In this episode of Real World Peaceful Parenting, Lisa Smith dives deep into the critical moments when a storming parent meets a storming child. Sharing relatable examples and practical strategies, Lisa shows you how to resist frustration, move past triggers, and get curious—not furious—when your child’s behavior challenges you. Discover the magic of “scuba diving” to uncover the feelings and needs beneath the surface, transforming moments of disconnection into opportunities for deeper understanding and connection.
Sign up for my free Peaceful Parenting mini-course! You’ll find everything you need to get started on the path to peaceful parenting just waiting for you right here!
What You’ll Learn from this Episode:
- Recognize Triggers and Respond Intentionally – Learn to take a deep breath, pause, and resist judgment when emotions run high.
- Get Curious, Not Furious – Replace reactive thoughts with curiosity to understand what’s really going on beneath the surface.
- Scuba Dive, Don’t Snorkel – Uncover the unmet feelings and needs that drive challenging behaviors like grunts, meltdowns, or withdrawal.
- Shift Perspective – Understand that big emotions often have nothing to do with you; they’re your child’s way of processing struggles.
- Play Detective – Ask powerful, connection-building questions like, “What’s going on?” to create space for your child to share.
- Transform Storming Moments – Learn how choosing connection over reaction fosters trust, cooperation, and deeper parent-child bonds.
Listen to the Full Episode:
Featured on the Show:
-
- Click here to sign up for my free Peaceful Parenting mini-course! You’ll find everything you need to continue on the path to peaceful parenting over there just waiting for you.
- Send us an email!
- Message me on Instagram and tell me how you felt after 10 minutes of undivided attention with your child.
- Click here to join The Hive!
- Peace & Quiet: The Crash Course For Peacefully Parenting Your Strong-Willed Kids
Full Episode Transcript:
Welcome to Real World Peaceful Parenting, a podcast for parents that are tired of yelling, threatening, and punishing their kids. Join mom and master certified parent coach Lisa Smith, as she gives you actionable step by step strategies that’ll help you transform your household from chaos to cooperation.
Let’s dive in.
Welcome, welcome, welcome. Welcome to today’s episode. I am so excited to be with you here today. As you know, as we round out this holiday season, I’ve been thinking a lot about you, my wonderful listeners. And I’ve been reflecting on which tools and strategies would be the most helpful during this important time of the year when emotions can run especially high.
And that’s when it hit me. I want to give you a very special gift today. One of our most downloaded episodes of all time addresses exactly what many families experience. during and after the holiday season. Those moments when a storming parent meets a storming child. Whether it’s the build up of anticipation, the excitement of the season, or the aftermath when we’re all decompressing from the holiday whirlwind, this content feels particularly relevant right now.
So today I’m offering you the gift of either discovering this episode for the first time or revisiting it with fresh ears and an open heart. Because let’s be honest, we can all use a reminder about how to handle these storming moments, especially right now. As you listen, I want you to think about how these strategies might help you navigate not just the holiday season, but the coming year, Day to day when emotions are running high in your household, whether you’re faced with dealing with pre holiday excitement, post holiday letdown, or just the everyday moments that can trigger both parent and child storms.
So let’s dive in together and explore one of the most impactful episodes about what happens when a storming parent Meets a storming child. I am sure that you’ve all experienced this where there’s that moment that comes just after you’ve made an effort for your kid or kids. You know, it’s not as though you’ve scaled an ice covered mountain for them, but you’re feeling like you deserve to be acknowledged, at least.
You deserve those big, long eyelashes of your kids that look up at you or look across at you from their phone like you’re the best parent in the world, like they used to do when you served up homemade chocolate chip cookies. And then it doesn’t happen. At the very least, you feel a bit put out, disappointed, let down.
But the truth is, there also might be a bit of anger and a little bit of judgment going on. You might have some judgmental thoughts like, my kid is so ungrateful, spoiled, difficult. My kid’s a brat. You might have thoughts like paying for X, soccer, piano, tennis, music lessons. Is a waste of time and money.
Little judgments with big consequences. Yeah. Oh, I know it so well. So well, imagine this scenario. You’ve just taken your daughter to soccer practice and the traffic was heavy on the way there, which added to your already high stress level after a busy day. You get to soccer and you sit there on the sidelines, kind of half watching and half reading a book because you feel like at least that time will be a little bit productive.
You read the same page five times while your mind wanders over the challenging day that you’ve had and all that didn’t get done. You become aware that soccer practice goes on quite late. And you look at your watch again and again and again. And now you’re thinking about how you’ll have to rush across town to pick up your other kid and then get home and start dinner that will most likely be criticized, picked at, and left uneaten.
You feel like you should be more appreciated. I mean, come on, you don’t need praise for everything, but it sure would be nice. For all the effort to be recognized just a bit. I mean, come on. Yeah. And then your daughter finishes practice and you can tell by the way she’s walking or maybe stomping. Across the soccer field to the car that she is not happy.
