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Episode 042: Giving Warnings-How that makes parenting harder and what to do instead.

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When? This feed was archived on April 28, 2019 01:36 (5y ago). Last successful fetch was on February 06, 2019 18:11 (5y ago)

Why? Inactive feed status. Our servers were unable to retrieve a valid podcast feed for a sustained period.

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Manage episode 201192116 series 2135895
Content provided by Parent With a Pro. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Parent With a Pro or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
So this is going to be a shorter training today to give you one specific tool to start implementing right away and start to see results. But let me tell you a little why I wanted to use this. I recently read a really popular parenting book that is SO good in SO many ways. However, it suggests using a couple warnings before you follow through so that your child has a chance to change their behavior. When I read it, I thought “This sounds really great and I'm going to start using this in my home.” We started using it and we saw really good results pretty quickly. But then after a couple of weeks we literally started hearing our kids say, “Oh, you get to ask me one more time before I have to do it.” I thought, “No! That is not the point of this.” Today, Jeff Tesch, LMFT is going to teach us why warnings are sabotaging our parenting and what we should do instead. LISTEN ABOVE OR READ THE SUMMARY BELOW Jeff Tesch, LMFT What Could Cut Misbehavior in Half I had two families in yesterday. Both of them have kids that are out of control. Some of the hardest stuff that I've seen. The kids in the family we very, very defiant. The parents had tried taking everything away to motivate the kids to behave better. But as I got to know them better I found that both moms were giving all kinds of warnings and all kinds of second chances. So I told both of them something I have been saying a lot lately and I truly believe this. If every parent across this country stopped using warnings, second chances and giving into fits, I think half the behavior in all of our kids would disappear. I feel that strongly about it because I just see it over and over, year after year, and family after family. That once parents stop giving warnings and second chances before giving a consequence, a child’s behavior drastically improves. The Problem With Warnings Warnings and second chances simply allow negative behaviors to continue. Kids know when they’re parents are serious. They will continue to use unwanted behaviors until they know that you are serious. I have kids in my office admitting to me that they know when their parent is finally serious and that they just don't care about warnings. Giving warnings is a process that really gets parents worked up. What if your kids knew you were serious on the first ask? How much frustration, nagging, anger, and yelling would that save you? Why Parents Give Warnings In some cases, parents give warnings because they are trying to be nice and patient. They don’t want their child to experience an uncomfortable consequence because they hurt when their child hurts. In other cases, parents give warnings because following through with a consequence can be really inconvenient. What to Do Instead of Giving Warnings We can cut out all that middle stuff where we're wearing out and it's not providing anything by just not using warnings. If you’ve been clear with your child about an expectation, they know exactly what's expected, then do not use a warning. Example: If you teach your child very clearly, “you may never hit your sibling.” You should never, ever say when that child hits, “If you do it again, there's going to be a consequence.” If the behavior occurs, use the consequence immediately. What About Second Chances? The second chance thing is so similar to warnings. Let’s use the hitting example again. Your child hits their brother and you say “Uh oh, you hit your brother. It’s time for your consequence.” Then your child starts saying “Please, please. One more try. I'll do better. I promise I won't hit. I'm so sorry. “ And even comes and gives us a hug and an “I love you mommy”. It can be tempting to give him another chance! I get it! I’ve been there. However, that leads to the child begging for a second every time, which is a lot of hassle. If a child breaks a rule, we just need to follow through with a consequence immediately.
  continue reading

88 episodes

Artwork
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Archived series ("Inactive feed" status)

When? This feed was archived on April 28, 2019 01:36 (5y ago). Last successful fetch was on February 06, 2019 18:11 (5y ago)

Why? Inactive feed status. Our servers were unable to retrieve a valid podcast feed for a sustained period.

What now? You might be able to find a more up-to-date version using the search function. This series will no longer be checked for updates. If you believe this to be in error, please check if the publisher's feed link below is valid and contact support to request the feed be restored or if you have any other concerns about this.

Manage episode 201192116 series 2135895
Content provided by Parent With a Pro. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Parent With a Pro or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
So this is going to be a shorter training today to give you one specific tool to start implementing right away and start to see results. But let me tell you a little why I wanted to use this. I recently read a really popular parenting book that is SO good in SO many ways. However, it suggests using a couple warnings before you follow through so that your child has a chance to change their behavior. When I read it, I thought “This sounds really great and I'm going to start using this in my home.” We started using it and we saw really good results pretty quickly. But then after a couple of weeks we literally started hearing our kids say, “Oh, you get to ask me one more time before I have to do it.” I thought, “No! That is not the point of this.” Today, Jeff Tesch, LMFT is going to teach us why warnings are sabotaging our parenting and what we should do instead. LISTEN ABOVE OR READ THE SUMMARY BELOW Jeff Tesch, LMFT What Could Cut Misbehavior in Half I had two families in yesterday. Both of them have kids that are out of control. Some of the hardest stuff that I've seen. The kids in the family we very, very defiant. The parents had tried taking everything away to motivate the kids to behave better. But as I got to know them better I found that both moms were giving all kinds of warnings and all kinds of second chances. So I told both of them something I have been saying a lot lately and I truly believe this. If every parent across this country stopped using warnings, second chances and giving into fits, I think half the behavior in all of our kids would disappear. I feel that strongly about it because I just see it over and over, year after year, and family after family. That once parents stop giving warnings and second chances before giving a consequence, a child’s behavior drastically improves. The Problem With Warnings Warnings and second chances simply allow negative behaviors to continue. Kids know when they’re parents are serious. They will continue to use unwanted behaviors until they know that you are serious. I have kids in my office admitting to me that they know when their parent is finally serious and that they just don't care about warnings. Giving warnings is a process that really gets parents worked up. What if your kids knew you were serious on the first ask? How much frustration, nagging, anger, and yelling would that save you? Why Parents Give Warnings In some cases, parents give warnings because they are trying to be nice and patient. They don’t want their child to experience an uncomfortable consequence because they hurt when their child hurts. In other cases, parents give warnings because following through with a consequence can be really inconvenient. What to Do Instead of Giving Warnings We can cut out all that middle stuff where we're wearing out and it's not providing anything by just not using warnings. If you’ve been clear with your child about an expectation, they know exactly what's expected, then do not use a warning. Example: If you teach your child very clearly, “you may never hit your sibling.” You should never, ever say when that child hits, “If you do it again, there's going to be a consequence.” If the behavior occurs, use the consequence immediately. What About Second Chances? The second chance thing is so similar to warnings. Let’s use the hitting example again. Your child hits their brother and you say “Uh oh, you hit your brother. It’s time for your consequence.” Then your child starts saying “Please, please. One more try. I'll do better. I promise I won't hit. I'm so sorry. “ And even comes and gives us a hug and an “I love you mommy”. It can be tempting to give him another chance! I get it! I’ve been there. However, that leads to the child begging for a second every time, which is a lot of hassle. If a child breaks a rule, we just need to follow through with a consequence immediately.
  continue reading

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