Calm Parenting Podcast - When To Say No & Yes (Bored, Unhappy, Tattling and Fighting Siblings)
Episode Date: December 21, 2024When To Say No & Yes (Bored, Unhappy, Tattling and Fighting Siblings) So how do you respond when your kids are bored or don’t like their gifts? When siblings tattle or fight…or your grown siblin...gs create drama during family get-togethers? When holiday plans go awry, family judges you? Kirk gives you scripts to use in these tough holiday situations. Our Christmas Sale is here! Visit https://celebratecalm.com/calm-christmas/ to purchase the Get Everything Package at the lowest prices of the year. Get practical strategies that really work with your strong-willed kids. AG1 AG1 is offering new subscribers a FREE $76 gift when you sign up. You’ll get a Welcome Kit, a bottle of D3 & K2 AND 5 free travel packs in your first box. So make sure to check out https://drinkag1.com/calm 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. OneSkin OneSkin is the world’s first skin longevity company. Get started today with 15% off using code KIRK at https://oneskin.co. MeUndies Kids To get 20% off your first order of MeUndies Kids, plus free shipping, go to https://www.meundies.com/calmpod and enter promo code calmpod. MeUndies—comfort from the outside in. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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So how do you respond when your kids are bored over the holidays
or they don't like their gifts,
when siblings tattle on each other or fight,
or when your grown siblings fight during family get-togethers.
What are you gonna do when holiday plans kind of go awry, when family judges you?
That is what we're going to discuss on today's episode of the Calm Parenting Podcast.
So welcome, this is Kirk Martin, founder of Celebrate Calm.
You can find us in our big Christmas sale at CelebrateCalm.com.
Look, this is a really stressful time of year when you're pulled in different directions
and some of you are so kind and thoughtful, you of year when you're pulled in different directions
and some of you are so kind and thoughtful, you're sensitive, you're empaths, you feel
the emotions of others and sometimes you can be a people pleaser, but that can cause you
to take on too much.
You constantly take the temperature of the home, sensitive to everyone's shifting moods
and maybe you have to be the mediator or referee
between siblings or between your strong willed child and your spouse. That can be
exhausting. It can cause adrenal fatigue and it causes an inordinate amount of
stress. So let's work on that throughout the holidays. I want to give you some
insight into when to say no and when to say yes to reduce some of the holiday stress because
that rhymes.
So there's no particular order here but I hope you can use these to enjoy your kids
and family over the holidays.
So some things to say no to.
Look feel free to say no to holiday parties and don't apologize for that.
Don't justify it.
You can just say, hey, we're overbooked, but we'd love to get the kids together after Christmas.
Say no.
For many of you, that is very hard to do because you don't want to disappoint people.
And you know what?
They went out of their way to invite you and it's kind of rude to say no to people when
they're doing. I want you to practice that just even if it's one thing over
the holidays during this time practice saying no because you're demonstrating
respect for your own time and wishes otherwise you're just always going to
try to please other people and you'll feel misunderstood and not heard and you'll be exhausted. Say no to the idea and the ideal of having the
perfect Christmas or holiday. Let go of that. I know many of you you grew up in
that home where everything had to be just so. I want you to practice letting
that go. Say no to trying to fix everything
in your larger extended family.
Don't get involved in all of that.
It's okay to give people space to own their own dysfunction.
It's not your responsibility to fix it or make it better.
You can care about people without getting involved and
trying to convince other people to make changes in their life because what I
found is it just backfires and then they're frustrated at me and I'm
frustrated at them. Say no to trying to make all of the details go perfectly. Who
cares if Christmas dinner isn't perfect or if
you forgot a couple ingredients or maybe that favorite... Look, I'll give you a
challenge. I just kind of came up with this one. Purposefully do something
imperfectly over the holidays. Maybe with that Christmas meal, maybe don't make a
certain dish that you usually make and
who cares? Look, I want you to see that it's not going to ruin your whole
holiday. So be okay with that. I'm telling you this is really important
because if you are like that you need to do everything like that. You're gonna be
on your kids all the time and it will backfire with the strong-willed kids. Say no to getting kids everything they want
for the Christmas or the holidays. In general, I say no to a lot of stuff. I say
yes to a lot of experiences and memorable traditions. That's what you end up remembering. Don't try to be the
intermediator, intermediary or mediator for everybody else. You know what happens
when you get together with families, even good families, it's kind of you you you
get into little cliques and then there's all this gossip about and drama about
other people. Don't talk about your relatives non-stop as some kind of game
because you know how it is. We all kind of fall into that, oh I really can't believe what Aunt Susan
is doing and it's kind of at times can be faux concern. It's really just, wow their life is a
train wreck. Let's talk about that because it makes us feel better about our own." Look, some of that can be therapeutic to do with your spouse. That's fine, but
don't get caught up in all that drama taking sides. It is not my job to make
everybody happy and manage everybody else's emotions and happiness and lives.
