Calm Parenting Podcast - How to Affirm a Child Who Rejects Praise
Episode Date: June 14, 2021How to Affirm a Child Who Rejects PraiseDo you have a child who rejects or resists your praise? Frustrating, isn't it? Our affirmation doesn't always resonate with how they feel inside or it feels dis...ingenuous. Kirk gives you a script to build your child's confidence through specific, effective praise. Our Father's Day Sale Ends This Weekend! You get the Calm Couples Marriage Mentoring Program FREE with your purchase of the Calm Parenting Package or the Get Everything Package. Make this your Father’s Day gift to yourself or tell your wife THIS is what you want. Want personal mentoring with Kirk via Phone? Click here to learn about mentoring packages. 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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Hey, so do you have a child who resists your praise? When you try to affirm your child,
they discount it. They don't want to hear it. Well, that's what we're going to go through today
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. If you need help,
call and praise my son, Casey Casey because he's pretty awesome.
Wasn't so much as a kid all the time, but he is now. And his name is Casey, C-A-S-E-Y,
at CelebrateCalm.com. So, oh, if you need help, tell us about your family. Tell us what you're
struggling with and we'll get back to you with some ideas, some strategies, some insight,
and hopefully we'll give you some hope. And if you need any of our resources, take advantage of the special Father's Day and Summer Sale we have going on right now.
If you need a custom package, ask Casey. So this will be kind of quick because I want you to
practice this this week. I was on a phone consultation with a couple and we were going
through, you know, long lists, kind of coming up with an action plan for their son. And one of
those things was, hey, he's not that great at school all the time, but he's really good. Like a couple of years ago, he took a wood cutting
class and he could make these intricate wood cutting designs. Used to be when he was a kid,
this is kind of instructive for you. So you're looking at 11, 12, 13 year old kid, or maybe a
nine year old kid, and he's kind of shut down and his gifts and passions are playing video games and
being defiant. So you start digging in on the phone consultation. You can do this yourself and
think back, what did he do before he shut down? What was he naturally curious about? And so the
parents, it's interesting when you do the consultation, you'll hear parents like, well,
here's what he's struggling with and this is such a fight. And so I always have to come back to, but tell me what's really in there.
And so after a period of time, he found out, like, okay, did this really cool woodcutting class
and made his dad this really cool, intricately designed,
I'm not going to give it away because it's too specific to their situation, gift for their dad.
And then minutes
later, dad's like, oh yeah, when he was little, he would draw these really detailed drawings.
And so he's a creative kid. He can see in three dimensions. He is very visual. He's very good at
Legos and he's good at arguing. And so you start to piece some things, some patterns together.
And so we want to switch
this summer from just focusing on school, school, school. If you would just apply yourself, you need
to work harder because you've done all that and it hasn't changed anything in the last 5, 8, 10,
15 years. So this summer, especially this month, let's start noticing and observing what he does
do well. Does that child do well?
And so I brought up affirming the child and they're like, well, he doesn't like when we praise him.
And I was like, of course he doesn't. He's a strong-willed child. You can't win either way.
And so these kids, if you praise them too overtly, they'll reject it because it feels like pressure.
See, if you praise them, it either feels condescending,
like, you did such a good job,
which sounds like we never thought you'd actually make a good choice,
and you did, so we're going to be overwhelmed and praise you.
Or it feels like our expectations are,
you're always going to make this good choice, so they reject it.
And so, we talked about being very, very specific in the choice. So they reject it. And so we talked about being very,
very specific in the praise. So two things, be very specific and use a matter of fact statement,
a statement of fact. So a few minutes before this, the mom had said, oh, we love your podcast. And
it's so great. We really look, I was like, don't. Don't even go there. I said, I'm going to reject your praise. I said, now, if you were to tell me, Kirk, we find your podcast valuable because you give us scripts that we can use with our kids.
Okay.
I appreciate that.
I can take that because it's not vague like, oh, you're so wonderful.
It's specific, and it helps me latch onto something that inside I kind of know is true,
like that resonates with me.
Telling me that I'm awesome does not resonate with me because I live with me,
and so does my family.
