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The Accidentally Permissive Parent
Episode 11029th February 2024 • Become A Calm Mama • Darlynn Childress
00:00:00 00:34:02

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When I first became a parent coach, I talked a lot with moms about how feelings matter. Over the past 15 years, I’ve seen a shift. Now there's a lot of awareness about emotions and validation, but I find myself talking more and more about how important it is to have consequences and teach kids that their behavior has an impact.

In this episode, you’ll learn: 

  • Why gentle parenting information is often incomplete
  • Why it’s not enough just to stop yelling and talk about feelings
  • How we experience real-life consequences as adults (and how we can use it as a model for parenting)
  • How to protect your own energy

This confusion over, “Ok, I validated their emotion. Now what?” is why I teach the limit setting formula and the concept of restitution. 

When you’re calm AND you put limits, consequences and connection all together, you are teaching your child how to integrate all the parts of their brain. It’s a complete parenting model to raise emotionally healthy humans. Listen to learn how.

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Parenting culture in the US has come a long way in terms of recognizing and validating our kids' emotions. And at the same time, we’re seeing more instances of the “accidentally permissive parent”.

 

Why Permissive Parenting Happens

In a recent study of parents who were practicing gentle parenting principles, 40% said that they actually don't know what they're doing.

Many of these parents have values around staying calm during a conflict, not yelling, identifying and naming their child’s emotions and trying to help their kid cope with those emotions. 

They’re trying to break cycles of shame and punishment and pain. 

This is amazing and beautiful. But it is incomplete, because they don’t know what to do with the misbehavior. There isn’t really language around setting limits or having consequences. 

This confusion over, “Ok, I validated their emotion. Now what?” is why I teach the limit setting formula and the concept of restitution. 

When you’re calm and you put limits, consequences and connection all together, you are teaching your child how to integrate all the parts of their brain. It’s a complete parenting model. 

Over time, you end up with an emotionally healthy person who knows how to manage their feelings in ways that work for them and others. That is our goal. 

 

How to Avoid Being an Accidentally Permissive Parent

Many moms who are interested in gentle parenting (also called compassionate or nonviolent parenting) are familiar with the first two steps of the Calm Mama Process: Calm and Connect.

In CALM, you regulate your own emotions. This might include healing from past trauma and definitely includes managing your stress levels. In CONNECT, we name, validate and emotionally coach our kids through their Big Feeling Cycles.

I believe we need to take connection a step further, and help our kids manage their big feelings within limits.

When your kid is struggling with a big feeling, you might feel like you can't set a boundary. You might want to let the misbehavior go because they’re already upset. You don’t want to bring on more big feelings by dealing with the misbehavior. 

You can be firm while still recognizing your kid’s feelings. In a situation where a kid is throwing things or hitting, this might look like The Hard No. “Everyone stays safe here. You can have your big feelings, but you cannot hit me.”

 

LIMIT SET is the third step. Here, you set clear limits and what your child may do (or what you’re willing to do), and hold your boundaries. 

For example, you tell your child they can play outside after they’ve finished their homework. They aren’t doing what they’re supposed to do, and time’s up. We’re not going to play outside. 

When you hold a limit, your kid is going to have feelings about it. They’re going to be uncomfortable, disappointed, mad or sad. 

When your kid is upset because you’re holding firm to your limit, they might try to negotiate with you to get what they want. If you can hold the line and let them struggle a little bit, they will find a way to move through the emotion. 

 

Finally, we CORRECT any misbehavior that happened. When your kid makes a mistake, they fix it. Consequences don’t have to involve pain and shame. You can practice empathy and compassion while following through with a consequence. 

Consequences are not about threats or fear. It’s about teaching our kids to think through their actions and the result of those actions. To recognize when their behavior has caused a problem for someone else and fix their own mistakes. 

It takes a long time to parent a child to become an adult. So we bring in small ways to show them that their behavior has an impact. “Hitting your brother causes a problem. Here’s how you can fix it.” “Not cleaning up your toys causes a problem. Here’s how you can fix it.” 

You might be thinking, “Darlynn, this sounds like an awful lot of work.” And you’re right. 

It can be exhausting to always ride every emotion out with your kids. And you don't have to. If you spend all your time emotionally coaching your kid, you’ll never get anything else done. 

I want you to know that it’s okay for our kids to process their negative emotions alone sometimes. It's okay for them to process their negative emotions with someone else. 