Your Aunt Suzy can handle it herself. You can be a good, you can support, you can
listen, but try not to get caught up in that drama. Do not apologize to your kids if they didn't get everything they wanted. Just sit in
their disappointment, right, because they're going to complain about things. And then you just very
matter-of-factly say, well, you can earn some money if you really want to buy that yourself.
I've got a few ideas for how you can make some money and buy that yourself.
But don't apologize when your kids are inevitably unhappy with their gifts. Also don't lecture them
about the need for gratitude and how hard you work to make money. Look if you're buying your kids too
much stuff that's your issue. Stop doing it.
So take back some control over that.
But this is a really important statement.
Let them own their own disappointment.
Let them own their disappointment.
It is their disappointment.
It is their disappointment. It is not yours. Look, you can feel bad when your kids are unhappy,
but do not give in to the anxiety and need
to make it all better.
And I'm going to address this more after the new year
when we go a little deeper,
but I want you to be free
from managing everybody else's happiness and emotions.
Ask your spouse to encourage you with this and reinforce, I
am NOT responsible for other people's happiness, only my own. I am responsible
to my kids, to my spouse, to other people to be patient and kind and thoughtful,
but I am NOT responsible for their choices, for their happiness. See, when you
try to change someone else's
moods or behavior, it makes both them and you frustrated and unhappy. If you have
our programs, begin to work through the 30 Days to Calm and a Straight Talk for
Moms or the Dads programs. The most giving thing you can do is to take care
of yourself physically, emotionally and spiritually. Why? Because then your kids and spouse don't have to take care of your emotions
and your exhaustion because you cared enough about yourself to do that
yourself. That is a huge gift to your family to not feel compelled to lecture,
to fix them, to be so upset that they have to walk on eggshells.
So here's another one.
Do not apologize for your child in front of your relatives.
I want you to learn to be confident and if you didn't listen to it, go back and listen
to the Thanksgiving message about how to handle judgmental family during this time.
Don't apologize for your
parenting. I want you to be confident that you know what you're doing, you have
a plan, and you're working it. And when your kids are throwing a tantrum or your
own parents or Uncle Jack, just sit in it. Don't be moved by it. Remember, I'm gonna
drill this into all of you, Your mood does not determine my mood.
Your behavior does not determine my behavior because what that is really saying is it doesn't say I don't care.
It says, oh, I do care, but I care enough not to fix this for you and to try to make it go away because of my own discomfort.
I believe in you. I believe that you are capable of handling your own disappointment.
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Okay let's say yes to a few things as well.
Look, I want you to do what is meaningful to you
without needing to convince others
that it should be meaningful to them.
See, it's amazing to share things
with your spouse, with your kids,
but if you force it and try to convince people
against their will,
it pretty much guarantees their resistance.
Look, if it's important for you to go to church,
go to church, soak it up, but you to go to church, go to church.
Soak it up, but don't try to get everyone else to care about what you care about it. You care about it,
prioritize it. That's how you lead
instead of badgering people. And if they don't come with you wherever you're going,
enjoy the quiet.
Establish some individuality
and some priorities for yourself.
I want you to take time alone.
I love at Christmas time sitting out at night
by the tree with the lights on by myself.
