forcibly    withdrawn.  These   unhappy youngsters  are forever crying, “Life’s
not fair!   You’re  always  treating    me  like    a   child.”
Waging a Winnable War with Choices
There    are     some    areas   of  our     children’s  lives   that    remain  beyond  our
control and are best    avoided.    If  we  exert   our will    over    children    in  these
areas,   we  are     destined    to  fail.  Any  parent  who     has     pleaded,    cajoled,
bribed,  threatened,     contorted   his     face    grotesquely,    or  done    headstands
trying  to  make    a   little  tyke    talk    for relatives   already knows   about   these
sorts   of  control battles.    Vince   isn’t   going   to  talk    unless  he  wants   to. The
same    goes    for the battle  of  the pureed  vegetables. We  can force-feed
them    down    Lily’s  little  gullet  all we  want,   but if  she doesn’t want    to  eat
them,   back    out they    come.   And we  lose.   Ditto   at  the other   end of  the
gastrointestinal    tract.  We  may demand  that    our children    do  their   dirty
work    on  the potty   chair,  but before  we  know    it, they’re over    in  the corner
of  the family  room    with    faces   sporting    an  ominous flushed look.
These   are battles we  can’t   win with    commands.   They    pertain to  what
children    learn,  think,  and eat;    when    they    go  to  bed or  the bathroom;   and
so   forth.  In  each,   children    fight   tenaciously     to  win,    and     when   we   get
involved    in  these   battles,    we  invariably  lose.   We  influence   our children    in
these   areas   only    by  modeling.   We  model   how much    we  like    our food    at
the table.  We  talk,   in  self-referenced comments,   about   how good    it  makes
us  feel    to  clean   up  our plate,  to  eat our vegetables. But every   time    we
issue   demands,    we  invite  a   fight,  and eventually  we  lose.
The secret  to  establishing    control is  to  concentrate on  fighting    battles
that    we  know    we  can win.    That    means   we  must    select  the issues  very
carefully.  We  must    pick    areas   where   we  do  have    control over    our kids.
Then    we  must    offer   choices in  those   areas.
We  may not be  able    to  make    Emma    eat when    she’s   at  the table   —
that’s  an  unwinnable  battle  —   but we  can control whether she’s   at  the
table   or  not.    We  may not be  able    to  control when    Justin  does    his chores,
but we  can make    sure    he  does    them    before  he  eats    his next    meal.   We  may
