How to Manage Fights and Power Struggles

Introduction

 Sibling rivalry is normal; daily power struggles are not. The goal isn’t to remove conflict—it’s to teach children how to fight safely and repair well.

Why Conflicts Emerge

Attention/justice needs; temperament and age gaps; household comparisons/labels; lack of negotiation, turn-taking, and regulation skills.

Core Principles

  • Parental neutrality: “I referee respect, not blame.”
  • Safety first: stop hits, create space, co-regulate.
  • Name each child’s feelings and needs.
  • Four steps: stop → calm → talk → plan.
  • Procedural fairness (timer, lots over time).
  • Daily 1:1 time (15–20 minutes) with each child.

Quick Tools

  • 3-Minute Mediation: speaker/listener/summary/shared plan.
  • Respect Ladder: stop → kind words → clear request → two-person solution.
  • Solution Cards: turn-taking, timer, team-up, swap activity.
  • Room Rules Board: simple, visual, signed by both.

Avoid

Comparisons, labels, snap judgments, rewarding tattling.

Mini Scenario

Parent ensures safety → one speaks, one mirrors → pick a solution card → set timer → write the agreement.

Takeaway

With neutrality, skills, and respect, rivalry becomes teamwork—and kids learn conflict skills for life.

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