Today I’m talking about misbehavior and the #1 reason it is so hard for parents. Misbehavior creates a lot of conflict in families. It’s one of the main reasons parents yell.
You’ll Learn:
If you’ve ever thought “If they would just listen and stop acting out, I wouldn’t have to yell!” this episode is for you!
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Maybe your brain has offered you the solution of getting your kids to behave better by having more rules and more limits and more consequences. By being more strict.
Many parents think the answer to misbehavior is in having better routines, or being more consistent, or being more firm.
The problem with this solution is that it doesn’t address the roots of misbehavior.
In this episode, I’m sharing why it’s so triggering and upsetting for you, and some concrete and practical steps to handling misbehavior without resorting to lecturing, avoiding, yelling, threatening or shaming.
Surprise! It all starts in your brain.
As a parent, your child’s behavior often activates your stress response.
Your brain wants to INTERPRET your kid’s behavior as a DANGER to your physical or emotional safety.
It will TRICK you into thinking that your kid’s behavior is a threat to you.
It will tell you that you need to protect yourself. Get bigger. Get louder. Fight back. Run away.
And that can make it hard to remain calm.
But when you can understand what’s driving the behavior and view it as an opportunity rather than a problem, you can head off the stress response and feel more calm in the situation.
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
All right, welcome to another episode of the Become a Calm Mama
Speaker:podcast, and today I'm going to talk about
Speaker:misbehavior. But before I get into that, I just want to say thank you
Speaker:so much for listening. I've gotten tons of like really
Speaker:positive feedback from all of you just saying how much you love the podcast and
Speaker:how helpful it is, and that just makes me so
Speaker:happy. So thank you. And like I said,
Speaker:today I'm gonna talk about misbehavior and I'm gonna share
Speaker:the number one reason why it's hard, okay? So we're
Speaker:gonna talk a little bit about misbehavior. Really, we're gonna focus on why it's
Speaker:so triggering and upsetting for you. And then I'm gonna give you
Speaker:some really concrete and practical steps to
Speaker:handling misbehavior without resorting to lecturing
Speaker:and avoiding and yelling and threatening and shaming and all the things
Speaker:that we don't wanna do. So before we get into it all, I
Speaker:first wanna talk a little bit about the body stress response,
Speaker:'cause this is gonna be really important for you to understand why
Speaker:behavior is so difficult. So first, I want you to like
Speaker:imagine that you're out walking your dog at night
Speaker:and you see a pack of coyotes. So I live in
Speaker:Southern California and we live like next to a mountain and there
Speaker:are a lot of coyotes that live up there. and I've never seen, well, I
Speaker:have seen a full pack before, but even if I just see one
Speaker:coyote when I'm walking my dog, I definitely
Speaker:get nervous, right? Now imagine that you're walking your
Speaker:dog and there's a bunch of coyotes and they start chasing you.
Speaker:In that moment, your brain would activate your stress
Speaker:response. It would quickly assess the threat and it would decide
Speaker:whether you should run stop and throw rocks, or
Speaker:hide in the bushes? Okay, I would probably run,
Speaker:which is probably not the right thing to do. So this is
Speaker:what happens with stress, right, with our stress response. There's
Speaker:something in our environment, and our amygdala
Speaker:is a part of our brain, and it's always kind of scanning for hazards,
Speaker:and it's looking around and it's deciding if the thing that's happening is
Speaker:safe or not. And if the brain decides it's not
Speaker:safe, that it's a problem, then it's going to activate
Speaker:your stress response and you're going to get all that stress juice,
Speaker:right? Like your cortisol is going to start pumping, your adrenaline,
Speaker:and you're going to go into protective mode and
Speaker:fight, flight, freeze, or faint. So
Speaker:this is just how stress works in general. But what's
Speaker:crazy about parenting is that you
Speaker:have a parenting brain that is also doing this.
Speaker:It's kind of looking for hazards in the
Speaker:environment and determining whether you're safe or not.
