Good Inside with Dr. Becky - How to End Power Struggles
Episode Date: April 26, 2022You ask your child to put on their shoes or brush their teeth, and you’re met with a flat-out “No!” If you’re like most parents, you’re familiar with the power struggle that follows: You ins...ist, your kid resists or ignores you, you get frustrated, they get frustrated, and nobody wins. The good news? There’s another way. This week, Dr. Becky answers questions from three different parents about tricky moments of refusal with their kids. As always, she zooms out to consider the big picture: Why do our kids say “no” in the first place? Then, she offers actionable scripts and strategies to connect to your child’s experience, while embodying your authority as a parent. You’ll leave this episode with a game-changing framework for resistance and a ton of tools to increase cooperation in your home. Join Good Inside Membership: https://bit.ly/3cqgG2A Follow Dr. Becky on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/drbeckyatgoodinside Sign up for our weekly email, Good Insider: https://www.goodinside.com/newsletter Order Dr. Becky's book, Good Inside: A Guide to Becoming the Parent You Want to Be, at goodinside.com/book or wherever you order your books. For a full transcript of the episode, go to goodinside.com/podcast
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Hi, I'm Dr. Becky, and this is Goodinside.
I'm a clinical psychologist and mom of three on a mission to rethink the way
we raise our children. I love translating deep thoughts about parenting into practical,
actionable strategies that you can use in your home right away. One of my core beliefs is
that we are all doing the best we can.
With the resources we have available to us in that moment.
So even as we struggle and even as we are having a hard time on the outside, we remain good
inside. Today we're going to be talking about some really common and tricky moments in parenting.
The moments where you ask your child to do something seemingly simple, and you're greeted
with a, no, no, not doing that.
Or a flat, no.
Or the no where a child isn't saying no, but they're just ignoring what you're asking for.
We're going to be going over what you can do in these moments.
And what you can do outside these moments, so you have fewer of them in the first place.
With all that in mind, let's jump in.
Let's hear from our first caller, Trevor.
Hi, Dr. Becky. My name is Trevor and I live in Southern California, Orange County. And I have two children, Patrick,
age two and a half and and maybe about ten months.
My question is about my two and a half year old son, Patrick.
He loves to say no to everything.
You know, Patrick, let's put on your socks.
No, put on socks.
Patrick, it's time to eat lunch.
No eat lunch.
It's no to everything, even things that he wants
to do. And my wife and I have made a concerted effort to always give him choices. Like Patrick,
do you want to read on the couch or do you want to read on the floor? You know, do you
want to eat at the big table or do you want to eat at the little table? You know, a choice for everything, but it's just constantly no.
And even though we get to the day, okay, hearing no for so many things is just a huge drain
and is very exhausting sometimes.
So I'm just wondering how to approach this and especially how to get better at it for the next child as she gets older as well.
I really appreciate some advice.
Hi Trevor. First of all, thank you so much for calling in.
I have so many memories, so many that are exactly like yours.
I am asking my child to do a very, very basic thing and the intensity
and the frequency of the know that comes back to me. It could be so frustrating. And I know
every single listener has experiences that resonate as well. So let's do what we kind of
love to do here. Let's understand what's going on. And then let's translate that understanding
into a couple very actionable practical strategies.
So what's going on here?
I really believe that no allows us kind of self-definition.
Right?
If we go back to our adolescence,
I think we can all remember that we never know
kind of that we are really our own person
as much as when we're saying no to somebody else.
Right, when you're a teenager and your parents
tell you what time to be home
and you're even thinking in your head,
nope, not gonna do that.
Well, what you're really saying to yourself
is I am my own person.
I have my own identity and saying no. It's a simple word to letters. It accomplishes in a lot of
ways that identity formation for adolescence and identity formation in toddlerhood is also
really core to that developmental stage. Your son is trying to figure out who he is in relation
to you and a separate from you. And playing around with the word no is totally appropriate because
we want our kids to figure out who they are as a separate person. But I promise Trevor that's not
all I have for you because I know as a parent also we need strategies to actually get through those moments.
So what do we do?
Let's go over some things you can do in the moment and some things you can do outside
the moment to really help Patrick both feel like his own person and be a little bit more
cooperative.
