Photo by: Patrick Breitenbach

The Persistent Child--Turning a Challenge Into a Strength

by Ellen Galinsky
Photo by: Patrick Breitenbach

It is my grown son’s birthday today—the day of his birth and the day of my giving birth for the first time.

As always on his birthday, I think about his growing up years. On the bookcase behind my desk (which happens to be in his old room), I can see photographs of him in his early years. There he is, as a very chunky infant in a blue jumpsuit (having rebounded from a premature birth), in the arms of his 90-year-old great-grandmother. He seems transfixed by the double string of glittering pearls around her neck and her shiny eyeglasses. And there he is as a toddler, looking at the camera quizzically, perhaps because he was uncharacteristically dressed up in an outfit his grandmother, my mother, gave him. And there he is as a young preschooler child in a striped shirt, perched on top of a ladder.

There is a stillness and peace to these photographs that belies my memories of these early years. If I turn the still photographs into moving pictures in my mind, I see him as an infant in that same blue jumpsuit but now he is beet red, back arched and stiff, screaming nonstop with colic. Or I see him as a toddler in the dressed-up outfit from his grandmother, but now he is throwing himself on the floor in a tantrum, because he wants something “NOW!” Or I see him in the striped shirt as a preschooler, but now I am walking out of a restaurant with him because he was so exuberant that he couldn’t sit still and manage the wait for dinner.

Birthdays are a time of gifts and I already have a gift that I will give him at a family party tonight, but I think my real gift to him has been in the way I saw and responded to his insistent and demanding persistence. First, it was in the way my husband and I understood his behavior. We understood that he didn’t feel well when he had colic. We understood that he was born with the kind of temperament where he reacted intensely to new experiences. And finally, we understood that toddlers are often negative—it is a normal part of their development. But most importantly, we saw that his persistence is a great characteristic—he just needed to learn to manage that energy.

As I write this, I don’t want to imply that living with a child who is persistent is easy. Or that I always felt positively when he had a tantrum in a store—I didn’t. But when I got those feelings, I tried to step back, sometimes thinking of myself as a character in a sit-com that others were viewing so I needed to handle things well. Or I called a friend (now called a lifeline) who had a child who was similarly persistent and we could laugh together at some of the outrageous things our kids had done.

I was careful to make sure that I told others—my son’s teachers, other parents, even his grandparents—what a great characteristic persistence is. Most importantly, I told him that I admired his persistence, but that my job was to help him turn it into a characteristic that worked for him, not against him.

The best strategy I used was to help him find ways to manage his own behavior when he wanted something so much that he got out of control. I hit upon this idea when he was a preschooler.

One day, I took him out to lunch. While we were having a good time, I brought up this issue, telling him that I needed to find a way to get him to stop when he started to lose control; that he had to stop when I said stop; there was no choice. So I set the goal, which had to be the role of the parent in this situation. And he knew why—he wanted to control his temper as much as I wanted him to.

I said, “What ideas do you have that will make you stop, when I say stop?” I took out a piece of paper to write down all of his ideas and mine. We discussed and evaluated each of the ideas. He finally came up with a plan—a “very secret phrase”—that only he and I would know. He wanted me to say this secret phrase when I needed him to stop.

I asked him, “How do I know this will work?” We had had some false hopes before. “There has to be some consequence if it doesn’t work,” I said. “And the consequence has to be something you really care about.” So we brainstormed consequences until we arrived at one that he cared about.

Did it work? Not always, but it worked much more often than not. The more he got his own behavior under control, the longer the sunny stretches in our days and the more he could use his fantastic energy and his persistence in positive ways. He has done this throughout his life in ways that I find deeply inspiring.

So Happy Birthday today—to my wonderfully persistent son!

I would love to hear from others who have turned your child’s challenging behavior into a strength and how you did it.

Ellen Galinsky, President and Co-Founder of Families and Work Institute, helped establish the field of work and family life at Bank Street College of Education, where she was on the faculty for twenty-five years. Her more than forty books and reports include Ask The Children, the now-classic The Six Stages of Parenthood, and Mind in the Making, published by HarperStudio in April 2010. She has published more than 100 articles in academic journals, books and magazines.

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56 Comments

I cannot tell you how much I needed this article and the comments from other mothers of persistent children. It feels so good to know that I am not alone. I have laughed and almost cried as I relate to what has been shared. This much I can add: I know that there are spoiled, undisciplined children that are out of control due to lack of control, but a truly "persistent" child is genetically made that way, it is not because we are bad parents, as some have judged us to be...

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I have two "persistent" boys. My oldest came into this world knowing himself like many of us only wish we did (especially after years of being "taught" what it right for us by educators and parents more interested in conformity than brilliance). He was not a tantrum thrower, as my DS2 was, but boy could he hold out for what he wanted...

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This article was so amazing, I am currently a mother of a very persistent 2yr old ( will be three in December). He throws some very strong tantrums and has very strong emotions ( apple did not fall far from tree on this one)...

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Thank you so much for this post and the timing. We have a very persistent 4 year old little guy, whom I like to refer to as "spirited." He is more of everything from energy, persistence, strong-willed, emotional. He too, was an infant who arched his back (had reflux) and we struggled with breast feeding. We still have a difficult time a lot but we recognize that we need to help him learn to manage his temperament in a positive way...

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Sharings of all moms are like sisterhood - we are united through love and care for our little (and big) ones:) I have 5 children, ranging from 14 to 4 years old, each one with different personality, gifts, talents. My first one beautiful daughter (and I see patern in many families with the first born - they are most likely strong willed) was, is and I believe always will be strong will child...

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Thank you for this perspective! I have two very persistent boys, ages 2&3. This gives me some hope and reminds me to enjoy the insanity!

Thanks for your insight, Ellen. I have a persistent 7-year-old daughter. I consider myself a pretty laid-back parent, but I can't be with her. She keeps me on my toes. It seems that everything I want for her, she doesn't want for herself. Thank goodness for reverse psychology. I'm still trying to figure out how to be the best mother for her and your article reminded me of some ideas. I definitely need to learn how to be more positive with her.

This is very interesting and inspiring. My son Quynix (key-nix = sounds like phoenix) will be two by Dec. 8 and he has manifested his own persistence as well. During these times... I see it more as a challenge since it is part of my parenting skills to let him express himself. He is still working on his language skills... and most of the time he would throw tantrums when he wanted something...especially when he knows I am around...

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thanks you for this. i have been trying to find resources that give me actual ideas of different things to try rather than just discussion of what is a persistent child and how to have patience. I will be trying this strategy with my 3.5 year old tomorrow. He is of course extremely creative, I'm hoping he can come up with his own consequences because i'm tapped out. I've found that I need to change up my approach with him every 1-2 months when dealing with challenging behavior...

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I am so happy to have found this article. We have a persistent son who is 16. We were told when he was just a couple weeks old that he is a "difficult" child what they call now as "high spirited." Well, we tell friends that we sometimes have problems with his "high-spiritedness." They don't see it! Besides persistence he is loving, a great friend, he hugs and tells me, his mom, that he loves me almost every day. He always says thank you, mom...every day...

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This is an old thread, but I still wanted to comment! :) my son is 4 months old, almost 5 months, and is very persistent! He has been since he was born. I would get upset because a family friend had a baby a month before we did, and her baby just lays down to sleep, doesn't fuss much, just kind of lays there. Her mom ate junk food while pregnant, complained like she was doing her whole pregnancy, and so on. My point is, I embraced and loved being pregnant, ate well, and had a natural labor......

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