@salimpu Listen to the Unruffled podcast by Janet Lansbury. She has great advice on how to stay calm and stable even when your child is not. Because, let’s face it children are not known for being calm and stable. Once you accept and expect that children will have big emotions and reactions your life will be so much easier.
I love the paramedic example. Imagine you fell and broke your leg and needed to call an ambulance. What would you do if they showed up, took one look at you and started freaking out about your leg saying, “oh no! It’s so broken! What are we going to do? Why would you go and break your leg? Don’t you know that’s bad for you?!”
How would that make you feel? Probably even more scared and unsure than before. Their job is to be calm and to help people when they need them most. It’s the same with parents. It’s our job to be calm and help our kids through their big problems and feelings without being sucked into the chaos.
The begging can be SO annoying, I get it. But they control their actions and you control your reaction. You can empathize “I know, you really wanted that.” You can reaffirm a rule, “please does not turn a ‘no’ into a ‘yes.’” You can stop engaging and just be a calming presence. If you feel like you’re going to lose your cool excuse yourself, tap out, put in headphones, go outside. Any annoyance or anger you show in that moment is more likely to make the problem worse in the long run. It’ll likely show that you are unsure about your stance or how to handle the situation.
A big reaction shows your child they are powerful and persistent enough to change your mood. They’re not. You are the rock. You are the confident, calm leader your child can look to when they are out of control.
ETA: to your wife’s reaction: sometimes it’s okay to seek a compromise, but NEVER in response to begging. Stand by your decisions with confidence. Remind yourself that it is good for your child to handle disappointment. It is good for them to discover their limits. It is good for them to feel big feelings from start to finish without someone rescuing them from their emotions.