But saying something specific that I actually know I'm pretty good at,
well, that does affirm me and it makes me
realize that, oh, I need to keep doing that, do more of that. So this family was going on a long
drive this summer. And so they were asking for, hey, what can we do on this long drive? And I
said, you know, one of the things you can do is bring out some of these qualities. And so here's kind of what this
discussion I wanted to sound like. Hey, you know, we want to apologize to you for something.
You know, we've been so focused on school that that's all we talk about. All we lecture you
about is just school, school, school. And inadvertently we have overlooked all of the great
qualities you possess because we, you know, we were just thinking, remember that woodworking
class that you took and that intricate gift that you made dad. That's so, that's so awesome and
means so much. It was really well done. And you know what that tells us? You have a gift in that.
Like you're actually very good in that. Like you're actually
very good at that. Like you can picture things in your brain and then you can execute on that.
Like you do these huge 4,000 piece Lego sets and you can just see in your brain how it's supposed
to go together. I can't do that. Mom can't do that. But you can do that. And that's actually
a unique skill. You probably take it for granted because you're just't do that. But you can do that. And that's actually a unique skill. You
probably take it for granted because you're just good at it. But here's the hard part. You don't
get a grade for that. So you don't get a grade for building complex Lego sets or creating something
with your own hands. See, if you got grades for that, you'd have all A's and you would be the
shining one in your school
because you're just fantastic at that. See, there's a statement of fact in there of like,
oh yeah, you kind of picture things in your brain and then you go ahead and just make it.
That's actually pretty cool. See, it's a statement of fact. There's no pressure on it.
And I would write this down as well. It's helping your child with self-discovery.
See, now this is a child who's been beating himself up
because he's not the smartest one in the class.
And maybe this child has a sibling that does better in school
and things are easier for that child.
And he tends to be in trouble a little bit more.
So he doesn't do his best work and he shuts down a little bit.
Well, now you're just making some statements of fact,
of things that he has done because he has built that complex Lego project.
He has made things with his hands.
He has created things.
And so you're not just making things up and you're not putting pressure.
You're validating and actually
helping him recognize, yeah, I actually am really good at that. I'm not making a big deal. I'm not
saying like, oh my gosh, you are the best Lego builder I've ever seen. See, your child's little
BS meter is going to go off and he's like, oh, you're just being my mom or dad. But when I just
say things like, oh, that took an awful lot of creativity in there.
It was really cool how you could do that because I can't do that.
That's a statement of fact.
And I would encourage you in the month of June, let's start noticing the things that we've overlooked.
Those things that we should be seeing all school year long.
Because the way to build a child's confidence is to build up their competence
and to show them that they are competent. And the way to help them this fall when they go back to
school to do better in school, to care about school, is to see the relevance of their subjects in school
to what they love doing in real life. Look, this kid, child, I believe he also
loves Minecraft. Well, of all the video games, of course, he would like Minecraft because there's
building in there and that's a future engineer. There's so many great qualities in that. Instead
of just always complaining and worrying about our child and all he does is the video games and this and
he does the middle more work necessary and we just pile that on our child so he shuts down and just
says, well, I'm a loser. It's kind of what you said I am. Instead, I can spend this summer being
completely honest and truthful with my child without denying anything that's negative and say, oh no, you happen to be
really good at that. You know, you remember when you were five, you used to do that? That's really
cool. We were just thinking about that. And I apologize for overlooking that because your
success in life is going to be dependent one day on doing what you love and what you're naturally
good at. See, you've got to give your child,
part of your job, our job as parents is to give our kids perspective, right? And part of perspective
is telling them the truth. See, if you're successful in life, it's not because you're
doing something that you're not naturally good at. It's you're using your gifts and passions
and you just happen to be really good at that. And we don't do that with
our kids. We try to fix them and fix everything that we think is wrong with them. So in the month
of June, here's your homework. Let's start doing that. If we can help you with that, you reach out
to us because that's kind of, this is a path that we took with Casey. He's a very confident and very
competent young man. If you reach out to him, he will put together a customized package for you of our
resources within your budget. Or he'll say, no, I think just go to the website. That special is
really good. He'll even send you the link or he'll put it in payments for you. But look for our
specials. If we can help you with that, let us know. We're here to help. We want you to build
up your child. We want you to enjoy your child. So if we can help with that, you let us know.
Love you all. Bye-bye.