Speaker:And when your child is
Speaker:misbehaving and you're in a default mode,
Speaker:your brain is going to interpret that behavior as a
Speaker:danger to you, to your physical or your emotional
Speaker:safety, right? Because just imagine when you
Speaker:have a behavior like screaming,
Speaker:just someone screaming in the world, if
Speaker:that happened and it wasn't a child, your brain would be like, uh-oh, they're
Speaker:screaming, we're in danger. Or if there was screaming on
Speaker:a roller coaster, your brain would be like, oh, it's It's safe screaming, don't worry
Speaker:about it, right? It can filter that. But if someone's
Speaker:crying, or someone's attacking you, like they're blaming you, or
Speaker:they're being really aggressive, like they're hitting you, or they're
Speaker:lying, or they're peppering you with questions, or they're arguing with you,
Speaker:like in any circumstance where those things were happening,
Speaker:you would feel really stressed, right? These behaviors in
Speaker:any other life situation would mean that you were under attack.
Speaker:And your brain would tell you that you needed to protect yourself, like get
Speaker:bigger, get louder, fight back, or run away.
Speaker:Your brain would tell you that your power was being
Speaker:threatened, and a powerless human is a vulnerable human,
Speaker:like in the, like our primal instinct, right?
Speaker:A vulnerable human is in danger, and that means that we need to
Speaker:get to safety and get our power back.
Speaker:I think of this as your brain on parenting, right? It's like
Speaker:instead of your brain on drugs, this is your brain on parenting, and it's kind
Speaker:of set at a high level of like scanning for hazards, because
Speaker:of course you're scanning for hazards. You are a parent, right? You want to
Speaker:try to keep these human beings safe and alive, and so
Speaker:your brain is doing its job, but it sometimes misfires.
Speaker:Fires. It sometimes sends you
Speaker:information and triggers your stress response when things aren't
Speaker:actually dangerous. I mean, if you think about
Speaker:a messy room, is that actually dangerous?
Speaker:No. A kid who skips a meal or
Speaker:doesn't bring a coat or has their shoes on the wrong feet,
Speaker:those aren't actual emergencies. They're not actually dangerous?
Speaker:A kid who's asking for sweets a lot or asking for screens or not
Speaker:sharing, a kid who's oversleeping, someone who's
Speaker:forgotten a water bottle, lost something at school,
Speaker:when you're running late or there's a big temper tantrum,
Speaker:are any of these actually dangerous to you?
Speaker:They're not. They aren't real emergencies.
Speaker:Misbehavior is rarely an emergency.
Speaker:Your brain, though, is going to scream, "Fix it! Change it! Stop it! Solve it!"
Speaker:because it sees the behavior as a problem.
Speaker:This is going to happen to you. This happens all the time in parenting. It
Speaker:might happen today. It might happen tomorrow. There's going to be things that come
Speaker:up with your kids, like a scenario where your kids are taking too long
Speaker:getting out of the car, and all of a sudden your stress response is activated.
Speaker:Or you open the lunchbox and nothing has been eaten and all the food is
Speaker:wasted, and your brain's like, oh my gosh, this is a big problem, and you
Speaker:start getting upset with your kids. Or your kid says,
Speaker:you're the worst, and they walk away and they slam the door. Or
Speaker:your preschooler's not gonna get in the bathtub, and then they won't get out of
Speaker:the bathtub. Or you say goodnight and you close the door
Speaker:and you're almost to the promised land of the couch, and then your child's
Speaker:like calling out, calling out, jack-in-the-box, coming out of bed.
Speaker:Now, when these happen, your default brain
Speaker:might take over and your stress response might get activated and
Speaker:you might yell or get upset. And I want to just
Speaker:say that's okay, because in the beginning of practicing
Speaker:calm parenting, I just want you to be aware. I want you to
Speaker:notice your reaction to your child's behavior.
Speaker:Become a witness of yourself and then notice like where do you feel the
Speaker:stress in your body? Like does it tighten your throat or does it
Speaker:feel heavy in your chest or do you feel like your, you know,
Speaker:blood is pulsing? How do you act? How do you treat your kids
Speaker:when you're in your stress response? What do you say? What do you do?
Speaker:And then I want you to really think about like what was going on in
Speaker:the background that was making you upset.
