Calm Parenting Podcast - Q&A: Exhausted By Lies, Defiance, Yelling, Moody Kids?
Episode Date: June 28, 2023Q&A: Exhausted By Lies, Defiance, Yelling, Moody Kids? How do you handle kids who lie and won't accept responsibility, husbands who yell, defiant kids who want to do thing their own way, kids who can'...t handle disappointment and whose moods control the home? In this special Q&A session, Kirk shares practical strategies for these situations and many more. Have more questions you'd like addressed in the podcast? Email Casey@CelebrateCalm.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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That's 15% off at OneSkin.co with code K-I-R-K. After you purchase, they'll ask where you heard
about them. So please support our podcast and tell them we sent you. Do you have a child that lies,
who even when you see them, you have proof on a camera
that they did something wrong. They still will refuse to admit that they did it. They won't
accept responsibility for their actions. They won't admit that they're wrong, right? Or maybe
you have a child who's unmotivated, right? A 10, 11, 12, 14, 16 year old child. They're just not
motivated to do anything and you can't take
anything away because you already took everything away from them when they were like seven, right?
And they don't care about consequences. So what do you do? We're going to talk about that. What
about defiant kids who want to do their things their own way? Or maybe you're a grandparent,
because we're dealing a lot with grandparents who are actually taking care, have primary
responsibility of their grandkids, And that's tough, right?
What about kids whose moods bring the whole family down?
Or maybe you have a husband who can't control himself.
Or kids who can't handle disappointment.
That's what we're going to talk about on today's bonus 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 with anything, reach out to our son, Casey, C-A-S-E-Y,
at CelebrateCalm.com. He gets this because he pretty much struggled with all of these things,
and he had a father who couldn't control himself at one point. So this is the part two of me
answering like 140 questions that parents posed to me on our Facebook page,
our Celebrate Calm Facebook page. I'm trying to go through all of them and it may take me the rest
of the year, but I will get through it all. I am really working on this because I want to honor
the questions that are asked because I know it's really hard being a parent of one of these kids.
So again, this is different than our kind
of regular like 10, 12, 15 minute podcast on one topic. I'm going to try to cover a lot of ground
here. And my caveat is that I've got to roll through things pretty quickly. So I apologize
in advance if I say things inappropriately, if sometimes I use a little bit of humor and maybe
you don't like it, or maybe I'm just totally
inappropriate. I apologize, but just roll with me here because there's a lot of good insight
and I would encourage you, this is some old guy wisdom, even if someone irritates you a little bit,
learn something from that person. I've learned as I've gotten older to try to learn something
from people that I disagree with. So even if you find me annoying, there's some really good insight in here that will actually help you with your
kids so you can hate me but love the insight so anyway so here's a Amanda
asked about this and and it's not just Amanda there were a lot of questions
about this about kids who just blatantly lie and you will see them doing
something wrong you can have them on videotape, right?
And they'll claim that it was someone being an imposter of them.
They won't admit it when you call them out on it, right?
Then they start screaming and yelling.
And this mom, kudos to you, said, I think she's embarrassed.
Bingo.
That's a big one.
Right down to word shame.
A lot of our kids have a lot of shame inside, right? And so there's simple things of like, look, we're not judging you.
Just like, could you put your plate in the sink?
And the daughter will say like, I did.
And like everybody in the family staring at the plate on the table,
it's clearly not in the sink, but she'll double down on that.
And so mom was like, well, do I push for her to admit that her plate has not been put in a
sink, right? Do I let it go and hope the phase passes? Because, right, if I don't, if I say
something, there's a big tantrum and she's yelling. And if I don't say anything, well, she just got
away with lying and not putting her plate in the sink. So there are a lot of different ways to look
at this one. And there's some good insight in here.
So let me just roll with this.
Look, this is related to this, and it's related to a lot of other things that we do with our kids.
Like it's the parent who goes up like, hey, did you get your homework done?
And then there's this like violent outburst.
And you're like, I'm just asking if your homework was done.
But I want you to think about it from the standpoint of what's going on inside
the head and heart of your strong-willed child. And these kids often feel like failures. They feel
like nothing they do can ever please anyone. They don't feel like they fit in. They're just, you know
what, they're just not good at being kids sometimes. And simple things that should just be simple and
easy, it's not that hard, right, are
just hard for them or they just don't want to do it. And they make, and I get it, they make their
own lives harder at times. But sometimes our kids, when they're reminded to do something,
right, this is what they hear. Why didn't you do that? Your siblings don't have a problem with that. Everybody else in this family does it.
Why didn't you?
You're a failure.
Now, I'm not saying this is right.
It just is.
And if that's what they're hearing, this isn't really a lying issue.
And I've said this many times.
Your kids don't have integrity issues, really.
They have shame issues.
They have helplessness issues at times where they feel
helpless to do things the right way. And so they just deny it, don't do it, right? And so the lie
to get away, try to get away with it because they're not mature enough to say, you know what,
I just feel helpless. I feel like a failure. So therefore I'm going to have a big meltdown,
right? So just know that going in. So here are a few things that I would try one is let's go with non-verbals
With many of your strong will kids look
I have no other way to say this except that most of us as parents just talk way too much and you go on and
On and on and on and you lecture too much and it just doesn't work. It provokes a negative response
And so I look we don't do blame or guilt, but I do have to be,
I want to be blunt as I get older with us to free us from things. You have to stop that,
right? Because look, if you already know that, if you know that going on and on and talking too much
is provoking your child to anger, and if you keep doing it, and then you email me like, well,
I can't believe you're just getting angry all the time. Like, well, you already know that you're provoking that.
So cut it out.
You've got to work on that yourself because look, it's not, I don't really care about
kids' behavior that much.
I don't.
I care about the relationship because if the relationship is good, if you understand these
kids, the behavior will come along and we'll be just fine. It won't be an issue, right? And so I don't want you hurting your relationship with
your child. So non-verbals are really nice with these kids. Even beforehand, think about this,
have a predetermined responsibility for your daughter. And I have in parentheses, not a task,
right? Chores, right? If you say like,
you have a chore to do, it's like, ugh, right? And I'd rather than having kids just obey doing chores,
I'd rather have them be responsible for something. So what can your daughter be in control of? I
don't want to give her control of my home. I don't give kids control of my home.
Casey never had control of our home. But I did give him certain activities that he felt in control of
and that he felt in control of himself when he was doing it. What does your daughter do well?
