Strict Is Loving episode artwork

EPISODE · Sep 10, 2024 · 34 MIN

Strict Is Loving

from Respectful Parenting: Janet Lansbury Unruffled · host JLML Press

Janet's "all feelings allowed" approach to parenting is sometimes misconstrued as permissive, passive, lax on boundaries. But as Janet clarifies in this episode, the exact opposite is true! She describes how acquiescing to our kids' whims and demands, giving them multiple chances to comply with our directions, or making it our job to console them when our rules disappoint can be a set-up for failure for our kids and us. She explains how respectful parenting is actually quite strict, and why, in her view, strict is much kinder and more loving than the alternative, builds better relationships, and encourages lifelong emotional resiliency in our kids.   Learn more about Janet's "No Bad Kids Master Course" at: NoBadKidsCourse.com. Please support our sponsors and take advantage of their special offers. 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

Janet's "all feelings allowed" approach to parenting is sometimes misconstrued as permissive, passive, lax on boundaries. But as Janet clarifies in this episode, the exact opposite is true! She describes how acquiescing to our kids' whims and demands, giving them multiple chances to comply with our directions, or making it our job to console them when our rules disappoint can be a set-up for failure for our kids and us. She explains how respectful parenting is actually quite strict, and why, in her view, strict is much kinder and more loving than the alternative, builds better relationships, and encourages lifelong emotional resiliency in our kids.   Learn more about Janet's "No Bad Kids Master Course" at: NoBadKidsCourse.com. Please support our sponsors and take advantage of their special offers. 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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Strict Is Loving

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Great news, the federal EV rebate is back. Eligible customers get up to $5,000 with a federal EV AP rebate on select 2027 gold and 2026 Equinox EV models. Visit your local Chevrolet dealer today for more details. Hi, this is Janet Lansbury.

Welcome to Unruffled. Okay, today, this is gonna be fun. I'm going to be talking about being strict. It's not a word that I use that often, but this idea of strict came up in the last podcast episode I did where I consulted with a parent who was worried that her respectful approach, her gentle approach that she was using was spoiling her child.

And as we looked into what she was doing, there were a lot of places where this parent was not taking the leadership role that I believe our children really need from us. And there were places where she was interpreting what I teach as very focused on encouraging kids' feelings. And this was causing her to be in a position where she wasn't taking care of herself. What I tried to convey to her is that the approach I teach is about a relationship.

It's not about we do everything to cater to a child's feelings. We don't do anything to cater to a child's feelings. That's what accepting feelings really is. It's not trying to change what we're doing because our child feels a certain way about it.

It's knowing that they're allowed to feel however they want to feel. We don't change our boundaries because of that. We don't try to appease them. We don't try to talk them out of it or talk them down.

We really encourage them to have their point of view and to be in conflict with them. And one thing that came out of this conversation is that I said, well, I'm really, really strict. Now, when I looked up the Oxford Dictionary definition of strict, it said demanding that rules concerning behavior are obeyed and observed. It also said demanding total obedience or observance rigidly enforced.

So that's not exactly my connotation. For one thing, demanding sounds like my finger pointed at the child and I'm telling them they have to do it a certain way. What I do is I ensure that rules concerning behavior are not obeyed, as this word says, because obeyed has to come from the child. The child decides whether to obey or not.

And that's not the goal. The goal is that I ensure that I'm holding the boundary for them. I'm helping them to follow the direction or the boundary. But I do have rules.

And they are confident, unwavering, solid, strong rules. And that's how I try to feel when I'm asserting them with children. Confident, unwavering, full of conviction. And I'm only actually able to do that because I'm not trying to please my child every minute.

I believe that this is the most loving way and that not having strict rules and not insisting and ensuring that kids follow them is not being as kind to my child, not being as caring and loving. That was a big paradigm shift for me that I've tried to help parents find in themselves because this is what changed everything for me. It allowed me to see things in a new light and realize that a lot of the things I was doing, thinking I was being so nice and loving, letting my child do this and oh, she wants to do that so much. Well, okay, I'll let her.

