Use a brief reset rather than escalating consequences
A short, calm time-out ends the incident without energizing it.
Why it works
NHA’s reset is functionally an extinction procedure: the child is briefly removed from social stimulation (a few seconds to a couple of minutes) and then immediately re-welcomed. The brevity is intentional — a long time-out provides more opportunity for the parent to re-engage with lecture or visible distress. The immediate re-welcome signals that the relationship is intact and models the pattern: a choice has consequences, the consequence passes, and life continues.
How to do it
- When a clear rule is broken, state it once: "That’s a reset." Nothing more.
- The reset is brief — thirty seconds to two minutes depending on age.
- At the end, re-welcome the child warmly without rehashing the incident: "Reset’s over — come join us."
- Return immediately to scanning for positive behavior to recognize.
Evidence
Brief time-out as an extinction procedure for attention-maintained behavior is an established component of behavioral parent training, with meta-analytic support for its effectiveness. (clinical)
Research on time-out covers a range of implementations; the NHA-specific "reset" framing emphasizes brevity and relationship repair more than many studied protocols, so findings should not be directly transferred.
Sources
- Everett, G. E. et al. (2007). A review of time-out procedures. Education and Treatment of Children, 30(4), 289–308.
Common mistake
Turning the reset into a negotiation or explanation session, which provides exactly the emotional energy the model is designed to withhold.
Practice this with IX Coach
IX Coach coaches you on reset delivery — the right length, the right tone, and the re-welcome wording — so the reset stays an extinction event rather than becoming a consequence-lecture.
7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).