GOYBP
Get Off Your Butt Parenting
Parents want ideas that work. In particular, they want ideas that work well. By well, they usually mean a formula by which they can garner immediate compliance with a minimum of parental intervention.
EPP does not provide a formulaic approach to discipline. It does, however, provide a practical one. One of the most practical of my suggestions is found in Get Off Your Butt Parenting (GOYBP).
GOYBP is the way to teach your children how to obey your verbal commands. We often call it “listening”. Listening is an imprecise term. Our children typically do “listen” to us. They don’t always obey.
Teaching your child that your words “mean business” is a commonly held value in our culture. You’ll experience most people believe that a child should be taught to obey. And I agree. However, the method with which most people are familiar in teaching this includes punishment, most often spanking.
Happily, it’s possible and indeed imperative that we teach our children to obey without resorting to spanking or other punishment. Even if we chose to reserve punishment as an option in our home, we can not spank or punish our child for every misbehavior. We need tools that work in the absence of punishment. It’s my experience that it’s not the spanking or time out that teaches. It’s the absolute consistency and parental involvement. GOYBP provides both of those key elements.
Get Off Your Butt Parenting is a simple, straightforward and effective way of teaching your child that you mean what you say. Indeed, it is what we try to teach when we consider spanking our children; that when we say something, we mean it.
I started this with my children when they were babies, but you can start at any time. Be patient, be consistent and be committed. You will see results.
GOYBP Do’s:
1) Say “it” once. Issue the command, once.
2) Follow “it” up with related action, moving the child into compliance.
GOYBP Don’ts:
1) Don’t repeat yourself.
2) Don’t tag your commands with a “please”.
3) Don’t say your child’s name over and over with an implied threat of punishment.
GOYB parenting is both a proactive and responsive skill. It’s proactive in that it teaches children that your words mean business. This is one tool in setting the stage and foundation for a positive tone. As your children learn that when you do say something, you mean it, there will be less discipline issues presented. It’s responsive in that it is used in the moments of real parenting (or care giving).
Scott Turansky and Joanne Miller (authors of some great discipline material) call GOYBP parenting “having a tight action point”. The “action point” refers to the space between the command and your follow up.
GOYB parenting works in the way the program outline in the book Magic 1-2-3 “works” and why spanking can “work”. The effectiveness of Magic 1-2-3 is not in the time out. The effectiveness of spanking isn’t found in the act of hitting your child. What makes punishment work is the consistent action following your words.
GOYBP makes it possible to communicate “I mean it” without having to impose punishment.
Here are some examples of practical application:
“Brandon, stay with me in the parking lot” is followed by taking his hand.
“Sue, put your shoes on, we are leaving” is followed by handing her the shoes.
“Roger, get off the table” is followed by picking him up and moving him.
These examples are for very young children. If your child is this young and you begin GOYBP immediately, they will learn quickly that your words mean business. Soon, you will be able to simply say the command and they will comply.
For older children, GOYB parenting looks a bit different. It may mean turning off the TV, taking away the game boy, disallowing the next (fun) thing until the task has been accomplished. Be careful to not withhold the next fun thing; that is punishment. Instead, delay it until your command is complied with.
Some examples for older children:
“Drew, it’s time to get ready for school” is followed by putting your hand out for the Game Boy.
“Lauren, it’s time to clean up the craft area” is followed by handing Lauren the trash basket.
“Camden, get your shoes” is followed by turning Camden by the shoulders in the direction of his shoes.
Inevitably, parents ask me, how long will this take? Isn’t this permissive? Why should I help them? Shouldn’t they just listen?
How long will this take?
That depends on several factors. The age and personality of your child, how closely to GOYBP you’ve parented up to this point, your consistency in using this tool. I’ve seen GOYBP turn around a negative situation within days.
Isn’t this permissive?
This question usually assumes a child needs to be made to feel back (i.e.: be punished) in order to learn to behave. Issuing a command and making sure it happens is the opposite of permissive. Let’s take an honest look at spanking in this context. What is spanking but an attempt to help the child obey? GOYBP offers help, but without the spanking. Permissiveness would be if the “command” were optional, tagged with a lilting waver at the end. Permissive would be if the parent repeated the command. Or repeated the child’s name in an effort the gain compliance. Certainly it would be permissive to abandon or change the command to suit the child.
Issuing a command and requiring obedience is not permissive. It’s good parenting.
Why Should I help them?
You should help your child learn to obey because that is your job. Children require an active, engaged and consistent presence in order to develop self control and self discipline. It’s a long process and they will require your assistance for years to come.
In the younger years, you can expect to provide hands on love, protection, care, nurture and discipline. The move away from the quantity of hands on parenting is a gradual move, spanning over years.
You should help them obey so that both parent and child are happier, and home life is a joy rather than a burden.
Shouldn’t They Just Listen?
You mean “Shouldn’t they just obey”, right?
That would be nice. But if the journey through childhood were full of obedience, I wouldn’t be writing this book. The need for teaching is apparent in all the message boards, magazines, books, TV shows and programs out there offering to assist you. If children learned to obey easily, parenting wouldn’t be an industry of profit.
GOYBP is an excellent way to communicate the expectation that your child will obey your commands. It’s kind, firm, respectful and effective. It requires 2 things of you.
1) The willingness to Get Off Your Butt.
2) And it’s also important that you issue commands that are fair in nature, number and reachable by your child.
