One more reference to Michael Phelps and then I’ll quit. Right before one of his practice swim meets his coach purposely stepped on his goggles and cracked them. He was apparently teaching Michael how to handle adverse and unpredictable situations which could happen anytime. It was a powerful communication that led Phelps to recognize that he had the ability to adapt and perform well under difficult circumstances. It paid off because in one of the Olympic meets his goggles filled up with water and he still managed to win.
Parents need to be able to communicate in totally new ways in order to get their point across and prepare their children to become the masters of their own destinies. Communication, by the way, is everything, all behavior not just talking. As a matter of fact, taking action and not talking so much can be a more effective communication especially when teaching some of the most important life lessons. (We’re programmed to chatter and we come to believe that everything can be solved by talking. At some point, words lose their value from overuse.)
The battleground for behavior change is home. If you can’t figure it out there, forget about your influence going out into the world with the kids. They need you to be in their heads when you’re not there. But unless you have established your authority you will not be and as a result they will make more mistakes, some very costly.
The enemy is within. It is a failure to recognize that I am in a behavior war. There are certain ways I communicate that perpetuate negative behavior and keep the cycle going. For example, I give my kid a directive to do something but it is communicated with a lack of forcefulness and importance. What they hear is the absence of “I mean it” and not the directive. So they do not respond. I become more insistent with a different tone (which should have been my first communication) and they accuse me of being angry with them (a manipulation) and I get defensive and then we are in a battle. I have empowered the kids to fight me over every little thing because of a wishy-washy directive.
The battlecry is, “No more!” No more will I choose to be unaware of the importance of how things get communicated. No more will I overlook the fact that daily interactions with the kids affect everything and determine not only what happens today but sets the tone for all future interactions. Either I commit to new patterns of communication or I lose the war - which means my kids are screwed.
(I’ll let you in on a little secret if you promise not to tell anyone. The reality, in most families, is that parents start out controlling all the cards. But for some strange reason they start buying in to the illusion that the kids have control. Maybe the kids are master illusionists but it only works if parents believe it.)