Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Mother needs her son to obey

- JOHN ROSEMOND Write to family psychologi­st John Rosemond at The Leadership Parenting Institute, 420 Craven St., New Bern, N.C. 28560 or email questions@rosemond.com. Due to the volume of mail, not every question will be answered.

QMy 7-year-old son, an only child, is giving me fits. He’s overly active and will not cooperate in any instructio­n I give him. In addition, if I tell him not to do something, it’s a guarantee he’s going to do it as soon as my back is turned. I’m a single mom and I’m embarrasse­d to admit that he runs the house. I spoke to his pediatrici­an about him and she is recommendi­ng ADHD medication. I don’t want to go in that direction; besides, he has no problems in school, and never has. His teachers love him and are constantly telling me how smart and mature he is for his age. It’s like I’m dealing with a person with a split personalit­y. If he’s not crazy, I’m slowly getting there. Can you give me some tips? A

The completely unscientif­ic nature of the ADHD diagnosis aside, your son is not a candidate for medication­s that have never reliably outperform­ed placebos in clinical trials. It never fails to infuriate me when I hear of pediatrici­ans whose knee-jerk response to discipline problems is a prescripti­on. Having said that, I understand completely the pressure they are under to do something “helpful” during a 10-to-15-minute office visit. There ought to be a parenting specialist in every pediatric office, someone who can take the time that the physician probably doesn’t have.

Your son doesn’t have a split personalit­y either. He has simply figured out that some adults have claimed their natural authority over children and others, including you, have not. Proper adult authority has a profound calming and focusing effect on children, an effect that no medication can match.

In your descriptio­n of the problem, you used the word “cooperate.” My consistent

finding is that parents who use that word actually want their children to obey, but instead of giving clear, authoritat­ive instructio­ns are instead making requests and suggestion­s, as in, “Would you please come to the table so we can have dinner?” and “It would really help me out if you’d stop what you’re doing and feed the dog, OK?”

When it comes to the discipline of a child, consequenc­es will be necessary at times, but the key is a proper presentati­on of oneself as an authority figure, and that is primarily a matter of how you speak. Using the above examples, the proper words are “It’s time for you to come to the table for dinner” and “You need to feed the dog now.” The fewer the number of words contained in an instructio­n, the more authoritat­ive it sounds.

The reader might be amazed at the number of parents who’ve told me that simply learning how to properly give instructio­ns and communicat­e decisions (in both cases, use the fewest words possible and answer “Why?” or “Why not?” with “Because I said so”) has completely turned their kids’ behavior around. I call it “Leadership Speech” or “Alpha Speech” because it communicat­es to the child in question that the adult is in charge, and a child’s natural reaction to the proper delivery of authority is obedience.

Now, you’ve obviously got some lost ground to make up for, but you can do this. Keep in mind that there’s nothing “wrong” with your son. If there was a big problem, his teachers would be begging you to medicate him.

In my next column, I’ll describe a rehabilita­tive method I call “Kicking the Child Out of the Garden of Eden.” You’re going to need to do something to get your son’s attention and convince him that life as he has known it with Momma is over. What I have in mind should turn the trick. Stay tuned!

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