Speaker:Just kind of growing your awareness, noticing how you
Speaker:react is going to help you change how you show up.
Speaker:Now another thing that's going to help you change how you show up as a
Speaker:parent is learning not to get triggered in the first
Speaker:place. Wouldn't that be nice, right? Where you're able to
Speaker:just, you know, have misbehavior be somewhat neutral,
Speaker:right? When, when you don't feel like it's so upsetting.
Speaker:Now, this is what we're going to talk about. We're going to talk about learning
Speaker:to prevent your stress response from being activated,
Speaker:and you do this by retraining the way you think
Speaker:about behavior in the first place. When you
Speaker:view behavior as a problem, your brain is going to
Speaker:react with that whole fix it, change it, stop it, solve it energy.
Speaker:But what if you looked at misbehavior as an opportunity?
Speaker:I know you're probably thinking, oh, come on, Darlene, really? But I'm going to
Speaker:really kind of show you how misbehavior is an
Speaker:opportunity. It's an opportunity to teach your child how to manage their
Speaker:emotions. It's an opportunity to teach your kids how behavior
Speaker:has an impact on others and to become more responsible.
Speaker:It's an opportunity to get closer to your kids. Instead of having that
Speaker:behavior act as a wedge between you, you use the
Speaker:behavior as a vehicle to get closer, to be more
Speaker:connected. So to see misbehavior this way, to
Speaker:become more neutral and even view misbehavior from a
Speaker:compassionate lens, it's important to understand
Speaker:where it's coming from. Like, why is your kid misbehaving in the first place?
Speaker:Knowing the reason your kid is misbehaving is going to
Speaker:help you feel more compassionate towards them. It'll make you feel less
Speaker:confused by the whole misbehavior situation,
Speaker:and it will give you greater, like, clarity. Like, okay, this thing is happening. If
Speaker:you're calm and you're not in your stress response, you'll know what to do with
Speaker:it. So we're retraining your brain right now to think
Speaker:about misbehavior differently. So Here's
Speaker:where misbehavior comes from. It comes when your
Speaker:child has big feelings about anything.
Speaker:About anything. That could be you, your rules, what
Speaker:happened at school, their sibling, their
Speaker:perception of you and your love for them, whatever it
Speaker:is. If they have big feelings, they're going to act out
Speaker:their big feelings. And sometimes the way they act
Speaker:out creates problems for others, and we view that as misbehavior.
Speaker:So all behavior is driven by feelings.
Speaker:Misbehavior is when the behavior
Speaker:causes a problem for somebody else or them.
Speaker:So behavior, really, it's a strategy that your
Speaker:kids are using in order to take what's going
Speaker:on inside of them and put it outside of them. So they're
Speaker:using their behavior to communicate their feeling
Speaker:with you, or they're using their behavior to
Speaker:cope with their feelings. Sometimes they're
Speaker:using their behavior to change the circumstance so that
Speaker:they can feel better. So this behavior,
Speaker:I really think of it as a strategy that kids, and all humans,
Speaker:kids use to communicate to cope or to change?
Speaker:So I love labels, not for
Speaker:people, but for behavior. So I've labeled some of these
Speaker:strategies because I think naming behavior can be
Speaker:helpful because it puts distance between you and your kid's
Speaker:behavior. It helps you go get a little curious, like, okay, what is this
Speaker:behavior? What is it called, right? So one,
Speaker:I'm gonna name a couple of these different strategies. So
Speaker:one is move their body. So a way that kids communicate,
Speaker:cope, or change their circumstance is by moving their body. And what does
Speaker:that look like? It looks like hitting, throwing, kicking, punching, spitting,
Speaker:grabbing, pulling, slamming, stomping, right? They're moving their
Speaker:body in order to communicate their big feeling or to
Speaker:cope with it. It is one of the main strategies that
Speaker:we all have access to is to allow emotion to move
Speaker:through our bodies so that we can get to a new emotion.
Speaker:Kids are the same, so they're allowing that big feeling to move
Speaker:through their body by moving it.
