Parenting Decoded

75 - How to Stop Nagging Your Kids (And Get Better Results)

Season 1 Episode 75

How to Stop Nagging Your Kids (And Get Better Results)

The Problem: You're repeating yourself constantly, and it's exhausting everyone. Nagging doesn't work, damages relationships, and prevents kids from developing independence.

What You'll Learn:

  • Why nagging fails and what it teaches your children
  • How to use natural consequences effectively
  • The power of saying things once (and meaning it)
  • Creating routines that eliminate daily battles
  • Transferring ownership so kids manage their own responsibilities

The Goal: Raise responsible, independent kids while building a stronger relationship—without being the household taskmaster.

Perfect for: Parents tired of the nagging cycle and ready to try strategies that actually work.

Email me at info@parentingdecoded.com or go to my website at www.parentingdecoded.com.

Have a blessed rest of your day!

SPEAKER_00:

Welcome to Parenting Decoded, a podcast for practical approaches to parenting. I'm Mary Eshin. Today we're tackling something every parent struggles with. Nagging. Clean your room. Did you do your homework? Brush your teeth. And then five minutes later, you're saying it all again. Here's the thing: nagging doesn't work. We all know it, yet we keep doing it, but there are better ways to get things done that actually work and don't leave everyone exhausted and resentful. Let's dive in. Why does nagging fail? Is the first question. When we nag, we become our children's external brain. We take responsibility for their tasks. And kids learn they don't have to remember anything because mom or dad will remind them. Nagging also damages relationships. Nobody likes being nagged. It breeds resentment on both sides and teaches learned helplessness. Kids never develop their own internal motivation or executive function skills. We're trying to be loving and helpful, but nagging winds up being none of those things. Here's a list of strategies that I want you to consider. The first strategy is using natural consequences. One of your most powerful tools is allowing natural consequences to do the teaching. Forgot their lunch, they get hungry. Didn't put their clothes in the hamper? No clean clothes. Didn't do their homework? They face consequences at school, not at home. I know this is hard. You want to rescue them, you're trying to be loving, but would you rather they learn now when the stakes are low and they are young? Or later as adults when consequences are serious, like not paying their bills or showing up for work late because they can't set an alarm clock. Use judgment for safety issues, but for most daily responsibilities, stepping back is incredibly effective. Strategy 2. Say it once. This is a game changer. Say it once, then stop. Dinner is in 10 minutes, please set the table. That's it. No repeating, no reminding, no following them around. If you say something more than once, it means you're telling them that you don't mean it, that you'll handle the reminders instead of them learning to remind themselves. If you say something once, then do it yourself, you've also taught them to ignore you. What happens when they don't do it? The consequence kicks in. Yes, you do have to figure out the consequences. They miss eating with the family, or they sit there while the food gets cold and they set it then, or maybe mom is only available to take kids to the mall to shop who've set the table as they were asked. The key is following through consistently. Strategy three, create routines. Instead of nagging about the same things daily, build them into predictable routines. Morning routine, wake up, make bed, get dressed, brush teeth, eat breakfast, pack backpack. Visual charts work wonders for younger kids. Create a checklist they can follow independently. For older kids, have weekly check-ins to review what needs to happen. Then it's on them to manage it. Strategy 4. Problem solve together. This is totally my favorite strategy. Instead of telling kids what to do, involve them in finding solutions. Getting ready for school has been really stressful. What ideas do you have for making it smoother? Kids are much more likely to follow through on solutions they've helped create. Make it collaborative. How can we work together so I don't have to remind you about your homework? Keep in mind that problem solving is a process and it might take several attempts to get a workable solution that sticks. Keep at it, model for your kids that problems take time to solve. Strategy five, transfer ownership. Have a conversation where you say explicitly, from now on, your homework is your responsibility. I'm not going to remind you. If you need help, ask me, but managing it is up to you. Then stick to it. When they forget, resist the urge to rescue and nag. When they face consequences, show empathy, but don't bail them out. That must have been hard. What will you do differently tomorrow? Yes, they might fail a few times. That's okay, that's learning. Always, always feel free to back up to strategy four and start problem solving again with them. The bottom line: when we stop nagging, we're raising capable, responsible kids. We're teaching them to manage their own lives and face consequences. Yes, it's harder in the short term, but we're not raising children, we're raising future adults, and future adults need to know how to function without someone following them around. Start with one strategy, pick the area where your nagging is worst, and try to find a new approach. Give it at least two weeks before deciding if it's working. You're not being lazy when you stop nagging, you're being intentional about raising responsible, independent kids. You've got this. If you need help, please reach out to me via email. Thanks for listening. Have a blessed rest of your day.