And that that wasn't as loving as having these well-defined boundaries and feeling strong about them so that my child has a chance to push up against them, question them, be mad about them, be disappointed, be frustrated. That's their prerogative. Another reason I thought this would be a good topic to talk about is that when I had Kim John Payne, the author of Simplicity Parenting, and he's got a whole community around the world of coaches, he said to me after we talked in the interview for the podcast, he said he thought we should do another one on discipline. He said that the people he works with really love my book, No Bad Kids, but they also have this impression that I'm soft on boundaries.

I said, really? And he said, yeah, right? Like, he knows that I'm not. And that came through to him, but I guess to a lot of people, it doesn't.

So I really want to try to clarify that and correct it if I can in this episode. I think one of the reasons this is a confusing topic for us as parents is that as humans, when we have complex, overwhelming topics that we're looking at, like raising children, we have a tendency, and I feel this, to want to simplify it so we can understand it better. And in this case, simplifying the kind of things I talk about, respectful parenting, welcoming your child's feelings, being on their team, being kind and loving when I set boundaries. In a very simplified manner, it can come off like, I'm just letting them do whatever they want, and I'm just smiling and nice all the time and trying to keep things upbeat and unruffled.

But what I'm saying is that there's a duality here that's an important one for us to try to work from as parents, and that is, I can be really strict and strong with my boundaries while also being kind as I set them. That's the kind of parenting that makes us feel good, makes us feel like heroes that we're so strong, we don't have to get harsh and stern and yell at our child. We can say it kindly because we're still gonna hold onto that boundary when they start screaming, no, they don't want it. And we're not gonna get phased by that because we expect it.

We expect that they're going to have a conflicting point of view a lot of the time and they have a right. And in fact, we can even get to the point, I know it sounds impossible, but we can even get to the point where we welcome that. And we know, ah, they're inventing really powerful things right there that have nothing to do with me personally or the rule that I just held to for them. And when we can be that kind of confident leader in our bones and our souls that we know this is so loving what I'm doing, that it's not my job to keep my child feeling happy and smiling all the time.

In fact, quite the opposite. It's my job to take a place in this relationship as the leader that can be strict from a place of confidence, strict with a smile and a real smile, not a fake or a manipulative smile. It's much easier to say, okay, sure, do it. And then get mad at my child.

And I love my child too much to do that, to go, okay, okay, okay. And then get to the point where what happens where now I'm angry. Now I'm annoyed. Now I don't like my child because they keep pushing me and they keep doing this thing or stalling or whatever it is.

I'm gonna talk about all that. And now I'm mad at my child. I'm resenting my child. I think I'm a bad parent.

I don't wanna do that to my child. It's much healthier for them to be able to have even their extremist reaction to the reasonable boundaries I set and hold with love. Kids feel the difference when we're saying, okay, whatever. And now we're starting to steam inside.

That doesn't feel good to them. It doesn't feel clear. It doesn't feel clean. It feels scary.

So we can eliminate all of that by seeing strict in a positive light. It's confident, unwavering, strong, the most loving thing. And what does strict look like? Oftentimes it's about our ability to anticipate and know what to expect of our child.

Not expect that they're going to be on their best behavior all the time. They're just not. Not expect that they're gonna say, oh, sure, you don't want me to do that? Okay, I'll stop.

Or it's time to come inside now for dinner. Okay, I try to remind myself not to expect that, especially during times of life where I'm having a hard time. Unfortunately, that's what happens. And therefore my kids are feeling the tension and they're gonna be having a hard time.

Or just something's going on with them where they're having a hard time. So that's what I want to especially expect that the behavior is not always going to be my favorite. And that's okay. Because every time I set those boundaries and they yell, they're getting to share this tension.

