Calming Our Reactivity to Children's Irritating, Demanding Behaviors episode artwork

EPISODE · Jul 8, 2025 · 21 MIN

Calming Our Reactivity to Children's Irritating, Demanding Behaviors

from Respectful Parenting: Janet Lansbury Unruffled · host JLML Press

In this popular encore episode, a parent writes that she’s overwhelmed by her two girls constantly demanding her attention, following her around their home and calling “Mommy! Mommy!” even if they are in the same room. “It’s driving me mad,” she writes. “It’s like a dripping tap. It is getting to the point where I just want to scream.” This mom notices that the girls don’t have this dynamic with their father. In fact, even if he is sitting beside them and she is in another room, they still call to her. Understandably, she feels drained and wonders if Janet can tell her what she’s doing wrong. Janet's "No Bad Kids Master Course" is available at NoBadKidsCourse.com. Please support our sponsors. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

In this popular encore episode, a parent writes that she’s overwhelmed by her two girls constantly demanding her attention, following her around their home and calling “Mommy! Mommy!” even if they are in the same room. “It’s driving me mad,” she writes. “It’s like a dripping tap. It is getting to the point where I just want to scream.” This mom notices that the girls don’t have this dynamic with their father. In fact, even if he is sitting beside them and she is in another room, they still call to her. Understandably, she feels drained and wonders if Janet can tell her what she’s doing wrong. Janet's "No Bad Kids Master Course" is available at NoBadKidsCourse.com. Please support our sponsors. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Calming Our Reactivity to Children's Irritating, Demanding Behaviors

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TRANSCRIPT · AUTO-GENERATED

Hi, this is Janet Lansbury. Welcome to Unruffled. Today I have a question that I received on Facebook. This mother is having difficulty because her daughters keep constantly calling mommy, mommy, mommy, mommy, mommy, and it's driving this parent up the wall.

And I want to flesh this topic out a little to talk about our reactivity as parents and how we can ease that. So behaviors like this one, children repeatedly calling our name and also whining and other repetitive behaviors that children sometimes will do. How can we respond in a way that doesn't actually amplify the behaviors and cause them to persist? So that's what I would like to explore a little in this podcast.

Okay, so here's the question I received on Facebook. My 4.5 and 2.9 year old girls constantly call mommy. If I leave the room, they call after me to ask where I am, even following me. If they ask a question, the word mommy could be said three or four times before the question.

They call me from where they are instead of coming to me. It's constant all day. The only time they won't is if I give them an iPad to look at something or the TV. It's driving me mad.

It's like a dripping tap. It is getting to the point where I just want to scream. It's overwhelming and I'm getting angry. I don't know what to do.

When their dad is home, they still call me, even if he is beside them and I'm in another room. At the end of the day, I'm so drained. What am I doing wrong or not doing right? So first of all, I want to respond to the very last thing she says here.

What am I doing wrong or not doing right? I would love to encourage this parent or any parent that this isn't about wrong or right. It's about a pattern that we may be a little stuck in or a child is stuck in that isn't serving us, that's making our lives harder, but it's not the self-judgment thing of what am I doing wrong? What am I doing right?

One of the most important qualities we can have as parents is self-compassion, especially in a time like we're in right now with so many stressful situations going on in our world. And also, if we want to make changes in some of the dynamics between us and our children, a lot of times this means changing generational cycles. It is huge work and we need to love ourselves and have patience with ourselves. There's no such thing as a perfect parent or anything close to a perfect parent.

I truly believe that. And attachment experts will tell you that even the most attuned parent will misrespond to a child with something like 50% of the time. So let's get realistic here and give ourselves a break. Because when we are judging ourselves like this parent may be doing, it's actually directly involved in the problem she's having here.

It's part of why she's getting angry and wants to scream and this is driving her mat. She's feeling like she's doing something wrong. She's judging herself as not a good parent for the way that she's feeling. Wining is a very unpleasant sound.

Studies show that children of every nationality, in every language, wine, it's a global behavior. And it's typical for children, the ages of his parents, to get stuck repeating and repeating and whining and demanding in that way. So these are unpleasant behaviors that children have. A second ago, I talked about attunement.

So what's going on with this parent is she is used to being a attuned parent. She may be a sensitive person. And she's kind of over attuned to this behavior that her children started and now has become kind of a thing between them. When we're a little over attuned, it means that we're taking everything in.

