Calm Parenting Podcast - Relentless Arguer, Gets Last Word In, Demands Fairness?
Episode Date: June 23, 2024Relentless Arguer, Gets Last Word In, Demands Fairness? Do you have a child who is a relentless arguer, has to get the last word in, prove his or her point, and/or has a strong sense of justice and fa...irness? Do you have that infamous cop, judge and attorney all wrapped into one living under your roof? Kirk shows you how to use these traits to your advantage without it driving you crazy. Our Summer Sale continues this week. Visit https://celebratecalm.com/products to purchase the Get Everything Package at the lowest prices of the year. The Calm Parenting Podcast is sponsored by BetterHelp. Take a moment. Visit https://BetterHelp.comcom/CALM today to get 10% off your first month. Visit https://drinkAG1.com/calm for a FREE 1-year supply of Vitamin D3K2 AND 5 free AG1 Travel Packs with your first purchase. AirDoctor comes with a 30-day money back guarantee so if you don’t love it, just send it back for a refund, minus shipping! Head to https://airdoctorpro.com/ and use promo code CALM and you’ll receive UP TO $300 off air purifiers! Today my listeners receive 20% OFF any AquaTru purifier! Just go to https://AquaTru.com and enter code “CALM “ at checkout. Go to https://HelloFresh.com/calmapps for FREE appetizers for life! One appetizer item per box while subscription is active. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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to get the most effective learning program out there at the best price. So how many of you have
a child who is a relentless arguer? Or maybe they need
to get the last word in or prove their point. Or maybe you married someone like that. Or they have
this high, strong sense of justice and fairness is very important to them. Or maybe they're like
a little cop, judge, and attorney all rolled into one. How do you use these traits to your advantage
without it driving you crazy? That is what we're going to discuss on this episode of the Calm Parenting Podcast.
So welcome.
This is Kirk Martin, founder of Celebrate Calm.
You can find us at CelebrateCalm.com.
You can find us on, we're very active on our Instagram page at Calm Parenting Podcast.
So this is usually when I say, hey, if you're struggling with something, email our son Casey.
But Casey is getting married
this coming week. And so I'm going to ask you a favor. Look, if something's urgent, email us.
If you need help financially getting our programs, email us. Those are quick and easy. But if you
have a long email you want to write about your family situation, I'd ask you to do this. Go back and binge listen to
past episodes of the podcast. Or if you have our programs, get our programs, download them to your
phone. You have them forever. Your spouse gets access on their own phone or you have your
parents listen. Go through the programs and start working at this. Work on yourself and make a list.
Write down your triggers or a couple situations
that you're struggling with. Write that down. Write an email to yourself. And in a couple weeks
on the podcast, I'll say, hey, all clear. Email us. But for now, I just ask you to give us a couple
weeks to enjoy the family time together. Because the truth is we're really, really conscientious
about when people email us. And we answer a lot of emails each day because this is our family mission.
And I just don't want to be in the middle of celebrating all of this and being like, oh, I have to answer that.
So, again, if it's urgent or something simple, let us know.
But otherwise, wait till we get back.
But in the meantime, just work through these things.
Apply the principles to them as you go through our programs because I think they're they're pretty
methodical and a lot of these things you can just work through so here let's get to this question
of like these kids that are relentless arguers have to get the last word in so before I get to
the big big example here's a very common one Casey would would come at me. Look, you can see it in your kid's
eyes. And he just wanted to argue. And so what I learned was this. I would see that look in his
eyes and say, hey, Case, I know what you're after right now. I'm not going to argue with you. I'm
not going in the courtroom. You're really good at this and I'll end up losing. But I know what you want right now.
You want my intense emotional engagement. That's even, you know, it's brain stimulation, but I like
going a little deeper. It's just intense emotional engagement. Because when your kids start arguing
with you, watch what we do. You put down your phone, you put down everything, hands on hips,
or you walk closer to your child. And now you are giving them 100% of your energy and
intensity. And that feeds something inside of them that they don't normally get when they're
just doing things well. So I would look at them and say, hey, not going in the courtroom, not
going to argue right now, but if you want to do X, Y, or Z, man, I am all in. So the process is, instead of reacting to your child's outward behavior, step back.
