Calm Parenting Podcast - Stop Fights Between Siblings & Parents. Build Confidence.
Episode Date: November 26, 2023This may be one of the most important podcasts I have ever recorded. We cover sibling issues, tension between parent and child, building confidence, and answers this question: "How can we REALLY chang...e our home life?" We are extending our Black Friday Sale for ONE more week. Take advantage of the Lowest Prices of the Year at https://celebratecalm.com/black-friday/ Questions? Need help deciding on the best tools for your family? Email Casey@CelebrateCalm.com and Casey will help you personally! Get $15 off the perfect Christmas gift, a Skylight Digital Picture Frame, at https://www.skylightframe.com/CALM Get your kids something they will actually LOVE, use, and look forward to getting all throughout the coming year. Build your child’s confidence NOW! Visit https://crunchlabs.com/CALM and get your kids CrunchLabs today! A Revolutionary Baby Monitor is Born. Visit https://www.masimostork.com/ to learn more. 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. The hard part about all
of this is that you have a lot of stuff going on in your
home. All kinds of dynamics, including ones you're not even aware of because when you got married,
you weren't aware of your spouse's family of origin story. You have no idea how all the stuff
from each of your childhoods is affecting you in your marriage or in how you actually parent,
right? And then you've got a
kid, one of your kids is picking on the other one. So it seems like you've got a sibling issue,
but I promise you, you probably don't. It's something else. Then you've got the dynamic
of a child not listening because maybe he's on the spectrum or maybe is ADD or ADHD. And so that
causes frustration in the home. And then you've got a tense
relationship, let's say, for example, between a father and a son. Well, guess what else that
creates? Tension between husband and wife. There's a lot going on. And I want to try in this podcast
to show you how to sort it out and attack things one at a time so that we can get to the kind of family life
that you really want.
So that's 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.
If you need help, reach out to our strong-willed son, Casey.
C-A-S-E-Y at CelebrateCalm.com.
Tell us about your family.
What are you struggling with?
We get together as a family. We talk about it and then we reply to you and we
give you some insight some strategies to try this is not a business it is a
family mission if you need additional help I would encourage you is the
holidays which means we have a huge huge sale and what that means is you get
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we have developed over the past 20 years with almost a million families and you get it at your fingertips
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year. Take advantage of that. Get everything. It'll be worth it. So here's what I want to talk about
because this is fascinating to me. So I get an email and the email,
like normal person, like you, writing in, we're all normal people, awful normal people, but we get
this like, hey, you know, we're really working at this, but our 10-year-old son is picking on our
six-year-old daughter. We're at our wit's end. What do we do? Well, when I hear that, I have some very specific sibling strategies to use,
but I decided to ask a question and say, hey, where's this coming from, right? Is this jealousy?
Do you have a, is your son the kind of child who's kind of always in trouble and he's got the golden
child sister? And so here's what comes pouring out of this really good mom when I get
the reply back. One, we've got jealousy. Yep, son's always been in trouble. The daughter is naturally
compliant. And so that's happening. Here's what else I hear. When our son is bored, he tends to
pick on his sister. Okay, that makes sense to me. And when he's had too much screen time,
he picks on his sister.
So there's more to it, but let me start here.
So here are a few ways I want to attack this.
One, I want to, this is not a sibling issue.
This is an issue of one child
who does not feel good about himself inside.
And he has jealousy, which is natural
because he sees how everybody else responds to his sister. And you know what he thinks? Well,
I'm not going to take it out on my dad because I'll get pounded. I don't necessarily take it
out on my mom, but I will pick on my sister because she's younger than me. Or in some cases,
the sister or brother is older, but this is a strong-willed child,
so it doesn't matter who they take on because they're tough, right? So a few things that I
begin to think about. One, let's start to create successes, right? I want to create situations in
the home and at school in which this child who doesn't feel good about himself begins to shine.
I want to use his natural gifts, talents, and passions to help other people.
I want teachers saying, oh, Jacob, I could really use your help.
You are really good at doing X.
Could you come in a little bit early?
Could you stay after class?
Could you help me in class with X?
At home, I want to put him in situations.
If this is a kid who likes building things, let's have him build things.
Let's have him make and create things.
Let's have him make dinner for us a couple nights a week and create a menu. And we'll even pay him for making a meal because it's a lot
cheaper than eating out, right? This is a kid who loves physical work. Well, let's get him doing
shoveling some mulch and doing some things outside or shoveling snow in the winter. I don't care.