We're feeling responsible to respond to it. We're feeling it impacting us. Like it's cutting into us. Every time they call mommy, I need to react.

I've got to do something. And there's no way that's not going to get us exhausted and frustrated, get us angry. Because what children are doing right there, it's almost like they're moving with us as one being. They're reacting off of us, reacting off of them, reacting off of us.

They're feeling this irritation and it's feeding their irritation. So it can become a cycle. One thing that helps us a lot as parents is to learn how to tune in and also how to have buffers. And that's not the same as I'm ignoring you and you don't exist for me when you do this and I'm turning away and I'm pretending it's not happening.

It's just a softening as if we've got padding around us. And when we hear this mommy instead of it penetrating into our being, it gets slowed down in the padding. It softly lands there. And so we can hold our own.

We're not feeling battered. We're not feeling shaken and rattled by everything. We're hearing it. It's going into the padding.

And we're going to respond while staying centered in ourselves, not being prey to whatever our child does that seems needy or wanting us or demanding of us. And the interesting thing too is that children actually are on a slower frequency than us. So while it may seem like they're called to mommy, needs an immediate response, they're actually not ready to take in an immediate response. So it's actually more appropriate for us to slow our responses down by imagining this padding or this space between us.

It's common for us as parents to feel urgent about everything that happens with children. They might act as if everything's an emergency. But there are very, very, very few actual emergencies with children. It's something that we have to work on and practice so that we're not reactive in a way that's going to wear us out and affect our mood and again, draw children into this cycle.

I've had parents online or parents say to me that they hate this word mommy because they are so sick of hearing their child say it again and again and again. And that's certainly understandable. But the reason that we are annoyed by it is because of the responsibility we feel around it. That we've got to do something to fix this and that and somebody's calling and I've got to jump.

We can't shift this when we hold our own. There's a time that I have loved being able to practice this idea and it's become very clear to me the importance of it and that I can do it even though I'm a very sensitive, reactive person. I have this opportunity that we have as teachers of rye, parent, infant classes and parent toddler classes during the class, which is mostly about observation. And one of the main reasons for observation is to be able to recognize our children as separate beings.

We're able to see that our child is separate from us as a whole person, but they're not a mature person who knows not to do irritating things and stop when they're bothering us. They literally can't a lot of the time. So we do observation of the children which is fascinating because they always doing interesting things on their own with materials that are there and with each other, engaging in conflicts, engaging in exploration, learning how to play together, being creative with materials. It's it's a blast and we recommend this at home and it's what all my podcasts around play are about how to enjoy your child in this manner.

Then when children are maybe 10 or 11 or 12 months old in the rye classes, we have snack time. In snack time, the tradition that Magda Gerber started is that the children sit at a child-sized low table we sit on the floor or on a pillow on the floor. There can be up to eight children sitting around this table that's kidney shaped. We serve bananas and we hand the pieces to the children.

I have videos on my YouTube channel and on my website where we demonstrate this and there's all these bodies there and just one adult and they're sitting because they want to and they know that that's the routine and the ritual that we wipe their hands first with a wet towel. We do each one individually paying a moment of attention to each child and then we invite them to help peel the banana, certain children who seem interested and of course that takes a while for them to get the hang of but they actually quickly do and then they're peeling the banana and then we're giving them each a piece and there's a moment of attention given to each child. We aren't just handing things off without engaging with that child and then we give them glasses with water in them. So all kinds of things are going on.

Maybe a child pushes another child or somebody wants more or more over here and I'm at the other side of the table or somebody knocks their glass over but actually it's surprising how calm and focused these experiences are considering these are 11 month olds up to three-year-olds and even the most active child is able to sit for the time that they're eating, be there, focus. So most of the time it's surprisingly smooth but there are times when it's not there's a lot going on and what we have to do as the facilitator in this class is hold our own, prioritize, oh this person needs me here but we hold our own pace, we hold our center and we don't get frazzled and it's an interesting feeling. What I feel like is there's something that I'm unplugging inside me, some nerves that I'm unplugging so that I'm not going to get impacted by everything that goes on. I'm not ignoring anything, I'm going to respond but it may not be right away or my response might be oh I see you wanting this and I'll be with you in one minute right now I'm over here but I'm not going to let the children escalate me, I'm not going to be reactive to their pace and their demands, their energy, I have to center in myself.

