Have you been sometimes feeling like you're held hostage by a tiny terrorist, like a child that is 2, 6, or even 11, has these demands of you that lead you to walking on eggshells and thinking you can't live life how you want to? Friend, if this is you, I'm gonna say something bold. If you have a bossy and demanding kid, we may be negotiating with a terrorist and encouraging more terrorist behavior. You're gonna understand what I mean by that by the end of this episode. And I promise I'm not a child hater. I love children. I love your child, and I do believe they are unique and special and wonderful. And I want to help you to be bringing out the best of their leadership and strong personality characteristics without enabling more terrorist behavior in your future. Hey friend, welcome back to the Sustainable Parenting Podcast, where we bridge the gap between overly gentle parenting and overly harsh discipline so that you finally have the joy and ease you've been missing. When you are parenting with kindness and firmness at the same time, you have dependable calm and resilience built in your child. I'm your host, Flora McCormick, licensed therapist, parenting coach, and I'm so glad you're here.
SPEAKER_00Listeners, if you need parenting advice, talk to my mom. Sustainable parenting with Flora McCormick.
Okay, our mantra for today is bossy and demanding kids need not apply. Now, no, it's not because I want you to shut down your kid or be harsh or mean or hateful in any way. I actually care deeply about your child being their unique self. But I want to encourage you, yes, you, to look at what you might be contributing to this more than you have noticed before. I say that with great sensitivity because it is hard for us to look in the mirror. I think of Taylor Swift's song, like I can stare directly at the sun, but never in the mirror. It is hard for us to really look at ourselves sometimes and see what we might be contributing. But today there is freedom in that friend, because when you notice that there are things that you may be contributing to the situation, you have power to make change because you can change yourself a lot easier than you can change someone else. And especially little humans that are three, five, eleven. We when we change ourselves first, it impacts them dramatically. I'm guessing you may have landed in this spot where your child refuses to go to bed unless you lay there for 45 minutes to two hours, or they refuse to eat anything except their favorite buttered noodles or nuggets, or they refuse to give you a second to yourself not even to go to the bathroom in privacy because you have wanted to give them a loving, considerate space to feel valid. I am guessing you have been caught up in an overly gentle parenting movement that gets something really crossed. We want to avoid a space where we used to have powerful adults and powerless kids. And that's a lot of what the gentle parenting movement came out of, is like we don't want to be condescending, dismissive of emotions. Absolutely that's true. We don't want powerful adults and powerless ignored kids. But on the other hand, what we have sometimes slipped into is the opposite: powerful kids and powerless adults. And friend, this has wide sweeping negative results. We see that this can lead to behavior problems more likely in children, poor emotion regulation because they've been coddled and unable to work through emotions, entitlement, and a lot of parental burnout because of all of the work that it takes to be constantly indulging the every whim of a tiny terrorist. So if we know that this isn't helpful, let's get it right. Let's not go between the two dramatic opposites of powerful adults, powerless kids into the space of powerful kids, powerless adults. No, no, no, friend. There is a middle ground that you can land on. That's where we want to be. That's the sweet spot of positive discipline, truly, of kindness and firmness at the same time. That is about respect that's mutual, respecting the child as much as you respect yourself. One of my favorite quotes about boundaries says, a boundary is the distance at which I can love both you and me at the same time. Yes, we want to love our kids. And it's okay, and it's actually important, not just okay, to love ourselves. If we are constantly only loving on them and neglecting ourselves, what long-term message is that teaching them about how they're gonna treat themselves as an adult? And what message is that teaching them in terms of how to be thoughtful about other people's emotions and their own sense of well-being? We want kids that are not just emotionally validated, but that also are considerate, are kind, are thoughtful towards others. And friend, those things are not really created out of overindulgence. So let's name it what it is. If we have gotten in a space where we are saying to ourselves, we can't, or the kid won't let us, we can't go to bed until the child's asleep. The kid won't let us sleep through the night. The kid won't let us cook the meals that we want to cook. We are not in the space of gentle, loving parenting. We are in a space of indulgent parenting. And we don't want to be there. That does not have good outcomes for anyone. Like I just said, that leads to the kids feeling like they have a right to be demanding in this world, and it leads us to get freaking burnt out. Why do I say this? Because I've been there with my first kid, my son, bless his heart, love him so much. But he's a softy and he's sensitive, and that threw me for a loop. Like, I'll take an angry kid any day. A mopey, sad kid, like is really hard for me. Angry kid, I can like parse out that's where a boundary needs to be helped. Not okay to treat me that way. But when a kid is sort of like mopey or needy and demanding out of that space, that's harder for me. Now you may be sitting there thinking you're fine with that, but it's harder when they're angry for you to hold your boundaries. We all have our challenge area. This