
Q: Dear Meghan: My daughter is 9 and is generally a great kid. However, for years I've noticed she has a very low tolerance for frustration or failure. When trying something new, if she can't immediately master it, she completely freezes. This generally means whining and begging for someone to do the task for her, often getting angry if they refuse. "It's impossible," and "Why won't anyone help me?!" are common refrains.
I don't think these things are beyond her ability, they just require her to push herself a bit. And she will do this for activities she has repeatedly completed in the past. Unless she is 100 percent confident in her ability to do something right the first time, her instinct seems to be to balk.
My general rule is I will help her but not unless she has at least tried on her own. This often leads us to frustrating impasses. I've tried talking to her when things are calm. We've discussed that her coaches and I give her challenges we think she is ready for - not impossible ones! - and how if she doesn't think she can do it, she's setting herself up for failure. I often say, "We can do hard things." I've also honestly told her my patience for doing these activities, which are hobbies she enjoys and wants me to do with her, is limited if she behaves like this. She always insists she wants to continue said activities though generally tunes out of my "hard things" pep talks.
Do I just keep on? Is there anything else I can try? I hate to withdraw from these activities because I hope the exposure to frustration will eventually build some tolerance.
- Quitting
A: Quitting: Just reading this letter leaves me frustrated; that's a lot of back and forth. And I get it: With a typical kid, all of the tricks you've been using may work. You let her try on her own, and then help. You've tried talking to her when she's calm. You've told her you and her coaches only give her challenges you think she can handle. You give her pep talks. You've told her about your own frustration. This perfectionism has been happening for years, so my curiosity is around whether she started whining and then the power struggles began, whether there's another issue that needs more support (anxiety, neurodiversity, other challenges) or whether it's a combination (which is most likely the case).
Let's begin with the basics and stop doing what isn't working. I would guess there is too much talking happening here. When we talk endlessly at and to our children, they tune out (which you're already experiencing). No one - adults or children - takes in a lecture or pep talk if they don't feel understood first, and it could be that your daughter doesn't have a lot of room to be frustrated. Are there techniques and ways to help her? Sure, but none of them will work until you stop lecturing her and start listening to her.
Try listening more and you may find solutions in her complaints. If you begin mirroring her emotions - "So, this task feels impossible to do" or "You feel like no one will help you" - she may begin to relax enough for you to say: "So, tell me what would change if someone helped you?" or "What about this task feels impossible?" Maybe she won't have an answer or maybe, just maybe, your daughter will give you a response that makes sense! While I get the "waiting to help her until she tries once" rule, you actually don't need to adhere to that. It's not building the resilience you want to see.
If your daughter is suffering from anxiety or another challenge, you may need more support, starting with her pediatrician. As tiring as this may be, please write a detailed list of when the whining and wanting to quit began, as well as everyone it happens with. You will want to look at patterns; it will be helpful if you need to reach out to specialists. To be clear, you will need to parent differently, regardless of whether a diagnosis calls for it, but you will parent more effectively with more information.
In the meantime, let's shift our perspective on helping her build some more tolerance for failure. Most humans (children especially) learn best in apprenticeship-like relationships. Of course, some children seem to forge ahead on their own, unafraid of trying things and, even if they fail, they keep going, but most children like to work next to their parents or teacher. I would try bypassing all the power struggles with the talking and back and forth, and begin by teaching her. Model the activity or challenge, have her try, rinse and repeat.
Rather than focusing on the mastery of the task, we focus on building resilience for years to come. When kids fail with a compassionate parent nearby (who doesn't shame or bypass their emotions with false cheer), it's more likely they will feel sad, move through it and try again.
(COMMENT, BELOW)
Leahy is the mother of three daughters. She holds a bachelor's degree in English and secondary education, a master's degree in school counseling and is a certified parent coach.
Previously:
• How to help a sensitive child in a not-so-sensitive world
• A painful past clouds how this parent sees their young child's behavior?
• My Teachers say my 4-year-old doesn't show any empathy at school
• My 7-year-old doesn't have a special talent. Am I failing her?
• Wife worries husband isn't playful and joyful with their kids
• A Toddler rebels against parents' breathing exercises during tantrums
• Should co-parents let teen decide the custody schedule?
• A 4-year-old's vocabulary is getting bigger --- and meaner
• I haven't seen my kids in 17 years. Should I give up on reconnecting?
• My 3-year-old son just gets angrier when I try to calm his tantrums
• My 3-year-old son just gets angrier when I try to calm his tantrums
• How can I help an intelligent 5th-grader who shows signs of depression?
• Should I tell my friend I think her teen daughter is manipulating her?
• What to do when a child has irrational fears
• My kids haven't gone 'mental' during covid, they're actually happier. Should I be worried?
• My kids haven't gone 'mental' during covid, they're actually happier. Should I be worried?
• Free yourself from overparenting!
• Is our teenager's behavior normal, or am I missing something?
• Our 12-year-old doesn't open up. How do we get him to talk to us?
• Can a 6-year-old have self-discipline?
• Our son is being pushed around. Do we teach him to push back?
• When only children have trouble with entertaining themselves
• How much empathy can I expect from a 5-year-old?
• Why it's OK that your seventh-grader lacks close friendships
• 'I love my child but I don't love parenting.' Will this change?
• Parents needn't explain all of their decisions to young children
• When patience isn't practical
• My 6-year-old isn't grieving his grandpa. Should I be worried?
• Why is a 4-year-old defiant at every turn?
• How NOT to teach kids to overcome disappointment
• The age of infinite information has made parents feel infinitely insecure
• Connecting with the uncooperative child
• DNA to blame for daughter's sassy demeanor?
• We try to teach her gratitude. All we get is attitude
• Comforting - but not coddling - a sensitive child