358: The Surprising Fix for Oppositional Behavior (3 Steps Parents Can Use Today) cover art

358: The Surprising Fix for Oppositional Behavior (3 Steps Parents Can Use Today)

358: The Surprising Fix for Oppositional Behavior (3 Steps Parents Can Use Today)

Listen for free

View show details

About this listen

When every request turns into a power struggle, it can leave you exhausted, frustrated, and questioning everything you’re doing as a parent. But here’s the truth: your child isn’t trying to make your life harder—their brain is stuck in survival mode.

Let me break down what’s really happening when kids seem defiant and how parents can shift from chaos to calm using three powerful regulation steps. You’ll learn how to decode oppositional behavior, why it’s not about disrespect, and what you can do today to help your child feel safe and cooperative again.

Why Does My Child Say “No” to Everything?

When your child refuses to listen or melts down over simple requests, it’s not bad behavior—it’s a dysregulated nervous system.

Here’s what’s really happening:

  • Their brain has gone into survival mode, shutting down logic and reasoning.
  • That “no” is often a stress response, not manipulation.
  • Many kids labeled with Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD) or other mental health conditions like ADHD, anxiety disorders, or mood disorders are really struggling with nervous system overload.

Think of it like a smoke detector that’s too sensitive—it goes off even when nothing’s really burning. When your child’s stress cup is overflowing, every small demand feels like too much.

Behavior is communication. Your child’s defiance is their brain’s way of saying, “I can’t handle this right now.”

Is My Child’s Oppositional Behavior Really About Anxiety or Control?

For many kids, saying “no” is an unconscious coping mechanism. It helps them avoid anxiety triggers or regain a sense of control when life feels unpredictable.

Here’s what’s going on beneath that resistance:

  • Anxious avoidance: Kids learn that saying “no” helps them keep anxiety lower.
  • Loss of control: When kids feel powerless, they fight to regain safety.
  • Sensory overload: Every transition, sound, or demand adds another drop to their stress cup.

🗣️ “The more dysregulated they are, the more oppositional they become. And when parents respond from stress too, it amplifies the cycle.” –Dr. Roseann

Key takeaway: Opposition isn’t disrespect—it’s the nervous system’s cry for safety and connection.

You don’t have to figure this out alone.

Become a Dysregulation Insider VIP and get your FREE Regulation Rescue Kit: How to Stay Calm When Your Child Pushes Your Buttons and Stop Oppositional Behaviors.

Head to www.drroseann.com/newsletter and start your calm parenting journey today.

What Can I Do When My Child Refuses to Cooperate?

Here is a simple, science-backed three-step plan parents can use right away:

  1. Regulate first.

  • You can’t calm your child if you’re dysregulated yourself.
  • Take deep breaths, move your body, or pause before reacting.
  • Your calm signals safety and helps your child’s brain shift out of fight-or-flight.

  1. Offer two choices.

  • Keep it simple: “Do you want the red shirt or the blue shirt?”
  • This restores healthy control without giving up...
No reviews yet
In the spirit of reconciliation, Audible acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of country throughout Australia and their connections to land, sea and community. We pay our respect to their elders past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples today.