
Have you ever thought about the difference between request and demands when parenting?
It might seem obvious, but I see parents, and myself confusing these all the time.
So what is the difference? One day I realized that the difference rested in my response to, "no".
If I got angry, resentful, or hurt by, "no", I was certain I had made a demand. Why? Because my child was not free to say, "no". Because I did not respect my child's right to say, "no".
Yet, when I did not mind that my child said, "no", I was certain that I had made a request.
Before you ask your child to do something, stop for a moment, check in with yourself, and see how you would react to his/her, "no". If you are comfortable with her/his, "no", you have made a request vs a demand. If you would be angry that they said, "no" you have made a demand, not a request.
Examples of times that I have made a demand thinking it was a request:
"Will you help set the table?"
"Would you please clean up your room?"
"Please, take the dishes to the dishwasher."
"Would you help me carry in the luggage?"
"Would you help me carry in the groceries?"
"How about you do your homework now?"
"Will you take out the garbage?"
How did I know? Because when my daughter balked or said, "no". I got angry.
There is nothing wrong with making a demand, but there is something wrong with not discerning the difference between a request vs a demand when parenting.
Had I been clear I would not have stated the above as requests but as demands. What would that sound like?
"I need you to set the table now"
"Clean up your room now, or else..."
"You need to take the dishes to the dishwasher now".
"You will help me carry in the luggage now, or else..."
"If you don't help me carry in the groceries you will..."
"You need to do you homework now or else..."
"Take out the garbage or else..."
Did you notice? Even when I make a demand, my child has the choice to refuse my demand and take the consequence for refusing. In other words, they have a choice to make, and the choice is theirs to make. (See my article "The role of Choice in Parenting" of February 29)
It is convenient when we don't confuse requests vs demands when parenting. Our children will appreciate our clarity, and we can be good role models when clearly differentiating requests vs demands.
Happy Parenting

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