First strategy in the moment.
Allow the no.
Replace, reacting with counting to 10 and taking a deep breath, right?
So you say, Patrick, time to go.
Let's put on your socks.
No, I'm not putting on my socks.
One, two, three.
You hear how long it takes me to get to three.
Imagine actually doing that until you count to 10.
Why?
Because our natural reaction is to react and actually add resistance.
So if you're like me, if you don't pause, you're going to say this.
Just put on your socks.
Come on, put on your socks.
You're the one who wants to go to soccer class.
You know we have to get to school whatever you're doing.
And you can see going back to that understanding. If the no represents my child kind of feeling like their own person,
then my reacting with control, you have to do this, you need to do this. It's only going
to make my child more likely to continue giving me those no's. So instead of reacting,
pause. Count to 10. Now, this isn't magic.
It doesn't mean after 10,
your child's going to be putting their socks on,
but actually I've watched in my own home.
How many times that pause gives my child the space they need
to realize maybe I also have the desire
to put on my socks and get out the door.
Okay, second.
You've said this kind of 10 to yourself.
You've taken a deep breath,
your child's still resisting then what?
Here's something I like to say to my kids,
especially when they were younger,
around this kind of identity formation need.
Wow, Patrick, you really are your own person.
Wow, I asked you to put on your socks.
You said no, I think you're telling me, you really like to be in control of your own decisions.
What am I doing here?
I'm actually naming the need, the kind of goal under the no.
You really are your own person.
Wow, you really are a big kid.
Wow, you really know what you want.
Those words actually help your child feel seen and we all know when we feel seen, we're
more likely to cooperate.
What else can you do in that moment?
Add fun, but add fun in a way that still allows your child to feel like their own person
because that's what they're going for in the first place.
So your child's now said no to doing their bath after I've counted.
After I've named they really want to be there on person.
I might say something like this.
I wonder if there's anyone in this house who can think of the most ridiculous way to
get water poured on their body during a bath.
Let me think.
I wonder if it's going to be me or you.
Me or you.
Who's going to come up with the funniest idea.
Now, I'm allowing my child to have an opportunity
to think of something funny to cooperate,
but to actually think of it themselves,
which fulfills that need to be their own person.
So let's kind of bring those together.
Pause count to 10, name what your child is looking to hear,
and then allow your child to come up with a solution.
Now, Trevor, I have to say these moments,
these no moments are so frustrating that me too.
Sometimes it's hard to do these things in a moment
on kind of reactive.
So there's actually so many things we can do outside the moment.
And I think you'll hear things that I'm going to share
with other callers that will apply. But for now, I would love to know what happens when you try some
version of a Get Your Nose out of your body in the morning game. So if my child's in a
no stage, I might start the morning like this. I don't know about you, Patrick. I have
so many nose in my body. Can you just ask me some questions, right? And maybe my child doesn't even respond.
I still would say this. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no playfulness, I'm adding levity, I'm actually introducing the idea that knows
can exist between us.
I'm not resisting it, I'm actually inviting it.
And then I'd allow your child to do the same.
Do you have any knows?
Do you want me to ask you questions?
Hey Patrick, do you want to go to the moon?
Hey Patrick, do you want to have ice cream for breakfast?
Right?
Something that it might even be funny to have a no response to.
And in doing this, you're really changing your child's relationship with the no and adding
so many of those elements that improve cooperation.
And now our next caller, Andrea.
Hi, my name is Andrea. I'm from Denver, Colorado, and I have one son who is almost five years old.
So my question is, what can I do better in situations where he just feels like saying no.
And he just tells me he just feels like saying no like this morning we need
to get ready for school and I need to leave for work. And everything is no. Even the
I say, okay, pick a shirt. I give them three choices. You can pick one of these shirts.
Nothing. Okay, I'll pick one for you and then he rips it off. So that's his trouble.
And then we move to the shoe, the same thing.
Pick which shoe you want to wear and he says nothing.
And then it's, he just, you know, puts his paws button on and sits on the couch and doesn't move.
I tried talking it out with him and nothing.
He is a big-feeling kid, so pushing him too hard or being rushed makes him react, I know.
