Calm Parenting Podcast - How To Handle Chaos, Whining, Meltdowns & Sibling Fights
Episode Date: May 18, 2021How To Handle Chaos, Whining, Meltdowns & Sibling FightsAll hell is breaking loose around you. Kids are whining, fighting, melting down. It’s so frustrating after all you’ve done to make your kids... happy. Your first impulse is to fix it and stop all the chaos. But that often backfires. Kirk shows you a different way, including a great example when siblings are squabbling. FREE SHIPPING this week when you purchase the Get Everything Package. Plus you get 67% OFF. Get Personal Mentoring with Kirk Over the Phone.Kirk will work with you individually or with you and your spouse to get you on the same page and help with your toughest parenting challenges you haven’t been able to solve. 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
Transcript
Discussion (0)
So you know we are very purposeful about how we manage our emotions and take care of our bodies
because we only have one body and one skin.
That's why we love OneSkin.
Their products make it easy to keep your skin healthy while looking and feeling your best.
We use the face topical supplement and love that there's no complicated routine,
no multiple step protocols, just simple scientifically validated solutions.
The secret is OneSkin's proprietary OS1 peptide.
It's the first ingredient proven to switch off the aging cells that cause lines, wrinkles, and thinning skin.
OneSkin is the world's first skin longevity company. By focusing on the cellular aspects of aging,
One Skin keeps your skin looking and acting younger for longer.
Get started today with 15% off using code KIRK at oneskin.co.
That's 15% off at oneskin.co with code KIRK.
After you purchase, they'll ask where you heard about them,
so please support our podcast and tell them we sent you.
Hey moms and dads, you know that our goal is to raise curious kids who love to learn,
and IXL makes that so much easier. IXL is an online learning program that enriches your homeschool curriculum from K to 12.
IXL encourages students to be curious and empowers them to choose how to learn. No matter your child's
learning style or knowledge level, IXL has video tutorials and learning games to guide your child
in the way your kids learn best while meeting them at their level. On IXL, kids can explore any topic in any grade level.
They're not forced into a single learning path.
Kids love IXL's positive feedback,
and parents love knowing specific skills that need work.
Make an impact on your child's learning.
Get IXL now.
Calm Parenting Podcast listeners get an exclusive
20% off an IXL membership when you sign up today at ixl.com slash kirk. Visit ixl.com slash kirk
to get the most effective learning program out there at the best price. So all heck is breaking
loose. Kids are melting down. Maybe a couple of them
are fighting. One's having a big tantrum, right? Everybody's negative. They're whining, complaining.
Dinner's not turning out right. Everybody's kind of upset. There's just this negative thing all in
your house and your first instinct is to fix it, right? Because that's what we've been trained to
do. Fix it. But how do you like it when
your spouse tries to fix your emotions and your mood? You don't like it and neither do your kids.
So we give you plenty of strategies, right? We teach you in the moment how to lead your kids
to calm. Motion changes emotion. We give anxious kids a specific job. We give lots and lots and lots of very proactive strategies.
But today, I want to give you a challenge, something to try this week.
Because I like these weekly challenges because it's top of mind.
It's one thing to try this week.
And I'm going to teach you that on today's episode of the Calm Parenting Podcast.
So welcome. This is Kirk Martin, founder of Celebrate Calm.
We're thrilled that you're here. We appreciate you sharing the podcast with other people because
everybody struggles with their kids, especially with a strong-willed child. If you ever need help,
reach out to our strong-willed child, Casey, because he was like three kids in one with all
of his emotions and his talking back and all of his energy that he had. And he will
help you because he kind of gets this because he was your child and he's seen all of this. He was
with all those camps we had with 1500 kids in our home. Poor Casey was growing up then and he'd wake
up and there were like kids coming into his bedroom. So he gets this and he will help you.
Tell us about, email him, Casey, C-A-S-E-Y at celebratecalm.com. Tell us about your family, ages of the kids, what you're struggling with.
We'll reply back personally. You know how many emails we get? Like there's this lady,
a good mom who emailed and I emailed her back and she's like, OMG, I can't believe I thought
this was just some form thing and I was going to get some automated response. No, you're not because we're a family like yours and this is personal to us.
We really take it personally. We want to help and we'll give you ideas. If you need help with our
resources, Casey can put together a custom package for you based on your specific needs and your
specific budget. It's actually pretty cool. Or
you can just browse through all of the specials that we have on the website right now. And I
believe this week we're doing a special when you get everything of a free shipping option.