This would be a great thing to do for the next two weeks.
Study human nature.
Study your kids.
For the next two weeks, while we're celebrating this wedding, be a student of your child.
Get to know, because we go through this in great detail in a lot of
the different programs of the root of it. The ADHD university, even if your kids don't have that,
if they're a strong willed child, it'll apply. It's their need for order and structure,
it's sensory needs, or it's brain stimulation. So you step back and think, hmm, what's the child
really after? And then instead of reacting, I feed them and I meet the internal need. Or you have that
child, right, that has that high sense of justice and they're going to argue with you and fairness
is really big to them and they want you to finally capitulate. And sometimes we had a lot of those
kids that came to our camps at our house and I'd say, I can't satisfy that in you right now. I
can't. I know what you
want is order and structure. You want to tie it together so it's all black and white so you can
feel at ease inside. I can't provide it that way and I'm not going to argue with you, but here's
what I can do. I can give you something you're in control of because I know you're really good at
doing X or Y. Could you do that for me? Because that would really help. And that would meet the sense inside. I would also, the sense that the sense for order inside. I would also
always say to them, look, relationships are more important than being right. Because you can be
right, but you can lose the relationship. Sometimes with Casey, when he was in that mood to argue, and I'm not recommending this,
but it's kind of fun sometimes. And in a handful of occasions, I would say this, hey, you know what,
Casey? You're absolutely right. And then I would walk away. Was he right? No, but I didn't need to
be right. I just didn't want to argue with him and it would really throw him off. So occasionally you
could do that.
What about the kids who just have to get the last word in? This is where I'll be tough on you.
In my experience, 95% of the time, it's totally your issue. You know why? Because you have to get the last word in. You have to prove your point and you're going to justify, well, I'm the parent,
I'm the authority figure. No, you don't have to get the last word in.
Why? What is it within? I'm just going to be tough on you because I want to free you from
needless drama over, I can't believe that my child always has to get the last word in. And I'm like,
I can, because you do it all the time. Where do you think they got it from? And so being tough
on you, I'm going to ask, why do you feel compelled to get that last word in to prove your point?
Because it feels it's like it compels you.
And see, if something compels you, then there's anxiety in it.
And it's not peaceful.
And it doesn't lead to anything good.
And so I'm going to challenge you for the next two weeks.
Let it go.
Let them get the last word in. I know, but it
really irritates me. I know human beings irritate me. You know who else irritates me? Me. I irritate
myself. Why? Because we're human. And if you're just going to walk around getting irritated at
people for everything, then you're just going to be miserable and everybody's going to have power
over your emotions because humans are irritating. And for the guy, I'm just going to be miserable and everybody's going to have power over your emotions because humans are irritating.
And I'm just going to address the guys.
For the guys out there who have to prove their point because I was that guy,
here's what I found in life.
People who have to prove their point are...
I can't say what I was going to say.
Here's what it proves, that you're a jerk.
And that's what I was.
When I always had to prove my point, nobody's going to say like, man what it proves, that you're a jerk. And that's what I was when I always had
to prove my point. Nobody's going to say like, man, you're so intelligent. You put together such
cogent arguments. I'm just in awe of you. No, they're just going to walk away and say, that
guy's a jerk. So stop being a jerk and let it go. And I promise you guys, your wife doesn't care. She's never going to say, you know what?
I'm so glad that I married someone who is so logical and points out that my emotions are
irrelevant or illogical or not legitimate. It makes me safe to feel like I'm with someone
who's always right. You want to go up to the bedroom?
Like they're never going to say that.
It's just so prove your point.
It took me a full year of working on an affirmation of saying I do not have to prove my point.
So let that stuff go.
That's your issue.
But what about that relentless arguer?
So here's how it works.
So I would walk into my home or home after work and Casey would be there waiting
like, dad, you have to take me to the store to get X. You have to download that new video game for me.