Not every meltdown or big feeling needs to be evaluated and discussed. You also don't have to attend every Big Feeling Cycle that you're invited to. Sometimes, we have to move on with our day.

This isn’t about you doing something to make your kid feel differently. It's about acknowledging the emotion and letting your kid learn for themselves that they can handle it. You can be empathetic and also trust that your kid can handle the feeling. 

The good news is that the more you practice limit setting with connection, the better and faster your kid will be able to move through their negative emotion. 

Ready to go deeper and learn the strategies and tools to raise an emotionally healthy kid, tween or teen? Check out my upcoming programs at www.calmmamacoaching.com.


Resources:

Free Resources:

Get your copy of the Stop Yelling Cheat Sheet!

In this free guide you’ll discover:

✨ A simple tool to stop yelling once you’ve started (This one thing will get you calm.)

✨ 40 things to do instead of yelling. (You only need to pick one!)

✨ Exactly why you yell. (And how to stop yourself from starting.)

✨A script to say to your kids when you yell. (So they don't follow you around!)

Download the Stop Yelling Cheat Sheet here

Connect With Darlynn: 

Transcripts

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Welcome. Welcome back to become a calm mama. I'm your

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host. I'm Darlyn Childress and I am a parenting coach and a

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life coach. And I help you become

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calm. Right? And part of being calm as a

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parent is knowing how to handle our kids' behavior.

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And I wanna talk today a little bit about this article

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I read called The Rise of the Accidentally

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Permissive Parent. And it was in the

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Cut, magazine, And it came out, I don't

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know, in December, possibly. Let me look. Let's see. Yeah.

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December 12th, it came out. And I have probably read this article,

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like, 50 times because it is fascinating to me

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to see the trends in parenting. I talked about this a couple weeks ago

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on the podcast about how I used to have to tell parents that

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feelings matter. And and I would talk a lot about,

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you know, stress stress regulation and and all of the

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emotions and how to compact be compassionate with our kids and how to connect with

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our kids and all of that. And then over the last 15 years of

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being a parenting coach, I see the shift

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towards there's a lot of validation, on

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emotions, and I now have to talk about how important it is to

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have consequences. And so we've come a long

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way in terms of emotionally coaching kids, which I

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love. And at the same time,

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we may be becoming accidentally

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permissive. And that's the title of this article. And I'm gonna talk about

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the article for a few minutes and then give you some strategies. So

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one thing I thought was fascinating is that,

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there was a recent study that, you know, some

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some, you know, researchers did on parents who were practicing

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gentle parenting principles, and they said

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that 40% of parents actually

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don't know what they're doing. 40%.

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And that's what I see. I feel like we have

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a great value system around, you know,

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identifying, feelings, staying calm, not

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yelling, not screaming, not using punishment, and

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trying to help our kids manage their emotions.

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But what ends up happening is that

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nothing there's no management of

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misbehavior. There's not really language around

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setting limits or having consequences. And there

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there was this, this quote I wanted to read. It says,

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parents who identified as gentle in our study

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usually note 3 things. 1, they

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regulate their own emotions in the middle of a conflict. K. In

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our program, we call that calm. Right? They try to name

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their child's emotions. That's number 2. And then they,

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3, give the child coping skills, and that's connection.

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So there's a belief system in

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this philosophy around compassionate parenting, gentle parenting, right,

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that our job as parents is to regulate our own emotions in the

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middle of a conflict. Yes. 100%. And

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then name the child's emotion and give them strategies to

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communicate their big feelings in ways that work for others.

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I love it, and I'm telling you it's an incomplete

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parenting model because it doesn't have

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limits or correction. And that's why

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I developed the Calm Mama process, to be honest, is because I

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loved like, when I learned this, it was called nonviolent parenting.

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And I learned these strategies about

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emotional coaching my kids through their big feelings and how to

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manage temper tantrums and how to, you know, not just put them in a time

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out. I was doing 1, 2, 3 magic. I would, you know, be like, that's

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1. You know? That's 2. That's 3. Go sit over there. You're

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4. Sit there for 4 minutes. Right? And my child

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was not learning how to manage his emotions at all. He

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we we were just talking about this as a family. We used to have this

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chair. This is before I learned any you know, the parenting

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strategies that I teach. We had this chair. We called it the time out chair.

