How to Make the Morning Madness Suck Less (#45)
Description
If your mornings feel like a daily emotional avalanche, lost shoes, floppy limbs, scratchy socks, MELTDOWNS, you’re not alone. In this episode, Jon goes back to the original Whole Parent format and answers real listener questions about morning routines, meltdowns, and the brain science behind why kids fall apart at the exact same time every day.
Instead of asking “What am I doing wrong?”, we flip the script:
What if the problem isn’t you… it’s the lack of brutal predictability?
Jon breaks down how kids’ underdeveloped executive function makes mornings uniquely hard—and how a simple, boring, repeatable routine can take the mental load off their brains and yours.
In this episode, we cover:
- Why mornings are so hard for kids’ brains
How an underdeveloped prefrontal cortex, weak time sense, and limited executive function make “getting out the door” way more complex for kids than it is for adults. - The power of “brutally predictable” routines
Why turning mornings into the same simple sequence every day (with visual aids, checklists, or songs) actually reduces meltdowns and resistance. - How long it should really take to get out the house
Jon’s 20-minute rule for shoes/coats/backpacks—and why building in buffer time makes you less likely to snap, rush, or bark orders. - Connecting before correcting
What to do in the first 3–5 minutes after kids wake up, and why a few minutes of cuddle + connection can change the whole morning. - When your kid’s “routine” includes a meltdown
How kids unconsciously bake the meltdown into the pattern—and how to replace that step with connection, play, or a job instead of power struggles. - Brain-based hacks that actually feel doable
Including:- Turning the morning into a game instead of a battle
- Giving kids simple “jobs” that channel their energy
- The “put the shoes to bed” trick to end the Great Shoe Hunt every morning
Listener questions in this episode:
- Nancy:
“My 6-year-old wakes up slow and my 3-year-old wakes up fiery. No matter how early I start, we’re either late or someone is screaming. What am I doing wrong in our morning routine?” - Dave:
“Every morning falls apart at the exact same spot: shoes and coats. My 4-year-old goes floppy, my toddler zigzags half-dressed, and I feel my patience evaporate. How do I break this pattern without becoming the drill sergeant I swore I’d never be?” - Anonymous (aka The Great Shoe Hunt):
“Every single morning turns into a shoe hunt. One shoe is in the pantry, the other in the bathtub. Is there a brain hack for kids who cannot keep track of their shoes?”
Key Takeaways:
- Your mornings probably aren’t failing because you’re a “bad” parent. They’re failing because kids’ brains can’t carry that many steps without structure.
- A brutally predictable routine + a visual aid (chart, checklist, pictures, or song) can remove 80% of the morning chaos.
- Build in more time than you think you need so you’re not parenting from panic and hurry.
- Connection first, then routine: those first minutes after wake-up are prime time to fill your child’s emotional cup.
- If your kid’s “routine” currently includes a meltdown, your goal is not to shame it away—but to replace that step with play, jobs, or connection.
- Responsibility (like putting shoes “to bed” at night) isn’t punishment—it’s how kids build agency, confidence, and resilience.
If you





