Calm Parenting Podcast - Triggered By Sibling Fights, Noise, Messes & More?
Episode Date: November 3, 2024Triggered By Sibling Fights, Noise, Messes & More? Do you get triggered by tantrums, kids pushing your buttons and ruining your agenda, leaving messes everywhere, or fighting with each other? Of cours...e you do! But when you react, you make power struggles worse, behavior never changes, and relationships become strained. Kirk shows you exactly how to overcome your triggers and break generational patterns. Check out our BIG Fall Sale! Get practical strategies that really work with your strong-willed kids. Visit https://celebratecalm.com/products/ to purchase the Get Everything Package at the lowest prices of the year. AG1 Every week of November, AG1 will be running a special Black Friday offer for a free gift with your first subscription, in addition to the Welcome Kit with Vitamin D3+K2. So make sure to check out https://drinkag1.com to see what gift you can get this week! HAPPY MAMMOTH It's time to feel like yourself again, Moms! For a limited time, you can get 15% off on your entire first order at https://store.happymammoth.com/ with the code CALM at checkout. SIMPLISAFE This week only, you can get 60% off any new system with a select professional monitoring plan. This is their best offer of the year! Head to https://simplisafe.com/calm. There’s no safe like SimpliSafe. AirDoctor 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! OneSkin OneSkin is the world’s first skin longevity company. Get started today with 15% off using code KIRK at https://oneskin.co. AQUATRU WATER PURIFIER AquaTru comes with a 30-day Money-Back Guarantee. My listeners receive 20% OFF any AquaTru purifier. Go to https://www.AquaTru.com and enter code “CALM “ at checkout. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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So, do you get triggered by tantrums,
by kids pushing your buttons and ruining your agenda?
What about kids leaving messes everywhere
or fighting with each other?
Well, of course you do.
But when you react, you make power struggles worse,
behavior never changes, and relationships become strained.
So in this episode of the Calm Parenting Podcast,
I wanna show you exactly how to overcome your triggers
and break these generational patterns.
So welcome, this is Kirk Martin, founder of Celebrate Calm.
You can find us at CelebrateCalm.com.
Look, we all have our triggers probably since childhood.
So these are deeply ingrained
and if you don't deal with these, you'll have constant and
unnecessary power struggles with your kids because they know your buttons and as strong
willed kids, they're awesome at pushing them.
And you will hurt your relationship with your kids.
And you know what's the one of the worst parts is you won't ever get them to stop doing what
they're doing. And everybody's going to end up frustrated by this and you know
what you're gonna miss opportunities to bond with your kids to teach them life
skills and to focus on what's really important all because you got triggered
by things within you that are not your kids' issues. And look, I'm gonna be a little bit tough here.
Don't force your kids to be responsible for your triggers.
These are for you to deal with,
not for your kids to work around your triggers.
Otherwise, what we're really saying is,
I've never dealt with my own triggers
and can't deal with this,
so you need to change so that I won't be triggered and
You need to change because I can't or won't change
So what we're doing is we are breaking
Generational patterns so your kids won't struggle with these things like we have that's a great gift to your kids
And I respect you for doing this work, And we're modeling for them how to control ourselves, transform ourselves,
and handle difficult situations in life. Look, that's way more important than
kids doing their homework, making their bed, or just doing chores. We are
reconciling our past, making peace with it so it can stay there.
We're making generational changes.
And look, you're creating a new family tree.
So let's go through four examples and different ways to handle this.
Now, one of the ones that is going to really trip you up is when siblings are arguing,
squabbling and fighting with each other.
So a dad had told me one of his boys would provoke the other one and then he'd get involved
and make it, in his quotes, infinitely worse.
So I want to show you how this dad worked through this process.
It's in our 30 Days to Calm program.
And the first step is, well, you
just identify your trigger and then always ask parents like diagram how this typically
plays out. How do you respond? And then what is the result? So the dad said, well, one
brother provokes the other. The other brother responds. And this is encourages the provoking
child to keep going. Why? Because they're looking for brain stimulation.
And their heightened voices provoke my response as the dad.
And when things go for longer than a minute or two, I barge into the room, stand over
them, start lecturing, and then one or both of the boys then raise their, they raise their
voices or
provide a smart Alec response. My response is then what? To escalate yell
bark orders and the result is chaos. The boys yelling rightly for their mom which
gets me even more worked up and by this stage I'm usually barking consequences and
everyone is upset with everyone else and all of this happens in probably 30 to 60
seconds. Now what I appreciate about this is here's a dad being honest and
so not blaming it on the boys well if the boys if my kids would just start
doing X no that's not the way to work with this.
It's like, I've got to work on this.
