Read The 1-2-3 Magic Workbook for Christian Parents: Effective Discipline for Children 2-12 Online
Authors: Thomas W. Phelan,Chris Webb
Tags: #Family & Relationships, #Parenting, #General
commonly asked question needs a whole chapter devoted to it:
What do
you do in public?
7
What to Do in Public
The threat of public embarrassment is something
that no parent takes lightly.
We now must come to grips with the worst nightmare of every
parent: what to do in public. No one wants to look like a child
abuser in aisle 5, the candy aisle, of the local grocery store. And kids—even
very young toddlers—seem to have radar that can sense psychological
vulnerability in anxious parents.
Once they have learned the mechanics of the 1-2-3, many parents
worry about being out in public where there is no time-out room. Believe
it or not, this problem can be solved without too much difficulty. That,
my fellow parents, happens to be the good news. The bad news is that
there is a worse problem lurking in the shadows, and deep in her heart
every parent knows what that problem is.
Your biggest problem is that your little ones can hold something
over your head in public that they can’t hold over your head in private:
the threat of public embarrassment. This fear of embarrassment and public
disapproval has at times made even the most competent parents forget
what they’re supposed to do, change their tactics and crumble. Try to
remember this basic principle: The long-term welfare of your kids comes
before short-term worries about what others are going to think.
55
56 1-2-3 MAGIC
Counting in Public
Let’s imagine that you do have a five-year-old and that yes, in fact, aisle
5 in the grocery store, the candy aisle, is one of your biggest problems.
It seems as though every time you go down that aisle, your son asks for
candy, you say no because all the candy bars are huge, and then the little
boy proceeds to throw a ferocious tantrum. He throws himself on the floor,
screams at the top of his lungs and—don’t you love this part?—a crowd
has gathered to see how you’re going to handle the crisis.
What do you do? The first thing you do is make sure you have the
1-2-3 rolling fairly well at home. “Fairly well” means you are getting a
good response at 1 or 2 most of the time. Why not all the time? Because
he’s just a kid.
Now you’re in aisle 5, your son is tantruming loudly, and the audience
has assembled. You look down at the unhappy little monster, hold up one
finger and say, “That’s 1.” You say this as calmly and as firmly as you
would at home. What is the key here? The key is not so much what you do
as what you don’t do. You do not, for example, let yourself be intimidated
by the threat of public embarrassment and whisper, “ Come on now, I
don’t want you making a fool of me in front of all these people.” You do
that and the child will
know
that you can be had for a nickel; he won’t
need the candy bar because he’s about to have more fun with you.
Proceed to 2 and then to 3, if necessary. Do not look at anyone else
other than your child. At this point, of course, parents wonder, “What are
we going to do at 3? There’s no time-out room.” This problem is easier
to solve than you think.
Time-Out Room, Time-Out Place
Over the many years of developing the
1-2-3 Magic
program, parents
taught me what to do in situations like this. These were parents who, in
the heat of battle, had to come up with rest-period solutions while in the
restaurants, in the theaters, in stores, at the museum, at the ball park and
so on.
We cal the solution,“Time-Out Room, Time-Out Place.”
There is always either a room, something like a room, or a symbolic
WHAT TO DO IN PUBLIC 57
place where a time out can be served. For example, in the aisle 5
conflict we just described, at 3 some parents wil just stay right
where they are and hold the child’s hand for several minutes.
The adult says nothing during this period. That’s a time out place.
Other parents have put little children in the grocery cart for the
consequence. That’s almost a time-out room.
Other ideas include a corner of the
store—a time-out place. For more ram- Quik Tip…
bunctious children, the bathroom of the When you’re out in
store can serve the same purpose. Let them public, there is always
either a room, something
scream their heads off in there for a while. like a room, or a symbolic
Some parents, feeling their children play location where a time out
up to an audience, will actually leave the can be served. And don’t
forget your time-out
grocery cart right where it is and take the alternatives. Just because
child back to the car to do the rest period. people are watching does
That’s a time-out room.
not mean that you have to
be at your kids' mercy!
Using the car like this makes some
people ask, “Using the car like this makes
some people ask, “Why should I have to go through all that trou-
ble?” The answer is because (1) they’re just kids, (2) they’re still
learning how to behave and (3) “all that trouble” is a sound invest-
ment in their future and your peace of mind.
Here’s another idea. If the child is old enough and you
won’t worry about him, at 3 have him wait for you—perhaps next
to one of the cash registers or next to the information booth—till
you’re done shopping.
During any time out, you do not talk to the child. No lec-
turing, screaming or nagging. Keeping quiet is often very hard, but
after a while the youngsters get the idea you mean business. And
yes, there have been parents who felt the fuss was bad enough that
they left a half-full grocery cart and went home.