And maybe we shift her responsibility from an arbitrary chore, right, to something maybe that she's really good at
that's even a responsibility. See, I'd rather have a responsible child than just an obedient child
who does things everybody else wants him or her to do. I hope that makes sense. Another thing I go
with, huge, oh, by the way, with the non-verbals for older kids, yes, I love writing notes to kids because then you're not in their face and they're not having to listen to your annoying voice and you're not going to have to look at their annoying face with their annoying rolling their eyes, right?
You write something to them.
They can process it without you standing over them.
So huge dose of creating successes. Your kids
who are lying a lot, my gut would tell me or experience tells me they don't feel good about
themselves because from the time they came out of the womb, they were in trouble because all we
measure with our kids is good behavior and good grades. And many of your kids are 0 for 2 in life
on that. And they're like, well, I'm pretty much a failure as a kid. So I think I'll just shut down or I'll just do it opposite of the way that you want. So I'd rather find other ways
for your daughter to be responsible, put her in situations in which she excels so that more times
during the day, you're saying, Hey, that was a good job, honey. Hey, really well done, man. I
never thought to do it that way. I want to spend a lot of time with kids of any kind, but especially strong willed kids,
affirming what they're already good at doing
instead of putting them in situations.
But this is up to you how you do it.
But this is what I know after working with a million families.
Most of your kids are going to struggle with certain things,
one of them being arbitrary chores.
And you can fight for 10 years, 18 years doing this,
or you can say, you know what, it's just not working. Why don't we instead, instead of asking my child to do something that they're
not naturally good at doing, by the way, I've used this analogy, what if you were at a job
where you just weren't particularly well-suited, your gifts and passions were not well-suited to
that job description, and your boss was continually asking you to do things that you're not good at doing you would feel like a failure and your boss would
constantly say why can't you ever do things right I gave you that job why
does it take you so long why are you procrastinating but if you get a job
that pretty much capitalizes on your natural gifts well then it's not even
that much work because you're just good at it and everybody's like, man, you did a great job on that project. Man, we can really rely on you. So why not do that
in the home, right? Each of your kids has different natural gift things, so put them in their unique
places within your hierarchy of your home to do different jobs and responsibilities instead of
trying to force the strong-willed
child to be like all the other kids, which they will never be like your other kids.
So stop trying to do it because you're just going to be frustrated.
They're going to be frustrated.
And then the relationship gets ruined, right?
Here's another insight here.
Your kids don't like being watched, right?
There's a severe response to that.
I remember I used to work at America Online way back in the day, right?
When there's an annoying company with all the little discs and everything that they
would send you.
And at one time, my boss moved me so that my cubicle was right in front of his office.
That was the day I started working on my resume. And I bought a ficus
plant and I put it up with Christmas lights so my boss couldn't see me in the cubicle. I don't like
to be watched. This is a huge insight for your kids. And it was funny. I was hiking the other
day because I'm trying to keep up with Casey because he's got really long legs and he's a lot
younger than I am. And so I'm trying to keep up so I can hike with him. And I'm trying to keep up with Casey because he's got really long legs and he's a lot younger than I am.
And so I'm trying to keep up so I can hike with him.
And I'm hiking up this mountain and I meet this couple.
And they were from Ohio and stuff, so they didn't know how to handle the snow and all that stuff.
And so we're going up this snowy incline.
And this is like late June.
And the husband kept looking back at his wife because I had held up. I stayed so I could kind of lead them up there because it was just whatever. Otherwise, they're going to die.
I'm kidding. But so he kept looking back at his wife. Hey, honey, are you OK? How are you doing?
And she finally said, if you ask me one more time, if I'm OK. And so I told the dude, I was like,
dude, here's what I've learned in life.
People don't like to be watched when they're struggling. So let's just walk up ahead. So he
and I walked up ahead and it was funny as we were walking through the snow, he said, you're such a
good guy. It's like, you're so calm. And I didn't tell him like that. That's the name of our
organization. It was just kind of fun. So the insight is though, people don't like to be watched,
right? And so when you get into meltdowns, that's why we like motion changes emotion,
using some kind of movement.
Because when a kid's melting down, when you're melting down, nobody likes to be watched.
Okay, second question.
See how long this gets?
This may be a three-hour one.
So this is related.
Getting a seven-year year old to admit that
he's wrong or made a mistake in the first place. Right. Um, even when I emphasize nobody's in
trouble, right. All those different things. Look, here's my initial reaction to him is that I,
I don't want to stop trying to get your kid to admit it, right?
Think about this.
And some of these I'm answering the question, and it may not always be directly with that.
It may relate to something else, but I just use that as a jumping off point.
Sometimes we set our kids up for failure, and it's like we do a gotcha thing.
You already know that he didn't do it.
So why do you keep asking, hey, did you wash your hands? Well, you know he didn't do it so why do you keep asking hey did you wash your hands well
you know he didn't wash his hands and so in some ways you're putting that child you're setting him
up it's entrapment right you know he's gonna lie about that right and so you already did that so
I wouldn't try to get your kids to admit things right that's part of that philosophy of like micromanaging your kids and
making sure because if he doesn't admit that he does, I get what you're thinking there,
but chill with some of that, okay? So, you know, mom went on to say like, hey, when we call him
out on most of his stuff, right? I wouldn't, look, I've learned this as I've gotten older, calling people out on
their stuff when you, I know that's just how you phrased it, but people generally don't respond
well to that, right? Now going to someone and say, hey, I think you're doing something that's
hurting you, right? Like that would be my approach. It should be my approach with you, which is look,
you're doing this thing, which is hurting you, which is you're lecturing your kids all the time, or you're assuming the worst about their motives.
And I know you have the best of intentions, right? Because you love your kids and you want
them to grow up to be honest and have integrity and be responsible. But inadvertently, you're
hurting your relationship with your kids, right? That's the tone instead of me just calling you out on your stuff all day long, right? So
look, I what I
It's the same answer basically is the last one which is let's create successes and let's change the internal
Dialogue within your kids. So instead of yeah, I'm not good at doing that
So I'm always in trouble
everybody mom and dad are always upset at me and I'm the one person in the house who loses the screens all the
time because I didn't bring my plate back from dinner, from the dinner table, switch it around,
create successes, find things they're good at doing and change, help change their internal
dialogue. Right. And now here was the other thing, Usually takes a few minutes. So here's the thing.
