
#1 General Instructions Like “Clean Your Room,” “Set The Table,” Or “Make Your Bed”

But a child may hear “Clean your room” and genuinely not know where to begin. Should they pick up the clothes? Put away the toys? Make the bed? Throw away the trash? Where does everything belong? What sounds like one simple request may contain dozens of decisions and individual tasks.
Before expecting children to complete a larger job independently, teach it step by step. Instead of repeatedly saying, “Clean your room,” try: “First, put all the dirty clothes in the hamper. Then come back, and we’ll find the next step.”
As children practice each part, the smaller steps eventually become one familiar routine. Only then does “Clean your room” carry the same meaning for them that it carries for us.
Celia explained that one of the biggest parenting mistakes is not expecting too little from children, but expecting understanding before we have actually taught understanding.
“It is important to remember that by 25 years, human brains are fully developed and we must not expect our child to respond to a request or understand one as an adult would.
Children do not learn simply because we explained something once. They learn through repetition and because we teach, model, practice, encourage, and repeat skills over time.
As adults, we have decades of experience that make everyday tasks, social expectations, emotional language, and problem-solving feel obvious. Children are still building that cognitive ability and experience.”
#2 “Calm Down”

Over time, children can learn to use these tools independently. But they learn regulation first through calm, supportive adults.
#3 “Be Good”

Celia encouraged parents to slow down, be more specific, explain the “why,” break larger expectations into smaller steps, and focus on teaching rather than assuming. When children feel supported instead of judged, they become more confident, capable, cooperative, and more willing to communicate.
As the expert emphasized: “The goal is not simply to raise children who follow directions. It is to raise children who genuinely understand and feel safe enough to tell us when they do not.”
#4 “Stop Being A Baby”

#5 “Use Your Words”

Celia Kibler is a Family & Relationship Empowerment Coach, parenting expert, international speaker, and award-winning author with more than 40 years of experience working with children and families. She is the founder of BeABetterParent.com and the Be A Better Parent App and the creator of The Parenting Puzzle System™, a personalized approach that recognizes every family is different. By looking at each family’s needs, personality, development, strengths, and challenges, along with the family’s relationships and dynamics, parents discover the tools, strategies, and support that fit their family and create their own formula for a calmer, more connected home.
A mother of five in a successfully blended family for more than 30 years and a grandmother of nine, Celia combines decades of professional experience with real-life parenting wisdom. Her mission is to help 50 million parents stop yelling at their children and create childhoods their children can blossom from, not recover from.
#6 “Good Job”

#7 “Be Careful”

Watch where they are stepping? Move something away from the edge? Use two hands? General warnings may create worry without giving children useful information.
Specific coaching is clearer, “Hold the railing while you walk down the steps.”
“Carry the glass with two hands.”
“The rocks are slippery, so take slow steps.”
Children are more successful when they know what safe behavior looks like and often become fearful about trying new things when always worried that something might happen from hearing “be careful” too often.
Celia offers a free Parenting Success Snapshot to help parents better understand their parenting strengths, challenges, and areas where they may benefit from additional support. Readers can take the snapshot at Snapshot.beabetterparent.com.
Beyond her work as a parenting expert, Kibler brings personal experience to the challenges of blended-family life. Having successfully parented her own blended family for more than 30 years, she understands firsthand the complexities that can come with combining families, navigating co-parenting, and helping children adjust through major life changes.
Because of this, Celia is offering a free 60-minute training, The Blended Family Reset, on Thursday, July 16, at 8:00 p.m. ET, live on Zoom with a Q&A session. The class is designed for parents who are divorced, separated, co-parenting, or blending a family and want practical guidance on reducing conflict, strengthening relationships, and creating a home where everyone feels connected.
#8 “Use Common Sense”

#9 “You Should Know Better”

Instead of assuming defiance, ask, “What happened?”
#10 Mixed Messages From Adults

Children notice the mismatch but may not understand it. Some begin wondering whether they caused the problem or whether they can trust what they are being told.
Clear, age-appropriate honesty is often less stressful, “I’m feeling frustrated right now, but it isn’t your responsibility to fix it. I need a few minutes to calm down.” When our words and behavior match, children feel more secure.
#11 Time: “Soon,” “Later,” “Tomorrow,” Or “Next Week”

#12 That Mistakes And Questions Are Safe

Try asking, “Would you like me to explain that another way?”
#13 Consequences That Don’t Connect To The Behavior

#14 Sarcasm And Teasing

A parent might look at a messy room and say, “Wow, this room looks amazing.” An adult recognizes the sarcasm. A young child may feel confused or embarrassed. Even playful teasing can be misunderstood when children do not yet recognize tone, exaggeration, or hidden meaning.
Humor is valuable in families, but children should not have to wonder whether they are being laughed with or laughed at.
#15 “That’s Not Fair”

While that may be true, fairness may not be what the child is really trying to communicate.
“I’m sad that I wasn’t chosen.”
#16 Lying Versus Storytelling

Intentional lying involves deliberately trying to deceive someone. Storytelling and imaginative thinking are part of normal development.
We can respond with curiosity, “That sounds like an exciting story. Now tell me what really happened.”
#17 “Share”

Most adults would want to know why, with whom, and when they would get it back. Children benefit from learning the specific skills involved, “You may finish your turn, and then your brother may have a turn.”
“Ask before taking something that belongs to someone else.”
“She said no, so you need to choose another toy.”
It's important to remember that we are not born with compassion. Sharing is an act of compassion and therefore needs to be taught. Taking turns, asking permission, waiting, and respecting belongings are clearer skills than simply telling children to share.
#18 Adult Conversations They Overhear

#19 “You Can Tell Me Anything”