is part of what I love to do in parent coaching is you get a person will walk alongside you and help you unpack that, identify it, and heal it. But today I want to give you just a few small bites of what can help if you have been struggling and ended up without meaning to in a place of some indulgent parenting. I'm gonna give you two key alternatives, friend. The first alternative to indulgent parenting is when you are struggling between choosing whether you should offer loving support of your child or hold a boundary. Guess what? You can choose both. You don't have to pick one or the other. This is one of the most common things that I hear parents like, oh, that feels so good and freeing when I really live into that. Like, meaning when I love them, I can say, I love you so much, and I hear that you're frustrated by this. And the answer is no. We can hold those two at the same time. Similarly, we can hold boundaries without having to sound mean. I used to think if I ever wrote a book, I would call it taking the mean out of saying what you mean. Because I think this is a skill that a lot of times it's hard to get in our voice and in our body. But the sense is, friend, we can hold both. We can hold both kindness and firmness at the same time. We don't have to choose one or the other. So if you have felt torn in these things where the kid will not let you do X, Y, Z or refuses to do A, B, C, I want you to try out in those moments, thinking of what you'd like your boundary to be. Like, okay, no, my internal boundary is going to be that I'm not making a separate dinner. So you can say to the child, I love you. I know this is not your favorite, and this is what we're having for dinner. You can hold both. You don't have to choose love or boundaries, you can hold them both together. Oh, it's one of my favorite things. I delved into that in depth in episode 79 and even talked there about how that can help us in a partnership so that we don't have one being the good cop, bad cop, one being the I love you side, and the other being the answer is no side. But being able to both hold I love you and the answer is no consistently as a couple. So you're not battling between one feeling, so you're not battling between one feeling too soft and the other feeling too scary, which I see happen in a lot of partnerships. Number two, alternative to indulgent parenting that has been having a guise of gentle parenting is to decide if you want to keep suffering in circles or you're ready to suffer with a purpose. A lot of people laugh when they hear me say that. And it's because wait, are those really our only two answers or options? Unfortunately, friend, they are in parenting a lot. When things are going great, we get to have joy, ease, wonderful, yay. But if they're not going great, and we have moments that our kid is like demanding or being bossy to us, guess what? Those are the moments where we have a choice. We can choose to respond in ways that keep us suffering in circles, or we can choose to respond in ways that get us to suffer with a purpose. There, it's hard either way. The biggest thing we end up doing when we're walking on eggshells is indulge. We end up indulging because we're trying to avoid any suffering. And friend, that usually leads to just suffering in circles. You might avoid it for the time being, but it keeps coming up. So instead, I want to invite you to consider are we ready to suffer with a purpose? And what does that mean? Well, I delved into that deeper in episode 55. And to give you a nutshell of it, it's that we can learn how to do hard things. We can do hard things, right? I was just talking to a friend yesterday who's dating as a 45-year-old and was reflecting on how to be hard in these different ways, this date that she had coming up. And I said to her, that might be hard if that ends up happening, but you can do hard things. And she laughed. She's like, Well, when you put it like that, it's like, yeah, yes, I can. It's like almost too simple in my head. It's such a big hard thing, but I can do hard things. And friend, you listening right now, I believe you can do hard things. And that if you are willing to take that step forward to do the hard thing of holding the boundary with love, you are likely going to see the pushback from your kid get less and less and less. One of the phrases I've often thought of is, friend, if you want your kid to be pushing less, we got to be less of a pushover. Because it's just their job to test rules and boundaries to see what happens when they do. If it's working, they're gonna do more of it. So, friend, the message today is if you have had a tiny terrorist kind of bossing you around or demanding things of you that you are tired of, I invite you to make this the week that you take a step forward. And heck, I don't know how you're gonna get there. Maybe you can do it on your own, but maybe you also have been like, I want a cheerleader, I want someone to help me with this. And in that case, let's work together. You could either purchase one of my short courses, which are$19 each, you could purchase one-on-one sessions with me, or you could join one of my upcoming events online or in person. Any of those options, friends, can get you there. It just takes you taking the step to say, I'm willing to do the work. It may feel like some suffering with a purpose, but dang, I'm ready to quit suffering in circles. And friend, join me next week as we're going to talk about the best way to prep for your upcoming spring break. I know a lot of people are getting ready for those. And it's one of the top questions I start getting in this season of the year is like, what do we do to enjoy our vacation that we've spent five or$10,000 on? Yes, friend, let's make it so you actually enjoy that time away from the office and with your kids or partner. All right, until then, I hope this is a week that you are able to parent with kindness and firmness at the same time so parenting finally feels sustainable.