The Three-S Strategy: Simple, Soft, and Strict Boundaries
In This Article
The Three-S Strategy: Simple, Soft, and Strict Boundaries
In the Family OS, boundaries are the “Guardrails” of the home. They provide the safety and predictability that a child needs to stop “Testing for Limits” and start “Deep Learning.” Most boundary-failures happen because the parent is either too aggressive (causing a fight) or too vague (causing confusion).
The Three-S Strategy provides the operational logic for setting and holding a boundary. It ensures that the limit is clear, the relationship is protected, and the execution is consistent.
I. Simple: The Logic of the Limit
A boundary should not be a lecture. If you use 50 words to explain why a child can’t have a cookie, their brain will stop listening at word 10.
- The Protocol: State the boundary in 10 words or less. “No more iPad today. The screen-time bin is full.”
- The Reiteration: If they argue, do not provide a new explanation. Repeat the same phrase. “I hear you want more. The screen-time bin is full today.”
II. Soft: The Emotional Tone
You do not need to be angry to be firm. In fact, anger often signals to the child that *your* internal system is failing, which makes them feel less safe (and more likely to hit back).
- The Protocol: Use a “Neutral, Bored” tone. You are simply the messenger for the reality of the home. You can even be empathetic to their frustration: “It’s so hard to stop when you’re having fun! AND the iPad is going away now.”
III. Strict: The Execution
A boundary that is only held “sometimes” is not a boundary; it is a “Variable Reward” game. This is the #1 cause of whining and begging.
- The Protocol: If you set a limit, you MUST follow through with the Natural Consequence (Article 43). If you said “No more iPad,” you must physically take the iPad and put it in a locked drawer. Do not negotiate. Do not cave.
- The Result: The child eventually gives up the struggle because they know the “Strict” part of the system is absolute. This reduces the total volume of daily friction.
IV. Scripts for 3-S Execution
When a child is hitting a sibling:
“Simple: Hands are for hugging, not hitting. Soft: I see you’re frustrated, but I won’t let you hurt anyone. Strict: I am moving you to this chair until your body is ready to be safe.”
When they want one more story at bedtime:
“Simple: We chose 2 stories, and they are finished. Soft: I love reading with you and I’m excited for more tomorrow. Strict: It is time for lights out now. I’m tucking you in.”
V. Integration with the Family OS
- Discipline (Pillar 3): The Three-S strategy is the primary tool for all developmental discipline. It removes the “Power Over” dynamic and replaces it with “Predictable Infrastructure.”
- Emotional Stability (Pillar 2): Staying “Soft” requires you to be regulated. Use your Box Breathing (Article 32) before you hold a “Strict” boundary.
ParentForLife.com / Stable Boundaries for Capable Humans.