Parent trying to communicate with a child who is not listening, showing challenges with cooperation and attention

What to Say When Your Child Won’t Listen (And How to Get Cooperation)

“Put your shoes on.”

Nothing happens.

You repeat it.

Still nothing.

And suddenly, you're louder than you wanted to be.

If this feels familiar, you're not alone.

What to Say When Your Child Says “No” to Everything

Why children don’t listen

It’s easy to think:

“They’re ignoring me.”

But often, something else is happening.

Your child might be:

  • deeply focused on play
  • overwhelmed
  • not connected to you in that moment

And here’s something important:

Children cooperate more when they feel connected.

What to say instead

Before giving instructions, connect first.

Try:

  • “Hey, look at me for a second.”
  • (pause, eye contact)
  • “It’s time to put your shoes on.”

This small shift is powerful.

In your guide, this is called connection before correction

And it changes everything.

What to Say When Your Child Refuses to Leave (Park, Playground, Screen Time)

Make it easier to say yes

You can also reduce resistance by offering small choices:

  • “Do you want the blue shoes or the red ones?”
  • “Shoes first or jacket first?”

This supports the child’s need for control, without giving up your boundary.

What makes it worse

  • repeating the same command louder
  • shouting from another room
  • giving too many instructions at once

These often increase resistance.

A simple shift

Instead of:

control → resistance

Try:

connection → cooperation

It won’t work perfectly every time.

But over time, it changes your whole dynamic.

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