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When "Bad Behavior" Isn’t Bad at All
When "Bad Behavior" Isn’t Bad at All
By Ovett Chapman, Ph.D.
#SeeTheWholeChild #ParentingWithPurpose #EveryChildBelongs
The Moment We Start Guessing
If you’ve ever sat in a parent–teacher conference and listened to a list of concerns about your child, you know the knot that forms in your stomach. Your child talks too much in class. Or not at all. They don’t complete assignments. They seem distracted. Sometimes they get upset quickly. Other days, they shut down completely. The words come fast: doesn’t listen, disrespectful, all over the place.
As parents, we want answers. Is it ADHD? Anxiety? Just a phase? We rush to label, to fix, to solve. In doing so, we often forget the question that matters most:
What is my child’s behavior trying to tell me?

Why We Misread Kids
Parents and educators alike tend to filter children’s actions through three common lenses:
- Medical – It must be a diagnosis.
- Moral – They should know better.
- Managerial – This is about control and compliance.
Each lens risks missing the bigger picture. A child avoiding math may not be lazy but may fear failure. A teen whose sarcasm feels like disrespect may be masking insecurity.
I’ve seen countless students misread in this way. Sometimes, the label lasts longer than the behavior itself.

Behavior Is Communication
Behavior is always saying something—it just may not be what we want to hear.
A child might be anxious. Overwhelmed. Unsure of what to do next. Acting out or shutting down is sometimes the only language they have to say, I don’t belong, or I don’t know how to cope.
When we only respond to surface-level actions, we miss the deeper message. Addressing the “why” changes everything. Ignoring it only magnifies the challenge.

Questions That Change the Conversation
Parents often ask me, “So what should I do?” I encourage them to start small:
- Pause before reacting. Breathe. Step away if needed. Your child’s behavior is not necessarily a reflection of you.
- Get curious. Ask honest, open-ended questions: What happened? Are you okay? What do you need from me right now? Your goal is to understand, not to fix in that moment.
- Examine the environment. Does the classroom, routine, or expectation need to shift? Sometimes behavior reflects surroundings, not character.
- Separate the child from the behavior. Your child is not “a problem.” They are a person with a problem to solve.
These small shifts can transform both the parent’s and the child’s experience.
Why This Matters for Every Child
When we view behavior only as something to correct, we lose the chance to connect. Connection is the soil where change grows.
Children don’t need us to be perfect. They need us to be present. To listen beneath the outbursts, the silence, even the slammed doors.
When we practice presence over punishment, we give them more than tools for today—we equip them with skills to navigate the rest of their lives.

The Reframe Files: Strengthening Connections in the Moments That Matter
If any of this resonates, I invite you to join me on April 14, 2026, at the 27th International Families and Fathers Conference in Los Angeles.
My session, The Reframe Files: Strengthening Connections in the Moments That Matter, will focus on how to build trust in everyday interactions—with children, caregivers, and one another. We will explore how to respond instead of react, and how small changes in our approach can create stronger, lasting connections.
You don’t need a title or a perfect answer to join this conversation. All you need is a reason to care. There is room for you.
Contact Information
🌐 The Wellspring Way
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🔗 LinkedIn: Dr. Ovett Chapman