I'm trying not to send him to his room for not putting away his plate. Please don't do that.
He just didn't put away his plate. Trust me, moms and dads, it's not that big a deal. It's not that
big a deal, okay? So I know what your intentions are of like, but if he doesn't learn how to put
away his plate, one day he's not. It's not true.
He's just a little kid.
He just doesn't care right now.
So it usually takes a few minutes of arguing over like, I make an effort not to argue and
simply say, please clean it up.
He spends multiple minutes trying to argue, like asking, why do you always make me clean
up messes I didn't make?
Look, I don't argue with kids.
It's just this.
It's like, because, right?
It's like, why do you make me do that?
Because I'm mean.
That's why.
Look, I don't need you.
Here's a great phrase.
I don't need you to like it.
I don't expect you to like it.
I don't need you to like putting away your stuff.
Just expect you to get it done.
Right?
Don't feed into the drama.
But let's change the internal
dialogue. That's my main point there. Change the internal dialogue by creating successes,
helping kids be responsible, not just complete arbitrary tasks. Okay. Here's another one that's
kind of similar, right? And I get the point. I'm having a hard time with my, this is a five-year-old,
but this could be a four-year-old, it could be a seven, it this is a five-year-old, but this could be a four-year-old,
it could be a seven, could be a 10-year-old, right? He has a tendency to argue over simple things
that are non-negotiable, like being respectful and using manners. He'll become agitated when I
prompt him to thank someone after a kind gesture. He'll moan or express that he doesn't want to,
right? Or he'll say, I can't be nice
all the time, right? His younger brother who is three doesn't have the same reaction when it comes
to using basic manners. Is there a different approach? Yes. Here's my different approach.
Stop prompting him to thank people. It's annoying, right? And I mean this, and I know your intentions are perfectly great. You want your
child to grow up and be a respectful young man who says thank you and please. So here's my advice.
Live out your life. Model for him. When someone does something nice for you, just say, hey,
thank you. That was really thoughtful. I appreciate it. But prompting him, it's like the shy kids,
come here, honey, say hi to Mrs. Henderson, say hi to Mrs. Henderson. Well, they're just a shy kid.
And parents will be like, well, she's just being disrespectful. No, she's not. She's just a shy kid
who doesn't like all the attention. And this will be a weird dynamic for you because these are kids
who absorb most of the attention in the family, but they also don't like all the attention, right?
And so when some stranger comes up or someone does something nice, you're like, honey, say
thank you.
Say thank you.
My honest opinion is that's annoying.
So cut it out.
You know I'm bad.
Look, I'm trying to be have fun with this, but also tell you in a very direct way. I promise you, mom who asked this, your kids will grow up and be respectful to other adults
if they see you being respectful in your life.
You have a DNA in your home.
If you grow up in a home, raise your kids in a home where you're not watching Jerry
Springer for three hours a day and you read books and you get out and you explore and you're curious.
Your kids will eventually grow up and be like that.
If you write like they're going to know, but stop prompting.
It's embarrassing.
They might be shy.
Let them do it on their own.
Oh, here's another insight.
Your kids will do the right thing when you're not watching them. He just doesn't want to do it in front of you. So live your life and model.
That is why we often say with Strong Willed Kids, your praise should be short and sweet. Don't say,
oh, buddy, I'm so proud of you. You did such a good job. It sounds fake. It sounds condescending.
It sounds like this. We never thought you'd actually make a good choice and you just did. So we're going to make a big
deal of it. And your kids reject your praise because sometimes it feels like pressure because
what it feels like is, uh-oh, now you're going to expect me to do that more often. And I'm not sure
that I can actually do that. So don't put that on me. So when I praise kids, it is short, hey,
nice job with that. Like how you handled that. Honey, I heard how you talked to Mrs. Henderson. That was awesome. Shows
me you're growing up. And then you walk away. You change the topic with teenagers too. You're
planting a lot of seeds. So mom, you're a good mom, teaching your kids the right thing, but stop
prompting him to say things unless you want arguments and fights for the rest of his
childhood. Here's a tough one. So I'm going to expand this beyond what the mom had asked, but
I'd say there are parents out there who have PTSD. There are parents who have gone through,
you were going through chemo treatment, who have various illnesses, right, that are just debilitating. And so, you know,
you may have heard me say like, hey, we want to get to that place where I don't need my child to
behave just so that I can behave, right? That was my thing as a dad is Casey, I need you to do
exactly what I told you to do. Because if you don't behave and do exactly what I tell you to do,
I'm not sure I can behave and I'm going get angry and you don't wanna see that, right?
Well, this mom wrote in and said,
look, I actually do need my kids to behave
because I don't have the strength
to keep going back up and down the stairs
to check whether they've done things, right?
I don't have that.
So here are a few tips that I hope you find helpful.
Number one, no long lectures.
Let's go with more blunt direct talk with kids.
These are strong willed kids.
They're four going on 24.
They're seven going on 37.
They're 14 going on 54.
Or some of your kids are like old souls, like 74.
Blunt direct talk.
Hey, this is what I'm expecting.
This is what I expect.
And this is what I want done.
Stop couching.
You know what?
It would really help me out.
It would, none of that.
Be assertive.
Moms, especially out
there, be assertive about what you need. I have no problems with saying, look, guys, I'm sick.
I'm going through something. This is what I need right now from you. Be assertive about it. You
don't have to do a long thing of like, you know, guys, when you're not feeling well, I do. Not that
tone. You're not trying to convince them. You're not trying to
guilt them into, you know, when you guys are sick, I take care of you. No, it's this. It's a simple
matter of fact thing. Guys, I don't feel well. You know what? I used to do this at the camps.
So back in the day, we started with this. We'd have 8, 10, 12, 15 kids in our home.
And why we want them to come to our home is that when kids go to traditional therapy,
they either don't talk or they say, I don't know, or they tell the therapist what the
therapist wants to hear just so they can be done with it.
