 good reasons that your son should not make coffee then. And all of your
reasons are understandable. They're reasonable. And you're not being wrong at all. We've talked
about this, haven't we? It's not that you're doing anything wrong. That's what makes it so
difficult with a strong-willed child because the things that work on your compliant everyday other kids, they backfire on this child. So
you're not being wrong, but it's also true that sometimes we as parents get in the habit of
reflexively saying no to our kids. And isn't that ironic given that our strong will kids
reflexively say no to things that we ask them to do. So this week,
I want you to catch yourself, think for a couple seconds, and then find a way to say yes to
something they can do within your boundaries. Look, there's nothing wrong with saying no to
your child. In fact, if you go through our programs, I'll actively show you how and when to say no, because it is very important, as a way to teach
your child how to handle the inevitable disappointments in life. It's important to
learn how to say no. It's important for you to know, especially young moms and dads, that it's
okay that your kids are mad at you sometimes,
because that just means you're being not a strict parent, a responsible parent,
because you know what's best for them. But in most of these cases, here's what I want you to do,
and I want you to practice that this coming week. Find something you can say yes to within your
boundaries. It may not be exactly what your child is wanting or demanding,
but I want you to find a way to say yes. And when I was talking to these parents, what hit me was
this. This kid is coming downstairs and his brain is firing on all cylinders. He woke up, got that
vision in his brain and wanted to carry it out. He's got an agenda. He's got a mission to complete. So what I wanted
them to do this first thing every morning, give his brain a win. And I know that's a weird phrase,
but it's important to create successes, to get positive momentum and feed that brain in very
healthy ways. And look, I know this is hard for some of you because your kids' brains
work differently than yours do. And so we often misjudge their motives. And if you do get our
programs, go through the Stop Power Struggles with a Strong-Willed Child. It is foundational
to understanding how do their brains work? Because otherwise we're going to label them all the time
as they're defiant, they're disobedient,
they're rebellious. And sometimes they are, but usually it's something else. And look, I know this
is hard because your kids don't come into the kitchen or greet you after work and say, mother,
father, thank you for providing all of these opportunities for us that you never had. May I
please make some coffee? May I please do X now? I'd appreciate it if you'd let me.
They're not going to do that. They just head straight to the coffee pot and they begin doing
their thing. They begin getting into stuff. And in your head, you're like, dude, you don't even know
what you're doing. What are you doing? There's a way to do this. Why don't you ask me? If you would
just ask me, I would help you out. Or you just go right
to your no. But they just head for it and they start doing it. And they're relentless and they
wear you down. And when you try to explain rationally why they can't make coffee this
morning, it just triggers a big fight. And then they ask why. Or they'll just ignore you. And
then you're going to be tempted to respond with your own tone. You know what?
I said no.
Did you not hear me?
Listen, there are times when you can, and then you trail off into some useless lecture.
But tomorrow, I want you to use this process instead.
Or maybe this afternoon.
Check your own anxiety.
Check your own control issues.
Check your own triggers.
And then do this.
Number one, say yes to the idea and concept first by affirming something positive.
You know what?
I think making coffee is a great idea.
Now, do you really?
No, because you know he's going to leave a big mess and you just don't want to have to
deal with that this morning.
You've got other stuff that needs to go on and you don't have time with all your kids to get all this done.
But this isn't some moral issue. It's just a preference. So you bite your tongue and you hear
yourself adding this. You know what? I actually think it's pretty cool and grown up that you know
how to do this at your age. Ooh, see, that's a shift
because here's what our real thoughts are.
Great, you're motivated to make coffee, a grownup thing,
but I can't even get you to put your dishes in the sink,
take out the trash or do one assignment in school.
I get that, but this is what we're doing here.
This is what we're about is shifting your perspective
with this child because the traditional perspective will not ever work. It'll ruin
relationships and you won't get them to behave anyway. So watch how cool that is. You know what?
I think it's actually pretty cool and grown up that you know how to do this at your age. Number two, then say yes to him making coffee, but add a challenge. Make it more
grown up. Hey, could you make me a cup? In fact, I've got an idea. Could you look up some different
recipes with some healthy spices you could begin adding to our coffee, like ginger or turmeric?
See, instead of the immediate shutdown and ensuing
power struggle, you're now engaging him and giving him a challenge. But here's your question.
