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MASFIC -
Mothers Against Sibling Fighting In Car

“What can I do to get my kids to stop fighting in the car? I know my yelling is wrong and they don’t listen anyway, but I have no idea what else to do. HELP!” - Frazzled mother of two, ages 3 & 5.

Strategies

Eliminate the “mistaken approach”
If you want the fighting to disappear you have to make fights an ineffective way of getting attention. That means you must ignore them. That is hard while you are in a car, and I am sure that IS in fact why children chose the car as the ideal place to fight! They have a captive audience who can not HELP but give attention in the form of ineffective verbal corrections:

“Stop that” “You’re driving me crazy” “Enough I said. I have had enough!”

After all, if you weren’t busy saying those things you’d be free to talk to your spouse, talk on your cell phone, listen to the radio, or any other number of things besides paying attention to the children. Let’s face it - well behaved children are ignored! We figure they are set - so let’s do something else!

In fact - we train them: if they want us - just act up. We need to train them in the reverse: Give attention when they are acting the way that is appropriate, ignore them when they are not. They’ll quickly learn to come about in their strategy.

Firm and Friendly
The trick is to not cave in to the demand for undue attention while staying calm and aloof (I know this is the hard part - especially with fighting). You do not need to ignore the children, just their fighting. If you only step in and get involved in their fights when they are really intense or physical, then you are unknowingly teaching your child to fight louder, longer and harder to be effective!

So, ignore the fighting. 100%. Cold turkey.

Here is how:

Offer Choice
Mom: “It is not safe for me to drive with this noise and distraction. Can you two stop fighting or do I need to pull over?”

Tip - You only need to explain and offer choice the first time, all subsequent times if they start to fight simply pull over.

Watch the Feet Not the Mouth
Regardless of how the children answer your question (“We’ll stop fighting, honest” - kick, punch, poke) their real decision or intention is shown in their choice of behaviour not their words. Respond to what they do, not to what they say.

Follow Through - Action Not Words
If the children continue to fight then simply pull off the road way, put the car in park, pull out a book and start to read. This will relax you and it demonstrates that you are not paying attention. After all - when was the last time you had time to read. Relish the opportunity! If you look upset or concerned they’ll know you are paying attention and continue.

If things get too wild, you can read from outside the car.
Mom: “I’m gonna read on the grass here - let me know when you are ready to go again”.

TIP: Don’t interfere with the learning by TALKING or EYEBALL ROLLING! This is not about you and your approval or disapproval. The lesson will be learned through the simple connection that when we fight - the car stops. Therefore to make the car go we need to co-operate. The children see they hold this power and mom is just following through on simple rules for social living in a respectful manner.

You should be having more joyful car trips shortly. So pack a book on your next trip and let me know how it goes!

 

alysonAlyson Schafer is a psychotherapist and one of Canada's leading parenting experts. She's the author of the best-selling "Breaking the Good Mom Myth" (Wiley, 2006) and host of TV's The Parenting Show a live call-in show. The media relies on Alyson's comments and opinions. you can find her interviewed and quoted extensively in such publications as Cosmopolitan, Readers' Digest, Canadian Living, Today's Parents, and Canadian Families.Visit Alyson's website!


© copyright 2011. Alyson Shafer.
Not to be reprinted without written permission.