So we wanted kids out of a therapeutic setting into a real life situation in a house where
we took them to stores, where we disappointed them on purpose, where things didn't go well,
where they didn't get to eat what they wanted to have for lunch, where other kids took their
stuff and they got in fights. So we had all these kids in our home. I don't like a lot of loud
noises. It was hard. And so there were certain days where I didn't feel well. And what I learned
instead of getting resentful, you know, guys, every day I try to make this fun and I take you
to the pool and I do all these things. I started saying this, hey guys, I just don't feel well today. So I need you guys
to step up and take more responsibility because I just don't have it today. And when I said it
like that, it's like they respected it because I wasn't trying to manipulate them. I wasn't asking
for a favor. I was talking honestly and they knew that. So I'd encourage you to manipulate them. I wasn't asking for a favor. I was talking honestly, and they knew
that. So I'd encourage you to try that. For those of you who are overwhelmed, scale down and simplify.
Cut out some of the extracurricular activities. Cut out some of the expectations you have on
yourself, right? Like every night I need to have an organic homemade meal for my kids. Look, I love
that that's your goal, but you can't
do it every night. You can't. So simplify, scale things down. Look, if you have a strong willed
child, you have to scale things down so that you free up like two hours every afternoon or evening
for some kind of meltdown or something to happen. Stop over scheduling things and living like on this narrow edge of life,
needing everything to go just right. You have kids. They're going to mess things up. Their job
is to mess up your agenda, right? It's just the way that it works. They're not adults. You're not
running a corporation with 40 year old adults making a lot of money. You have a corporation with 40-year-old adults making a lot of money.
You have a family with flawed, imperfect people where things just go wrong and people have awful moods sometimes.
So know that that's normal and just simplify, right?
I would live, look, part of as I get older, just live with reality.
This is your life right now.
So scale back.
This is, focus on the stuff. I would also say,
I don't know what your spousal situation is, but your spouse has to step up. You've got to like,
hey, hubby, listen, I'm dealing with some issues right now. I need you to step up. I need your
help. Could you do X and Y? I'm going to do this in a minute for helping with husbands, but hubbies
tend to do better when you give them very specific missions to do.
They're basically like the strong will kids.
You set them up for success.
You let them do something they're good at in the home.
You give them a very specific mission to do.
When they do well, you say, now that was helpful, right?
And I'll give you this one that most of you will not do.
Ask for help.
Find a friend, right? And ask them for help. Find an
older lady in your neighborhood, your church, synagogue, mosque, and ask them and say, look,
I've got three kids and I'm really struggling because I'm sick. Do you think you could come
help me a couple times a day? Do you think that one of my kids could come down to your house and
bake cookies or do something or you could do homework with them?
I guarantee, I mentioned this last time, older people love helping out.
It makes them feel helpful.
It makes them feel like they're using the wisdom that they have gained all those years.
Moms don't like asking for help because you're all independent.
You think you can do everything.
And some of you, well, I don't want to bother people.
Well, why don't you value
yourself? Why don't you think that you're worthy of having other people help you? I don't say that
with a guilt thing. I want to challenge you because you do everything for everybody else,
but you don't treat yourself the way you treat other people, right? That's a way you can kind
of flip that thing around. Treat other people, right? Do unto others as you would have them do unto you. Well, mom,
sometimes do unto yourself as you would do to other people because you give to everybody else,
but you won't allow anybody else to give back to you. Now, if you want to do phone consultations,
we can dig into your childhood trauma and your childhood issues. We can do that, but that's
where that comes from because it's a worthiness issue, right? If you don't ask for help, nobody can help you,
and you rob other people from an opportunity to help you, and you don't get the help that you need.
So just be vulnerable, right? And admit, I need some help around here. Okay, here's kind of related
one is grandparents raising a strong-willed child, right? And this is a grandma who works,
who has a disabled husband,
and they've got a high-energy child that's very young.
So look, this is hard.
There aren't, some of these things,
there are not easy or good answers to.
It's just plain hard.
And so here's my best advice to all of you.
Do what works for your
family. Stop comparing yourself to other families. Stop listening to all those other families and
looking on Facebook and Instagram at their perfect family outings, right? When yours have never been
like that. They're just pictures. It's just, right? Virtually no families have that. Stop that. In fact,
my advice is make sure that your best friend
has a child who's way worse than yours because it'll make you feel better about your life.
So, right, because you can tell your husband like, hey, our child struggles a little bit. I think
theirs is going to jail. So, but I would do a couple things here. Do what works for you. Number
one, do that. Give that younger child some adult type
jobs doing the home. I mentioned it all the time, but our kids are not good at doing kid things,
but they're good at doing adult jobs. Try it. Make it a challenge, right? Do some old school things.
Grandma, you're, you're, you said you're older. You guys don't have the energy. Your husband's
disabled. Teach this, that your grandchild, some of the old school things like playing board games
like doing those seated things that we did right telling stories right the old school things that
we did that I did with my grandma when I was a kid and don't be afraid to ask others for help
okay I'm gonna let me cover this one and this is going to cover a lot of questions on how do you motivate a child?
Because I remember one of the questions was like, oh, I have a 12-year-old boy who's not
motivated.
And I was like, tell me a 12-year-old boy anywhere in the world who's motivated.
It's very, very common for middle school age boys to be really motivated and even high
school at times too, right?
So this is very, very common.
So just don't freak out about that. So here are a few things that I'd say. A lot of times it comes
from a lack of confidence. A lot of kids who are unmotivated, right? It looks like they're lazy.
It's that they just don't have a vision for their life. They don't have a lot of confidence. They're
not always the kids who are like, I'm going to be an engineer. I'm going to be a nurse. I'm going to be a teacher. They don't
know what they want to do, right? Because they're not always that good at school. And our society
does a horrible job with kids who are very, very bright, but don't like school, right? And so I
would give them, like I said, adult type jobs, ownership, give them ownership of their choices
within your boundaries. We cover that a
lot. Look, I'll just say this so I don't forget. If you have a teenager or a child, say 11 and above,
if you need help with them, look into our program. It's called the No BS Program. So if you go to
CelebrateCalm.com, look under products, it's No BS Instruction Manual for Strong Will Kids because
nobody gave you an instruction manual. So we created one we created once 25 action steps. I'll tell you
is one of my favorite, favorite things to do, especially with older kids, especially rebuilding
that relationship. There's a lot of practical tools in there that are really, really helpful.