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And we recently got rid of that chair, and it still had the

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bite marks on the arm. It was a wooden chair with arms, and

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it had all these bite marks from Lincoln,

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like, chewing the wood while he was in a

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time out trying to regulate himself,

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trying to calm down. And to you know, it's sad to think of

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him doing that, working so hard at

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self soothing and self regulating and using his body to calm himself,

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which is not a problem. But he was by himself just, you

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know, you know, building up with, like, I've gotta be good. I've gotta be good.

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I've gotta be good. I've gotta be good. I've gotta be good. And that's just

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sad to me. Right? I think co regulation is so beautiful. You instead

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of putting your kid in the time out, you time in, you come alongside,

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you give them some support. Right? So that calm, that

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connection, when I first learned about it, I was like, yes. I

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love all this. I definitely there's this art part of the article that

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says, modern parents are simply

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trying to be less punitive than their own parents and break up

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the patterns, namely screaming and spanking, that

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many of us gen x and millennial parents

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have experienced. And that's what we're trying to do. Right? We're

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trying to break cycles of of shame

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and punishment and pain.

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But what we don't know is then what to do with misbehavior.

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Remember this struck me early on when,

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like, my kids were just, like, being silly, and they

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spilled popcorn all over the floor.

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And they were just kinda like you know, to them, they don't think about

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what is the results of having all this popcorn on the floor because they don't

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know anything. Right? They're, like, 46 or whatever. And

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they spill all this popcorn, and I just looked at it. And I was like,

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okay. What am I supposed to do about this? It's not cool

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that they're, like, spilling popcorn all over the place. And yet

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what am I supposed to say? Oh, you guys were feeling so silly. Yeah. You

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love popcorn. Yeah. It's fun to throw it. Uh-huh.

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Aw. Then what? That's when I did that deep dive, and

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I started to understand boundaries and limits and how to set limits. And that's why

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I teach the limit setting formula, And that's why I teach this concept of

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restitution, which is an, you know, restorative justice

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type of model in parenting. When your kid makes a mistake, you

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they have to fix it. And when

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I put the program together, the Calm Mama

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process, Calm is that part about

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us, is emotional regulation ourselves.

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Some of that requires healing from trauma, of course, and going deep dive

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into our own narratives, and I've talked a lot about that on the

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podcast. So calm, also stress management,

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right, all the beautiful things that are just about being, you know,

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a healthy whole person. So we have to do that.

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Then connection, how do we emotionally coach our kids through their big healing cycles

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within limits, with boundaries.

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I was just talking to a mom who's in my program in the Com Mama

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Club, and we were she was saying, you

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know, how much she helped her child this morning with her big feeling

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cycle, and the the daughter had, spilled some

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so this happens. Right? You have a 4 year old. They just kind of can't

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get through their feelings. And, you know, she was

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leaving for work, and she had to drop her daughter off at preschool. And the

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mom said, oh, you know, I felt guilty about leaving her in that

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distressed state. And I think that's

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so indicative of how we feel when our kid

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is struggling with an emotion or struggling to move through a

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big feeling. We feel like we can't set a

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boundary. That if we do, we're doing something wrong.

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If we go in and say, I'm leaving for work.

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I I hear you're you're gonna go be at school and be

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sad a little bit. It is okay

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for our kids to process their

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negative emotion alone. It's okay for them to

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process their negative emotion with someone else,

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and it's okay for you to shift out of it. Not every

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negative emotion needs to be processed. Not every

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meltdown, every big feeling needs to be evaluated

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and discussed and teased out. There's not time

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for that, to be honest. We have too much going on as

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as moms and as as parents, as people.

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So there are times when you say, you know, I understand that you're

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feeling sad and it's time to put your socks and shoes on. Are

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you putting them on or am I? It's okay if you keep

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crying while you do it. It's okay to move moments

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forward. There's another part of the article that I really

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liked, and it says, this softer approach, this gentle parenting

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approach doesn't necessarily get results. When a

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kid misbehaves and you find yourself talking about that

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feeling or taking a few deep breaths in the other room, it doesn't seem to

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help. And then you end up being inconsistent with your

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limits, and you have you know, the kids start talking back

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to you. There's so much negotiation that happens

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when you are not when you don't have strong boundaries, when you feel

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guilty about having those boundaries and when you don't hold them

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because it's tiring. Because what happens when you have a limit?

