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Why Acceptance Isn’t Letting Behavior Slide

January 14, 2026

Mother comforts upset child on the sofa

One of the most powerful gifts we can give our children isn’t correction, advice, or even praise. It’s acceptance.

When I shared that idea recently, it resonated deeply with a lot of parents. And it also surfaced a common worry I hear all the time:

“But if I accept my child, doesn’t that mean I’m letting bad behavior slide?”

Short answer: no.
Longer answer: let’s talk about what acceptance really means in Parent Effectiveness Training (P.E.T.).

What Acceptance Is (and What It Isn’t)

In P.E.T., acceptance is not permissiveness.
It’s not ignoring behavior, lowering standards, or saying “anything goes.”

Acceptance is about separating who your child is from what your child does.

When children feel accepted as they are, they feel emotionally safe. And when they feel safe, they are far more open to learning, cooperation, and growth.

Acceptance sends a powerful message:

“You are loved—even when your behavior needs work.”

That message sinks deep. It becomes a quiet inner voice:
I matter. I’m okay. I belong.

And that inner feeling?
It really does change everything.

“Okay… But What About the Behavior?”

This is where many parents get stuck.

Because yes, there are behaviors we don’t like. Doors get slammed. Voices get raised. Shoes get left in the middle of the hallway again.

Acceptance doesn’t mean pretending those things don’t matter.

It means responding with the right tool at the right time.

When Your Child Owns the Problem

acceptance

 

Let’s say your child yells, “You NEVER understand!” and storms off, slamming the door.

In that moment, your child owns the problem. They’re overwhelmed, upset, and signaling emotional distress.

This is where Active Listening comes in.

Instead of lecturing or defending yourself, you might say,“It sounds like you’re feeling really frustrated and unheard.”

You’re not agreeing, you’re not fixing. You’re letting them know they’ve been understood.

That’s acceptance in action.

When You Own the Problem

Now let’s say that slammed door rattled the house, startled you, or left you worrying about damage.

That’s when you own the problem.

Later, when emotions have settled, you can use a clear I-Message,“When doors get slammed, I feel tense and worried. I need us to handle anger without damaging the house.”

Same situation.
Different moment.
Different skill.

This is what healthy parenting looks like. Acceptance and limits, working together.

Why Skills Matter

Most parents already care deeply. What they often lack isn’t love or effort, but practical tools they can use in real-life moments.

Parent Effectiveness Training is about putting theory into practice. We learn:

  • How to recognize who owns the problem

  • What to say when emotions run high

  • How to set limits without damaging the relationship

  • How to grow the “no problem” area in your family life

And we practice. Together. With real examples. So you’re not guessing in the heat of the moment.

You Don’t Have to Choose

You don’t have to choose between being loving and being effective.
You don’t have to choose between acceptance and accountability.

You can be both.

And when you are, parenting feels less like constant damage control and more like a relationship you can actually enjoy.

If this idea of acceptance speaks to you and you’re ready to dig deeper, my next Parent Effectiveness Training course begins soon:

☀️ Tuesday Mornings
🗓️ February 17 – April 7
⌚ 10:30 am – 1:30 pm (Pacific)

You don’t have to do this perfectly.
You just have to be willing to learn something new.

And that, too, is acceptance. 💛

Here are some other articles you may like:

Why Connection Isn’t a Reward for Rude Behavior

What Setting Limits Looks Like

I’ve recently added something new! Leader Effectiveness Training translates beautifully between home and work, and many employers will invest in it (it’s recognized by SHRM to offer Professional Development Credits (PDCs) for SHRM-CP® or SHRM-SCP® recertification activities).

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Daily Parenting Inspiration

“My child is not giving me a hard time… my child i “My child is not giving me a hard time…
my child is having a hard time.”

That one shift changes everything.

Less: “Why are they doing this?”
More: “What’s going on for them?”

Hard behavior is often just… hard feelings.

When we see the struggle,
we respond differently.

Less reacting.
More supporting. 💛 #respectfulparent #sandiegomoms #parenteffectivenesstraining #attachmentparenting #rie #PositiveParenting #parentingtips #DefianceOrMisunderstanding
“I didn’t say it was your fault… I said I blame yo “I didn’t say it was your fault…
I said I blame you.” 😅

When kids blame, it feels personal.

But it’s usually not about being right…
it’s about letting out big feelings.

Blame =
“I’m frustrated.”
“I’m overwhelmed.”

Before correcting, try connecting:

“You’re really upset.”
“That was hard.”

Less defending.
More understanding. 💛
“Children do well when they can.” So when they’re “Children do well when they can.”

So when they’re not…
It’s not about won’t.
It’s about can’t (yet).

Less: “Why are they acting like this?”
More: “What’s getting in their way?”

Skills take time.
Emotions get big.
Brains get overwhelmed.

And in those moments,
they don’t need perfection…

They need curiosity - not furiosity. 😋💛

Yup, I made up a word.