So that honesty is awesome.
So the next step in the program is,
let's have a pre-planned response.
We know this is going to happen again,
so let's plan for it and have a new response
to the sibling situation.
And so what can you do differently next time,
even if it makes you uncomfortable?
And I'll give you the shortcut.
Do the opposite of what you normally do now,
because you'll probably get an opposite response
that's better.
So here's what a few of the options
that the dad began doing.
Said I can walk by and say casually,
hey, I'm headed to the garage to do X
if anybody needs anything or wants to help me.
Or, hey, let me know if either of you wants to go grab a snack with me.
Dad said he could walk into the room and sit with earbuds in,
listening to music or a podcast.
And if it's a podcast, something the kids might be interested in,
then he could even ask, hey, what do you think about this guy's theory, these ideas? Dad said this one, I like this one, I can go
find something else to do maybe even out of earshot because nine out of ten times
they're not hurting each other they're just annoying me and then when I leave
them alone they learn to sort it out themselves. Now that's a cool option. Now caveat,
some of you have kids who are very aggressive toward each other and I'm not talking about rough housing because rough housing is a very
healthy thing for kids to do but kids who are being very aggressive,
that's not what's happening here and I deal with that in the Discipline That Works program,
but that's not what what's happening and what's not happening in most sibling situations.
It's just they're arguing and picking at each other.
I want them to learn how to sort it out themselves.
Now here's one of my favorite responses that this dad began doing.
And this is what he said afterward.
I began being curious and I'd ask the provoking child, hey, are you bored?
And I'd offer to give that child my intense emotional engagement. You hear me talking about that.
Making something in the garage with me because this kid likes to tinker with things. He likes to make things.
So now rather than my son getting all that negative intensity from his brother's reaction
and then my reaction and mom's reaction, now I'm actually with him in the garage and we are building things together.
See that is cool.
Here is when a dad deals with a trigger of his that 50 times before caused the
whole house to escalate.
And now he's figured out a way to actually use that and bond with his son.
That's cool.
Now, one of the other options is to sit in the room
and literally say nothing.
Just sit in the discomfort of it.
And this dad had said for someone who yells
and raises his voice too much,
the discordant noise from others is triggering.
But he's working on this.
Well done, Dad.
See, I like how he handled that.
Now number two situation, because Dad just mentioned that, is discordant noise.
That is a huge trigger for me.
So when we started those camps way back in the day, and we'd have 10 to 15 kids, they
were like loud attorneys in our home squabbling with each other or
they were building with things making noise while humming and making weird
noises not to mention these are kids like yours who vent they complain a lot
it was like nails on a chalkboard but I couldn't react and yell at kids so I
focused on this see discordant noise is especially irritating
because there's no rhythm to it like music.
It's just noise here and there and then an outburst
and it really throws off my nervous system in a way.
So I began doing the only thing that I could do
in that situation, which is control myself.
So I kind of ball my hands into a fist and then I gently kind of hit them against my thighs in a
rhythmic motion. And I would focus more on the vibration that that was sending
through my legs and the rhythm of it. I focused more on that than I focused on
trying to control the kids. You've seen this before.
When you're at a movie theater, when you're at dinner and someone's talking too loud or
on their phone and it just irritates you and the more you focus on them like your blood
pressure rises, that's what was happening to me with these kids.
So I controlled the one thing I could myself.
Look, if you struggle with this, I'd also encourage you get noise noise-canceling headphones. I'm not being funny with that. It's
just very practical. You don't have to hear every single thing that your child says. You just need
to be aware of what's going on. So here's another difficult one. What about messes in your home?
Okay, even if you don't struggle with there being messes everywhere left by your kids,
apply these same action steps to your own triggers in order to be free.
Now, caveat, in other podcasts and in the programs I go through in detail, many different
ways to how to get your kids to clean up and be responsible.
That's the easy part to me.
What I want to focus on today is not fixing the situation or the problem, but learning how to not let
this trigger you anymore. So you're going to hate this, but I want you to do it. Sit
in the situation without fixing it. Walk right into the midst of that mess and sit down right in the midst of it or in the
midst of chaotic sibling squabbling.
Do it without trying to fix it right away.
Now what you could do is think about this.
You could even journalist this if you're into journaling.
First identify what are you feeling in your body?
Does your heart race a little bit?
Do you feel short of breath? Does it give you a headache? And
then identify why this triggers you so much. Does it feel overwhelming? Do you
feel guilty over letting these messes get out of control like you failed
because your kids are sloppy? Do you fear kids will grow up and be unable to be
organized and they're gonna live this chaotic life? Is it irritating because
you worked so hard for like five hours to keep the home organized
and then your kids come in and mess it up in five minutes?
