When Your Child Stops Listening: Why it Happens & What to Do About It

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Learning Moments with Lisa Yvonne

Kids & Family


Most parents think learning begins when we begin teaching, when directions are given, a book opens, or a task starts.


But research in neurodevelopment shows something very different: learning begins in the nervous system, long before instruction ever starts.


When a child’s nervous system is overwhelmed, stressed, or overloaded, the “learning brain” temporarily shuts down. What looks like resistance, ignoring, or defiance is often the brain’s built-in protection response at work.


In this episode, we explore how parents can recognize this shift and use simple, grounded leadership practices to help children re-engage with learning, cooperation, and problem-solving.


Key Ideas from This Episode


Learning is continuous, not event-based:

Children are learning all day long: socially, emotionally, cognitively, and relationally. Learning is not limited to academic moments.


The nervous system determines whether learning can happen

Dr. Stephen Porges’s work on neuroception shows that the body constantly evaluates the environment for cues of safety or threat. When overload is detected, the brain shifts out of learning mode and into protection mode.


Freeze is the most misunderstood stress response

Many children respond to overwhelm not with argument or avoidance, but with stillness or shutdown. This is not defiance; it’s biology.


Stress behavior is not misbehavior

As Dr. Stuart Shanker explains, some behaviors stem from stress rather than intent. Recognizing the difference changes how we respond as parents.


Parents must learn the difference between “won’t” and “can’t”

This is one of the most important leadership skills in parenting:

  • Treat stress behavior like a character issue → creates shame.
  • Treat a character issue like a stress behavior → creates fragility.

Learning to interpret behavior accurately allows parents to lead with both clarity and compassion.


Leadership, not pressure, opens the learning door

Children engage best with steady, attuned leadership…not urgency, overwhelm, or rapid-fire instructions.


Three Practices That Reopen the Learning Brain


Listen to episode to learn all about the simple, straightforward way to engage your child so they can listen, learn, and act.


The 3P’s are effective across ages and settings, from homework to chores to emotional moments.


You can read the full transcript here.


Key Takeaway: When we learn the difference between a child who won’t and a child who can’t, we can lead well so they become a child who can and will!