Speaker:Another strategy that kids use besides move their body
Speaker:is what I call lawyer up. So this
Speaker:happens a little bit later, like more after 5 or 6
Speaker:years old, where kids will start to argue
Speaker:negotiate, challenge, ask repetitive
Speaker:questions, accuse, interrogate, ask why
Speaker:over and over. I think of all of that as lawyering up.
Speaker:Sorry to any lawyers out there. I don't think there's anything wrong with these
Speaker:behaviors. They are strategies, right, that we use
Speaker:to communicate, to cope, or to change our circumstance.
Speaker:So when your kid is negotiating or arguing with you, or
Speaker:kind of accusing, asking you a bunch of questions, you can be like, ah,
Speaker:they're lawyering up, okay, okay. Now I don't want you to
Speaker:lawyer up yourself, okay? I want you just to be able to view
Speaker:the behavior as an external expression of what's going on
Speaker:inside of them. Another thing that kids do and
Speaker:people do, I say kids, but you guys, we all do these, is
Speaker:complain. So what does that look like with children? It looks like
Speaker:crying, whining, yelling, swearing, and just
Speaker:straight-up monologues. So when your kid is kind of
Speaker:on, like, you know, they're crying a bunch, they're whining, they're
Speaker:yelling, it's like, oh, okay, this is complaining. This is their
Speaker:strategy to communicate or cope or change their
Speaker:circumstance. So they're complaining.
Speaker:Another strategy is attacking the messenger. They're like,
Speaker:turn it on you, right? They insult, they blame, they defend, they name-call, they
Speaker:swear, they try to use guilt, they try to, you know, use these
Speaker:strategies to turn the situation, and this is their
Speaker:way to cope, to feel better. They're like, I don't like the way I feel,
Speaker:and I want to put this emotion onto someone else and make it their fault.
Speaker:So they're attacking the messenger, which is a lot of times you, because you've had
Speaker:to say no to something that they want. And when you say no,
Speaker:it brings up big feelings in your kids, and then they don't know what to
Speaker:do with those big feelings, so they move their body, they lawyer up,
Speaker:they complain, or they attack the messenger. A couple other
Speaker:ones, I don't wanna get too in the weeds here, but I think these are
Speaker:really helpful just to understand how kids behave. What are
Speaker:we talking about when we say misbehavior? So another one
Speaker:is delay. Right? They just like ignore you,
Speaker:don't listen, they move slowly. I think of it as
Speaker:delayed compliance, or they lie. So this
Speaker:is when they have like a delay strategy, and what's going on in their head
Speaker:is like, if I pretend this thing isn't happening
Speaker:and I don't do anything about it, I can feel better.
Speaker:So they're just, you know, working hard to cope with that
Speaker:discomfort and they're like delaying the
Speaker:compliance or listening or any of it.
Speaker:The two last strategies are refusal and negative thought spiral.
Speaker:So refusal, you know what that looks like, right? They just don't do it. So
Speaker:they don't move, they don't comply. I also put
Speaker:like when your kids are doing like sneaky behaviors, like
Speaker:sneaky sweets, sneaky screens, this is sort of their refusal
Speaker:to follow the limit. They are, you know,
Speaker:just not going to do it, so they're going to sneak it. And hopefully they're
Speaker:thinking, I won't get caught and I can feel better without having any consequences.
Speaker:So that's a strategy, and it really drives parents crazy.
Speaker:And then some kids, they go into negative thought spirals. They
Speaker:start worst-case scenarioing. They go into what-if
Speaker:questions. They bring up irrational fears, or they
Speaker:start self-harming or self- blaming or self-critical. And
Speaker:that is when instead of the attack the messenger, when they take those big
Speaker:feelings and push them onto someone else, this negative thought
Speaker:spiral is when your kid's behavior strategy is to
Speaker:turn that negative emotion onto themselves. It's
Speaker:another way to cope with the feelings. It's
Speaker:another indication to you that your kid doesn't know what to
Speaker:do with those big feelings. So all
Speaker:of these behavior strategies, they're unconscious.
Speaker:They aren't malicious. They don't represent a
Speaker:character flaw in your child. Your child's not trying to
Speaker:manipulate you. They are trying to
Speaker:maybe change their circumstance or feel better about it, but
Speaker:they're not like consciously aware of what they're
Speaker:doing, and even if they are, it's still a strategy
Speaker:that they are using to communicate or cope with the situation.
