
What if the behavior is only the surface and underneath it, something deeper is happening that many parents were never taught to look for?
There is a moment many parents know all too well. You call your child once… twice… maybe even three times. By the fourth time, your frustration is rising. Your child finally responds with attitude, tears, silence, or defiance.
And in that moment, it can feel like the behavior is the problem.
Behavior is often communication before it is simply disobedience.
For many of us, parenting was modeled through control, fear, punishment, and survival. Parents did what they knew. They managed homes, responsibilities, and stress the best way they could and many of them loved their children deeply; but love and understanding are not always the same thing. Today, many parents are realizing something important:
Stopping a behavior does not always teach a child what to do instead.
And that realization changes everything.
The Four Pillars: A · B · C · D
A — Attention
Children behave where they feel unseen.
One of the hardest truths for many parents to accept is that children do not only seek attention when they are “bad.”
Sometimes behavior increases because connection decreases. Children who feel unheard, overlooked, or constantly corrected may begin expressing those feelings through behavior instead of words. Not because they are manipulative, but because children communicate distress behaviorally long before they can communicate it emotionally.
A child who feels consistently seen and emotionally safe responds differently than a child who only receives focused attention during conflict.
B — Boundaries
Structure is not the enemy.
Many parents struggle with finding balance. Some homes become extremely strict, while others become inconsistent because parents are exhausted, overwhelmed, or afraid of being “too hard.” But healthy boundaries are not punishment. They help children understand safety, expectations, accountability, and consistency.
Children actually thrive when they know where the lines are. The shift is moving from “do what I say” to “this is how we function safely, respectfully, and responsibly.”
That shift changes the emotional climate of an entire home.
C — Communication
Children learn from how we speak to them.
Communication is not only about giving instructions. It is about tone, timing, emotional safety, listening, and how children interpret our responses.
Many children are corrected regularly but rarely feel heard. When children do not feel heard, communication breaks down into yelling, defensiveness, withdrawal, dishonesty, or emotional shutdown.
Parents sometimes believe children are “talking back” when, in reality, the child may be attempting to explain, defend themselves, or express frustration in an unhealthy way.
This does not mean disrespect should be tolerated, oh no, it means communication should teach children how to express themselves, not simply silence them.
D — Discipline
What are we actually teaching?
For many people, discipline immediately means punishment. But true discipline is meant to teach, guide, and develop self-control.
Ask the deeper question: “What is my child learning from my response?” A child may stop a behavior quickly because of fear, but fear and understanding are not the same thing.
Children need correction, structure, consistency, emotional safety, guidance, and opportunities to learn differently.
Parents are not being asked to abandon correction. They are being invited to think more deeply about what correction is teaching.
Parenting is more than managing behavior.
Sometimes children are overwhelmed. Sometimes they are dysregulated. Sometimes they are emotionally disconnected. Sometimes they simply have not yet learned the skill we are expecting from them.
And sometimes… parents themselves are exhausted and responding from stress instead of support. That does not make someone a bad parent. It makes them human.
The goal is not simply to raise children who obey when watched. The goal is to raise children who eventually understand themselves, regulate their emotions, communicate effectively, and function responsibly even when no one is watching.
That kind of growth takes more than punishment alone. It takes connection, consistency, reflection, and guidance.
Continue the Conversation
One shift in understanding can begin changing an entire home. Go deeper into Attention, Boundaries, Communication, and Discipline through the ABC’s of Parenting series.
🎥 Watch the YouTube series: youtube.com/@Inspired_by_Tena
📘 Download the free ABC’s of Parenting eBook
💛 Share this with another parent who may need encouragement and support.
— Inspired by Tena —