That was Casey's idea. So here's what I want to focus on this week. I want you to learn to sit in the chaos without having to fix everything.
Because that's our first instinct is to stop the meltdown.
Stop this.
Get them to be quiet.
Change their attitude.
Fix that mood over there.
Get the siblings to stop fighting.
And I get it.
If there's bloodshed and someone's getting hurt, obviously you've got to jump in and do something.
But this week, I want you to sit in the chaos. And I was reminded of this. I've got a couple emails this
week, especially from guys, which is really cool. I love when guys do this. Here's the one that I'm
basing this off of. He said, I got your everything package. I love the no BS because I'm a no BS kind
of guy. It's short and sweet. And what I learned from you is how to
sit in the chaos because at work, my job is to always fix things. I'm a fixer. I'm fixing. I'm
coming up with all these different things. But what I've learned to do with my kids when I come
home is to sit. And I'm learning when I sit, I begin to see situations more clearly. See, and now I'm going
to veer off of this guy's email. So what you will find is in that moment when you're always in that
mode of trying to fix everything, you're reacting all the time because as soon as, right, as soon
as you start to feel that energy in your home change and some of that tension come in, you want to fix it and you begin to react. And when you react to your child, you're giving your
child power over you and you're getting in that reactive mode and it tends to escalate things.
And you'll notice this with your own anxiety, right? Because your anxiety, my anxiety,
that's our biggest, is really that and our control issues are our biggest enemy as
parents. Because when we get anxious, we tend to project into the future. And I can't tell you how
many parents of even four and five-year-olds are already like, wow, my daughter's doing this and
I'm just concerned that one day she, I was like, she's five. Do not project into the future and
don't project into the future with your teenager. Because when you were 13, you weren't all that awesome.
You may think that you were, but you weren't.
And you changed a lot over time because life has a way of maturing us.
And your kids especially will grow up because what happens is they're stove touchers and they're going to learn the hard way.
And you're going to want to fix it because you don't want them to experience pain. And in fact, sometimes the most important thing that they can
experience is to experience it for themselves. That hot stove actually teaches them. And I'm
reaching for some notes here because I wanted to recall a story. I was doing a phone consultation
with a couple and it was really interesting what these parents said
as we were talking.
The situation, what I was trying to convey to the mom,
especially, I was like, yes, you're the mom.
So when you see your child experiencing something hard,
because you love your son as a mother,
you don't want him to experience the pain.
And so you try to fix it and make it all better.
But watch how interesting this is.
And this is sometimes what I like about phone consultations is the ability to talk to the husband and wife and get them to understand each other. husband, in the same situation, does want your son to experience some pain because he loves his son
and knows that for some kids that's the best way for them to learn. See, we often look at each
other and we're like, well, my husband just doesn't or my wife doesn't. No, you both love your child.
And because mom loves her child, she doesn't want him to experience a little bit of difficulty.
And for the dad, precisely because he does love his son, he wants him to.
And so you have to really work together.
But sitting in the moment and in the chaos will help you.
One, it helps you lead your kids to a different place. Because when they're all wound up, if you enter that arena and your anxiety,
you're projecting out of like, oh, I need to fix this
or they're gonna grow up and be sociopaths
or you are an order person, right?
You are a structure and order person.
You need lots of order.
That's me.
And so whenever you encounter disorder in the home,
Legos on the floor, kids being upset, noise bothers you.
Your initial instinct is, I better shut that down right now. And you're not even recognizing that
you're not doing it for your kids. You're doing it for yourself because you can't handle it.
And so you begin, it's what I used to do in case he was little, I'd shut that down right away. Why? Because I couldn't handle
the disorder. So when I began sitting down, physically sitting down, it changed my body
posture, changed my tone of voice, so I could talk in an even matter-of-fact manner, so that I could
lead my child, because I want you to lead your child to a calm place. Telling them you need
to calm down now is not leaving them. That's escalating and creating more chaos in the home.
And what you will find is when you sit in the chaos, you will teach and problem solve. See,
instead of fixing and solving the problem for your kids or to satisfy your own
control issues and your own anxiety, instead you'll be able to teach them how to problem solve
and fix the situations themselves. See, that's what we're after, isn't it? I want, you want,
your kids to learn how to be responsible for their own actions,
for their moods, for their behavior. But inadvertently, by us trying to fix everything
and jumping in all the time and trying to make everything all better, we make it worse. How many
of you have found the more you jump in, you tell your kids, guys, gotta go, gotta go, to the car,
to the car. And the more you rush your kids, the slower they go. When you wake your kids up in the morning and
you're kind of anxious, like we got to get up. Come on, you got to go because school's ready.