They're getting to release it. That's how they'll all feel better. So when we anticipate, when we can expect and not anticipate like something bad's gonna happen, seeing this as positive as much as possible, seeing this dynamic, eyes out limits, you don't like them, I can empathize, but I'm not gonna try to kowtow to what you're feeling or put everything aside and wait and let you have this big meltdown while I'm just waiting for you. I'm going to keep going with a lot of acceptance for whatever you're going through because I expect it.

And what this also does is helps me to set the limit very, very early, as early as I possibly can. And what does that mean? If there's a room that's maybe my bathroom and I have certain makeup things in the drawer or something else that I don't want my child to mess with, I don't have to have my reasons. It doesn't have to be a messy item or something that can ruin.

I just don't want my child in there. I don't. I keep that door closed. I have a high lock on it or if I didn't do that, then I'm still gonna set the limit as early as possible by seeing my child going over there towards that drawer and just saying, I'm gonna stop you.

Let me help you out of this room or just not gonna let you go in there. And I'm holding them off nicely, lovingly, but assuredly. So they can't do that because oftentimes what happens when we maybe feel we're being loving and respectful of our child and we don't want to hurt their feelings in any way or make them upset, now we're letting our child open the drawer and we're saying, oh, could you please not take that? Could you please not touch that?

Could you put that back? And we're leaving them hanging. We're not being kind when we're allowing them to do things that we really don't feel like having to do right then. So that's one way.

Strict is more loving. Another way came up from the consultation in the podcast last week that the little girl didn't want to leave the party and the mom was trying to get her shoes, take her in a private place. The girl was very upset already and going off. And when I said to this parent and I believe this 100% and I've done it with my children and I see this heroic and important and that is as soon as I start to see she's starting to whine, she doesn't want to leave or there's some sign, even maybe before it's time to leave because I noticed my child lately is having a bit of a hard time with her behavior and this is a transition.

So this is going to be especially challenging for her. So I know I have to set this limit that it's time to leave and I'm already ready to have what I call the confident momentum to get her out of there. I'm ready to have to do that. Now I can go a little slower if she seems totally calm and fine about it but if I see her starting to go off into resistance mode then I'm going to be that hero and get her out.

Grab the shoes, don't spend any time trying to talk her out of it or allow her to be in that uncomfortable place where again I feel like I'm leaving her hanging. She's getting more uncomfortable. I'm getting more uncomfortable and now she's unraveling and it doesn't bode well for either of us and it just makes our job way too hard, way too hard. It'd be much better to get her out of there and maybe she did calm down right away and it wasn't necessary but it's better to err on that side of loving strictness or whatever we want to call that, that confidence of you know what, I need to help here.

My hero suit is needed and I'm going to be on it right away. Many of the questions you bring to me are about this where I just want to say help them earlier, help them right away. Don't let it get this far to where you're annoyed, they're digging their heels in, everybody's uncomfortable, it's not worth it. Much better to err on the side of being overly preventative.

So setting limits early, early, early. Call it strict, it can save us so much aggravation and here's other ways that I feel very strict and again, I wasn't always this way, it's not my natural tendency, I really had to come to this, I had to find this groove for myself and that's why I know that you can too, that anyone can, it's in you, it's in all of you. Behavior in public, which is also this example that I just shared about but other behavior in public, like I remember a parent in one of my classes telling me that they went into the doctor's office and their toddler was walking along, you know, they were a pretty new walker so the parent was excited to let them walk around so they start exploring all the different offices, they go towards one door, peek in another door, they're standing in a doorway, then they go into an office completely and the mother has to get the child back out again. There's no reason a child needs to do that.

We can have them on our lap, we can hold their hand as we walk them into the doctor's office when it's time. We don't need to give children that freedom because that freedom isn't really freedom, it doesn't feel like it to them. It feels like we're giving them kind of a false freedom where you're not really free to do whatever you want here and it's just harder for us to have to say, no, no, no, I'm not going to let you do that. It's unnecessary.

