Close Menu
Richmond Family Magazine
  • Magazine
    • Health & Wellness
      • Children’s Health
      • Women’s Health
      • Men’s Health
      • Senior Health
      • Mental Health
      • Nutrition
    • Family Life
      • RVA Family Fun
      • Food & Recipes
      • Travel
      • Pets
      • Nature
      • Home & Garden
    • Community
      • Publisher’s Page
      • Richmond History
      • Just Joan
      • Nonprofit Spotlight
      • News & Press
      • Featured Folks
    • Parenting
      • Parenting Tips
      • DadZone
      • Civics & Policy
      • Family Finances
      • Legal Advice
      • Safety Tips
    • Arts & Entertainment
      • Books & Authors
      • Museums & Exhibits
      • Theatre & Performance
    • Learning
      • Education
      • Arts & Crafts
      • Science & Technology
  • Directories
    • Summer Camp Finder
    • Party Finder
    • Private School Finder
    • Preschool Finder
  • Calendar
    • View Events by Date & Category
    • View Events by Organizer
    • Submit Your Event
    • Manage Events
      • Submit New Event
      • Account Dashboard
      • Account Logout
  • Giveaways
  • Newsletter
Explore More
  • About Our Magazine
  • RFM Summer Camp Expo
  • Find a Local Copy
  • View Issue Archives
  • Advertising & Media Kit
  • Content Submission Guide
Richmond Family Magazine November/December 2025 Cover
Subscribe Today
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube LinkedIn
  • About Us
  • Distribution
  • Archives
  • Advertise
  • Camp Expo
  • Contact
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube LinkedIn
Richmond Family Magazine
  • Magazine
        • Health & Wellness
          • Children's Health
          • Women's Health
          • Men's Health
          • Senior Health
          • Mental Health
          • Nutrition
        • Family Life
          • RVA Family Fun
          • Food & Recipes
          • Travel
          • Pets
          • Nature
          • Home & Garden
        • Community
          • Publisher's Page
          • Richmond History
          • Just Joan
          • Nonprofit Spotlight
          • News & Press
          • Featured Folks
        • Parenting
          • Parenting Tips
          • DadZone
          • Civics & Policy
          • Family Finances
          • Legal Advice
          • Safety Tips
        • Learning
          • Education
          • Arts & Crafts
          • Science & Technology
        • Arts & Entertainment
          • Books & Authors
          • Museums & Exhibits
          • Theatre & Performance
        • Print Edition

          Richmond Family Magazine November/December 2025 Cover
  • Directories
    • Summer Camp Finder
    • Party Finder
    • Private School Finder
    • Preschool Finder
  • Calendar
        • View Events by Date & Category
        • RFM Events by Date
        • View Events by Organizer
        • RFM Event Organizers
        • Submit Your Event
        • RFM Calendar Submission
        • Manage Events
          • Submit New Event
          • Account Dashboard
          • Account Logout
  • Giveaways
  • Newsletter
Subscribe
Richmond Family Magazine
Home
Books & Authors

If I Have to Tell You One More Time

Victoria WinterhalterBy Victoria WinterhalterSeptember 6, 2011
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Email
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

“You’ve tried everything. Time-outs. Yelling. Reminding. Nagging. Taking away privileges. Counting to three. And none of them worked. Like most parents, you’re fed up,” author Amy McCready sympathizes. Promoted as “the revolutionary program that gets your kids to listen without nagging, reminding, or yelling,” I doubted whether If I Have to Tell You One More Time would deliver, but it has.

When the introduction shared how the book came about, I was intrigued. Apparently, after resolving to stop yelling, she was inspired by Seinfeld’s George, who believed that “if everything I’ve done is wrong, then the opposite must be right,” and she signed up for a parenting class based on Alfred Adler’s discipline principals.

Why isn’t parenting as easy as it seemingly once was? According to McCready, “Our homes have followed the outside world in becoming a democracy – with as many opinions as there are seats around the dinner table.” While the old strategies may no longer work, McCready insists that doesn’t mean our children are bad or disrespectful.  She clarifies, it’s just that “as inhabitants in a democratic society, they inherently sense the need to push back when family life gets too constraining.”

Therefore, If I Have to Tell You One More Time begins with a brief psychology lesson built on three premises:

  • A child’s primary goal is to achieve belonging and significance.
  • All behavior is goal-oriented.
  • A misbehaving child is a discouraged child.