Aren't you just giving in? You could make that argument, but I would make the argument that we
make these decisions every single day in our interactions with others and ourselves. Look, I compromise with myself daily at the gym when I choose an easier workout over a tougher one,
but I still worked out. I do it daily with my family and friends. I put aside what I want
or what is most comfortable to me, and I compromise to the degree that it maximizes our relationship
without tipping me into resentment. See, if you're always compromising and always doing everything
for everybody else and nothing for yourself, moms, if you're always doing that because you learn that
from your mom, it's generational pattern you need to break, otherwise you're just going to be
resentful. After all I do for you. See, if you're doing that, that's not healthy. So you compromise to the degree, and you don't have to call it compromise,
you could call it being selfless, because that's one of our core things is I want to be selfless,
and I want to put others before me, right? But I do that to the degree that it maximizes our
relationship without tipping me into resentment. Are you giving in to your spouse or friends when you agree to meet halfway or change your mind
or put their preferences above yours?
No.
But we have this idea sometimes
with the parent-child relationship
that it's different, like it's some dictatorship
in which the authority figure's primary purpose
is to wield ultimate executive power
in some insecure bid for power and to train his or her
subject to learn how to obey. Look, much of that that we have comes from these misconceptions that
we have, this upbringing in which authoritarian parents merely pass down law-based religious
conceptions. Some of you have that deep inside of you. I did but I don't want my son to obey me I want him
to trust me because I have his best interests at heart because we've built a trusting relationship
I don't need him to carry out my arbitrary wishes or do things out of obligation because I'm the
authority figure in the home I want him to do these things because out of the generosity of his heart,
this is reciprocated,
because hopefully this has been molded and modeled
by his mom and dad,
by how we treat him and others in the world.
So out of that, our child, your child,
reciprocates with selfless acts and kindness
because he wants to, not because he has to, not out of obligation or out of fear.
So I encourage you, wrestle with these ideas of what a good authority figure is. Because in my
life, what I found is good authority figures are patient and they walk alongside me. Look,
they don't let me get away with my BS and they challenge me, but they walk alongside me and show me how to do that
instead of just demanding it from above. Okay, so back to our example. You and your kids, look,
you and your kids are not equals when it comes to decision-making power. You have the ultimate
authority. You can say no whenever you want, and that's completely fine. But I want to encourage you, because you are the one with power, to exercise it with humility,
especially with the strong-willed kids.
Again, not giving in.
We don't have to be permissive, but I also don't have to go,
I'm the authority figure.
I told you to do it.
Your job is to obey.
In between there is a trusting relationship.
So in this situation, give your child's brain a
win. Create a success. Number three, give your child some ownership. You know if you listen to
our programs, we talk all the time about giving your kids ownership of their choices within your
boundaries. It's really powerful. So maybe you say, hey, why don't you become the barista of our home? You're giving your child some ownership
of this task and asking him to assume a more adult-like, more responsible position. See,
this is what I'm really after. I don't want your kids just to do what you tell them to do all the
time. That's fine. But then I'm setting them up for a life in which their job
is to go through life just doing things that they're supposed to do. I wanted to raise a
responsible child. I want more responsibility. So let me keep going with this. Let me repeat that.
You're giving your child ownership of the task, and you're actually asking your child to assume a more adult-like, more responsible position.
Now, number four, I affirm again, hey, that's really cool.
You know, why don't you be in charge of this every morning?
And actually, I'm going to give you a challenge.
Maybe you could come up with some different recipes.
And maybe once a week, you could cook a meal for us because I think you make an excellent chef. See, you're
lifting your child up now and expecting more of your child. See, in saying no all the time,
you're just asking your child to be obedient to your wishes. But we're actually asking something
greater of your child to learn to be more responsible, to use his or her gifts, talents, and passions,
and desires to do something constructive for the family. They're going to struggle to do their
chores, but they'll often, if you change that around and you're like, hey, cooking a meal for
us once a week, awesome. That's teaching you to be responsible, which is what we're after. It's a lot better than just having you do some little chore.
So I'd rather, I mentioned this before,
and you're really going to have to wrestle with this, moms and dads.
I'd rather raise a responsible child than an obedient child.
An obedient child merely carries out instructions.
A responsible child must think, use his or her gifts creatively,
and serve a higher purpose. And that's a critical paradigm shift. I can tell you,
with a grown son, the reason he is so good at what he does, both with Celebrate Calm and his
other full-time job, is that he's extremely responsible. He's very good in the adult world.
So watch what happens with this.
Instead of just complaining to your spouse, to friends, to yourself,
that your child is disobedient to your largely arbitrary wishes,
instead, watch, you begin to change the narrative in your heart
and in your child's head and heart to this.