So I charge really hard to be calm and not put that pressure on him, but sometimes he just puts
the brakes on and everything is nothing and no. So I never know what the best choice is in that scenario and I it's probably one of my biggest triggers
and I don't usually handle it well and I end up putting his shirt and shoes on for him
which is enabling and all the things. So I'm looking for a better way to handle that.
Hi Andrea, you know my first reaction is that I really hear your frustration here and I hear that you
want to show up in a different way. And before we jump into any strategies, I'd
ask you to just kind of join me. And just tell yourself, this is really
frustrating. It's really frustrating to try to move the day along. And I'm tired
and it's hard. And I'm a good parent who's going to learn some
different things, and I'm trying my best.
Okay, what's next?
A couple ideas for you.
I think so often when we get really frustrated as parents as just humans, there's probably
some expectation that wasn't met. And I think as a parent, we often
tell ourselves in the morning, oh, I hope this morning goes better. And it's not like I think
we should tell ourselves, oh, I hope this morning's a disaster, but it's important to have reasonable
expectations because then we can deal with the matter at hand instead of having to deal with the
matter at hand and our own disappointment. So right now, Andrea, I would imagine your morning, like actually
visualize it, right? Get all the details. And then imagine your child saying, no,
imagine them saying, no, I'm not getting ready. No, I'm not putting my shirt on.
And then see yourself. And actually in that image, watch yourself take a deep breath.
Maybe imagine it's me or it's Trevor right next to you saying, oh, parenting is really
hard, right?
So we have that validation.
Doing that mental prep work and that real kind of imagery work of imagining ourselves in
a more grounded way, it actually gives our body kind of a rep and
Helps us be that parent in the moment a couple other ideas
See the wish
Under the no
There's always a wish under a no sometimes. It's very specific. Sometimes. It's kind of grand
I'll give you some examples. Something specific. You wish I would put your clothes on for you, huh? A different wish might be,
I bet you wish you were in charge of all your own decisions. I bet you wish you could decide
whether you had to change out of pajamas at all. Or when it comes to these nose that are around transitions, I think there's often this
wish underneath.
I bet you wish you had more time with mommy, huh?
I bet you wish sometimes you could stay with mommy all day.
Or do you ever wish you could go to school and learn and be with your friends and be
with me all day?
Do you ever wish you could do all of that?
Naming a wish under a no really helps a child feel seen and it helps a child understand
their own behavior. And this always leads to increased cooperation. What else? Well,
Andrea went all else fails. I'll be honest, this is my go-to line. And I'll model it and then explain why I love it so much.
There's something about blank. That doesn't feel good to you. I believe you.
There's something about putting on a shirt right now. That doesn't feel good to you, huh?
I believe you. There's something about eating breakfast right now. That doesn't feel good to you.
I believe you. There's something about getting into the car, that doesn't feel good to you. I believe you.
There's something about getting into the car that doesn't feel good to you.
I believe you.
Why is this my favorite line?
Okay.
Well, I love that in this line, I don't have to understand anything about why my child's
upset.
I don't have to understand why they don't want to put on a shirt.
I don't have to understand why they don't want to eat breakfast. I don't have to understand why they don't want to be on a shirt. I don't have to understand why they don't want to eat breakfast.
I don't have to understand why they don't want to be in the car.
I don't have to understand any of that.
I just have to believe my child's experience.
I think a lot of us have an easier time validating a child's experience when we understand it.
But I think what's really critical is to consider that validation can come before understanding. And when we validate
someone's experiences real, often that's what they're looking for anyway, just to be believed.
So that's something I would really have in your back pocket. And if that's something that doesn't
come naturally to you, those words practice it in front of a mirror a few times, even pause this
podcast right after and just say, huh, there's something about this that doesn't feel good to you. I believe you.
Hey, quick thing. If you follow me on Instagram or if you're a part of the good inside membership,
you probably know I've written a book. And I'm so excited to say that you no longer have to pre-order it.
You can order it because it's available right now.
You might have guessed the title is Good Inside, a guide to becoming the parent you want to
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And let me be clear, it's not a book or perfect parenting.