Speaker:They're taking the messy feelings inside and they're putting them
Speaker:outside of themselves. So adults have
Speaker:strategies to cope with feelings too, by the way, right?
Speaker:We also do these things. Now some of us though have super
Speaker:duper healthy ways of coping with big feelings,
Speaker:and like giving ourselves compassion or walking away until we get
Speaker:calm or talking through a conflict or journaling or going for a walk or
Speaker:talking to a life coach like me, right? We all, we
Speaker:have healthy strategies. They're the same in that
Speaker:we're working, we use these strategies to communicate or cope with our
Speaker:feelings. There's adults that have less healthy strategies:
Speaker:gossiping, emotionally checking out, saying mean things,
Speaker:Yelling, complaining, beating ourselves up, overeating,
Speaker:overdrinking, avoiding people that we are upset with, right?
Speaker:We do strategies too, we just don't have an adult
Speaker:walking around criticizing us all the time.
Speaker:So sometimes you might have a partner who does that, haha. Okay,
Speaker:so these behaviors though, they create a lot of conflict
Speaker:in families, your children's misbehavior. So it's one of the
Speaker:main reasons why parents yell. And parents will think like, "Ah,
Speaker:if they would just listen and stop acting out, I wouldn't have to yell."
Speaker:But that's just not how it works.
Speaker:Like, they're not going to stop acting out. You want to give them new
Speaker:ways to act out their feelings, but they're
Speaker:not going to be able to change their behavior unless
Speaker:you help them find new strategies. So
Speaker:when, so think about that stress
Speaker:response from earlier, right? When you're thinking like, you know, my
Speaker:kids should be listening to me and I'm yelling to get them to listen to
Speaker:me, what you're really doing is you're trying to get like more
Speaker:control over the situation so that you can feel better.
Speaker:Your brain is offering you a solution of getting your kids to
Speaker:behave better because your brain wants to like get
Speaker:everything calm again. And so you're kind of coming on harsh and you're
Speaker:maybe, you know, your brain's like, okay, let's be more strict and have more
Speaker:rules and more consequences. And you're
Speaker:thinking that this answer to misbehavior is
Speaker:going to be being more firm or being more consistent.
Speaker:But the problem is the solution of being more strict, it
Speaker:doesn't address the roots of misbehavior.
Speaker:If you don't address the underlying emotions, the
Speaker:feelings that are pushing or driving your kid's
Speaker:behavior strategy, what you end up is playing whack-a-mole. You know
Speaker:that old arcade game where the mole comes up and you have
Speaker:this hammer and you try to whack it down? So I
Speaker:think sometimes there's whack-a-mole parenting where you have these different
Speaker:behaviors that are popping up and you keep creating rules and
Speaker:being really strict and having more consequences and you're whacking at the
Speaker:behavior, but then you deal with one behavior and then another behavior
Speaker:pops up because what you're not doing is you're not helping
Speaker:your child learn better ways to
Speaker:communicate, cope, or change their circumstance.
Speaker:I'm not saying that misbehavior isn't frustrating or that we
Speaker:should continue to just allow it. This is not permissive parenting.
Speaker:It is compassionate parenting though. What we are doing is we're
Speaker:looking at the reason the kid is behaving this way in the
Speaker:first place. We're getting curious. We're moving from curiosity
Speaker:into compassion. Now it's not permissive parenting because when your
Speaker:child is behaving in a way that does not work for
Speaker:others, they do need a limit. It is your job to
Speaker:make sure everyone stays safe in your house And it is your job to teach
Speaker:your kids that when they have behavior and it creates an
Speaker:impact, it's their job to, you know, deal with the impact of their behavior.