Look, we don't have time for this. And you can feel that inside of you. That's your anxiety.
And that dumps all over your child and your child resists it. Moms and dads, your kids are not
rejecting you. They are rejecting your anxiety
because your anxiety tells them
that they cannot get ready quickly enough.
They cannot do something to your satisfaction
because you will never really be happy with it
because if they would just apply themselves
a little bit more,
they would be capable of accomplishing so much more.
And that anxiety causes your kids to resist
because they know inherently they cannot
satisfy your anxiety. You always want more. You always want it done more quickly, better. And so
when you learn to sit, you will start to recognize, oh, this is about me. Somewhere on one of the
programs, I talk about the toaster moment. It's a famous moment in our
home when Casey, we were at a house in Northern Virginia, and Casey came down the stairs and I
started to get on him. Did you get all your schoolwork done? Because I heard you upstairs,
because I know you're procrastinating. Did you get it done? And what I realized was in that moment,
I was getting on him about his schoolwork, but the real issue was I had
procrastinated with my own work. And because I had done that, I was projecting my own issues onto him.
That's not a cool thing to do. And so in that moment, because I was learning how to control
my own anxiety and sit in the chaos, I looked at him and said, Casey,
my apology. That's not your issue. That's my issue because I'm laid off with my own work.
I apologize for dumping my stuff on you. It was just emailing with a really great mom.
And she was talking about how her parents raised her and her brother, and her brother turned out to be not always that responsible person,
and she struggled a little bit, and so she's got a young child,
and she's already worried, well, my parents did this way,
what if I repeat their mistakes and I do it the same way?
And what if my child grows up and she's not?
And what I had to ask the mom, and we're having a nice discussion,
so it sounds kind of jerky to me, to you maybe And what I had to ask the mom and we're having a nice discussion. So it sounds kind
of jerky to me, to you, maybe what I asked her. But I said, look, I'm just going to be honest
with you. Why are you projecting? Why are you asking your daughter? Why are you asking your
daughter to deal with your own baggage? You're dumping your own baggage from your childhood onto your child, expecting your child to carry a load
that you can't even carry. And there's no blame and no guilt in there, moms and dads. I don't do
that. What I want is a recognition and honesty and humility, because humility is a very powerful
thing to say, yes, I'm dumping all of that anxiety on my teenager and my teenager is now
Resisting me and pulling away not because he's stolen and defiant teenager all the time
But because he can't handle the pressure that I'm putting on him or maybe it's the four-year-old or the eight-year-old or the ten-year-old
Or whatever. It doesn't matter what the age is
But you've got to deal with your own stuff.
And most of us carry stuff from childhood that we don't even realize.
And we're dumping that on our kids, your control issues, your anxiety.
So this week, I really want you to practice this.
Learn to sit in the chaos and learn to see the situation more clearly.
I often do this example at live workshops.
By the way, we're traveling again.
That's awesome because we love live events because there's so much energy
and we get to answer people's specific questions.
So if you have a school, a church, a synagogue, a mosque,
an organization, email Casey
because everything's opening back up again, hopefully.
And so we'd love to be back out there.
Just ask us and we'll come.
So let's say you have two siblings and they're fighting. And typically what happens is we get uncomfortable.
We want to break it up and we want to fix it. And we come in and we send one child to his room and
the other child to his room. And inadvertently, we just sent our kids away from the very person
who has the wisdom to teach and help them. And we rewarded the one child who's the provoking child, right? Because
the provoking child needs brain stimulation, wants to get his brain stimulated. So he irritates
the reacting child who obliges. And then, mom, he's picking on me. He's being mean. And then
we come in as adults and we add our own chaos to the whole situation and inadvertently reward
the child who needs brain stimulation.
You know, go to your room.
How many times?
And now what that child learns is if I want my brain stimulated,
I'll just pick on my brother because then my mom and dad yell at me.
Everybody's upset.
Now I get sent to my room, which isn't a bad thing because I hoard food up there.
And I've got my video games there.
