Once Again I learn to stop trying to control the things that I have no control over

I have been going crazy at bed time around here. Some nights the whole process is so frustrating that I am in tears. The kids mess around. They play with each other. They play chase with the Baby. They smear toothpaste all over the bathroom and break the teeth off of my hair cutting comb. What should take minutes takes at least an hour and then some. I feel like I have to stand over them waving a stick while they slowly inch their tiny frames from one task to the next or they will escape and scatter again and return to the silliness and time frittering that is their regular unsupervised modus operandi. By the time they are in bed I am emotionally exhausted from dealing with the naughtiness, the tears, the sheer mental energy it takes to try and force small independent beings to do something that they don’t want to do.

Saturday night was a very low point in our bedtime history. I had to discipline the Girl for going off task several times. The Boy was loud and obnoxious, distracting to everyone else and the Girl was crying into her pillow as I turned out the light and started to sing. I lay down next to her only to have the Baby climb jealously over her and push her way in between us while they both screamed bloody murder. They were restless and fractious as I sang, they bounced around and off the walls during prayers and my voice, body and energy were spent. So I prayed as they listened that I would learn a better way to do things, that they would learn to get ready for bed fast and that our nights would be more peaceful.

The next night, without having really given it much further thought throughout the day I suddenly found myself saying, “It is bed time at 8:00. You have 15 minutes to get yourselves completely ready. That means your pajamas are on, your clothes are put away, your teeth are flossed and brushed and you are laying in your beds by the time it is 8:oo. It is your responsibility. Anyone not ready for bed in time will be disciplined for disobedience, and then every 5 minutes after until they are ready. If you are ready by 8:00 I will read you a story out of that big book that has the long old fashioned stories in it that we don’t usually seem to have time to sit and read through together. And…whoever is ready first gets to choose the story.”

And then I cleaned up in the kitchen and cleared the table.

The Boy shot through his evening routine faster than I even thought possible. He was lying in bed in less than 5 minutes. The Girl dawdled, and chatted, and went into talk to him while flossing. I bit my lip. I stopped myself 100 times or more in that 15 minute interval from reminding, nagging or cajoling. I did not rescue her from the consequences of her choices, and 8:00 came and she was not ready. And then there were tears. And then she wailed for the whole 5 minutes as she brushed her teeth alone in the bathroom and I read the Boy the story he chose. She got to hear the tale end of it.

They both started up again with the interrupting and talking and moving around during the singing so I told them I would leave the next time either of them started up. I didn’t finish singing that night. More tears. I did give hugs before I left though, face wet from rubbing against their salty tears.

We tried it again the next night. The Girl was ready in time, but the Boy still got to choose the story. They were quiet during the singing.

Tonight, we tried it again. The Boy elected to practice a new song on the piano for a few minutes while the Girls ran to finish first tonight. And she did. I stood on the patio chatting with a neighbor. At quarter to eight I checked on them and they were both ready and the Girl was triumphantly choosing her story for me to read. There has been more peace in our house at bed time than there has been for months. And even with the reading they are still getting to sleep earlier.

And once again I remember something that it was very hard for me to learn at one point, and I still tend to forget from day to day. The only one I have control over is myself. The only choice I have is how I will respond to a situation that presents itself. Even, or especially, very small children cannot be compelled to do something without me sacrificing a great deal of my time and energy and essentially doing it for them. That’s another option I have, but I didn’t realize I was choosing that, and I was resenting the energy it cost me.

In the last few days, as I allow them again the freedom to choose on their own how the evening will go, and I step back and say clearly , “This is what I will, and won’t do. Now let the chips fall where they may.” There is much more air in our house it seems. There is space to breath again in the evenings because I am not crushing us all with the weight of my expectations, and my vise grip on the way things are done.

I wonder why it took me so long to remember that this is the way people are, and that this is the only really viable approach to our relationships to other people. Then I realize that it was because I have been focused on myself and how I feel about this and it has kept me from seeing the larger picture. It has kept me from seeing my children as little people, rather than burdensome drains on my evening schedule. It has kept me from looking beyond myself for a solution. It has blinded me to my goal as a parent of producing autonomous independent people who can act decisively and independently in their own daily lives. This exclusive self focus has robbed me of the joy that is possible in even the bed time routine and the time that could be spent snuggled with children making happy memories instead of solidifying an image of me with my shrew voice in their little heads.

I only took a little, gentle reminder to get my eyes off of myself and look up and around. To look at what is good. And yet, the change is so dramatic that I shall have to find a way to remember more often.

all content © Carrien Blue

5 thoughts on “Once Again I learn to stop trying to control the things that I have no control over

  1. Carrien, Once again I am reminded of my own shortcomings in this area. I am slack at following through on consequences and waste so much emotional energy on trying to get my kids to do things, or behave in a certain way. It’s exasperating when it could/should be so simple. In my head I know that I don’t want to force their wills….I want them to choose what is right of their own accord because it is right. I know this and yet constantly find it hard to implement. Your post has reminded me to take a step back, regain my own self control and lead by example. I know the key for me will be setting clear consequences and as you said ‘letting the chips fall’

    Thanks for this.

  2. Awww the joys of bedtime we all go through!

    Not that this has any relevance to you, but thought you might find this interesting….. I stumbled upon this website of a new book that is out and am interested in reading for my son’s sake. Thought you might find it interesting as well.

    http://www.nationofwimps.com

    Miss ya!

    Megan

  3. Wow, Carrien, what a great reminder! We have bedtime woes at our house too. I’m trying your approach tonight. [:-)
    Rachel in Idaho

  4. Thank you so much for writing this. Bed time has been an immense struggle (like 3 or more hours from when we start until he’s actually sleeping) since we moved. I am completely and totally exhausted from it every night and by the time the chore is done, I’m just ready to fall into bed and go to sleep. I feel like we have tried absolutely positively everything….
    Anyway, thank you for the ideas, and more importantly the reminders.
    I need to change my attitude about this all.

  5. carrien,
    thank you so much for your candid heart and your words of LIFE to us all. i have rachel and anna magee staying with us for two weeks to help me with the kids as we are almost due for baby boy to come in 20 days!! this will be our 4th (do you remember when i had ransom, our first son, and third baby?) well i just want to say that i admire your motherhood, your faith, your willingness to live simply, frugally and with a mind focused on the greater Story. your bedtime routine is glorious. i want to implement but i have a question: when do you bath them? we bath the kids right before bedtime, with teeth brushing and meds in the bath. it seems its the getting into p.j.’s and actually physcially in bed that is the rub. any suggestions? email me at estherplaster@gmail.com. thank you dear!

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