Speaker:So limits and consequences are super helpful because
Speaker:they create kind of an external interruption of what's going on
Speaker:inside. But your child is much more
Speaker:likely to respond to that limit or that
Speaker:consequence and change their behavior when they feel
Speaker:seen and heard and understood by you. Because
Speaker:here's the thing, your child, they have this story in their head
Speaker:about whatever's happening, and they have a lot of feelings about that
Speaker:story. And when they behave,
Speaker:when they show how they're feeling through their behavior, it's
Speaker:an opportunity for you to see those thoughts and feelings in action. It's a
Speaker:chance for you to get to know them better. To strengthen your relationship.
Speaker:It's also a way for you to be able to look at their behavior
Speaker:and say like, well, that doesn't work. Okay, so what do they need help learning
Speaker:here? So when you have that clarity and you have
Speaker:that calm, you're able to look at that behavior
Speaker:from a more neutral space, and you're just looking at it like, okay,
Speaker:this behavior is a form of communication. What is it
Speaker:communicating to me? What is the feeling underneath?
Speaker:What is the tool my kid needs to cope with this feeling?
Speaker:Yeah? Okay. So I said I would give you practical
Speaker:tips, a practical strategy for handling
Speaker:behavior, and I am gonna do it. I'm gonna walk you through
Speaker:sort of how to handle these behaviors. So the first one,
Speaker:always, always, always, is to get calm.
Speaker:Remember the stress response, if it's activated, if you're looking at their
Speaker:behavior and you're making it mean something that's dangerous about
Speaker:like the future, I don't mean dangerous like obviously if they have a
Speaker:hammer and they're gonna like go hit their brother or something, I want you to
Speaker:stop that. But what's cool about the stress response is it's really
Speaker:hard to override it in normal circumstance, it's very
Speaker:hard to override it when it's actually an emergency. So
Speaker:as I've said, misbehavior is rarely an emergency,
Speaker:so it's okay to delay your connection and
Speaker:it's okay to delay the consequence. So delay is
Speaker:this concept I teach all the time because when you pause and
Speaker:delay in the middle there, when you're resetting, you're
Speaker:resetting yourself back to calm so that you can connect and limit set.
Speaker:Delay is this really great strategy to manage a
Speaker:moment without adding any chaos. Because if you go talk to a
Speaker:person about a problem that was created because of their feelings,
Speaker:but you're upset, you're not gonna show compassion. So
Speaker:really, discipline or training your children
Speaker:and connecting with your children only works when everyone, well,
Speaker:it only works when you're calm, that's for sure.
Speaker:Always, always, always the first step is going to be
Speaker:to get calm and take that pause break if needed.
Speaker:The next thing I really want to remind you is that a lot of times
Speaker:behavior comes because you have said no to something that your kid
Speaker:wants. If your child is acting out because you've said
Speaker:no to a request or they're experiencing an impact or a
Speaker:consequence, you're really going to see these behavior strategies.
Speaker:They're going to bring out, you know, a lot of strategies to
Speaker:communicate their feelings or cope with their feelings or try to change the
Speaker:circumstance. So they're going to be moving their body, lawyering up,
Speaker:complaining, attacking the messenger, delaying, refusing,
Speaker:or doing that negative thought spiral. So you're
Speaker:going to be tempted in that moment to give in.
Speaker:Okay, you're gonna be like, okay, it's not that big of a deal, look at
Speaker:how upset they are. I don't— I don't want you to do that. I want
Speaker:you to stay committed to your limit and then allow for some
Speaker:of that protest. Don't take that protest personally.
Speaker:So we're pausing if we need to, so we're getting calm,
Speaker:we're staying committed, and then we're allowing for
Speaker:some protest. That's just that
Speaker:complaining and things like that. I'm gonna give you some scripts to how to limit
Speaker:that. So not taking it personally is also
Speaker:really important. It can be really hard, especially if they're like
Speaker:attacking the messenger or complaining to you or
Speaker:lawyering up to you, right? Or moving their body and trying
Speaker:to hit you. It's gonna feel really personal. I really want you to remember
Speaker:it's circumstantial. So you're staying calm, You're staying
Speaker:committed, you're allowing for some of it, and then you want
Speaker:to go into connect, right? Using that connection tool,
Speaker:connecting. I hear you saying, I'm so
Speaker:mean, Mommy's so mean. Are you feeling frustrated by my
Speaker:saying no? Like, narrate what is
Speaker:happening, what you're seeing, and name the emotion. Now remember,
Speaker:naming the emotion is just a guess. It's just
Speaker:kind of guessing the feeling and then pausing and letting them
Speaker:answer yes or no. Then you
Speaker:use that connection tool and then you have your limit set. So we're
Speaker:calm, we connect, we limit set. So that
Speaker:looks like saying, "It makes sense that you're frustrated. It's hard hearing no,
Speaker:I know. But what else can you do besides name-calling?"
