As a child, I spent idyllic summers at my family’s secluded lake cabin in the woods of Northern Wisconsin. My fondest memories include swimming with my cousins, cooking with my grandmother, and fishing with my dad.
Hello nostalgia.
Last Summer I returned that tiny lake cabin to share a week-long vacation with my dad, cousins, and this time, my own child. About half way through the vacation, I remember sitting in a lawn chair on the beach chatting with my cousins.
Together we laughed the afternoon away reminiscing over our childhood memories together, while our kids—ages 2, 3, and 5—played in the lake, splashing and wrestling around. I couldn’t think of anything more perfect.
Kids play turned rough.
As the kids continued wrestling, one of them started choking on water.
Gulp.
It’s the sound that sends a mother’s heart straight down to her pelvis.
post contains affiliate links
Thankfully, it was a small amount of water and after a few good coughs all was well again. But the kids couldn’t help continue to wrestle. Splashes of water transcended into the air, heads were dunked under water, and playful shrieks traveled at least a mile across the lake.
No one wanted to ruin their fun, but surely our hearts and stomachs couldn’t handle one more drop into the pelvis.
Those four words.
Still sitting firmly in our lawn chairs my cousin called out the kids’ names one-by-one to get their attention. Of course they ignored her and continued roughhousing in the water. The second time she yelled louder with her hands around her mouth, amplifying the sound.
(Yes, we continued parenting from a lawn chair. Don’t judge. My dad orchestrated great parenting from a lawn chair. Old habits die hard.)
Finally the boys stopped, looked over in our general direction, and waited for some sort of instruction. With her right hand raised high in the air showing the two-finger piece symbol, she shouted a parenting phrase that I now use every day:
“You have two choices!”
I loved that phrase the moment I heard it. She grabbed my attention. I too wanted to know what these choices were.
The boys listened intently as she revealed the choices.
“Put on your life jackets or get out of the water. Which choice would you like?”
And just like that the boys stopped wrestling, came out of the water, donned life jackets and returned to wrestling in the water. There was no begging, nagging or reminding. It just happened like you asked them to get out of the water for a cookie.
From that day forward.
Kids–toddlers especially–will engage in testing boundaries at every chance they get. It’s emotionally draining. It’s frustrating. It leaves you exhausted at the end of the day wondering why a kid engages in power struggles all. day. long.
But…
Choices change everything.
Why?
Because both the child and the parent maintain a sense of control.
The parent maintains control of what the two choices are and the child maintains control over which option is chosen. It’s a win-win.
Here are a few very basic examples:
You have two choices: color with the crayons on the paper only or put them away.
You have two choices: hold my hand as we cross the street or sit buckled in the stroller.
You have two choices: put your train set away during dinner time or lose the train set for the rest of the day.
When choices don’t work.
Of course there are times when your child will refuse either choice. Been there. And of course there are times when your child chooses one thing but doesn’t abide by the choice. Been there too.
Eat some chocolate, diffuse some essential oils, and do not panic.
There’s an easy step-by-step to help make choices work for you…
- Physically get down on the child’s eye-level.
- Look him or her in the eyes.
- State the desired behavior in a calm but firm voice.
- Then state the consequence for not listening or abiding by the choice.
- Follow through with the consequence, if needed.
The lesson learned that summer.
As a child, I learned countless life lessons alongside my cousins at the tiny lake cabin. How to be kind. How to say I’m sorry. How to make a s’more by the camp fire. Each summer I grew up, laughed and learned.
As an adult, I didn’t expect return to the cabin and learn more life lessons alongside my cousins. Learning the phrase “You have two choices” was unexpected, yet so useful!
I’ll always remember that parenting lessons come when you least expect it–like when you’re trying to decide whether to shout “Two choices” from your lawn chair or jump in the water to break up a fight.
Yup. Choices.
So basically Love & Logic….
I love the “two choices” idea. I have used it myself and it does work to end battles and tantrums.
Great to hear it works well for you!
“Follow through with the consequences.” Never bluff, if you tell them something will happen if they don’t comply you better mean it.
I would agree.
Though not guaranteed to eliminate every argument, this has been by far one of the best techniques I’ve learned! I discovered it in Danny Silk’s book Loving Our Kids on Purpose. If the original choice elicits no or a delayed response, then I’ve found it effective to offer, “Would you like to choose or would you like me to choose?” Works great even with my super feisty 8-year-old!
Ooohhh! Excellent tip! Give a choice about choices. Brilliant.
Dear Lauren,
I found your blog while a was doing some unanticipated surfing. I worked as an emergency hire for 1 year, and my term expired back on 2/14. I was a SAHM for 3 1/2 years before that, and now I am once again a SAHM. We are not in the military, but, it looks like we will be relocating soon. I have a 4.75 (4 and 3/4) year old boy who I’ve never loved so much, mostly because he will be my only one. When I stumble across your blog last year some time, I began to read and research your blog for inspiration and positive discipline, especially after going back to work. 1 year seems so short, but, I can testify that it was also very long, I miss most of my co-workers! But, I have also passed on your articles to those working moms that I worked with. I would have thought I would have stayed closer with my Mommy and Me friends, but, time and life moves on, and I feel that I wished I could have stayed at that position. But, I have to tell you how much I LOVE, LOVE, LOVE your blog. And now that I’m back at home I can send you a comment!!! Thank you for being out there and writing timeless articles. I will continue to follow you at least for a long time!!!
PS: I learned about the 2 choices “suggestion” when mine was 2, and I realized at almost 5 I need to return to this option again. “Everything old is new again” 😀
Hi Lauren,
I’m new to your blog and have been enjoying it.
I have a question for you:
Some of the examples of choices sound to me like the old style “if you don’t do what I say, you’ll get punished”. How are they different from this?
For example:
You say: “You have two choices: color with the crayons on the paper only or put them away.”
How is this different from “If you don’t stop painting the wall with those crayons, I will take them away”
You say: “You have two choices: put your train set away during dinner time or lose the train set for the rest of the day.”
How is this different from: “If you don’t put the train set away, you will not be allowed to play with it for the rest of the day”
I see the change in vocabulary when telling the child “you can choose” as opposed to saying more threatening words like “If you don’t do this…” , but I don’t see how the real request changes… the kid has to do what the parent wants (put train away), or get punished (loose the right to play)…
I cannot see what the real “choice” is.
I’m sure there’s something I’m not understanding right. Could you clarify for me, please?
Thanks so much
Can you give some examples of consequences the child would face if the child doesn’t accept either of the choices? Thanks