The “1-2-3-4”
Don’t forget your Time-Out Alternatives (TOAs) when you have to go
out of the house with the kids! Here’s another situation. You’re cooking
a new recipe for dinner and you are so excited about this new dish that
58 1-2-3 MAGIC
you can hardly stand it. At 5:15 p.m., however, you suddenly realize you
are missing three essential ingredients. To make matters worse, your
six-year-old and eight-year-old are in the other room playing well
together for the first time in two-and-a-half years. You’re going to have
to interrupt them and there’s no time to get a sitter.
Here’s what you do. Tell the kids that you have to go shopping, it
will take about an hour and they have to go with you. You know they don’t
want to, but you’re all stuck. Tell them the deal will be this: If they’re
“good” while you’re out (meaning they don’t hit a count of 4—you’re
giving them an extra count because of the length of the trip and because
they don’t want to go), you’ll buy them a treat. Their reward will be $1
cash or $1 worth of whatever else they may want to buy. If they hit the
count of 4 during the trip, however, the reward is gone.
Some parents feel this is bribery. It is! But the real definition of
bribery is paying someone to do something illegal. Here we’re paying
the kids to do something legal, and it works.
My wife and I had a very interesting experience using this TOA tactic
with our kids when we used to go out for ice cream in the evening. The
first few times we went out for our after-dinner treat, the kids fought like
cats and dogs in the back seat. By the time we all got our ice cream, no
one was in any kind of a party mood anymore.
So one evening I told the kids this: “Guys, we’re going out for ice
cream. But there’s going to be a new deal. If you guys hit a count of three
before we get there, we turn right around and come home. Nobody will
get any ice cream.”
With hopeful hearts, we took off in the car. The children started
fighting. I said,“That’s 1, third count blows the trip.” Sure enough, they
were soon at 2, and then, only half way to the ice cream store, they hit
a 3. I turned the car around and went home. The kids were not pleased;
they looked stunned and resentful.
A few days later—this time less hopeful—we took another shot at an
ice cream outing. We weren’t three hundred yards from the house when the
kids started fighting again. I said,“That’s 1, third time blows the trip.” They
hit a 2 and then a 3, and the car got turned around and headed for home.
I’m sure that before our next attempt at an evening treat the kids had
had a conversation with each other. Their conversation probably went
WHAT TO DO IN PUBLIC 59
something like this: “Isn’t it a shame that most children in the world,
except us, have normal fathers? Unfortunately, our Dad turned out to be
a shrink. But he’s got the car and he’s got the money, so if we want some
ice cream, we’d better put up with his stupid games!”
So, about a week later, our intrepid group once again set out on
its quest. To my amazement, the kids started fighting. I said,“That’s 1,
third time blows the trip.” To my further amazement, however, the kids
instantly became quiet and they were good as gold the whole rest of the
way. We all enjoyed our dessert.
One moral of this story: Sometimes it takes a few trials for you to
make believers out of the kids. By the way, I’ve often been asked what
to do if while on the way one child acts up and the other one doesn’t. The
answer: The one gets the ice cream and the other one doesn’t. But don’t
expect to enjoy the ride home.
Keep Moving
Another tactic that some parents have used successfully in public takes us
back to our grocery store example, where the youngster was having a major
fit in the candy section of aisle 5. What some parents have done is simply
leave the child on the floor and move on to aisle 6. When they meet someone
in aisle 6, they say, “Boy, do you hear al that racket over there?”
Seriously, what often happens is that the child starts worrying where
mom or dad went, forgets the candy and runs to find his parent. Naturally,
you wouldn’t want to get too far away, depending on the age of the child.
Then again, some kids run to find their parent and then remember the
candy and continue the tantrum. What should you do then?
The answer to this question depends on two things: How badly do
you need to shop and how much guts do you have? A number of years ago
I was shopping by myself in our local grocery store. I saw a lady come
in with a four-year-old boy. She picked the boy up, put him in a cart and
pushed the cart past the bubble-gum machine. The boy asked for gum,
the mother said no and the boy went ballistic. The mother kept moving
and said nothing.
I shopped for twenty minutes, this Mom shopped for twenty min-
utes, and this little boy howled for twenty minutes. Wherever you were
60 1-2-3 MAGIC
in the store, which was not large, you could hear this kid’s blood-curdling
screams. But this lady was great. She paid no attention to her son. She
had come in for milk, green pepper and converted rice, and, by God, she
was going out with milk, green pepper and converted rice. I remember
passing this duo in the rice aisle. While the youngster wailed, his mother
was calmly looking at the rice box: “Let’s see, four ounces times six. Yes,
that should be enough for tonight.”
I was impressed. But Mom was soon to fall off her pedestal. I hur-