Tue. Aug 5th, 2025

Why Yelling At Your Kids Won’t Get Results

mad mom

When we teach parents to avoid responding to their children in anger we get a common reaction: “But my kids won’t obey unless I get angry.”

And you’re probably right, but only because you’ve taught your children to wait until you’re angry before they have to obey. You give your kids cues to know when you mean business. Those cues tell your child that it’s time to respond because your action point is coming next.

There is a definite connection between action point and anger. Many parents use the energy from anger to finally take action. When parents learn to tighten up their action point, then they don’t have to use anger as the motivator. In fact, anger can often be a flag that your action point isn’t tight enough.

If you find that you’re relying on anger to motivate your children, then it’s time to make a change. First, though, you need to develop a new plan. What signals do you want to use to indicate that it’s time to clean up, or it’s time to go? Maybe you’ll use the child’s name, obtain eye contact, and use the word “now” in the instruction.

When you’re ready to make the change, talk with your children. Explain that you have been wrong in teaching them to wait until you get angry before they start obeying. From now on you are going to tell them once, then comes the action. If your child doesn’t respond to the new cues then move right to your follow through.

You may use a warning at first as your children are learning to respond to new cues. This helps them see that you mean business, but don’t add several warnings or you defeat the purpose. Develop a routine with your kids so that they know when discussion or delays are over and obedience is required.

We don’t encourage parents to always demand obedience. Children also learn from negotiation, compromise, and cooperation, but there is a time for children to respond whether they like it or not. Your kids need to know when that is and clarifying your action point will help them learn it.

This parenting tip comes from Chapter 1 in the book Home Improvement, the Parenting Book You Can Read to Your Kids by Dr. Scott Turansky and Joanne Miller, RN, BSN.

Leave a Reply

By submitting your comment, you agree to receive occasional emails from [email protected], and its authors, including insights, exclusive content, and special offers. You can unsubscribe at any time. (U.S. residents only.)

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related Podcasts

More News
John Bevere Exposes the Silent Threat Facing the Modern Church
John Bevere Exposes the Silent Threat Facing the Modern Church
A Christian Guide to the 7 Deadly Sins
A Christian Guide to the 7 Deadly Sins
How Genesis and Revelation Connect: the Beginning and the End
How Genesis and Revelation Connect: the Beginning and the End
Have You Committed the Unpardonable Sin? The Truth from Scripture
Have You Committed the Unpardonable Sin? The Truth from Scripture
Deliverance Is a Decision Part Two: Jesus Healing on Shabbat
Deliverance Is a Decision Part Two: Jesus Healing on Shabbat
Demons In Hell
Demons In Hell
The End of the 10 Kings
The End of the 10 Kings
10 Steps to Honor God and Be Less Contentious
10 Steps to Honor God and Be Less Contentious
Mocking God Brings Destruction
Mocking God Brings Destruction
The Best Things Happen to Those Who Decide to Try
The Best Things Happen to Those Who Decide to Try
previous arrow
next arrow
Shadow

Latest Videos
113K Subscribers
1.3K Videos
12.6M Views

Copy link