#respectfulparent #childrendowellwhentheycan #drrossgreen #parenteffectivenesstraining
End of school = chaos… Then suddenly… no structure End of school = chaos…
Then suddenly… no structure 😅

Or camp… to camp… to camp.

Summer is fun ☀️
But it can also mean:
more pushback
more “I’m bored”
more sibling stuff
more BIG feelings

And when routines change, behavior usually does too.

The good news?
You don’t need more control… you need better tools.

✨ listen without shutting them down
✨ set limits without the battles
✨ handle big emotions (theirs + yours)

Less surviving
More thriving

My summer Parent Effectiveness Training class is coming up 💛
Drop a ☀️ and I’ll send details!

 #respectfulparent #sandiegomoms #parentingtips #parentingmiddleschoolers #PositiveParenting #attachmentparenting #rie #parenteffectivenesstraining #RespectfulParenting
Oof. This is a hard one sometimes! Share your exam Oof. This is a hard one sometimes! Share your examples of a time this happened 🙏🏼🙈
I'm just reading the book "Untangled -Guiding Teen I'm just reading the book "Untangled -Guiding Teenage Girls Through The Seven Transitions into Adulthood" by @lisa.damour ,  and I love it. This one struck a chord with me so I thought I'd share. It's from the section "The Pull of Popular."

What does “popular” actually mean?

Because when you look a little closer, the kids who seem the most “popular” aren’t always the most liked. Sometimes, their influence comes from social power, not genuine connection. And that can come with a lot of pressure—on everyone.

This can be a powerful conversation to have with your child.

Not in a lecture-y way, but with curiosity:
“Do kids actually like being around her, or are they worried about being on her bad side?”
“What makes a friendship feel good to you?”

Helping kids think beyond popularity and toward the quality of their friendships gives them something much steadier to stand on.

Because in the long run, feeling safe, accepted, and able to be yourself matters a whole lot more than being “popular" and then you may just hit that sweet spot of being "popular" because you are well liked!

 #parentingtips #sandiegomoms #respectfulparent #raisingteenagegirls #parentingmiddleschoolgirls
We have dreams for our kids. The friends we hope We have dreams for our kids.

The friends we hope they choose.
The sports we hope they love.
The grades we hope they earn.
The path we quietly map out in our minds…

And then they grow.
And they choose.

Sometimes differently than we imagined.

And that’s where it gets uncomfortable.

Because the real question becomes:
Are we raising children who follow our path…
or children who can find their own?

Letting go doesn’t mean stepping back completely.
It means shifting roles.

From director ➡️ to guide
From fixing ➡️ to listening
From telling ➡️ to being available

It means offering wisdom when it’s invited,
and trusting them enough to figure some things out on their own.

That’s not easy.

But that’s where confidence is built.
That’s where ownership grows.
That’s where they become themselves.

Not a version of us.

If this hits home, this is exactly the kind of skill we work on in Parent Effectiveness Training—how to support your kids without shutting them down.
My next class starts in less than two weeks:
☀️ Tuesday Mornings
🗓️ April 7th – May 26th
⏰ 9:30 am – 12:30 pm (Pacific Time)
📚 Eight classes
And of course, I'm still working on this!

Reg info in first comments/bio 👇👇
My daughter was venting to me about a recent pract My daughter was venting to me about a recent practice…
and of course, I did what many of us do.

I offered a solution, "I mean, you don't really need to go next time; it's optional." 

Her response?

“Mom… I just need to complain, not fix it. I'm still going.”

…Heard. 😅

It was such a good reminder.

When kids come to us upset, our instinct is to help. To fix. To make it better. But sometimes all of our great ideas land like this:

🚪 door closes
😶 conversation over

Because what they actually needed wasn’t a solution.
It was space.

Space to vent.
Space to feel heard.
Space to figure it out themselves.

And when we jump in too quickly with advice, it can unintentionally send the message:
“You can’t handle this.”
or
“Your feelings need fixing.”

Even when that’s the last thing we mean.

Sometimes the most helpful thing we can say is:
“That sounds really frustrating.”
“Ugh, that’s tough.”
“I’m here.”

That’s it.

No fixing. No coaching. No life lesson.

Just connection. 💛

(Still practicing this over here, by the way 🙋‍♀️)

If this hits home, this is exactly the kind of skill we work on in Parent Effectiveness Training—how to support your kids without shutting them down.

My next class starts in less than two weeks:

☀️ Tuesday Mornings
🗓️ April 7th – May 26th
⏰ 9:30 am – 12:30 pm (Pacific Time)
📚 Eight classes
And of course, I did what many of us do.
Reg info in first comment 👇👇

Come learn how to listen in a way that actually keeps your kids talking.

 #PositiveParenting #parentingclasses #ParentEffectivenessTraining #respectfulparent #rie #attachmentparenting #sandiegomoms #parentingtips
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