It is a book that will help parents like you feel empowered, confident, and sturdy.
Visit GoodInside.com slash book to order your copy today.
Now let's get back to the episode.
Let's hear from our final caller, Katie.
Hi, Dr. Becky, this is Katie.
I live in Atlanta, Georgia.
I have a two year old, a little over two year old son,
and a six month old daughter.
I'm calling just with a question about kind of how
you would handle this or what words you might use around
something my son's doing.
So he, we've learned a lot about consent and it's important to us for him to
learn about his own bodily consent as well as others and treating each other with respect.
And so when he hurts us, be offered to stop. I don't like that and then you're making
stop. He has taken this and we love to see him now.
You're starting to say, stop idle.
I know like it.
I know like it, which is awesome in certain scenarios,
but then he started to do that and things like brushing teeth
and taking backs and any of the things that he might not
feel like doing in the moment.
And so I want to encourage him to continue to set healthy
boundaries around what he wants to spend his body like when he and dad are wrestling or
re-know-re-thousing. I guess I need some guidance or some instruction on kind of how to reframe
when we're doing things that are healthy for him and necessary for personal hygiene or, you know,
doctor's visit or things like that. Are there, you know, certain words or things that might be helpful
in those situations to say, oh, yep, you don't like it, but we have to do it anyway. And kind of
helping him understand that at his little stage. So thanks so much for your help.
I love your podcast.
Thank you.
Bye.
Thank you, Katie.
Your calling in reminds me of a question I get often.
And honestly, it's often about tooth brushing.
It's something like this.
How do I get my child to brush their teeth
without giving me a hard time?
And if they are giving me a hard time,
do I, like, pin them down on the ground and brush their teeth? Do I let them go a few nights without brushing? What do I do?
Okay. I want to take this question and zoom out, and then Katie will zoom back into all the
questions you raised, because it's all related. Here's the big idea. I think when we don't have a
good answer to our question, we're asking the wrong question. We can't ask the question, how do I get my child
to brush their teeth? Even the question, do I pin them down or let them go without brushing?
And I know for me, my first reaction is, I don't like either of those answers. That means I must have
to ask a different question. So let me try to formulate this differently. In terms of toothbrushing,
and it can be the same with so many of these other areas
where we don't want to force our kids to do things.
I think the question we have to ask instead of, how do I get my child to brush their teeth
or take a bath is, what is my child's resistance a sign of?
And how can I lower my child's resistance outside of those moments? So that
when the moment comes, there's not as much of a power struggle. Kids who get into huge
battles about brushing their teeth, that moment's too hot. We need to think about what we can
do outside of the moment to change what's happening. So our child can show up differently
in that moment.
Now we have good options.
So let's go over some of these outside of the moment strategies.
What do we know?
Kids like to feel in charge and kids so often feel so done to, so controlled.
We need to give kids more opportunity to really feel in charge because then when we ask
them to do things,
they're gonna be more likely to cooperate not because they want to brush their teeth,
but because now tooth brushing isn't a way to define their own separate identity,
so it's just not as heated.
My favorite game, the urine charge game.
I hope every single person listening to this podcast does this today.
I think we will all have a more peaceful few days in our home.
Say something like this to your child. You know what I've been thinking about? It can
be kind of annoying to be a kid sometimes, right? Am I always asking you to do things?
Oh, go get dressed. Come for breakfast, clear your plate, put on your shoes. Oh, so many things
that I'm in charge of. How about we play the urine charge game? And your child will say, what's the urine charge game?
Well, for five minutes, you get to tell me to do anything.
Because sometimes kids should know what it feels like to be in charge, and sometimes
adults should know what it feels like to be asked to do things you don't want to do.
A couple rules.
You can't involve food, and you can't ask me to buy anything, and you can't ask me to
do anything that's going't ask me to do anything
that's going to be dangerous, but anything else is fair game.
Now your Chad might need you to kind of lead them there, right?
And remember, they're just looking for that feeling of being in charge.
You can lead them to somewhere silly like, oh, I hope you don't ask me to walk backwards
everywhere.
I really hope you don't ask me to do a really ridiculous dance.