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Let me give you an example of a limit. You know,

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you are welcome to play on the trampoline once

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you have cleaned up all of these balls. K. Or you're

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welcome to go outside once you have finished your reading

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assignment. And you are waiting, and

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your kid is just playing around, and they're not doing the thing that they're supposed

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to do. And so you just say, okay. Time's up. We're not going to play

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outside. That's, you know, your limit.

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Or, oh, the balls aren't being cleaned up. There's the trampoline is

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closed, you know, and you stand in front of the trampoline. And

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what happens when you are in that moment with your kids is

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that they then have more feelings. Right?

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When you have a boundary and you hold it, your

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child is going to have emotion about that feel about that

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boundary. It's gonna bring up uncomfortable feelings.

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It's going to break be, you know, make them

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mad, make them sad. Right? And then all of a

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sudden, you're in another big feeling cycle. And

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you will feel like, okay. Now I've gotta manage this big

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feeling cycle, and I'll coach them and hold space and let them talk about

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it. And the next thing you know, they start negotiating with you.

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They're like, okay. What about if I pick up 2 balls? Can I go in

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the trampoline? What about if I only read 1 page?

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Can I still go outside? Mom, what about this? I'll read 1 page. I'll go

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outside for 5 minutes, and then I'll come back inside, and then I'll keep reading.

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And you find yourself almost, like, negotiating

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every limit. And you are

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probably training your child that you are open for negotiation

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because you're trying to figure out a way to not trigger

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a big feeling cycle. Because in this

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model, it can be exhausting to always ride every emotion

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out with your kids. And I wanna invite you to think

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about the fact that you don't have to,

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that they can be sad and they can be uncomfortable and they can

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be disappointed, and that can just be true.

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You wanna name it, but you don't need to manage

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it. We don't need to manage all these emotions. We don't

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need to shift them. We don't need to do things to get our kids to

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feel differently. That's not what this is about. It's

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really about acknowledging the emotion and

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letting your kid learn for

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themselves that they can handle it, that they know how to

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overcome discomfort. I wanna

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talk about this in another episode, but I'm just thinking about, like, how how how

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helpful boredom is because boredom is extremely

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uncomfortable. And when you are in a position

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where you don't have a distraction and you're just you

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know, you're gonna try to do some seeking or to start bugging your sibling. You're

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gonna beg your mom for the phone. You know, you might start creating a

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problem so to get to get that, energy out.

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And if you can hold that line as a parent and not give

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the phone, right, and and just not give

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into the whatever the desire is and let your

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child struggle a bit, they will move through the

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emotion and find a way to satisfy their brain.

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It's just trusting that temporary discomfort

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and allowing for it. Now how we

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get into this permissive parenting trap, right, is when

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our kids misbehave because of their feelings. Right? They throw

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the apple sauce. You know, this is an art from the article. It's like, you

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know, kids on play dates who throw the applesauce up applesauce

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pouch across the room after demanding graham crackers or

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kids who hit with no punishment or kids who act as if there are no

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rules. Right? A child slapping their mother.

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We tend to have this sort of upside down

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situation where kids are not

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given firmer no messages. Like,

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everyone stays safe here. That's not safe. Throwing things is not

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safe. Not gonna let you do that.

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Right? Just holding the boundary and

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saying, you can have your big feelings, but you cannot hit

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me. You can have your big feelings, but you will

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not throw things. And

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saying that sentence, It is okay for you to

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communicate what is the boundary and what's

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not. Now just saying it

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isn't necessarily enough. We that's the

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limit setting part. That's the boundary, and then following through on

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that boundary is really important. And

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I'm doing a workshop in a cup in, next week on Thursday

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called managing meltdowns and misbehavior, And I'm gonna talk

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about how to actually follow through with a consequence. Right?

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How to practice empathy and compassion while setting limits

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and following through with those consequences without feeling bad about

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it. It's like connect, limit,

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set, correct. All three parts of the comm mama process

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are are important. So connection and empathy

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and and emotional regulation is super important

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within a boundary. And then if your child's behavior is outside of

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boundaries, we bring in non punitive consequences.

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And all of those pieces are important.