Then, McCready details the ego states of personality as outlined by Eric Berne in the 1950s in the hopes of helping to transform combative relationships into cooperative ones.

  • She writes, “When we’re communicating in the Parent Ego State, we’re usually ordering, directing, and correcting others with phrases like ‘It’s time to clean your room,’ ‘Don’t forget to take your medication,’ or ‘Just try one bite of broccoli.’”
  • She explains, “Adult Ego State allows us to calmly and effectively share information and invite cooperation. It’s the ego state you’re most likely to operate from when you’re at work or with other adults. Your child operates in the Adult Ego State while she’s at school, as does her teacher.”
  • And she maintains, “The Child Ego State is one of high emotion. In this ego state, we experience pure delight, impulsive reactions and exhilaration.”

McCready also explains that if you’re having problems with “tantrums, talking back, not listening, negotiating every little thing, defiance, or other types of resistance when you’re trying to get your child to do something, it’s probably a clue that you’re interacting too much from the Parent Ego State.”

That is definitely the case with me, especially since I started back to work full-time. There’s been a lot of micro-managing in an attempt to be more efficient. This also explains why my kids enjoy spending time with their father, as he transitions easily to the Child Ego State when they play.

McCready believes that if parents spend ten minutes, twice a day, with each child individually and do whatever she wants then she won’t seek negative attention or participate in undesirable behaviors. She argues, “Children can sense the difference between quality time ad quantity time. We may spend long hours running to the dry cleaners, post office, and grocery store with our kids, but that hardly counts as quality time. And they know it.”

If practiced daily, this “Mind, Body, and Soul Time,” as McCready calls it, helps you connect emotionally with your child, reinforce your child’s importance, and provide your child with the attention she needs. McCready insists if you allow your child to choose the activity, she will feel a “sense of positive power in having some control over his life.”

I’m not going to lie. My first thought was ‘I don’t have time for this,’ but when I put it in terms of forty minutes a day, I knew I spent much more time playing with my kids than that. The difference was I was selecting the activities and we were doing them all together. So I followed McCready’s suggestion of having my kids generate a list of ideas to prevent wasting time trying to think of something special to do. I also made it a point to label our special time so I got credit in my daughters’ eyes and they could look forward to doing it again later in the day.

Sure enough, while I hate to agree with George of Seinfeld, when it came to parenting, I was wrong and the opposite was right. In less than a week, this strategy has resulted in less nagging and more fun for us all.

 

 

Authors Books Parenting Reviews
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Email
Previous ArticleSeptember 2011 Publisher's Page
Next Article If I Have to Tell You One More Time – Are You Making Your Child’s Behavior Worse?
Avatar photo
Victoria Winterhalter

Victoria Winterhalter is a mother, teacher, reader, and writer on the education and environment beats for RFM. She has been with RFM since its founding in 2009 and has contributed photos and written numerous articles on education, parenting, and family travel.

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Explore More

Parenting

Simple, Fun Holiday Outings for Toddlers

December 3, 2025By Lindsay Garrison
Virginia Rep's A Christmas Carol - Photo by Aaron Sutten
Theatre & Performing Arts

Virginia Rep Brings the Energy with a Holiday Production of Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol 

December 3, 2025By Mara Guyer
robot hand shaking human hand
Family Finances

AI in Personal Finance: The Promise and the Limits

November 29, 2025By Jeremy Blubaugh
Half Page Ad
Featured Events

    CarMax Tacky Light Run

    Dec 13, 2025
    13301 N Woolridge Rd, Midlothian, VA

    “Build to Give” with the LEGO Group

    Dec 13, 2025
    6629 Lake Harbour Dr. Midlothian, VA

    Teens Help Out: 3D Pop-Up Holiday Cards

    Dec 10, 2025
    5001 Twin Hickory Road
Medium Rectangle Ad
Richmond Family Magazine
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest Instagram YouTube LinkedIn

Magazine

  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Submissions
  • Contact

RFM Events

  • View Calendar
  • Events by Location
  • Come See Us Events
  • Submit Your Event
  • Summer Camp Expo

Directories

  • Summer Camps
  • Party Finder
  • Private Schools
  • Preschools

Let's Keep Connected

Subscribe to our free newsletter to receive the latest content, events, and giveaway entry notifications. 

© 2025 Richmond Family Magazine. Publishing Platforms by Modus Works.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.