So that, our child going up to another child and maybe harm them or grab their toy away. Now, many of you know that in my classes we allow some exploration for children to learn about toys and how to engage with each other this way and we allow certain things to go on that I would never allow in a public situation where I don't know the people and they aren't on board with what I'm doing. So I'd be there right away. Oh, you're interested in that?

No, I'm not going to let you. And my hand is there, always ready, not afraid to even take something out of my child's hand. I'm going to do that right away with the benefit of the doubt and ask. And then I see them hesitate.

You know what? I'm going to help you out here and I take it. I really see this as being there for my child. They can count on me.

I'm not going to leave them high and dry. Letting a child run around a store or a restaurant? No, I wouldn't do that. There's a safe place for them to be outside.

I would take them outside during the meal, take turns with my partner or whatever and realize, you know, maybe take out is a good thing with this child. I have two children that could sit for hours in a restaurant and then I had my youngest and he couldn't sit at all. And so we didn't do that. We weren't going to put ourselves and him through that aggravation.

By the way, you may or may not agree with anything I'm sharing here and you don't have to be as strict in all the ways that I'm suggesting. So you get to choose what matters to you or what you think is important. But mealtimes, with the Rye approach that I teach, we notice very early on when a child is able to sit on their own, which is usually towards the end of the first year, they are able to sit while they eat. They don't need to get up and come back and forth if we make this a rule.

And we do it with love and kindness and confidence. We do it with snacks first so that we're not worried if it doesn't work out that our child didn't get something to eat. That feels easier for us to do, right? We actually use small tables so we're sitting with our child but you can do this in a high chair as well.

And we say, okay, here's your snack. And they come and they sit and then they start to get up. Okay, so you're done. You're letting me know you're done.

And then right there, they either get up, crawl away or if they're in a high chair, maybe throw something down and we say, okay, thanks. You're showing me you're done. I don't want you to throw the food down. Simple as that.

But if we don't follow through, I guess you'd say strictly with our expectation of this is the way meals go and I know you can do this. I believe in you because every child can do this. I've never met a child that couldn't. Even my son is so active.

He could sit while he was actually eating. It might be short, but he could do it. And if he could do it, I feel like any child could do it. So I know it can be scary.

Oh, they're not gonna get enough to eat. But if we think like that and we keep bending the rules for them, then they have no rules around eating. They don't learn them. The only way they can learn them is if we really mean it and we show them this is what we expect and we're not gonna be eating with them any other way.

If we're in the park, that means we're sitting on the grass. And I took this even further with children where I didn't let them walk around with drinks either. We would stop. We would sit.

We would be mindful for those moments. When they were done, they would clearly indicate they were ready to get up by getting up or in a high chair by squirming and starting to throw they're gonna throw food or something like that. And yeah, okay. Thanks for letting me know you're done.

And children can learn these wonderful table manners that way from the time that they're one year old. It's quite amazing. But they need us to stay focused with them for that to work. Because if we're trying to do a lot of other things at the same time as the meal, then they're less inclined to be able to focus also.

It's good training for us where so many of us are used to multitasking, but this is what sets us up for those family dinners together. This is what sets us up to be able to have healthy eating habits and have our child have manners when they go to other people's houses. We can instill this much earlier than a lot of people leave. And you can see some examples of how this works in a couple of my posts on my website, Baby Table Manners.

