Your kids are settled into play with Legos. Everything is peaceful. You think it may be time to sneak away to grab a cup of coffee and read some of the morning paper. Before you take your first sip you hear it start:
“I had it first!”
“Well, it’s mine!”
Then all hell breaks loose. Before you reach the scene, Legos are thrown and your two children are in a rumble. Why is it that kids can’t get along for five minutes? Why are they always in conflict?
It’s natural for parents to want a peaceful home. Part of that expectation includes having our children acting peacefully toward each other. But this is just an unreasonable expectation because there will be conflict. But there is a better way to approach it, and I say this based on personal experience. I want a peaceful one, too. I remember trying to extinguish any conflict and wondering why it didn’t work. I found myself waiting for the conflict and ready to pounce when it started. What I created was an environment where conflict was expected and my kids expected me to work things out for them. Over time, I have figured out a new approach that works better for everyone.
What I learned was that it was natural for children in a family to have conflict. Just by the nature of being siblings, they are in competition with each other. At the very least, they will compete for their parents’ attention. Because of that competition, they will naturally try to bring you into their conflicts to see who wins your approval and who loses.
However, this is one arena where we should avoid giving our children attention. In effect, they want us involved in their conflict, but we need to work at staying out of it. Here’s how:
- Expect conflict. Siblings will get into battles. If we work to keep them out of conflict altogether, we teach them nothing about solving conflict and we remain in a role as “warden.”
- Set up rules for their battles. Kids can learn to settle their battles over time if given the right guidelines. For starters, tell them there will be no hitting, no biting, and no throwing things at people and to use inside voices. Add your own rules and let kids add some, too. Post them on the refrigerator so they are known to all.
- You get involved only when rules are broke. When you intercede, only refer to the rule that was broken. Don’t get involved with the content of the battle. “Well, he took my Lego and threw it. Then he…” You’ll never get the real story.
- Never take sides. Parents tend to side with the younger child. The younger child can learn this and use it to provoke a fight to get their way. It will make more sense and be a lot easier if you break up fights based on the rules of engagement you have posted on your refrigerator.
- When rules are broken. Separate your children. Remove them or remove the toys. Neither child should “win” the object of the fight.
- Be careful. Remember, they can be tricky in attempts to get you involved in the conflict. “But he hurt my toe, see it’s bleeding” (there’s no visible blood). Unless someone is truly visibly hurt, don’t buy into it.
- If you witness a crime, deal with the offender. If one child does hit another while you happen to pass by, you need to punish what you saw. All the other rules listed above are in effect particularly for events you don’t witness.
Following the above guidelines will help you begin a new life free of owning your children’s conflict.
Eventually, your children will learn conflict resolution if they have any desire to play with each other, which most kids do. Instead of protecting a younger child, monitoring playtime and being a referee, you will be the keeper of the refrigerator rules. It will remove you from the emotions of the conflicts and allow your kids to learn to resolve things on their own.
Just think, you may be on your way to a more peaceful home.