Let's give this child space and place. I'm going to run through things pretty quickly
here. Sorry, it's in all of the materials, but space and place are really important for our kids. They have to have their particular
space and their place within it where they feel they get to use their unique gifts. They get to
not be compared to their siblings all the time. Because you know what happens with a lot of our
strong will kids is one, they don't measure up against their siblings, so they begin to shut down, or they don't measure up against you. And if you've
got a mom and a dad, and you're maybe in a certain profession, or you went to, and you've got your
doctorate, or you're an attorney, or something really successful, so to speak, that child figures
out, you know what, I can't even get through third grade. I'm just going to shut down and not even do it. So here's an idea. Let's have a neighbor, get a neighbor to give, in this
case, this 10-year-old son jobs to do. Hey, I need your help. Could you come down the street? Could
you help me out? Because when your child is at the neighbor's house helping him or her, or at an
animal shelter, or at church, or synagogue, or mosque, or somewhere doing something they're
good at, other people recognize it, and it feels good inside. And it's helpful because now it's
like, okay, maybe my sister is better than me at X, but when I go to Mrs. Johnson's house,
I'm so good at doing that. I take care of their dog. I'm earning money, whatever it is. The third thing that came to mind is
I want to create a special role for this son
because he is the older brother, right?
So look, I'm king of the roost
for the first four years of my life.
Everything revolves around me.
If it's strong-willed child,
that's pretty much gonna continue for a while
until they hit their stride in their early to mid-20s, and then they're going to take off, and they're going to be awesome,
and the rest of their life is going to be really cool. And then the compliant child is going to
struggle in their late 20s because they've never really faced adversity, whereas your strong-willed
child has been fighting life since he came out of the womb. But I want to give, so this child is, the sister is competition. The sister
makes him look bad in a way. So rather than be nice to your sister, look, if that worked,
we would have never had siblings killing each other since the beginning of time, right? It
doesn't work. Those simple phrases like, be kind to your sister. We're a nice family. That's not what's going on.
This has nothing to do. This has nothing to do with whether this 10-year-old boy is kind or a
good person. Nothing to do with it. It has everything to do with what he has internalized
through the first 10 years of his life. And I want to give him a special role and say, you know what?
You're the oldest. That
makes you special. It's special. You're the oldest, which means you're going to have more responsibility
and also going to have some special privileges. Here's what I need your help with as the older
brother. It's almost that idea of making him a deputy in the home. Our kids like feeling like
adults having a higher mission. So rather than leave
your sister alone, if you can't leave your sister alone, instead, I want to lift kids up. I want to
give them a higher vision for, hey, you're the oldest. You're double digits, man, 10 years old.
I was thinking when you're 10 at that age, we can go do some really cool experiences,
but I really need you to step up. And here's where I
need some help around the home. And here's where I need some help even with your sister, because
you're 10, you're capable of more. And when you show me that you're capable of more, man, I can
take you to X, Y, and Z, because then I can trust that you can step up. I'm pulling that child up,
right? The mom mentioned when he's bored. that's why we like giving kids specific missions
purposeful missions running their own little business volunteering at the animal shelter
walking down working at the neighbor's house and then mom said too much screen time okay i can't
deal with that except to say this then don't give him so much screen time if giving him a lot of
screen time causes him directly relates to him being mean to your sister. Well, let's take away the
screen time. Well, you know, in our process, if you say no to one thing, you have to say yes to
something that's appropriate. And that's when we get into missions and all those things we mentioned
before, creating successes. But here's the main point of this podcast. Here's what followed. Mom went on to tell me, well, my husband and son don't have a great
relationship. My son already feels like his dad doesn't like him. Because when the child doesn't
listen, hubby yells and gets on him. And so watch what's going on here. Mom emails, because she's a good mom and
wants some help, and is like, I got to get this kid to stop hitting his sister. And here's what
the real issue is. The adults in the home can't do what we're expecting the kids in the home to do.
So think about this. Mom said, my son already feels like his dad doesn't like him.
So what am I supposed to think if I'm a 10-year-old kid? I'm already different. I know that I don't
always fit in. I may not connect well with kids my own age. I've always been in trouble. It feels
like everybody's against me. And now my own dad doesn't even like me. Well, what do you do with that if you're a kid? Well, one logical thing
is to shut down. One is to become very defiant, and that will eventually happen in the teen years
if we don't fix this relationship now. Well, right now, the easiest thing is I'm just going to start
hitting my 60-year-old sister. That makes perfect sense to me because hurt people hurt other people.
This is a hurt kid.
This is not a bad kid or a mean kid.
This is a kid who doesn't feel good about himself.
And so he takes it out on the world around him.
And this is what's very important to me.
We're asking our kids to handle conflict and to get along when the husband and
wife can't even figure it out right because i guarantee you this is what's happening in this
home because it happens all the time and it's no blame no judgment on this mom is married to a guy
who can't necessarily control himself and she she's probably spoken up before, maybe even said, hey, would you listen to this guy's podcast?
But he dismisses it.
And he dismisses it.
And he doesn't listen.
Or he's like, I don't need the help.
He just needs to learn to listen.
When I was a kid, if I would have done this, my dad would have done X, Y, and Z.