Her head is lowered and her lips are pressed tight. She gets in the car and doesn’t say a word to you. Slams the door and collapses in the seat with a heavy sigh, and then immediately pulls her phone out and starts scrolling through her phone. She’s made no eye contact with you, hasn’t said a peep, and has a stony expression on her face.
You feel like I’m sitting in your car yesterday, today, most days. So you ask her trying to pep up the energy in the car. You ask her, how are things going? How is practice? And you get the done, done, done dreaded phone grunt. Shouldn’t all the care and attention and time you’ve put in to get her there get you more than a phone grunt, you think?
I mean, come on, Lisa. Come on. Does she know what I do for her? Now, here’s the thing. Do you make the phone grunt mean something about how much you are or aren’t appreciated? Oh, such a good question. What am I making the phone grunt mean? I’m taking it personally and I’m getting triggered and judgmental.
Yeah. Whoa. Okay. Let’s slow this motion picture down for a minute and let’s look at how this could play out differently before your veins start pulsating or twitching. Just take a breath for a moment. And at this point, we’re like at a fork in the road. We have a couple different options. One. You could launch into criticism about the lack of gratitude and why you and your efforts should be more appreciated and how you’re not going to stand for this anymore.
You’re not going to play for the next round of club dues, or you’re not going to rush home from work to make sure she gets there on time. Oh my, an explosion’s coming. Because when a storming parent meets a storming child, there’s going to be an explosion a hundred percent of the time. Yeah, but there’s another option, option two, option two is before your veins start pulsing or twitching, you take a moment, just a moment and you breathe.
And then you remember to get curious, not furious. And when the moment feels right, like there’s some oxygen in the car, you turn and ask, Hey, what’s going on? What’s going on? Turns out the parent who got curious, not furious. Found out that your daughter struggled with drills and that the coach called her out in a practice in a way that made her feel bad and self conscious.
You find out that she’s putting a ton of pressure on herself to perform well, and she feels crappy when it’s not going like it’s supposed to. You figure out that she’s disappointed and frustrated and upset and embarrassed. And it has nothing to do with you. The phone grunt didn’t mean what you thought it did.
You’re not being disrespected or unappreciated. Your daughter was just dealing with the real challenges that were bringing up big emotions. And all you saw was the storming, i. e. the phone grunt going on at the surface. But down underneath, there’s all these things going on for your kids. All kinds of feelings and emotions.
Some they can put their finger on and some they can’t. There’s all kinds of needs going on, attention, affection, autonomy, connection, understanding. And when they don’t get met, it leads to feelings like embarrassment and frustration and pain and disappointment and all kinds of big feelings that are all lurking right below the surface.
So if you can ask yourself, what else could this mean? The phone grunt, maybe it means a lack of appreciation, but maybe it means something else. And when you scuba dive down to the feelings and needs, and you figure it out, like this mama did, you can help your child with a strategy to prepare for the next practice.
You can create a deep sense of connection and cooperation because you’re digging below the surface. You’re scuba diving down to the feelings and needs instead of snorkeling at the top. And for you, when you push out all of the need to get your child or your kids to behave in a certain way, it creates space for you to figure out their feelings and needs and you feel much more connected.
Yeah. So the next time the phone grunt comes, what will you do? You can ask yourself, what else could this mean? What else could be going on? You can move past the judgment and get curious, not furious. You can take a deep breath and refuse to be triggered and ask, hey, what’s going on here? You can even ask yourself, what else could be going on?
So what I want you to remember today On our quest to being better parents is that when we get triggered by something like the phone grunt, step one is to take a second, take a deep breath, move past the judgments, push off the trigger, and instead play detective, get curious. Not furious and ask what’s really going on here.
The joy, the connection, the cooperation you will experience when you learn to scuba dive down to the feelings and needs rather than snorkeling at the top with the behavior, rather than taking it personally, rather than making it mean that your kid or kids are disrespectful or bratty or spoiled. The connection you’re going to feel.
Um, Is going to be like nothing you’ve ever experienced. It’s going to feel like magic. It’s going to feel amazing. So again, the first step, take a deep breath, resist the judgment, move past the trigger or triggers. Instead, play detective, scuba dive down to the feelings and needs and ask. Hey, what’s really going on?
Tell me. Talk to me. Let me in. Ah, I can’t wait to hear how this is going for you. I absolutely cannot wait. Alright, until we meet again, I’m wishing you peaceful parenting. Thanks for listening to Real World Peaceful Parenting. If you want more info on how you can transform your parenting, visit the peaceful parent.com.
See you soon.
Enjoy the Show?
-
-
- Don’t miss an episode, follow the podcast on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or RSS.
- Leave me a review in Apple Podcasts.
-