Speaker:So this is that circumstance where your child's like, "You're so mean! You're the meanest
Speaker:mom! You're the worst!" Right, that's name-calling.
Speaker:And so we want to identify the emotion that's driving the behavior
Speaker:and then set a limit. So connection is identifying the
Speaker:emotion, limit set is putting a limit on
Speaker:that behavior. It makes sense that you are frustrated, it's really
Speaker:hard when mommy says no. If you have older kids, yeah, of course you're
Speaker:upset, it's hard getting told no, right? You just change your affect.
Speaker:And then you offer, what else can you do besides name-calling? Name-calling doesn't work.
Speaker:How else can you tell me that you're upset? How else can you tell me
Speaker:you're frustrated? So you're calm,
Speaker:you're connecting, you're setting that limit, and then delaying the
Speaker:consequence, right? We don't go to correct, which is that fourth step.
Speaker:So it's calm, connect, limit, set, correct. We're not going to correct until
Speaker:everybody is calm, like delaying the consequence for the strategy
Speaker:until everyone is like kind of settled. So
Speaker:I'm gonna give you a couple of scripts. I think these are funny a little
Speaker:bit for how to set limits. And
Speaker:these are like times when your child has like a bunch of big
Speaker:feelings or is acting them out and you're a little bit overwhelmed or you
Speaker:want to limit it and allow for some of that
Speaker:protest but without allowing it to go on and on and on.
Speaker:Now these are examples. Whenever I give you a script on this podcast,
Speaker:I am, the limit-setting formula, remember, is
Speaker:what your child can do and the conditions. I don't get
Speaker:to decide what those conditions are for you. I don't even get to decide what's
Speaker:allowed. You do. But I'm gonna give you some of
Speaker:the scripts so you can hear the language and how it works. So
Speaker:imagine a kid who's like really, really annoyed and complaining and
Speaker:complaining and complaining. So you've said like, "Oh, you know, I hear
Speaker:you, you know, being, you know, really complaining about this limit. Are
Speaker:you just so frustrated with mommy? Are you so angry about this?" Whatever
Speaker:age they are. "Yeah, I'm so mad! This is so stupid!"
Speaker:Then you set your limit. Ready? "I will be happy to sit here and
Speaker:listen to you complain about my rules
Speaker:for 2 full minutes. Tell me everything you don't like about this
Speaker:circumstance." And I would actually get my phone. I've done this so many
Speaker:times. I would get my phone and I would set the timer. I'd be like,
Speaker:"Ready, go!" So we're
Speaker:communicating to our child, "Yes, you can complain.
Speaker:You can protest within the limit that I am
Speaker:setting." I found that when I did this, my
Speaker:kids, especially if I was in really good connection with them,
Speaker:they would be like, "Oh, forget it." get it, because they recognize that
Speaker:their complaining isn't going to change the circumstance. And actually, by that
Speaker:point, they've probably worked through the emotion, so
Speaker:it's not— they're not even that charged anymore. Does that make sense?
Speaker:Um, okay, here's another scenario where your kid is like
Speaker:throwing things, and you can stop.
Speaker:This is like almost like a hard no, where you're like, listen, you are welcome
Speaker:to show me your feelings about this as long as you don't throw things.