And I'm going to mention a couple of them right here. Here's the big thing I want to do with
motivating kids, Find and discover what
they care about, not what you care about. I know what you and I care about. We want kids to have
good grades and good behavior and good study skills, and we want them to have good manners
and all those good things, but your kids don't care about that. Now look, you may have a more
compliant child, a more neurotypical child that does care about those things and loves doing
schoolwork and gets good grades and good behavior. Perfect. That's awesome. So you already
know what they care about. They care about what everybody else cares about. So life is kind of
easy for them as a child. But you, if you're listening to this podcast, probably have a child
who cares about all kinds of other stuff, but not necessarily the stuff you want them to care about.
So the number one thing would be find, want them to care about. So the number
one thing would be find, discover what they care about. And I'll give you a formula that we use
with a couple examples. I can't do too much because it's going to, I could spend an hour and a half
on this, but we don't have that time. So find, so here's what I encourage you to do. Mission and
mentor. With older kids, the formula is this. I would want to make a list,
identify your kids' natural gifts, talents, and passions. What are they good at doing? What do
they naturally love doing? What are their natural, just what do they love? What are they good at?
What are they curious about? Who do they connect well with? Number two, find ways for your kids to
use their natural gifts and talents outside the home. In school, if you can, but mainly it's going to be in the neighborhood,
church, synagogue, mosque, somewhere else outside of your home. And thirdly, accountable to another
adult. So mission and mentor. I want to give them a mission about something they care about.
They don't usually care about school projects, but they may care about money, having their own
little business. They love
animals. So they might like to volunteer at an animal shelter, help out at a veterinarian's
office, just getting an internship, doing it for free, right? Many of your kids love, they get
along great with little kids, not siblings, but little kids. They get along better with older
people and little kids. So put them in situations like this summer, vacation Bible school, right? Let
them go and work there because they're great with little kids. So let me put this together for you,
a couple examples. So we're working with this family. Actually, this is a live workshop. A mom
got at the Q&A time, said, I've got this 12-year-old daughter and she's not motivated.
She's got a bad attitude. She won't do her school.
What consequences can we give her so that she'll start doing her schoolwork and have a better attitude?
And I was like, there are no consequences for that.
Just think what you're asking.
Is there a consequence that is going to...
See, we're trying to give a consequence thinking that's going to change this outward behavior
when in reality what we're dealing with is a child who's not motivated,
who doesn't feel confident, who doesn't have a vision for their life.
You can't give a consequence for that.
Right?
Does that make sense?
So here's what I asked her.
I said, look, we don't have a lot of time.
It's during a little break.
I said, what does your daughter love doing?
You know what?
She's really good at soccer.
Good.
Who does she connect well with?
Oh, she's great with little kids.
So I said this.
Okay, here's what I want you to do. Go in your neighborhood.
Let's find a soccer coach who is coaching little kids. And I want you to go to that coach and say,
hey, I've got this 12-year-old daughter who loves helping other adults. Not me. You can keep that to yourself. But you know our kids. They love other adults, helping other adults, not you. She loves
soccer. She loves little kids. You look a little overwhelmed. Would you mind, would you consider allowing my daughter to come and help you out
with your practices and your games? Because I think you'll find her really helpful. So this is
a big key. If you can, and as long as this is safe with another adult, have that coach, have that
other adult approach your child, whether it's through you, however
you want to do it, and say, hey, I've heard you're really good at X.
Could you come help me on Tuesday night?
So this is what happened.
The coach asked Rebecca, said, look, I need some help.
I've got these little kids.
I've heard you're really good at soccer.
Come out Saturday night or Tuesday night, six o'clock.
So Rebecca goes out.
She helps with soccer.
At the end of the practice, guess what she got?
She got hugs from like 12 little girls. Why? Because little girls always look up to the older girl. And Rebecca, while she had a bad attitude at home and while she didn't do her schoolwork,
when you put her on a soccer field, you give her a soccer ball and a bunch of little kids,
she comes alive and she's got energy and she attracts those kids and they loved her. So when
she came home that night, did she have a bad attitude? No attracts those kids, and they loved her. So when she came home that
night, did she have a bad attitude? No. Why? Because we created a success. We put her in a
situation which she was using her gifts, and she felt that. So the coach says, Rebecca, come out
again Saturday morning. We've got a game. I could use your help. Rebecca goes, helps out. She's good
at it. You know how you build confidence? Confidence comes from competence, being good at something.
She was good at this.
She didn't need people saying, oh, you're so good.
She knew it internally, and she knew people were watching,
and she knew her parents were watching,
and you put her in that situation coaching these little kids.
She was awesome.
And here's the cool part.
After the game, two sets of parents come up to her and say,
hey, Rebecca, we don't really know you,
but it's like our daughters talk about you all the time.
Our daughter's struggling in school.
Would you consider mentoring or tutoring her?
Not knowing Rebecca had not done schoolwork for years because she wasn't motivated.
Now, now Rebecca's motivated.
Why?
Is she motivated because her mommy and daddy told her that school's important and teachers in school say no?
It's because another adult has asked her for help with their kids.
And here's what she knows.
If I'm going to tutor those kids, because the coach will say, hey, Rebecca, I want you
to continue working with these kids.
But if I hear from your parents that you're not keeping a B average, if I hear that you're
mouthing off, you're not working with these kids because I'm looking for a leader.
And that your child to another adult will say, yes, ma'am, yes, sir.
Something they won't say to you.
Because why?
That mentor, that other adult has something that your child cares about, being with those
kids, coaching soccer.
And so guess what? Now Rebecca has a reason to do school
work, not to please you, not to make anybody else happy, but because it allows her to continue to do
what she loves, which is coach these younger kids. Does that, I hope that makes sense. I get your
kids volunteering at animal shelters, starting a little business, helping a neighbor fix an old car, do mechanical things, build things, just get them doing what they're good at doing.
The other thing, and I'm not going to spend any time on this, but I have to mention it,
with motivating any of your kids is you must bond with the parent. You've got to make sure that the
relationship with your child's father, as much as you can, I know some of you are divorced and the dad's a narcissist and it's not gonna work.
But for those of you who have this option,
if you're a guy listening,
your relationship with your child is incredibly important.
And I know it's like, well, that sucks
just you're only pointing out the father.
