Climbing Fish Parenting
You stayed calm. While everything around you escalated — while words were flying and the room was filling with heat — you made a choice to be the counterweight. You kept your voice low and steady. You stayed in the room when every instinct said otherwise. And then your child turned around and said: stop using that voice. That stings in a way that's completely different from other parenting feedback. It's not the sting of having lost your temper. It's the sting of having worked incredibly hard not to — and being told your effort was somehow still wrong. Here's what your child was actually telling you — and why it's more useful than it felt. In this episode: * Why your child's nervous system can detect the gap between your calm voice and your activated body — and what signal that mismatch sends * The difference between performing calm and being calm — and why one works and one doesn't * What the noticing means when you catch yourself in the gap — and why it's evidence of something shifting, not something failing * Why going back after a hard moment doesn't always mean apologizing — and what to do instead * How one simple, honest sentence after a hard moment closes the gap your child's nervous system was left holding * Why doing this consistently builds something in your child's nervous system that makes the next hard moment a little easier By the end of this episode, you'll understand what your child was actually receiving when you performed calm — and you'll have one small, concrete practice that changes how hard moments end in your house. Resources mentioned: Take the free two-minute quiz at climbingfishparenting.com/quiz — it helps you identify exactly what kind of barrier is getting in the way for your specific child, so you finally understand why nothing has been working and where to start instead. Sign up for the newsletter at climbingfishparenting.com/newslettersignup for this week's exclusive Swim Strategy content. Your kid isn't broken. Your parenting isn't broken. Sometimes we're just asking our fish to climb trees. That's what we fix here.
36 episodios
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