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It's like, if you spend

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most of your parenting energy on managing emotion and, like,

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processing emotion with your kids, you are going to feel exhausted. I

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talk about this a little bit in therapeutic parenting, the the,

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podcast episode I did a while back. How

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hard it is to stay present and emotionally coach your kids

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because they're gonna have a 100 feelings a day. This

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little 4 year old that I was using as an example, how many feelings

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did she have in that morning? Right? So many. So if you're

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gonna be present and coaching through each one, you are gonna end up

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exhausted. And and that's

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not that's not okay because then you're gonna have to be able to,

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like, handle bedtime and, you know, make lunches

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and, you know, get kids to get their socks and shoes on.

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Right? There's so many parenting things that are required that

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require our energy and get

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devoting all of our time to emotional coaching is gonna give us

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not as much energy. So I'm hoping that

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by hearing this, that you are a,

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convinced that that kids need boundaries. Right?

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And that second, that you don't have to you don't have

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to attend every big feeling cycle that you're invited

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to. That as a parent, it isn't your

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responsibility to coach every emotion,

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but we wanna be empathetic for that emotion and then also

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be able to trust that our kids can handle that feeling.

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It's also okay sometimes to distract from a feeling.

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Not, of course, if they very much are telling you this big story

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and they wanna process, like, the about, you know, how their dress got

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ruined or they didn't like their birthday present or something like that.

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Of course, if you're getting some some real words and and you're in a

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beautiful conversation, great. Stay present for it.

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But sometimes it's just, I don't like that.

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That makes me mad. I he hit me.

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Right? I'm sorry. But you know what I'm saying. It's like, it's just a

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little discomfort. And so we're not gonna discount it.

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We're gonna be like, yeah. That's frustrating. I get it. Why don't you go ahead

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and run upstairs and

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boundary. You give them some some, a

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container, and they're oftentimes able

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to shift out of that big feeling.

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So we don't have to, you know, stay

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in those big feeling cycles for hours and

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hours and hours, okay, or even minutes and minutes and minutes.

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Sometimes, I when I when I'm in my programs, I teach, you

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know, a little bit I teach about, like, connection,

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a connection tool. You know? Oh, I you're screaming. You you know, you're saying

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you don't like this. Are you feeling frustrated? Yeah. Okay. Well, I'm open to

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listening to you talk about that for 1 minute, or I can help

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you talk about your frustration after you have gone done you

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know, you put taking your plate to the counter.

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So you are saying I'm open for this within this boundary. I'm open to

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helping with your feelings as long as you're not spitting on me. I'm open to

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helping you with you know, talk about your frustration

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after you have tidied up your table, after you put away these

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toys. So it's within the boundary.

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And the more you practice the limit setting with the connection,

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the more your kids are able to honestly move through their negative

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emotion a little bit faster, process it, label

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it, that's usually enough. Just naming the

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feeling, kinda giving them a little bit of room

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within that boundary and then moving forward.

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Now what do you do afterwards? Right? Like,

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they caused a problem. That's consequences. I taught that on the podcast.

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I'm gonna teach it in the workshop for sure. And,

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that's the managing meltdowns and misbehavior workshop.

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It's Thursday, March 7th at 9 AM Pacific, 12

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PM EST. It's free, and you can sign up on my website or on the

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show notes at com mama coaching.com. And,

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you know, that's gonna be really great. I really hope you're there

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because I'm gonna talk about, like, kind of how to do consequences in

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a way that doesn't feel terrible. Because what happens a

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lot of times is that when you're practicing gentle parenting,

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right, you are, you know, trying

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to get your kids to process their

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emotion with the hope that then they won't have to use

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behavior strategies like hitting, kicking, punching, spitting, throwing,

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you know, all of those things. We want our kids to not

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need to do those things. But, honestly,

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the process of parenting, it takes a long time, right,

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to to, parent a child to become an

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adult. And so in the meantime, we have to

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kinda bring in little ways to show them that, you

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know, hitting your brother causes a problem. Here's how you can fix

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it. You know, hitting mommy causes a problem. Here's how you can fix

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it. Not cleaning up your toys causes a problem. Here's how you can fix it.

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So we bring those impacts in

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to our parenting. We just don't do it in a way that's, like,

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threatening or if you don't do this, I'm never taking you to the park

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again. It's like, why don't we flip that? I'm happy to take you to the

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park, or we can stay at the park as long as you're

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not throwing sand. And then they throw sand,

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and then you leave. Now you're all thinking, wait.

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I leave? Yes. But they're gonna cry. They're gonna scream.

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They're gonna have a fit. They're gonna maybe, you know, throw something or

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whatever, whatever. That's gonna be terrible. Yeah. It is terrible.