I'm pointing out, which is true,
which something that is true in our experience
with a million families that I see every single day,
and it also is borne out by a lot of social research. If the relationship with the father
is not good, and this happens a lot with teenage boys, if a teenage boy grows up and knows,
I can never please my father, and my father's not ever happy with me, and he's just always
yelling at me, and all he does is discipline me. That child will often shut down to prove that what
his father thinks is correct. You know what? You already thought I was a loser. Guess what? Now I'm
a loser. It just happens. And it's really important. And I can't tell you how important that is to do
that. And in that No BS program, I'm not trying to sell that. I'm letting you know, honestly,
this is one of my favorite programs. It's extremely helpful, and it's really good for dads because it's concise. It's 25 action steps, and a lot of
them are really, really good ones for a father to learn how to bond with the child that he's always
had trouble bonding with. Okay, let's move on. Sass, blatant disrespect, disrespectful tone, words,
right? Defiance, absolutely no when asked to do something.
And the mom went on to say, the mouth on our seven-year-old strong-willed daughter is what
gets her in the most trouble, especially with my strong-willed husband. And this is, I'm going to
expand this because I had a lot of people comment, oh yeah, our kids are pretty strong-willed. They
can't control themselves and neither can a husband.
So look, my honest response when I read this is your husband has to grow up.
You simply can't as a man or a grown woman blame everything on a 7-year-old or a 17-year-old, right?
You can't blame a 7-year-old for not being able to control her mouth when the
37 year old can't control his. So in some ways, my response is you need to talk to your husband,
not the seven year old. And moms, a lot of moms are in a really hard spot because you've got a
strong willed child. And then you have a husband who can't really control himself. And so you're
managing all these different people, right? You're managing everybody else's emotions. And when your husband's coming home or into the living room, you're like,
guys, pick up Legos. Dad can't handle it when there's Legos on the floor. Or dad doesn't like
it when you do that. And you're caught in between and you get adrenal fatigue and you get exhausted
and you get just and resentful because it's like, look, I'm trying to take care of these kids.
But then I've got this grown adult who's supposed to be my husband, who's supposed to be my partner, and now I'm managing his emotions
because every night at the dinner table, it's just husband yelling at the kids, and it doesn't work,
right? That's exhausting. So a few things, and I'm going to come back to the husband thing
in a second. Strong-willed kids, you've got to give them ownership. And I
encourage you to listen to the strong willed child program that we have. There's a key concept of
giving kids not control of your home, but ownership within your boundaries, making things a challenge,
using that energy, saying, hey, bet you can't do X, giving them grown up jobs. I put them in a
position to succeed. Look, I tend to expect the no from a strong-willed child.
I just do.
It's what I do as a human.
It's my first response when someone asks me to do something is a no.
Why?
Because it buys me some time to figure out a different way to get it done.
And they want to do it on their own terms.
And I'm not going to do that right here.
But it's a great trait because it's a sign of an independent thinker. Now, I know
it's irritating as the parent. You don't let your kids do whatever they want. I'll get to that in a
minute too, but I tend to give kids some options and I expand my boundaries so I'm not so rigid
all the time. And I encourage all of you as parents, all of us to watch like, is what you're
asking your child more for your
own convenience or more about your own control issues and the way you want to do it? Do they
have to do it your way? Do they have to? Or is that just arbitrary? Because strong-willed child's
not going to do it your way. And I'd rather give them a little bit of space to do it differently
and say, look, here's what I want done. Here's my goal, my objective. I don't care how you get it
done. If you want to do it in a weird way,
you want to do it in a fun way, you want to do it upside down, backwards, I don't care.
Just get it done. I encourage you to do that, right? Look, I also don't have a problem if you
have a child who's just being straight out defiant, like, no, I'm not doing that. Then I declare
martial law. You can't be bullied by a kid. There's no reason
to be bullied by a kid, but you got to watch and make sure you're not being too rigid. Make sure
you're giving some ownership, using all the tools. But at the end of the day, right, if my kids don't
get things done at home and it's Saturday morning, listen guys, martial law. What's martial law?
Martial law means there's no fun in this house until it gets cleaned, right? Oh, that's
stupid. That's dumb. How come we have to do? No, you're supposed to take us here on Saturday. Yeah,
not happening because I made a rule, which is these things don't get done during the week.
They get done on Saturday morning. Seriously? I told my friend I was going to be on my screens.
We were going to play a video game together. We were going to, yeah, well, too bad. Not happening.
I don't have a problem at all with declaring martial law
and being very tough with kids.
I don't make it personal.
I don't create drama.
And I don't go on and on.
I just let them know what I expect.
And then I follow through on that.
But my gut, it's not my gut, it's my experience.
Strong willed kids, they just need a lot of ownership
to do things in a different way.
And we've got to work.
Hubbies, if you're listening and you struggle with this, you've got to work on it.
So for all those with a hubby who needs to change, I'm going to do an entire podcast on this coming up.
There'll be a little bit longer and more involved.
But here's some quickie notes.
One is I've done a bunch of podcasts for dads and hubbies that i make like five to seven
minutes long so they don't have an excuse not to listen forward that to your kids right um but you
need to be direct and here's some advice and i hope you don't get offended by this talk to men
like other men talk to men talk to your husband now i know he should be understanding and he
should be understand your love
language, and I get that. But if you're listening and this applies to you, he doesn't get that.
So I talk to men like I talk to other men. I talk to boys, right? I like talking to kids. I talk to
kids like I talk to adults, right? So be a little bit more blunt. And you have every right to say, look, hubby, you don't act like this at work.
So you can't act like this at home.
I expect you to be the man that I married and model self-control for our kids.
It's not too much to ask.
Now, I know some of you, that's going to be really hard to say to your husband because
he may react in a very ugly way, a dismissive way, may blame you, right?
May turn it around on you. You're always
blaming me. You guys be better off. All those immature things that I used to do, right? But
you've got to talk to them about that and say, look, there's so many women. This is what hurts
me and not hurts me. What's the right word? It's distressing. I feel it for women who are, they can't have an honest
talk with their husband because the husband will dismiss them. The husband will turn it around
and you're just caught in this thing of like, what am I supposed to do here? Right? It's a
really brutal place to be. So I understand that. And that's why when anytime a man, guy reaches out
to him, I'm like, I will mentor you. You're looking to change. I'm all on board. I will help you with
that because it's a huge deal. But you've got, I would talk and say, look, you can't, you don't do
this at work. You don't walk around marching around yelling at people at work, but you come
home and you do that with the kids. It's not working. So I give your husband one or two specific
things to try for
the next week. Hey hubby, look, we've been trying this thing. You want it even better? Hey hubby,
I've been listening to this guy's podcast and here's what I've realized. I talk too much. I talk,
I go on, I react too much. I'm going to start working on that. I don't care what it is, but
then you're not, it's not all about him. You're saying, hey, I've got some things to work on.