I found it's great time for me to reflect on things,
to think, and so I take that time by myself. Look,
watch a Christmas movie you want to watch even if you do it by yourself. Cry
along with Jimmy Stewart if that's your favorite movie. I also want you to learn
to say yes to asking for help. Ask for help from other people and it's really hard especially
well all moms and dads none of us want to ask for help it sounds like weakness
oh I don't want to bug them think about what that says well I don't want to bug
them sometimes is I don't feel worthy of asking someone else to help me. Guarantee
you after the new year we'll get into
that because there's a big worthiness issue in a lot of this. I don't feel
worthy unless I'm doing everything for everybody else, unless I earn that from
my mom or my dad and that carries over and it's a big trap. And I got this email
from this mom and I wanted to share it she said thank you in all caps for even
saying it was okay to say I need help in a world where it seems that asking for
help and even being raised to say that was a weakness it was a kind gift to
here even writing this to you I'm fighting my own embarrassment and insecurity to state it out
loud that I not only need help raising my strong-willed child, but I have to swallow my pride
and say I need help financially as well. I've been listening to the podcast either laying in bed to
refuel or and give hope for a better tomorrow or I listen first thing in the
morning when I wake up to try and forge the best path forward for my strong willed
child for that day. And so what I loved about this mom emailing is it was hard
for her to do this to, I need help with this child
and I want to get your programs but I need help financially. See, we always honor that.
The most important part of that is the fact that this mom stepped out of her comfort zone
and actually asked for help. See, I don't, other people don't know you need help
unless you ask for it.
And there's a lot of confidence and strength in that
in saying, hey, I wanna be assertive,
here's exactly what I need.
And that's, you know what, my mom used,
my mom was the sweetest human being on the planet.
And at the end, near the end she would say,
oh, I don't want
anything from you boys for Christmas. And I said mom that's a lie. I said if on
Christmas morning everybody else was opening gifts and you had nothing to
open, you would be hurt and angry and bitter. And she was so sweet she said, oh
honey you're right. And I said mom that's a worthiness thing, right?
Like we don't know, we want to get you things that you like, but you won't tell us.
And so we can't, we have to guess.
See it's a really beautiful thing to be assertive and say, hey, here's exactly what I would
like.
Well, then you take the guessing out of it.
Now, that doesn't mean spouses shouldn't come up with surprises and know know your wife or your husband so well
That you can come up with something really creative
but at times you just need to be honest and straightforward and
so look if if if
You really want to stop the power struggles in this coming year, you have a huge opportunity
because I believe that 80% of power struggles are caused by our own anxiety because we're
anxious about our child's future and that causes us to lecture and badger them and get
all over them and then they shut down.
Or it's our own control issues because we all have control issues and there's no blame
or guilt in that.
It's actually good news because you and I have complete control over changing ourselves but not changing
others. So here's an idea for you. How many of you allow your kids to decorate
the Christmas tree but then you can't wait for them to go to bed so you can
fix the tree and rearrange the ornaments and make it look
nice and all symmetrical. So this Christmas I want you to say yes to
practicing imperfection and working on your control issues. Say no to having the
perfect Christmas tree. A few years ago we got a Christmas tree, we put it up and
it was leaning just a little bit.
And everything inside of me wanted to fix that because I grew up with a dad who was
a perfectionist.
And if you didn't do things perfectly, my dad would yell at me, all of his sons, he
would yell at us, and that was deeply ingrained in me.
And look, that can serve you well in parts of life because you're very conscientious.
You follow through,
you care about how things are done,
but it will sabotage relationships.
So practice imperfection, let that tree not look perfect.
And when other people come over, don't apologize for it.
Don't blame it on the kids.
You can do that this year.
Next year, you just need to own it yourself.
Yeah, I'm just practicing not being a control freak. So let's practice that. Let's start
expecting siblings to handle their own stuff. So when they're doing little squabbles, you could
walk by and say, hey guys, do you want me to fix this for you? Or do you think you're capable of working this out yourself?
And then walk out, give them a chance to do that.
Let's say you have a child that comes in, tattling on his or her brother or sister.
Here's sometimes what I would say to those kids, oh, thank you so much for telling me
what your brother was doing wrong.
I know you're doing that because you care so much for your brother and his heart and
what's going on.
And I'm sure if he was doing something that bad, he must feel really bad about himself.