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But having a kid throw sand at people is also terrible.

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It is uncomfortable, and it is exhausting if you're

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focused so much on their big feelings all the time and you're processing every

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emotion. You will not have capacity

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to follow through. You won't have the

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capacity to hold your child accountable for their

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behavior if you overindulge the emotion.

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So we and I say overindulge, I mean, we're

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not we're gonna name it. We're gonna acknowledge it. We're

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gonna validate that feeling, And then we're going

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to give them a strategy or a limit of how they can manage

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that feeling or what they can do with that feeling.

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Like, it's hard to teach it on the podcast because when I teach it in

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my 6 week program, I you know, you're in the class and we're giving

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example after example after example. But, you know, if you go

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through all the other podcast episodes, you can kinda get the idea of how to

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set a limit within and then how to follow through on it.

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Now I wanna acknowledge that this

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isn't necessarily easy either way.

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Right? Spending time on validating an

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emotion while while also holding a boundary is

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not armchair parenting. Now what what's armchair

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parenting? It's where you get to sit in an armchair and just tell your kids

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what to do, and they listen to you. Now

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you can get there with your kids with connection and limit set.

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For the most part, your kids will learn that it's in their best

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interest to follow directions because they're learning. When they

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don't, there will be a consequence.

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But it's not when you parent this way, you're not teaching your

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child to be afraid of you. You're teaching your child

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to think through their action and the result of

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that action. And it takes

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time for your child's brain to connect those dots.

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It does not take a lot of time to connect fear.

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Right? Because fear is a primal

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impulse. And so you can trigger fear all day long with your

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kids, and they will probably be very good listeners even

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when they're really young because they're afraid of getting hurt. They're afraid of getting

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emotionally disconnection from you, and, you know, you might get well

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behaved kids. What you don't get, though, is kids who can

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connect with their feelings and feel safe with you, unfortunately.

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It just creates a lot of isolation and disconnection when

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you use traditional fear based parenting.

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But what do you do instead? How do you get your

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kids to listen? How do you get your kids to follow directions?

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Some of my clients call this, you know, the long game. They're like, oh, this

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is playing the long game in parenting. And it's like, yeah. It's not that

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long, but it is going to take, you know, 6

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months or a year depending on their age. I'm not gonna give a timeline. I'm

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just saying it takes a while because their brain has to develop, and you have

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to show them multiple times that

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if they misbehave, if they have an off track behavior, there will

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be an impact, and they will have to,

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repair that, that there will be a consequence. I'm not

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afraid of the word. Consequence is not a problem for

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me. It doesn't mean pain. It

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doesn't mean punishment. It just means a result. I was

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thinking about this the other day. Like, where are there consequences

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in real life? And my example was thinking about if I

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went to the grocery store and I filled up my basket and I

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had all the food that I was gonna buy, and then I got to the

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checkout and I realized they didn't have my wallet or my Apple Pay

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wasn't working right on my phone or something. I

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would not be able to buy those groceries.

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Like, they the people who work there wouldn't be like,

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you forgot your wallet? Well, here. Just take this $180 worth of

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groceries with you to your car. Like, no. There would be a

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consequence of my action. I'd have to leave the cart, go back to my

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house, get my wallet, come back, and then pay for it,

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or put it all away or they would put it all away. Right?

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But the consequence would be I would not get my things. Now even if I

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had a temper tantrum, even if I had a meltdown, even if I cried

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and said how sad I am and and how upset I

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am, The the people who work there would still

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be like, that makes sense. It may that sucks, and

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we're not giving you your groceries.

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Right? So I I think

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it's the same in parenting of, like, yes.

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Your feelings make sense. They're totally valid. You are entitled to do

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to feel that way. Can you yell at me? No. Can you

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throw things? No. Can you break things? No.

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Right? No. And you're not

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following the rules. You don't you don't you're not, you know, keeping within the boundaries

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and the the the sort of contract of of the way this family works,

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and so that means that there's you're not going to go to

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get ice cream with us or whatever the boundary is that you've

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set. So I'm I don't want you to be afraid of

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consequences. And when you have limits and

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consequences and you have connection and

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you're calm, you put them all together,

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you are teaching your child how to

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integrate all the parts of their brain.