This is what I'm going to work on. And Javi, I've noticed this.
When you come home or when you walk into the room with our son or a daughter,
when you do X, it tends to escalate all the time and it's not working.
And it hasn't worked for like the past seven years.
And I know like if it worked, if you had a strategy or a tactic you were employing and it didn't work for seven years, well, you probably changed the tactic.
So for the next two weeks, could we try X?
The next time our son or daughter does X, could you just do this?
Could you just sit down without trying to fix the situation?
When you walk into the room for the next week,
merely point out everything that our kids are doing right,
but don't correct them over everything.
Just point out what they're doing well.
Could we try that for one week?
And let's see how they respond to it. See, because I'm a practical guy, I'm a logical guy.
And so for a week, I can do that. But if you come and say like, we need to change our entire
parenting approach, I'm out. It's too much for me, but I could do it for a week and I could try a
couple of things and then we could measure it and see like, and then when they do well, hey, I noticed, I noticed how you came in the room with Tommy just
then. Man, you really calmed that down. That really helped me out, right? Affirm when he does
well and don't correct your husband every time he messes up, okay? So I'll end with this with that.
Wives, don't be put off. You're an equal partner.
Women, you're an equal partner.
I don't care what every, certain segments of where, how you've been raised, right?
You're an equal partner.
You're a smart person, right?
It's not like someone just gets to dictate everything to you, right?
You shouldn't be bossed around and you shouldn't be dismissed.
And I want you to be able to stand up for yourself. Okay, we're getting to the end here, but if you, okay,
here's a quick one. Food. Kids refuse to eat what we have in the house. Everything makes them, quote,
nauseous. They don't like it. Even things they ask for in a grocery store, they constantly want to
get takeout. Now, my response that I've written down, I cannot say because I'm not allowed to swear
on this podcast or otherwise we have to put some rating thing on it. But my response was no way.
Right. And you can fill in whatever word you want. Right. Look, if you if you need to apologize.
Right. And again, this isn't just for this parent who is asking. I'm expanding this. If you've created an expectation in your home
that the kids are supposed to be able to just call DoorDash every other night and get food,
then you need to apologize.
Hey, we apologize for leading you to believe that we do DoorDash three or four times a week
because that's expensive.
We're not doing it.
I apologize for that, right?
So if they're like, oh, I can't eat that, I can't doing that. I apologize for that, right? So if they're
like, oh, I can't eat that. I can't eat that. I have a couple of responses. One is no freaking
way. No, you're the parent. Moms and dads, there are some of these things are not that hard. They
just aren't. You just need to do what you know is right and put up with their whining and their
complaining. Oh, but I don't like what I'm eating. I don't like how that tastes. Oh, you know what? If that's that serious, let's go see a
naturopath, right? Let's talk about cleaning up your gut biome, right? Start talking to them about
that and see how that goes, right? Because that's what I hear you saying is that there's something
wrong. And so let's go see a doctor about that. But the honest answer to this one
is not that hard, which is not the way it works in this home. Seriously? Yes, seriously. It's not
the way that it works. We buy stuff at the grocery store. We eat at home. If you don't like it,
then you can go to the grocery store, get your own thing. But I'm not paying for DoorDash.
And I don't care how much your kids complain. Stop giving into that, right? This is not a, look,
you have to draw a distinction between, okay, my child's melting down because he's going to a new
taekwondo class and there's a lot of anxiety around that and feels like a failure and maybe
the kids are picking on him. So if he's melting down, I don't say, no effing way, you got to go
to the class anyway Anyway, be a man
No, and that I'm understanding. Yeah anxieties hard. Of course, you should be nervous going to that new place
That's hard navigating that see that's different
This is they just got in a habit of eating Chipotle and eating whatever from door to look if I didn't have to cook every night
I would eat out every single night if I could. And actually,
I'm an adult, so I could. But I care about my body. So I don't, right? And I care about my
wallet too. But there are distinctions there. And some things are like, no, it's not the way it
works. I don't know where you got the idea. Maybe your friend's parents let their kids order DoorDash every day and have food delivered to them.
Now, if you want to walk three miles down and get something to eat, maybe we can talk about that, right?
Because now you're at least getting some exercise.
If you're going to pay for part of that, are you going to do chores to pay for that?
Hey, I can work with that.
But no, you're not going to have food delivered to you.
Okay, enough of that. You get my point. Can you address the child's inability to cope with change
or discontent? An easy child may express their disappointment for a few seconds or a few minutes,
and then they move on. And I get that, right? They're like, oh, that was a bummer. Too bad.
Strong will kids freak out. They can rage for 30 minutes. And part of it is,
look, these are kids who are very, very intense and they live with a lot of intensity.
And I know this will sound funny, but it's this, they have very high expectations. They wake up,
they have an agenda, they have a vision, they see things, they're visual sometimes,
and they want to accomplish these things. And when it doesn't get done, it really frustrates them.
And the weird part of this in a way is that I know some people, right, who are not very motivated to do great things. Well, they don't
get disappointed much. You know why? Because they don't really have high expectations.
And so that's another way to look at it instead of like, my kids can't deal with that, which is true,
is my kids have very high expectations and they've got big dreams and when it doesn't go well,
they get frustrated. Well, you know, there's a good side of that and i'm not excusing that but like for i
remember casey will tell you if you ever talk to him i was a freak when i started this doing
celebrate calm right i was a freak i got upset every night because of stuff going wrong and my
computer broke and my email list and the cds weren't printing the right way because we used to way back in the day we actually printed our own CDs in the kitchen and put them
all together and did all that stuff and that was and I had this big big ideas well then you get a
lot of big frustration so just know that and it helps you see your child a little differently
but here's what I would encourage you to do. One is validate with intensity. Oh yeah, you know what? If I were you, I'd be frustrated
too. Do that sometime. Just see how they respond, right? You know what? If I were you, I'd be
frustrated too because you had this idea that you were going to do X and now you can't do it.
And then ask them some questions. Say, what does that feel like?
Like, did you wake up this morning picturing that? Did you visualize this? Did you see this?
Why does this mean so much? Instead of, and watch this switch. You know, why can't you handle it
when things go wrong? You know, life is filled with disappointment. See, that's a snotty lecture.