So inadvertently, we also teach the other child who's always reacting that he's kind of a
victim, that he has no choice in the matter, but he does. But when I sit in that room and now,
instead of lecturing about how they need to learn how to get along better and be friends,
they don't care. Instead, I can read the moment and I can teach them and say,
hey, Jacob, it's a provoking job. So here's what I know
about you. You've got this awesome brain, loves to be stimulated because it's filled with ideas and
you're a go-getter man. And so when you get bored, you don't like being bored. So you end up picking
one of your brother because you know he's going to react to you. Now two issues with that. One is
that you now become dependent on your brother. You need him to react because if he
doesn't, then you've got to do something even worse and that causes you to get in trouble. And that's
the second issue. When you irritate your brother and pick on him and do those things, you always
lose your stuff. So that's not like the best option to me. You can keep doing it if you want,
but you're going to get the same result. But here's another idea. You've got that awesome brain. It's very creative, right? And I also know this about you. You love money because many of
your kids really like money. It's not that they're greedy because they often have very big hearts.
You love money and you have a big heart. So here's an option. When you get bored, instead of just
picking on your brother, why don't you and I brainstorm three, four, or five different ways
for you to earn some money in the neighborhood? Because man, you are a born entrepreneur and you
can start making some real money, my friend. And you've got a big heart and with some of that money,
you could give some of that money to St. Jude's to help kids with cancer. And in fact, if you do that,
I'll even match part of that. So your choice, how you want to use your brain and handle those situations.
See, now instead of go to your room, you're a bad kid.
Nobody likes you.
No wonder you're always in trouble.
So he internalizes, I'm a bad kid because we didn't really teach him anything.
Well, we sent him to his room to teach him that you can't pick on your siblings.
You didn't teach him that at all.
He already knows he shouldn't do it. You just sent him to his room to teach him that you can't pick on your siblings. You didn't teach him that at all. He already knows he shouldn't do it.
You just sent him to his room, and you didn't give him any tools,
and you didn't even teach him anything.
Because look, punishment isn't discipline.
Discipline means to teach.
What we just did when I sat there and observed,
I taught him about his brain.
And the beautiful thing about that is well here's the
negative thing if you don't teach him about his brain he'll never know how to use it and he'll go
through life seeking stimulation from taking bad risks and maybe in teen years doing stuff that you
don't want him doing because he's driven by the whim of his brain but now you've just empowered
him and educated him and said,
I want to teach you about how cool your brain is. And here's how you can use it negative ways. Oh,
but here are some really cool ways you can use that brain. I just gave him options. And then
with the other child, I can teach him and say, look, I get it. Your brother has a lot of energy and I get it. You find him irritating because
he's breathing and because he's your sibling. And that's how siblings have thought about each other
literally since the beginning of time, Cain and Abel. So if all you're ever going to do is react
to people who are irritating, to situations that are irritating. You are going
to be powerless in life and you are going to be miserable. And I can't help you with that.
But if you want to learn how to get control of your own responses, if you want to learn how to
control yourself instead of controlling your brother and everybody else you're ever going to
meet in life. Oh, I can teach you how to do that, assuming that you've learned how to do that,
moms and dads, which I want you to do, right? And now the two kids who instead of separating them
and sending them away, instead I each taught them a new life skill. That will begin to reap benefits with fewer sibling fights because
now you start to talk a different language instead of, guys, keep it down in there. Why can't you
just play well together for 12 minutes? You didn't teach them. You're pleading with them not to bother
you. And instead of pleading with them not to bother you,
I'm not teaching them. But that began with me controlling my own anxiety over their fight,
their fighting, and their squabbling. That began with me controlling my own anxiety,
controlling my own control issues. And I walked in the room, instead of creating my own chaos. I sat in the midst of the chaos and I taught.
That's a beautiful thing.
And that's what I want you to practice this week.
We good with that?
If you need help, reach out to us.
If you want to learn how to do this,
the special we're doing this week,
we have a special on everything.
It's there on the website, go.
But on the Get Everything Package
because we teach you literally everything we know. It's 30 plus hours worth of strategies. We're doing free
shipping. We've dropped the price 60%. If you need help, if you want something smaller, smaller
package, email Casey, C-A-S-E-Y at CelebrateCalm.com. He'll help you out with that. We can work within
your budget. We can work within whatever you need. Okay. So thank you for listening. I didn't plan to
go through all that today. I'm super excited because this podcast actually turned out better
than I had kind of outlined it on paper. And I love that. I like this sibling example. So let
that sit in your brain this week. Email us. We'll help you out and love you all. Talk to you soon.
Bye-bye.