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So let me say what that means. You have your child and they

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have their primal brain, their reptilian brain, their fight, flight, their stress

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response. Right? So some kids, you know, flip into

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that fight, flight, freeze, fate, fawn. And then you're off

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you've got a big temper tantrum. Right? They're activated. In

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that in that circumstance, when they're that activated, you have to

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just ride it out. That's a big feeling cycle, and you just have to ride

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it out. Be present, make sure everybody stays safe, and

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wait. If you're calm, a lot of times it fizzles out

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faster. If you offer compassion, fizzles

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out even faster than just being calm.

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So it you know, the connection and the compassion is huge.

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So you have your kid's little reptilian brain, and then they have you have their

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limbic center, and that's the emotional part of the brain. That's where

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decision making is based on emotion. If it feels good, do it.

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If it doesn't feel good, don't do it. It's not based on the future.

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It's not based on time. It's not based on money. That

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decision making process is just very much impulsive.

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It's it there's not thinking involved. And then you have the executive function

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part of the brain, which is the thinking part of the brain. Now little

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kids 0 to 6 have a lot of trouble getting to that

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executive function. They have not built a bunch of neural pathways

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up there, and so it's very hard for them to

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do some thinking. But that doesn't mean they can't. It just

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means you have to do a little bit more work of showing how

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cause and effect work, showing how time works. You

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have to bring some more impacts. You have to have strong boundaries

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to show them how how world the world works.

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That's your job as a parent. And then over time,

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what you're doing with this process, you staying calm,

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you giving them connection, you're soothing their limbic center, you doing

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limit sets, you're giving them the idea of cause

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and effect, and you're activating their prefrontal

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cortex, their executive function. And then you're having consequences

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that are gentle and kind that also keeps them in their emotion,

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their, thinking center of their brain.

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And over the course of time, you end up

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with a emotionally healthy person,

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someone who knows how to manage their feelings in

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ways that work for them and others.

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That is our goal. That's what the goal is in my emotionally

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healthy kids class. If you do the emotionally healthy teen class,

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we start wherever your teenager is, whatever skill set they have, and

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we do the same process. We set boundaries. We have compassion.

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They just look a little bit different as they age. But the process

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the calm level process is always the same. Calm yourself,

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connect with your kids, set limits, and follow through

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with correction. When you do that, you have a complete parenting model.

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There was this this last sentence that I'll share

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from this article. And we're of course, we're gonna link it. But it says,

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what is most exhausting for parents is thinking there's an exact way to do things

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and a wrong way to do things and walking around with the pressure that you're

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going to ruin your kids. It says, we're

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starting from an earnest place, but our intent on going

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above and beyond, and we are killing ourselves to

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curate the perfect parenting philosophy.

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It says even though that doesn't really exist.

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I'm not saying I have created a perfect parenting philosophy.

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I would never use that phrase. I don't know if it's perfect,

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but I do know it's complete. I do know

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that if you combine your own self regulation and

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connection with limits set and correct,

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you won't feel so overwhelmed by misbehavior.

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You won't feel so overwhelmed by big

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feelings. It's really cool. 1 of

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my clients, she said sent me this note. She said, the best thing you taught

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me is that my child can be held accountable for the emotional drain

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they have on me and our family. It makes so much sense to add limits

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and consequences to calm parenting. It's the missing piece that

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has changed our home dynamic over time. It's a lot more

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chill, and I'm not so pissed off all the time.

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This is what you can get when you work with me or when you sign

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up some of my programs or you get my, you know, re free

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resources. You can start to activate into

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the four parts of the Comama process. So the first

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the invitation to you is to come on March 7th at

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9 AM Pacific, 12 PM EST to my free

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workshop called managing meltdowns and misbehavior. You can sign

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up, like I said, on my website, calmmama coaching.com

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or in the show notes. And I'd love to see you there. It's

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gonna be great. There's a good little it's a good work workbook or

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worksheet that I've created. Very, very simple. I did

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not I did not add a bunch of stuff because I was like, I wanna

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give you something that you can read really fast and get understand really quickly

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and apply. So this is a very simple parenting

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workshop all about meltdowns and misbehavior.

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Alright. I hope that this episode was helpful. I hope it

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inspired you to, move

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towards boundaries, feeling more comfortable, feeling less guilt

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about doing them. And and if you do feel

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badly, you should come to the workshop because they'll help you get out of that

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feeling bad about it. Okay. Have a great week, and I

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will talk to you next time.

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