But if I said, you know what? What is hard about that? I'm curious.
Why? Where's that frustration? What did you want? What did you see in your brain?
What was it? And see if you can get inside of them and then identify with that.
When kids get very upset, it's because things are out of their control. So I try to give them
something they're in control of in that moment,
a mission, a task helping. Oh, you know what? I forgot. Could you do me a favor? Could you go in
the pantry, get the spaghetti sauce? Do you think you can get that top off? I have trouble getting
that off. Well, they just accomplished something. They got the top off of that. They helped you.
It made them feel in control of something. Here's another insight that I hope you will find helpful.
Some kids just verbalize everything that's going wrong with them.
They just verbalize it.
Ah, stupid.
They're not really miserable inside.
They just make you miserable.
But they're not really miserable inside.
They're just venting and they just do that because it gets it out of them.
I'm not saying it's right or wrong.
I'm just saying that it is. I've also noticed I've gotten older. I do that.
I verbalize and it could sound to other people like, man, you had a bad day. I was like, no,
I was just verbalizing when things went wrong because that helped me process it. Again, you can give them time to vent. I'd validate with intensity. Oh, I'd be frustrated too. You go do
something else. Give them space so you're not looking at them with intensity. Oh, I'd be frustrated too. You go do something else. Give
them space so you're not looking at them melting down. Remember, people don't like to be watched
when they're struggling. And then when you come back, you can say, hey, got that you're frustrated.
Okay, what are next steps? What are we going to do to problem solve? And again, in that tone,
not, honey, I can tell that you're really upset. Let's stop with that one. Okay, stop with it.
Honey, I can tell you're really upset. You know, with that one. Okay. Stop with it. Honey, I can
tell you're really upset. You know, when I get really, that tone, it sounds very patronizing
and it sounds weak to them. See, I talk to them like an adult. Yeah. I'd be frustrated too.
Happened. Same thing happened to me the other day at work. I was so PO'd. I was so upset. Whatever
word is appropriate for whatever age. I was so frustrated. I totally get
that. So here's what I do. When I get frustrated, I walk away for like a minute and a half for three
minutes. I go get something to drink. I go to the bathroom. I give myself some space to process that
disappointment. Then you know what I do? I problem solve. So that's what we're going to do now. Okay. Let me take a drink. Let me finish with this one.
My 11 year old's ability to bring the whole family down if he doesn't get his way. He's kind of like
a black cloud always around. We're sad. We can't seem to fix this. We don't seem to know what
consequence will work. Look, there's no
consequence that's going to take that away, right? We mentioned that before. It's something that
it's internalizing. So I've got to mention this. When you mentioned Black Cloud, it's worth
checking with his doctor, psychiatrist, just to make sure that there's nothing chemically wrong or genetically,
that, right, we just want to make sure that there isn't something there that is true
depression. I know these words get bandied around a lot, like, oh, he's depressed all the time. Well,
there's different kinds of depression. There's situational, right? Like, well, I'm just sad
because someone, my girlfriend broke up with me, so I'm sad, right? Or I didn't get what I wanted.
So I just have to say, make sure you get them checked out
to make sure we rule that out.
By the way, look at all the internal things with your kids.
Look at their gut biome.
Look at their diet.
Look at their, right?
You have a lot of kids with sensory issues.
Man, if I wake up in the morning
and if I'm allergic to something,
if you've got a little kid who's allergic to something
or has anxiety and their stomach's kind of always upset,
well, that's going to put them on edge.
So when things don't go well,
instead of responding like a three out of 10,
they're going to go like an eight out of 10.
So do check with those things.
Check with gut issues.
It's a big deal for a lot of kids.
So check all those things.
I would also do this. I do that mission and mentor
thing. He's an 11-year-old kid. That's the age which I got to have a mission in life. So let's
find someone who can be his mentor. Let's get him doing something for an old guy down the street.
All the stuff that I mentioned before. And I also asked this because the mom had said this. It's also I'm naturally anxious and it's heightened when I anticipate him freaking out when I tell him no to something. So mom, let's practice you're not moved by his disappointment so much right
look I want to be moved with compassion when people are hurting and when people are suffering
but disappointment is just a part of life right and then there's different kinds of disappointment
so practice sitting with that disappointment so you don't feed out because if you're naturally
anxious and I bet you're kind of talking to your son like this a little bit and like, honey, I, you know, I'm just trying to figure out how to help you. Well, see,
your anxiety is dumping on him and making him feel insecure about himself. So no blame, no guilt,
mom, right? Cause I'm a naturally anxious person too. So I want you to work on yourself and work
on your tone of voice so that you're actually, when your son is in that place,
you're not trying to coax him out of that just so it feels better for you. You're able to actually
be the reassuring one and the calm one and say, well, of course you're disappointed. Of course,
of course you're going through that. And you can normalize disappointment, right? I hope that makes
sense. And so instead of you guys, because of my senses, you and your son
probably feed off of each other in an unhealthy way. And so we all do those things. So no blame,
no guilt, but let's work on that one mom. So dealing with your own self anxiety, learning to
sit with his disappointment. So you're not moved. And then you become kind of a rudder for him.
And then the other thing that we mentioned is kids often verbalize things.
You can ask them, hey, are you really this upset inside?
Or are you just venting to me because that feels good?
That would be a good thing to know, right?
Are you really torn up about this?
Or are you just kind of venting because that feels good?
And he may say, oh, I'm just venting.
And you're like, oh, well, for 11 years, we thought that you were a dark cloud. You just verbalize your stuff,
right? It's just a good thing. It's a good thing to know. So I'm going to end there because I'm
afraid to look. 58 minutes. I'm going to finish this in less than an hour. Thank you for listening
this long. Again, give me feedback. If this is helpful, let me know. I'll keep doing more keep doing more most of our podcasts I'm going to keep short but if we can help you in
any way if you find this helpful give us feedback write to Casey our son C-A-S-E-Y at
celebratecalm.com if you need help with any of our programs like the No BS program the Calm Parent
package or if you just want look if you like what I've been talking about, just get the Get Everything package. You get 30 hours of insight
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ask Casey, we'll help you out.
We just want you to have the tools.
So thank you for listening.
Thanks for sharing the podcast with others.
And I'll see if I can get to the other 118 questions
I haven't gotten to.
Anyway, love you all.
Thanks for listening.
Bye-bye.