So I've learned how to do it, I've gotten a lot of practice this way and it's amazing, it's such a confidence building experience that you can do this and of course it's really vital if we have one child or more than one child especially that we're not feeling pulled and impacted by everything they say or do or everything that goes on, everything they want right now, children want everything right now. They want everything right now but they don't need it right now. Another aspect of this is our realistic expectations of our children's behavior because that affects our feelings which are going to guide us to react a certain way. So if I understand that my children are going to do this thing that they do which is call me 50,000 times, check up on me and make me answer them immediately and be demanding in this way which again without meaning do I've kind of gotten into this with them as one body and now I'm going to separate myself out, be my own separate person on my own very different pace and I'm going to respond from that place.

So finding this in yourself whether it feels like I'm unplugging, I'm loosening up the nerves inside, I've got padding around me, slowing down. The way that will look with this parent she says first of all if I leave the room they call after me to ask where I am so I don't have to answer that right away I'm going into the other room they're asking me again now they're coming closer, I'm not going to be yelling out to them feeling like I've got to report to them, I've got to respond right away, slowing myself down. I hear them say it a couple times maybe and I say oh I'm over here actually not I'm here you know not that reactive place, my own center taking on my leadership role that I know that my children want me to have in their heart of hearts. Letting some of the demands and mummies just flow by so they decide to follow me.

I'm in this other room they're asking me a question they're saying mommy a whole bunch of times before they ask the question which is super annoying but I'm expecting it I know this is their thing. I'm not going to dig into each mommy that they say and try to make it stop I'm going to let it go. So I'm going to wait they're saying mommy mommy and now I'm doing this other thing. I'm not able to focus very well at first because this is a new dynamic for me to be leading and it's going to take a little while for me to get the practice I need to believe in this and it's going to take a while for my children to notice something different that will release them from being caught up with me in this pattern because they see that I'm okay this behavior they have doesn't have power with me and I'm not escalating in my frustration and it will lose interest for them.

So I'm letting those mummies go here comes a question I'm going to give it a moment to think what the answer is and then I'll answer the question oh you're asking me about the tv that answer is going to be no sorry my love so I have my own place that this is stemming from not theirs and then they can get mad at me all they want to and ask me the same thing a whole bunch of times and I'm going to keep doing what I'm doing and and just not and be empathetic like it's hard when you're a node of that it really is but it's not my responsibility to fix them or to get caught up in them in fact I want to do everything I can to not get caught up so she says they call me from where they are instead of coming to be well let them call from where they are it's okay it's safe for them to do that if we don't respond in a way that makes that work for them then they'll come over so the most I would do is say like oh if you need me I'm here and not get sucked into trying to please them wherever they are so this parent is doing this wonderful attunement but it's over attunement it's again coming from this positive healthy wonderful parent place but it's not helping this parent to the extent that she's taking it we have to find this other part too where we can be separate and whole in ourselves and understand that they are very young with low self-regulation and a low threshold for emotional expression they're going to share every little thing with us it's not an emergency so she says it's constant all day and I don't think it'll be constant all day if this parent wants to work on buffering herself being unplugged slowing down she says the only time they won't is if I give them an iPad to look at something or the tv so that is an understandable help for this parent like I just got to shut this down because I can't take it anymore but what I want to help this parent and other parents work on is that you're not going to let yourself get to that point because you're perceiving your role a whole different way and you're not going to be a victim to your children their repetitive mummies and whining is not yours to fix don't let it in she says it's like a dripping tap yes I get that it's getting to the point where I just want to scream totally it's overwhelming me and I'm getting angry I don't know what to do even when their dad is home they still call me even if he's beside them and I'm in another room right because he doesn't have this particular issue and they're not getting stuck in something with him and she's drained at the end of the day yeah so I 100% believe this parent can change this starting with a lot of self-compassion finding the imagery and the perspective to believe to believe in herself as this whole person leader with her own center and pace I really hope that helps and to understand everything we need to know to be able to embrace our leadership role with our kids please check out my online course nobadkidscourse.com I believe you'll find all the answers that you need there thank you so much for listening we can do this

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Frequently Asked Questions

How long is this episode of Respectful Parenting: Janet Lansbury Unruffled?

This episode is 21 minutes long.

When was this Respectful Parenting: Janet Lansbury Unruffled episode published?

This episode was published on July 8, 2025.

What is this episode about?

In this popular encore episode, a parent writes that she’s overwhelmed by her two girls constantly demanding her attention, following her around their home and calling “Mommy! Mommy!” even if they are in the same room. “It’s driving me mad,” she...

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