Do you feel resentful toward your kids or even a spouse who not only doesn't help but
complains about it or yells at the kids and now you have to be jump in and be the mediator
between a parent and the kids.
Do you take it personally as disrespect towards you? Do you feel judged by your parents because
their house was never like this? Look that's all normal. So next let's take a tough step.
For the next few days I want you to practice. Sit in the midst of the
mess. Sit in the midst of sibling squabblings or tantrums from your toddler
or teenager without reacting, without fixing them until it doesn't trigger you
so much anymore. Because when you get triggered, you tend to lecture, yell,
repeat yourself 14 times, and that makes you sound and feel
powerless and weak and you complain about it. You try to bribe and plead and go on and on and
eventually just yell and no one takes you seriously.
So while you're sitting realize this is normal expect it. It doesn't mean
accept it, but expect it. It's normal.
Look when you signed up for marriage, you forfeited your
right to do what you want to do all the time. When you signed up to have kids, you forfeited the right
to expect to have a quiet home with no messes. In the moment of that, do something that's calming to
you that you do feel in control of. Read a book, do
crossword puzzles, scrapbooks, so listen to music while you're just sitting there
because the rhythm and order of that will help you a little bit. Now here's an
option for perhaps a certain room or several rooms. You just happily clean up
while listening to music or a podcast and go about your day. No drama, no
complaining.
I'm not saying this is what I recommend.
I'm just saying it's an option.
It alleviates your stress and the drama and you get what you want without lecturing or
yelling.
You get a neat home without any negative feelings.
It's kind of like with the dishwasher.
If you need the dishwasher loaded a certain way, then just be the dishwasher loader and don't let anybody else near it. You just handle
it because it's unfair to ask other people in your home to do what will
never please you. If they can't please you, then you have to relinquish that
right to yell at them and just do it yourself. You and everybody else will just be much happier.
Now you can go hardcore and declare a martial law in your home until the messes are picked
up.
You can give your kids some practical tools for cleaning up like creating videos with
them and I've been through those in other podcasts.
I went through this a great deal in the updated discipline that works program. So if you have our programs, check your app because I just updated this
program and the new program will be in your app to listen to. But I really, really want
you to practice sitting in this without fixing it over the course of the next few days and
weeks and months until you have some limited mastery or control over it so it
doesn't trigger you in a visceral way and cause you to react and hurt
relationships. Okay number four. Look I'm just going to put this under the the
heading of kids are just being kids which means they're irritating and
they're messing up your agenda because you're a really good parent and you've
got this checklist of things that have to be done and
It has to be done in a certain time because that's what it means to be a good parent
But you know what your kids are gonna mess that up, especially strong
Well kids, especially emotional kids and little kids part of their job description is to ruin your agenda
So throw away the checklist. Here's a quick example
agenda. So throw away the checklist. Here's a quick example. A great mom had said, I get so triggered lately. All my kids want to do is drag everything in a
house into giant piles they call forts. They're doing it in closets in the
living room everywhere and it really sets me off. So here's some perspective.
Imagine the opposite. If your kids had their heads in screens all day, even though that doesn't make
a mess and they're quiet, you'd be coaxing them relentlessly to play and create and build forts
and anything else. Then you'd be thrilled that they stopped playing video games and were actually
being inventive and creative. I'd encourage you, look at situations differently
because sometimes as parents or as humans,
we go from like, it's like,
oh, well I'm not happy with them doing that.
Well think of what the opposite could be happening, right?
It's like, I do this a lot with teenagers,
like, oh, well my teenager is on his screens all the time.
Okay, I get it, it's not optimal,
and we wanna change that.
But if your child isn't
Vaping and looking up really bad things on the internet and is not doing all kinds of other things
They could be a as teens. You know what then I get a little bit of perspective
I think I shared this on Instagram once we used to do this with our son like okay
So he butted in line. We got a note one day. Your son Casey butted in line in the cafeteria.
And I was like, okay, so he was hungry. He's got initiative and he knows how to get what he wants.
Like those qualities. I know it's wrong, but at least he didn't like stab some kid in the back and
stomp on him, right? Like get perspective. These are kids. They're supposed to do things that irritate you. So stop
imposing your grown-up responsibilities and expectations on your kids. I was
guilty of that for so long. Casey, you need to do this. And I was like, 135, he's
7 or 14. Just watch that. Now you can put limits on anything. Hey, you can only build forts in these rooms.
No forts in this living room ever. And you could require that they pick up the fort at the end of the day.
