Why Does My Child Not Listen to Instructions?

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It can feel constant.

You say something once… nothing.

Twice… still nothing.

Third time… now you’re frustrated.

And the thought shows up fast:

“They’re not listening.”

“They’re ignoring me.”

“They know better.”

But what looks like “not listening”…

isn’t always what’s actually happening.

Listening Isn’t Just Hearing

This is the first disconnect.

Hearing words is automatic.

Listening requires processing.

And processing requires access.

Instructions Are Multi-Step Demands

When you give an instruction, your brain sees it as simple.

But for your child, it’s not just one step.

It can involve:

  • Filtering out background noise
  • Shifting attention
  • Processing language
  • Holding the instruction in memory
  • Organizing the action
  • Initiating the task

That’s a full chain.

And if one part drops…

the whole thing looks like “not listening.”

Access Changes Everything

Your child might be able to follow instructions.

That doesn’t mean they can access that ability every time.

Access=Capacity

They’ve done it before.

They might do it later.

But in that moment?

Access might be low.

What Low Access Looks Like

When access drops, you’ll see:

  • Delayed response
  • No response
  • Partial completion
  • Starting, then stopping
  • Seeming distracted

From the outside, it looks like defiance.

Underneath, it’s often overload or low capacity in that moment.

Timing Matters More Than You Think

If your child is:

  • Focused on something else
  • Transitioning between tasks
  • Already frustrated
  • Mentally tired
  • Sensory overloaded

Your instruction is landing on a system that’s already busy.

And busy systems don’t process well.

“They Heard Me, They Just Didn’t Do It”

Sometimes that’s true.

But often, what actually happened is:

They heard the words…

but didn’t fully process them.

Or couldn’t hold onto them long enough to act.

Or didn’t have the mental space to start.

Repeating Louder Doesn’t Fix Access

This is where things escalate.

You repeat the instruction.

Then louder.

Then sharper.

But increasing pressure doesn’t increase access.

It usually does the opposite.

More pressure → less access.

Why It Feels Like Ignoring

Because the gap is invisible.

You see:

“I gave a clear instruction.”

“They didn’t do it.”

So the conclusion becomes:

“They chose not to.”

But there’s a missing layer:

State.

State Drives Response

If the system is regulated:

Instructions land.

If the system is overloaded:

Instructions bounce.

Same child.

Same instruction.

Different state.

Different outcome.

What Actually Helps

You don’t fix this by repeating more.

You fix it by making the instruction reachable.

That can look like:

  • Getting their attention first
  • Using fewer words
  • Giving one step at a time
  • Pausing between instructions
  • Checking for understanding
  • Reducing background noise
  • Timing it when the system is more open

You’re not lowering expectations.

You’re increasing access.

The Shift That Changes It

Instead of asking:

“Why aren’t they listening?”

Ask:

“Is their system able to process this right now?”

That question changes how you approach it.

Final Thought

Your child isn’t always refusing instructions.

Sometimes…

they just can’t reach them.

And when you understand that…

you stop escalating the pressure…

and start opening the doorway.

No Shame. No Pity. No Cure Needed.
Alex

If this sounds familiar, you’re not alone.
There’s more like this inside the Firepit.

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