And my response would usually be not happening today. No. Short and sweet. My discipline is
usually very short and sweet. Very few words. The more words you use, the less valuable they become. And your kids stop listening to you. You know what else? Short and sweet is
confident. The more you talk and the more you kind of explain, the more you kind of get worked up
and your kids know they have you on the ropes and they're like, oh, he started talking. She
started explaining herself. I'm going to use that to my advantage because they're really good at
that. Short and sweet. Hey hey not happening today here's the
other reason i don't do demanding we had established that as a principle if you demand something from
me it's always going to be a no here's a cool thing if you ever listen to our discipline that
works program one of the cool things is um the opposites rule i I learned this from, we had 1,500 demanding attorney kids in our home over the course of a decade.
And so I came up with this rule that was opposites.
So when they were demanding opposites, opposites.
Because all kids remember they have that opposites thing at school where they wear the opposite.
They wear their clothes inside out, whatever.
And they get it very quickly.
So if you demand something from me, you get the exact
opposite of what you wanted. So you want me to do this right now. That means every time you demand
something of me, that means you lose it. Every time you lose it for another day, another hour,
another week, as many times you ask, ask me 14 times. I'm fine. It's going to be 14 hours or 14
days before you get that so that's
kind of a cool way to set things up in your home without a lot of words so i didn't explain a lot
when he would he would demand something of me i also didn't come back you know what you already
have enough video games that you don't play you have clothes you don't wear i'm not going because
they're never going to say dad mom i i hadn't realized that i had games that i don't wear. I'm not going, because they're never going to say, dad, mom.
I hadn't realized that I had games that I don't play in too many clothes.
But after you pointed that out to me, light bulb went off and I realized you're right.
It's not going to happen.
So I said, no.
So what would happen?
It would get kind of ugly because you would, you'll walk away and your kids will follow you, won't they?
So they're going to follow you and they're going to amp it up because they're persistent like that.
So let's play this out.
So I would go upstairs to my room.
Casey would follow me and he'd keep going and keep going. And eventually I'd just say, hey, Case, listen, I've seen this movie play out in
our home like 36 times this month. Kind of being facetious, but also proving the point. Your kids
do this a lot. So here's how it works every time. See the tone now, watch the tone instead of,
I don't know why you just can't take no for an answer.
Why do you have to keep bugging me? I've told you a million times, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Not all the words. I'm going into teaching mode. Hey, Case, I've seen this before. I've seen this
movie play out. Why? Why do I use that? Because a lot of your kids like movies. They don't hear
anything you say. They can't remember what a teacher says, but they can
memorize every line to their favorite movie. And this is a little theme I liked. So,
Case, I've seen this movie play out. Here's how it works. I come home from work, and you're
immediately there demanding that I do something. But you know that I am a man who does not do
demanding, so I said no. So, I walk away. You follow me. Why? Because you're
persistent. You know what you want and you're assertive. And I like that about you. And you've
got these great critical thinking skills. And so you come after me. So I go upstairs. I double
lock my bedroom door. You go outside. You climb up through the second floor and you come in. Why?
Because you're assertive and you're persistent. Great
qualities. But here's what happens next. I say no again and you keep going and then you get upset
and then you make it personal and you start yelling at me and demanding more and you call me
names. And then how does this scene end? With you in tears because you not only don't get what you initially asked for
but you're gonna lose your screens and the privileges you already have and you're gonna end up in tears and
It's not gonna work
And so what I want you to know is you have complete control to write a different ending to this movie
See here's where we are right now.
I just read life to my child.
I spoke truth.
That's how it works.
Instead of complaining, why do you always do this?
I can't do this.
Instead of creating all of your drama, you just spoke truth.
I've seen this before.
Here's how it always works because that's how it always ends.
And I know you're not going to like it. Look, there's a part of me that is advocating for my son. I know what you want.
You want that new video game. You want those clothes. You want that new hockey stick. I know
that. The way you're going about it will never work. Can you hear the tone there? It's
resigned. There's no energy. It's just not going to work with me. That's how I handle tantrums.