Hey, what do you think we could do for your brother?
Is there something maybe we could go to the store and get something
for your brother that would make him feel better. Now your kids will start to recoil
because they're like, no, I was trying to get my brother in trouble and now you want
to do something nice for him? That's kind of cool. Now you can take it a step further
and say, hey, one thing I found in life is that when people tattle on others,
when they gossip about others, when they judge others, it's because it makes them feel better
about themselves because they're not confident and they're not mature. So if that's what's going on,
I'm going to go outside a minute and if you want to come walk with me, I'll help you out with that.
See, you're getting to the heart of the matter rather than I can't believe that you're tattling on your brother again
How many times have I ever told you get right to the heart of it?
I would encourage you play the podcast a lot over the holidays
Listen, let your kids listen. Let your extended family listen to the podcast
If you have the program send us their email addresses and we'll send them the programs
So you can get on the same page
It's a really cool thing. Tell your family how you're working on your own control issues your own anxiety
Instead of constantly constantly complaining about the children and you can always say to them
Hey, I can see you have very strong opinions about my kids and about my parenting
So that means you want to help here is how you could help me
Immensely and I have to throw this in here because I promise this kid that I'll give a shout out Caleb
Shout out to you
Here's a funny stories over Thanksgiving because the family was had several hours to drive and the parents had gotten the Black Friday special. They had downloaded
the programs. They were listening in the car, but they thought that their kids had their
own earbuds in and they thought that they were watching movies, listening to music.
Well their strong-willed son Caleb wasn't. He was listening to our strong willed child program and what
he said later that day was, who was that guy that you were listening to? He was
describing me. That's what it feels like to be me. Can I email him? So Caleb,
because our kids are, look they're four going on 24, 13 going on 43.
They're very comfortable in the adult world.
Caleb actually emailed me,
and we're having this great conversation back and forth,
helping him understand the way he's made
and how to use that to his advantage.
And I'm being tough on Caleb.
I'm like, hey, you gotta stop with these tantrums and I'm doing that all the time and learning how to control
yourself. You've heard me talk to your parents about their own control issues.
Let me give you some tools to deal with your own big emotions. And Caleb is
owning it. That kid's gonna rule the world. So shout out to you Caleb. I hope
you get everything you ask for Christmas. So say yes to kids owning their
boredom. Say no to being emotionally manipulated and blackmailed. Refuse to
jump in and fix it. Stinks to be you. You can do that. You could say, hey I've got
a couple cleaning projects I could really use some help with. Yeah they're gonna balk at that. But my favorite is just to
say, hey you have this amazing creative and genius brain. I can't wait to see
what you come up with to solve your own boredom. See what I want to communicate is I believe you're capable of coming up
with some great ideas to solve that yourself. That's cool. Do not apologize.
I'm gonna repeat this one. If they don't get everything that they wanted,
don't apologize for that and don't apologize when they're inevitably
unhappy with their gifts. Practice that even matter of tone,
matter-of-fact tone that we talk about all the time when you're disciplining.
Short, sweet, very few words.
And let me repeat this one again. Sit in
imperfection. Why do you feel compelled to make everything perfect for everyone
else at your own expense?
And when your kids say, hey, we don't want to stay any longer at grandma's house, it's
boring.
Look, you can give them some options.
You can even bribe them if you want.
I'm a realist.
Sometimes that's your best option.
You just get through the day.
I don't judge parents for that
But I'm also okay with occasionally saying hey
Everything isn't about you or the world doesn't revolve around you
We're staying because this means a lot to your grandma and it's important and in there you're communicating
I believe you're capable of being selfless.
I believe you're capable of seeing
that this isn't about you.
And that as a family,
we value doing kind things for other people.
Now that's really cool.
So let's do this.
Let's practice.
Pick three, four or five of those action steps,
things to say no to,
things to say yes to.
Begin practicing them over the holidays.
You're gonna have plenty of opportunities.
Listen to the podcast with your kids.
Let them listen to this stuff.
If we can help you in any way, we will,
because I have enormous respect for you
digging in and doing the hard work.
Thanks for sharing the podcast.
Love you all, and we'll talk to you soon.
Bye bye.