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Modern parenting is built on a massive operational flaw: we treat child conflict like a broken toy that needs to be fixed immediately. When a child comes home upset about drama at recess or in a group chat, our default reaction is to smooth it over, force an apology, and tell them to "just be friends".
But according to Jessica Speer, award-winning author of BFF or NRF and The Phone Book, this "fix-it" mentality is destroying our kids' ability to set boundaries.
In Episode 9 of The Parent Tap, we extracted Speer’s clinical architecture for navigating the messiest parts of growing up.
The "Name to Tame" Protocol
When your child is highly activated from a social conflict, your logic will not register. Before you try to solve the issue, you must deploy the "Name to Tame" protocol.
- Sit in the Discomfort: Do not immediately offer a solution. Sit with them in their pain. Acknowledge that the situation sounds incredibly difficult.
- Identify the Emotion: Help them recognize and name the specific feeling (e.g., betrayal, embarrassment, anger). Naming the emotion is the first biological step to processing it.
The Threat Matrix: Meanness vs. Bullying
Parents frequently confuse standard developmental meanness with actual bullying. Speer provides a rigid distinction:
- Mean Behavior: Kids are developing social skills at different rates. The ability to take someone else's perspective doesn't fully develop until the middle or end of elementary school. Meanness happens, and kids need to build resilience against it.
- Bullying Behavior: Bullying is entirely different. It is highly targeted toward one person, repeated over time, and aggressively intentional. When this line is crossed, immediate intervention with the school is required.
The Digital Blindspot: Why Screen Time Limits Fail
Parents love to brag about their strict screen time limits, but turning off the Wi-Fi at 8:00 PM does not protect a child from the content they consume at 4:00 PM. Speer warns that innocent searches (like questions about puberty) can instantly lead to dangerous and inappropriate content. Parents must shift from simply limiting time to actively installing app controls, network filters, and establishing a rigid "Family Tech Agreement".
The Bottom Line:
You cannot snowplow every bad friend and mean comment out of your child's way. You have to give them the tools to process the friction.
Listen to the full clinical breakdown with Jessica Speer on Episode 9 of The Parent Tap on Apple, Spotify, and YouTube.
Connect with Jessica Speer
Website: https://jessicaspeer.com/
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