I have a child who is
responsible and capable of doing adult type jobs. And that is going to make my child wildly
successful in the real world. See the difference? He never listens to anything I say. She doesn't
follow through on things. He doesn't do his chores. Why can't they ever do that? Instead,
my narrative is, man, I give my child a challenge, and this child steps up and takes ownership of it.
And now I don't even have to worry about it because they're hugely responsible when they're doing these things.
My child's going to kill it in the adult world because otherwise we spend 18 years trying to get them to care about what we care about
and try to be good at being a kid and good at doing schoolwork all the time. And we crush their confidence. We kill their confidence.
Instead, I look out to the future and say, man, this is going to serve you well in the real world.
Now, here's number five, and this is going to be tough for you. Know that your child in this
situation is going to leave little droplets of coffee and cream and
spill sugar and leave little wrappers on the counter. And he's not going to clean up the right
way. And I can say that with pretty much a hundred percent certainty. So what's your response to this?
One of two things. One, you could go a little bit more even matter of fact to say, hey,
no more barista job and definitely no tip until you learn how to clean up.
Look, I'm perfectly fine with that.
What I don't like is, you know what?
If you're not going to learn how to clean up, you're not going to get to do coffee anymore.
See, it's that snotty tone.
It's that endless lecture.
You know, we really need to learn how to clean up around here because if you don't learn, stop all the lectures.
Talk to them like adults. Look how
quick that, hey, just want you to know, love what you're doing. Love the barista, but fantastic.
You're doing grown up things. You're responsible. But look, no more barista job and definitely no
tip because I kind of like in this situation occasionally if they go above and beyond,
leaving like a little tip of some kind. Hey, no tip until you learn how
to clean up. I like that a lot. I would try that. Look, some of your kids, they just don't clean up
and they're not. And so you can say, oh, you're letting them get away with it. But you've tried
to make them do it 87 times and they just don't. And in that case, I just put some music on. I
smile. You savor your coffee while you're cleaning up next to your child, smiling and having
a conversation and telling them how much you love their coffee and giving a vision for their lives
of all the other responsible things they could begin doing. Now, I know this is not the way you
always pictured your home running. This isn't how you pictured your child behaving because some of
you grew up in these really rigid homes. It's like, well, I'm just going to tell them what to do and they're just going to do it.
And then you had a strong willed child and they brought out all of your immaturity and
your triggers so you can work on it and grow up and be free from all these traps.
But that's, but look, this is what I'm talking about.
This is the reality.
This is the child you've been given.
And watch what you just did here, which is cool.
You took what was a certain power struggle, right? Look, nobody wins in a power struggle.
It always results in tears and strained relationships. And you turned it into a
bonding moment because you stepped back from your own anxiety and you paused for a minute
and you found a way to say yes to something.
So this week, I want you to think of some common situations in your home in which you and your
spouse act like Dr. No all the time. Begin to rethink those situations and think, how can we
be creative? How can we get the yes to something? How can we encourage our kids to use his or her
gifts and become more responsible, all within our acceptable
boundaries.
Just make sure your boundaries are big enough.
Don't be so rigid.
Watch your child's expression when you say, you know, I usually say no to that, but I'm
going to say yes today with these specific conditions.
See, I actually believe you can do this really well.
And you could even add this. You know what? I wonder if you could even do this better than I can do it. See, now
that's motivating. And I know this stuff isn't easy. I understand I'm challenging many of your
most deeply held beliefs and assumptions about parenting. So I appreciate you wrestling with
these ideas. Look, I like to laugh and be lighthearted,
but the stakes are high here because if we keep picking these power struggles,
this will destroy relationships and lives
for decades with serious fallout.
So it's important that you really wrestle with these ideas.
And I'm gonna ask you to do this for a few weeks,
do it for a month, see how it works,
see how your child responds.
You're gonna be uncomfortable and you're gonna question yourself, right? And every good family is going to say,
are we letting our child get away with things? But they don't do X and Y, but they do these things.
And other people are going to judge you. And that's normal. And it's good to wrestle.
And I encourage you, keep listening to the podcast. Keep, if you have the programs,
download them to your app, to the app. Tell us.
We'll share it with your spouse.
We'll share the programs with your parents so everybody's on the same page.
Let your kids listen.
Look, Carmine is listening to this podcast.
Let them listen to the Straight Talk for Kids program because Casey, our son, will encourage
him and challenge him.
Hey, you got to learn how to control yourself because if you learn how to control yourself,
your parents don't have to. It's really cool. If you need some help,
if you need help with the products or financial assistance, reach out to us at Casey, C-A-S-E-Y at celebrate calm.com. Thanks for listening. Thanks for being open to a different way.
And thanks for sharing the podcast. Love you all. Bye-bye.