respectful discipline and action seeing is believing these have video examples of me with very young children so you can see how it works another thing i'm strict about is when kids are telling us what to do and it can be very insidious it doesn't even hit us that it's a negative thing that they tell us to switch places in our seats with our partner or they tell us they want us to play with that toy for them a certain way and we think well that's harmless i can get up and move or only mommy can put me to bed and no one else can but it's not easy for us to be available that time and our partner is children need us to be clear and confident in our choices there and not do things for them on command and again it can be hard to see and maybe there's a fine line for some of you on this well i don't mind doing this or that usually if it is becoming a problem for your child it'll start to get worse where now they're asking for more and more unreasonable things and that's when we can clue into hey maybe i shouldn't be letting a two-year-old tell me what to do another one our personal boundaries i talked about this before with our stuff we just don't want to tell in our stuff even if it would be safe for them we just don't want it personal boundaries are part of all of these points that i'm making i don't want to be following you around with food and picking up after you i don't want to be running after you in public i don't want you to tell me what to do i don't want to feel like i'm being ruled by a two-year-old or three-year-old or four-year-old or five-year-old and i want to be able to sit with you and have a moment where we're just together eating so personal boundaries come into all of this this can be something like i don't feel like playing this right now i don't want you to take out more stuff i'm gonna put this stuff away i don't want to be outside anymore i'm getting hot this is where we take care of ourselves and it's so crucial because we need to take our place fully in this relationship for us to be able to be the kind of parents we want to be for us to be able to be strict with a smile or that confidence to feel trusting of our child if we're letting ourselves be walked all over it's going to drain us of our energy our child's discomfort is going to increase along with ours and we're far more likely to end up yelling or hating this job feeling like failures none of which we deserve to feel in the least so for the next point i want to make about being strict i have a note that i see from a parent so i'm going to respond to this my daughter's tantrums seem to happen when she wants to do something or have something and can't for example if it's been 20 minutes that she's been brushing her teeth and washing her hands and playing at the sink and she won't cooperate to get ready for bed if i pick her up to take her to her room she loses it but i can't always wait an hour for her to tire herself out at the sink to get her in bed i have things to do and she needs to go to bed or she doesn't want to get dressed in the morning and i'm out of time i have to get her to take care so i can catch a train to work if she refuses to get dressed and no amount of making it fun distraction etc has helped then i have to force the clothes on her and she loses it so what do i do when i can't let my daughter go through the tantrum when i have to get her in the car to get to an appointment or daycare or catch a train what happens if there simply isn't the opportunity to sit back and allow her to go through the tantrum so i love this note because it actually covers a lot of things i'm talking about here and really epitomizes the struggle that so many of us have yes tantrums happen when children want something that we say no to or to have something they can't yeah those are the boundaries and how boundaries allow children to vent feelings that part is how it's supposed to be if we could see it that way she says it's been 20 minutes that she's been brushing her teeth and washing her hands and playing at the sink she won't cooperate to get ready for bed so one other example i wanted to use for being strict this was a popular podcast i did at the beginning of this year stalling dilly-dallying don't let kids stall or dilly-dally be on that as early as possible with the boundary for all the reasons that this parent's situation exemplifies first of all she so generously lets her do all this stuff and then she still won't cooperate and if she gets picked up to take to her room even after the 20 minutes of messing around she loses it anyway so what do we have to gain out of this besides a lot of frustration and aggravation don't let your child go there if she's taking too long to brush your teeth help her out stop her okay here we go oh can you finish up there all right i'm gonna take the toothbrush let's put it away you can always give those moments for her to do it herself but i would have in the back of your mind especially at the end of the day when kids are tired she's at daycare it's an exhausting day for children as it is for us when we have to go to work and come home and deal with this right so for yourself for her don't leave her hanging just stop her take the toothbrush put your arm around her back do this early early early early so you're not letting it continue to unravel and her to build steam and discomfort we're uncomfortable because we're waiting and we're annoyed and now that's making her even more uncomfortable we're playing off each other in that way that is just a recipe for frustration so help her wash her hands if she's trying to stall don't let her play at the sink it's not a time to play not a place to play so she won't cooperate to get ready for bed right she needs a helping hand and if you start this much earlier you'll have more cooperation i would let her know before any of this say you know we have this time where it's really hard for you and you're playing around and then i get annoyed and you won't go to bed and you have a big screaming meltdown we're not going to stop to let you do all these things