Tantrums are rational and manipulative. I won't give you anything. And so you're going to ramp
it up until it makes me so uncomfortable, I give in. What I want you to know is I'm uncomfortable with being
uncomfortable. I'm comfortable with you being upset at me. It doesn't move me. Your behavior
does not change my behavior. Your mood does not determine my mood. You can throw a meltdown
in public. I mean, a tantrum. A tantrum is rational. A meltdown is irrational. But you
can throw a tantrum in public because look, I'm not that worried about being embarrassed by your actions in public because those are your
actions. What I'm worried about, what I get embarrassed by is when I throw a tantrum in
public. See, I'm reading the situation and I'm talking in a calm, even matter of fact language.
It's a very business-like language of like, here's what's about to happen and it's not going to end well for you but so here's where
the energy goes this is what I know about you you're assertive you know what you want that's
a great quality in life because you're never going to grow resentful like a lot of us right a lot of
you a lot of moms and dads and a lot of moms you a lot of moms and dads, and a lot of moms,
you're resentful. After all I do for you. Well, that's your own resentment, right? And so you
don't speak up for yourself a lot, and then you don't get what you want. So son, I like that you're
assertive. I like that you see patterns in life. That helps you with arguing. I like that you're
persistent. Man, that will make you a great salesperson. It would help you get what you want in life.
A Harvard study showed the number one quality necessary for success in life
is not good grades and good behavior.
It's pig-headed determination and persistence, and you have it.
In this particular case, here's what's going to happen, though.
It's not going to work, and you're going to lose all your stuff.
But here's what else I know.
You have a big heart, usually toward other people, right?
You have a big heart and you love money.
I am going to go downstairs now and start to make dinner.
If you want to come down after you think about this, take a couple minutes.
Think about how you want to rewrite the ending to this story. That's a lot better than,
you know what, right now, think about your attitude, young man, because they're just going
to come back with, what attitude? Or, you know what, dad, you have attitude now. I don't have
attitude, and then it just blows up. So instead of making them make a decision right now, I just put it in their court. I just
gave them ownership. Listen to the programs for that. We teach you how to give ownership, critical
skill. That's in the Stop Powers with a Strong Willed Child program. How to give them ownership
of their choices within your boundaries. I'm going to go do X. I'm going to go get started on dinner. Gives you a little space. Why don't you think about how you want this movie to end? Because if you come downstairs in a little
bit, I bet we could brainstorm three different ways for you to earn some money in this neighborhood
by helping other people. And with that money, you could buy those new clothes, that new hockey stick,
those new video games. See, I'm problem solving.
And that's a big part of what I want to do.
Instead of like, well, I just need to discipline my child.
No, I want to teach him how to, I want to problem solve with my child.
I just taught him that talking to me like that, it just doesn't work.
But instead of like, stop doing that or else you're going to lose things.
I spent more of my energy went to, I can teach you how to do this differently.
Come talk to me.
And I can start to use that relentless trait,
that persistence to my and their advantage.
So I'm trying to make this one short.
Look, practice that this week.
Go through the program, start working it and working it.
And if you have those questions,
write them down. But here's my challenge for two weeks. You start digging in deeper and saying,
okay, what does it say on these programs for how to handle that? Or I haven't heard that. Let me
listen to another one. And then your emails, you know what they will become? You know what? I was
going to ask you about that, but I dug in. I took that principle. I applied it. Here's how I did it.
And it changed the situation.
Now, if you have a situation and you just can't get to the bottom of it,
then in a couple weeks, I want to give you the whole clear, email us.
And we really appreciate that.
So, love you all.
Thank you for sharing the podcast.
We still have Even Though the Wedding is next weekend.
I've got a podcast planned.
I'm going to record that ahead of time, So I'm not doing it in the middle of the
wedding. And I'll probably be posting a little bit on Instagram as well, some reminders and some tips
because those are quick and easy for me to do. So thank you all. Look, thanks for being our family.
We consider you extended family. We all have these kids that are basically the same.
That's why I'm on Instagram answering questions a lot.
We have a Facebook page too, but I'm getting kind of immediate feedback on Instagram.
And I'm trying to really help people in the moment because this is hard work.
And you guys get judged by all the people that have like compliant kids.
And we just, we want to help you stop the power struggles and build a closer relationship,
even with this really challenging child or challenging kid.
So love you all.
We'll talk to you soon.
Bye-bye.