Speaker:So listen to how firm my voice got there, because I really am
Speaker:saying like, yes, you can have these big feelings, but throwing
Speaker:things, no. And I want to communicate that in a very firm
Speaker:voice. You are welcome to show me your feelings about this as
Speaker:long as you don't throw things or throw things at me. Like,
Speaker:if they are throwing, you know, balls or whatever, you're like, you're
Speaker:welcome to throw balls outside, you can throw balls You know, you can throw this
Speaker:pillow, you can give them some options, but you
Speaker:wanna communicate what the limit is. Here's another
Speaker:one. When you have screen time rules in your family and your
Speaker:kid doesn't like them and they wanna complain and complain and complain, you can
Speaker:say, you guys listen to this, it's so funny. I
Speaker:am happy to listen to you complain about our screen time rules on Fridays from
Speaker:6 to 6:15 PM. Would you like to make an appointment?
Speaker:And then when they get like annoyed or whatever, you kind of
Speaker:smile and they start to complain, then you go, "If you want to
Speaker:talk, you can talk, but I'm not listening. I
Speaker:will listen to you on Fridays from 6 to 6:15."
Speaker:I had to do this with one of my kids because I had— he didn't
Speaker:get to play video games until he was much older than his peers, and
Speaker:it was like an ongoing complaining thing that he wanted to talk about.
Speaker:And so I would reserve a certain
Speaker:period of time every week and he could just talk about it with me.
Speaker:Again, I was committed to my limit, I was
Speaker:calm, and I allowed for some of it within the limit,
Speaker:right? This limit script
Speaker:is when your kid is like really
Speaker:overwhelming you and you're in your stress response. I want you to be able
Speaker:to say, "I'm going to take a calm-down break, and I'll be back
Speaker:to listen to you in a few minutes." Like, just straight up
Speaker:saying, "I want to hear you, and I will, but I'm going to take a
Speaker:break first." So this is when you're not ready for that
Speaker:connection tool and you need to go calm. That's how that sounds.
Another one:"I'll be happy to listen to you as long as you speak kindly
Another one:to me." You don't have to and have someone
Another one:name-call you over and over and over again, you can,
Another one:"Uh-uh, uh-uh, uh-uh. I'm happy to listen to you as long as you speak
Another one:kindly to me. Name-calling is not kind. What else can you say?"
Another one:So you're, you know, setting that limit right there while still
Another one:in connection. Okay, I
Another one:hope hearing a few of these scripts gives you an idea of how it
Another one:works in practice to set limits. In ways that are
Another one:respectful of your child's feelings and still allows them to
Another one:communicate or cope with those feelings, but within a way that
Another one:actually is safe, emotionally safe for everybody, and physically safe for
Another one:everybody. So the key takeaway for today is this,
Another one:ready? Your child's misbehavior is
Another one:triggered by feelings that they don't know what to do with.
Another one:Right? That's The thing I really want you to understand is
Another one:that your child's misbehavior is triggered
Another one:by feelings that they don't know what to do with. Now,
Another one:just having that awareness is going to transform how you view your
Another one:kids and the story you tell yourself about them. Instead
Another one:of thinking they're jerks, they're psychopaths,
Another one:or whatever negative thoughts you have about their behavior and
Another one:what it means about them as a person, their character. You don't have to do
Another one:that. So just knowing, oh, this behavior, this is
Another one:feelings coming out, it will change how you view your
Another one:kids. It will help you feel more compassion towards your
Another one:kids and will make you more connected to them. That's the goal
Another one:here, right, is to help your kids know what to do with
Another one:their big feelings. So how do you do
Another one:that when you're looking at behavior and and getting mad about it, you're
Another one:gonna miss seeing that the behavior is
Another one:showing you what's underneath. So this awareness will help you feel more
Another one:compassion. And also, like, it's
Another one:almost like a parenting hack because if you're able to
Another one:see that their behavior is triggered by their feelings, it will
Another one:help you feel more calm because you're gonna see the behavior
Another one:as a temporary strategy. Because feelings
Another one:come and go. They rise up, they move through. They rise up, they move through.
Another one:It's temporary. And when you see the behavior as a way
Another one:that your child is communicating or coping with their feelings, you're
Another one:like, "Oh, okay, this will pass." It'll help you calm.
Another one:It'll help you not freak out so much, and it will activate your stress response
Another one:way less when you understand that this
Another one:behavior is acting out feelings,
Another one:and there's nothing wrong with my child. It will help you freak out
Another one:less and not have your stress response so
Another one:activated.