we're going to keep going and you can scream and have a meltdown but we're going to keep going forward because it's my job to get you to bed so you could say this to her but definitely say to yourself that this is a hero's job right now it's not about letting her do what she wants and take her time that's not going to work as parents noticing or she doesn't want to get dressed in the morning i'm out of time and i have to go to daycare right so put the clothes out ahead of time help her get dressed don't expect her to do this herself it's hard to go through these transitions first thing in the morning or at the end of the day especially she's feeling your attention so try to allow yourself plenty of time to be able to dress her and hear all her screaming as you do you're not going to stop everything if it's time for you to be somewhere just keep moving forward oh you don't want to do this you don't want to do that if she's fully in a tantrum and she can't function because that's what happens to go into this physiological state then take her hand help her get to the car bring the clothes there don't sweat this you will have more time if you're not waiting for her if you're helping her strictly if we want to think it that way helping her move forward confident momentum i'm not going to let you stop me from moving forward with you because i need to be a hero here you're having a hard time you need my confidence this parent says no amount of making it fun distraction etc has helped right so don't do that stuff it doesn't help that is a drain on your energy this is where i take playful parenting ideas with a big grain of salt if i take them at all and i mostly don't because it's putting such a burden on us and it's distracting us from our job which is to be the leader and to allow her to vent at us if she needs to try not to take it personally because we know kids have their reasons i don't want to distract her out of that i just want to welcome it as i help her through making it fun oh my gosh it's such i mean i don't know how parents can put on a smiley face and try to make a game when they're looking at their watch and ready to go it's really asking so much of us then as she said it doesn't work anyway so gosh how awful does that feel as a parent unless we're a saint we're going to be really mad at our child right i would be if i went to all that trouble to make it fun don't have that you're already very full plate she says what happens if there simply isn't the opportunity to sit back and allow her to go through the tantrum don't sit back keep going when you're in between like that maybe you can pause if you give yourself enough time but if you're on this early and not waiting around and asking her to do things that she can refuse like get dressed but actually taking it upon yourself to like now we're gonna get dressed i know this is hard for you sometimes it's hard in the morning so i'm here to give you a helping hand putting that in your routine the momentum that we come in with in the beginning setting those limits early moving forward early will override a lot of the conflict actually especially if we're not afraid of the conflict that's the interesting dichotomy here the less we fear the conflict the less there's going to be because what children really want from us is a more fearless parent none of us is perfect but if we know that and we know we have it in us and we can do it with a little more strictness and a little more being on top of it we'll discover that it really does work and tuning into that feeling of being annoyed that is really important to start listening to maybe we're not used to that that's the voice telling us you need to set the boundary now don't let this go on it's not a good place for you where you're taught to be so coming back full circle to this idea about feelings and how important it is to allow kids to have their feelings all of the strictness that i'm talking about is what allows kids to express and experience their feelings in the healthiest way it's not playing the games and letting them stall letting them behave certain ways and asking them not to giving up our personal boundaries to try to keep them happy that is us avoiding their feelings if we think about it i mean why would we want to get upset we don't but that's why it's important to reframe it so we're encouraging our kids feelings this way not by placating and going along with it but by not being afraid to go up against them giving them that structure that they need and their freedom to express feelings and go through all the feelings they need to have in life to be healthy and know that it's all part of life it's all okay that's a byproduct of a stricter approach so i really hope some of this helps and clarifies and if i've given false impressions in the past i'm really sorry about that but i think some of it also stems from the fact that we do want to please our children so badly we just want happy kids that it's not the instinct most of us have to feel confident about being in the position where they're not going to be happy and then ironically that actually is why they feel happier because they don't have an annoyed parent or they have a less annoyed parent they feel safe they can express all the things and we're still still love them even when they get so mad or have tantrums and they can count on us we're always going to be there we have their back that's what brings happiness to a child and we can do this you you

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Frequently Asked Questions

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This episode is 34 minutes long.

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This episode was published on September 10, 2024.

What is this episode about?

Janet's "all feelings allowed" approach to parenting is sometimes misconstrued as permissive, passive, lax on boundaries. But as Janet clarifies in this episode, the exact opposite is true! She describes how acquiescing to our kids' whims and...

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