So what happens to the wife in this situation? She figures it's so unpleasant talking to my
husband about this that maybe I'll just try to get the two kids to behave better. Because if the two
kids behave better, then my husband won't get upset and then everything's better. So we're putting on two children what the two grown-ups in the home can't do. Now, caveat,
this is hard. There is no blame. There is no guilt. There is no shame in this. This is the hardest
stuff you will ever do in your life. Whatever job you have, even if it's a really hard job,
does not compare to handling conflict with your spouse and with
your kids in the home. It doesn't compare. Now, here's the second thing going on. Dad can't control
himself. In some cases, mom can't control herself. It may look the same. It may look differently.
I don't know. But the root of it is we can't control ourselves. So we talk too
much. We lecture too much. We use guilt trips after all I do for you, or we scream and yell.
We use fear and intimidation. No matter what it looks like, it's the adult being unable to control
himself, but then asking, requiring, and sometimes shaming the kids because they can't do what the grown-ups in the home
can't do. And it goes back to what I was really saying to my son when Casey was little,
and I used fear and intimidation. What I was really saying to him was,
I need you to behave because if you don't behave and do exactly what I say, I'm not sure I can behave and you do not
want to see me angry. How many of you grew up as kids managing your parents' emotions? How many of
you married your father because your father couldn't control himself like my dad and you
learned how to manage his emotions so he wouldn't be upset. And then you met a guy who was kind of the same way,
and because you had grown up for 18 or 20 or 30 years managing your dad's emotions,
this guy that you met was very, very familiar to you,
and you were like, hmm, I know how to handle this.
And then you get into marriage.
It doesn't work.
You're repeating the same generational patterns.
So let me tie this all together. I want to give kids tools and I can help a little bit. I can
actually help a lot with the jealousy and the sibling fight thing. I can help a lot with that.
We're going to create success, a space and play, special role, purposeful missions, get this child,
his brain focused on bigger things. All of that is really
good, but it's not the most important thing. The sibling issues in this situation doesn't really
matter. That will resolve itself. One, when father and son can restore their relationship,
and when the child, when the son or daughter feels like his dad actually accepts him and likes him, that will
change everything. Everything. And by the way, that's why I want you to get the everything
package because this is not isolated. You've got to have tools for your kids, but you've got to
have tools for you as parents. And then you have to have tools for you as a couple to know how to handle this
conflict. Otherwise, guess what happens? It all begins to unravel because the sibling fights,
we can maybe put a short-term stop on that. Like, yo, if you don't stop hitting your sister.
But eventually, this son will stop bothering his sister, but then he's going to start doing
other things to self-destruct even more. So the real solution here is number one, for us to learn how to control
ourselves. Number two, for dad or mom, whatever your situation is, to restore your relationship
with your child. Consequences don't change behavior. Relationships change behavior.
If you have, look, if you were to picture a father and son in this case,
or father and daughter, or mother and daughter, it doesn't matter,
and they're at odds, and there's always tension between them,
that's just going to continue on, right?
That's going to cause all kinds of issues in the home.
But now if you picture this father and son playing
catch together, going for drives together, sitting together, building with Legos together, and the dad
can control himself and he's not yelling anymore, right? And he's listening to his son. Don't you
think that will change literally everything? And if husband and wife can't figure it out, if you too as grown adults can't figure this out,
it's not fair to ask your kids to do what you're not capable of, what you don't have tools
to do, or what you're not willing to do. I know it sounds a little bit harsh, and I know maybe
listening to this podcast, it's the first time you've realized, oh crap, I thought I was just
texting, emailing this guy about like a sibling issue in our home, when I realized this is our
issue, and we better dig down deep and learn how to do this, because it doesn't just magically get
better. Now, I'm a man. I am awesome at putting things off. I'm awesome at not asking for directions and living in denial. Oh,
honey, it'll be fine. It'll be fine. No, it's not. It's not fine and it's not going to be fine.
And I hurt my wife saying those kind of things, right? Because that hurt because it was denying
reality and it was denying that what she was seeing in the home was true. And that hurts
and that will unravel and it will not get any true. And that hurts. And that will unravel,
and it will not get any better. So let's dig into this, okay? So I'm going to recap. For the
jealousy, we're going to create successes. We're going to find a place for your child to, you know,
I almost don't want to do these because these are like the little strategies, but they're not the
real issue. But still, place and space, special role, purposeful missions, all of those things.
But let's begin to learn how to control ourselves. Go through the dad's program,
go through the men's program, the 30 days to calm to learn how to control yourself.
Later on, you can go through the kids program, give it to your kids to listen
and go through the sibling issues and how to discipline, but go through the calm couples
program because you can do it right from home where you learn how to actually, but go through the Calm Couples program because you can do it right from
home where you learn how to actually, we go through the process, how do you actually have
a hard talk with your spouse? Let's do that stuff. That's the gift I want you to give each other
this year for Christmas or Hanukkah or whatever you celebrate or for the new year. That's what
I want you to work on because that will change everything at a very root level. And I believe you're capable of doing that.
And I will walk with you on that path doing that
because it's critically important.
Okay, I've said enough.
If you need help, reach out to Casey.
C-A-S-E-Y at celebratecalm.com.
Love you all.
Let's work on this together.