And I know, but many of you are thinking like, but if you allow your kids to be messy,
they're gonna grow up to be slobs and they're gonna get rejected by society and I'll be embarrassed for them
It's just not true. That's your anxiety speaking
You are that anxiety is causing you to project into the future watch that especially as your kids get older
Because then you're just gonna lecture all the time and notice everything that they're not doing well
And then they'll shut down they'll resist resist you anymore. Your kids are gonna change.
You have a DNA in your home.
Look, if you leave messes everywhere yourself,
then your kids will inherit that
as part of their environmental DNA,
and think that's the norm.
But if you're neat and tidy,
your kids will eventually be like that.
Just like if you eat healthy and you exercise,
they'll eventually get that.
They just won't get it on your timeline.
Casey's bedroom and bathroom were horrid as a kid, but he owns his own home now. Guess what?
His home is organized and clean and you have to take off your shoes when you walk into his house.
So don't project into the future. So to this mom, said instead of reacting, sit down, remember that, grab a drink
and a book. Watch your kids building their forts. They're playing well by themselves,
entertaining themselves, not hurting anyone or anything. That is a dream for modern-day parents,
but that's that chaos and stuff that you don't like. Encourage them by asking questions. Hey, I'm curious why you use that for the top of the fort.
Hey, do you think you could make this even bigger without it caving in?
Affirm them. Man, that is so creative. You guys are such good builders. See, you're enjoying your kids.
Send pictures of these forts to their grandparents bragging about them.
Be grateful that you get to work on.
That sounds awful actually, doesn't it?
This sounds like, you know, be grateful that you get to work.
So let me change that.
You know what?
Just lean into that.
You know, you don't have to even be grateful for it.
But I want you to know this is an opportunity for you to be free from this trigger that
dominates your mood. Because these things that your kids do, they change your mood.
And so now you don't have to be grateful for it, but you can just recognize,
oh there's another one of my triggers. This is an opportunity for me to be free
from that, to enjoy relationships with
my kids instead of walking around being irritated and lecturing all the time. So instead of seeing
the disorder and something that always needs to be done, always needs to be picked up, going through
my checklist, see it as a monument to your kids' creativity, an expression of simple joy, something you will miss when they get older.
Because I guarantee you, you will miss this.
And when the kids get older, sometimes you lose this childlike desire to make for it.
So I'm going to add this with your teenagers.
Enjoy the moments that you get with these kids, even when they're irritating.
They're just figuring this teen thing out and tween thing out for the first time.
And if you can enter into their world and enjoy it instead of trying to just change
them all the time, it works so much better.
Now here's a cool idea to turn it around.
You know our thing is like take something that triggers you and turn it into something positive or a bonding moment. So make your own fort
with your spouse one night and just lie down in it. Let your kids show you how to
play again and have fun and just not be productive and responsible and irritated
all the time. And then maybe on Friday nights all of you crawl into a fort and
have a snack and laugh and
giggle. You will never regret those times. You won't. Change your expectations of yourself and
your kids. Stop trying, stop trying so hard to be the perfect parent. Change the narrative in your
head from, my kids are so messy and leave things everywhere. They never pick up things too. My kids are so messy and leave things everywhere. They never pick up things too. My kids are so creative and they have a great imagination and they love to play.
And then turn this into bonding moments.
Choose one situation.
This week, Moms and Dads, think of this.
What irritates you?
Choose one situation that usually frustrates you.
Be patient.
Be creative.
And I bet you can turn that into a bonding routine with your child.
We've done that before on cleaning a child's bedroom and a lot of different things in the home.
Take what usually separates you and let it bring you closer to your child.
See, the ultimate goal isn't just to get your kids to behave.
I think that's kind of the easy part. It's
to build a relationship so they follow you out of a deep sense of respect and
trust because that's what we really want and when you have that trust and you
enjoy your kids they will actually listen to you more. Right now they're not
rejecting you they're rejecting your you, they're rejecting your anxiety
and they're pushing your buttons
and they're getting their intense,
that need for intense brain stimulation from your reactions.
We have the power to change that.
Let's do that.
If you need help, reach out to us.
By the way, we have a big sale going on at celebratecalm.com
to get 35 hours worth of our step by step instructions for less than
the price of like one or two trips to a therapist. Take advantage of that. But if
we can help in any way, let us know. Thank you for leaning into this. Thank you for
being willing to break generational patterns. I was just on Instagram with a
gentleman that I really respect. He was in the military for 14 years. He has gone
through a lot and he said, man, breaking these generational patterns is harder emotional work than anything
I've ever done, but I have so much respect for that guy because he is
changing the foundations of his family. His kids and their kids are going to be different because of the hard work that he did and
the hard work that you all are doing. So, so much respect for you all. Okay, to you next time love you all. Bye-bye. you