If your kids are like my kids, you're going to say to them, please don't ask me to do a really ridiculous dance. If your kids are like my kids, you're gonna say to them, please don't ask me to do blank. They're gonna ask you to do
blank. And then you can act it out. No, I don't want to do that. I really don't...
Ah! Okay, I guess you're in charge. I guess I'll walk backward. And then if it's me, I might
right kind of bump into the door and say, Oh, no, I might fall down. Oh my goodness, right?
And we're really doing this role reversal.
You know that hours later when you talk about bath time
or tooth brushing time, things have changed between you.
You've built up this connection capital
that you can then draw down on in the moment of your request.
What's another outside the moment?
Kind of strategy?
Stories about being a kid.
Right, so randomly. Over lunch, I might say to my child on a weekend, you know what I'm thinking
about when I was your age, I hated what my parents told me was back time. I don't always want to do
back. I don't want to do back at all, and I remember. I remember my parents sometimes skipped a shower,
or they did it when they wanted, and kids didn't get to do that.
Ah, that was so annoying.
Just joining your child in the frustration of being a child
helps reduce resistance because a child feels understood.
Okay, what about in the moment?
Well, there are things sometimes our kids have to do,
even when they're screaming, I don't
want to do this.
The things that come to mind for me are less about hygiene, because those I think about
really lowering the resistance for outside the moment.
But I'm thinking of buckling a child in a car seat.
I'm thinking about going to the doctor for a checkup, things like that.
All of those things I really believe you can lower resistance through play, through preparation, through
these games.
Having said that, I'm a realist.
Sometimes you get into the car, you've done all the prep and still your child saying,
I don't like it.
It's my body.
You can't buckle me into the car.
What's a parent to do who's trying to build circuitry for consent?
Well, we can still know our role and validate our child's experience.
And I think words like this help in all those situations.
As your parent, it's my number one job to keep you safe and right now safety means blank and right
now safety means buckling you into the car and right now safety means bringing you to the doctor
for your checkup and then add a line like this. And I believe you, I believe you that you're not liking this.
You know your body best and only you know what feels good
and what doesn't.
And then I might add something like this.
I really want to work with you.
So next time we have to buckle into the car next time,
we have to go to the doctors.
It won't feel so bad.
Right now I'm doing this because it's a way of keeping you safe. I want to emphasize.
We want to reduce those moments. I also want all parents to know that even when you do say,
have to buckle your child into the car, you can reinforce the fact that your child knows their
body best by just saying, I believe you, you don't like this. I know this doesn't feel good or maybe if you can get a little bit ahead of it, I know.
You, me, we don't want you to get into the car and have to buckle while you're screaming.
Is there anything you can think of to make it a little more enjoyable?
Is there anything we can think of to make it a little bit more fun?
So Katie, let me kind of bring a little bit of that together.
So many of the things
that are going to end up helping your son are going to be the things you do outside
the moment. So then when these moments come, they won't be as heated. If there's something
you feel like you have to do, where safety is a concern, you have to buckle them into
the car seat or you have to pick them up because they're running near an active street with driving cars, act, and name your
leadership role, and also name that you see your child's distress and that you believe it.
Thank you Trevor, Andrea, and Katie for calling in and sharing such real moments from your
home moments that have happened in my home and I'm pretty sure homes across the whole
world.
Let's tie this together with three main takeaways.
One.
When kids say no, no, no, no, over and over, They're looking for separation and a sense of control.
Two, I believe you.
These words honor your child's sense of themselves.
They give them separate identity.
Use these words to validate what's happening for your child.
Three, there's so much we can do outside the moment to improve cooperation in the moment.
Remember to replace that question, how can I get my child to do blank?
Why is my child so resistant about blank with what's going on for my child?
That leads to them appearing resistant. How can I work on this outside the moment?
So when the heated moment comes, my child has built the connection and skills they need.
If this episode resonated with you, let's take it one step further together. Check out my Listening Workshop.
It's available at goodinside.com
and will give you all the strategies and scripts
you need to turn power struggles into moments of cooperation.
Thanks for listening to Good Insight.
I love co-creating episodes with you
based on the real life tricky situations in your
family.
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note to GoodInsidePodcast at gmail.com.
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