Tired of Losing It Before Drop-Off? How to Create a Peaceful Morning Routine with Kids Before School

Does your morning routine with kids end in tears—yours or theirs?

If your morning routine with kids before school feels like a full-contact sport, trust me, you’re not alone. I’ve had more than one morning where the vibe was anything but peaceful. One moment I’m sipping coffee (barely), and the next, I’m using what my daughter calls my “Beast Voice” while trying to find someone’s missing left shoe.

As a clinical psychologist, parenting expert, and mom of two little ones, I know firsthand how emotional—and overwhelming—getting kids ready for school can be. Especially when you’re deeply committed to parenting without yelling... but somehow find yourself shouting over cereal bowls and lost backpacks before 8 a.m.

In this episode of the Educated Parent podcast, I open up about one of my own chaotic mornings, the hard lesson my five-year-old taught me, and the real secret to creating a calmer, more connected morning routine with kids before school.

Because here’s the truth: peaceful mornings don’t happen by accident. But with a few simple mindset shifts and practical tools, they are possible—even if you’re running late and your toddler is demanding to bring three stuffed snow leopards to school.

Why the Morning Routine with Kids Feels So Hard

There’s something uniquely stressful about the morning routine with kids. 

Everyone’s tired. Everyone’s hungry. Everyone needs something—now. 

And unlike other parts of the day, there’s a hard stop: school drop-off. That time pressure? It’s real, and it makes every little hiccup feel massive.

So let’s talk about why our own emotional regulation as parents matters even more than our kids' behavior. Because the way we feel when we're getting kids ready for school sets the tone for the entire day—ours and theirs.

What Happens When You’re Committed to Parenting Without Yelling... But Still Yell

If you’ve ever said, “I don’t want to yell... but they won’t listen unless I do,” this episode is for you. I share my own moment of losing it—what my daughter dubbed “The Beast Voice”—and the powerful (and painfully accurate) observation she made that shifted everything for me.

In that moment, I realized that parenting without yelling isn’t about perfection. It’s about recognizing our triggers and taking care of ourselves, so we’re not reacting from a place of exhaustion and overwhelm.

The One Habit That Changed My Morning Routine with Kids Before School

Spoiler alert: it’s not waking up an hour earlier. It’s eating breakfast. Or in other words, taking basic care of yourself first. 

Sounds too simple, right? But that one shift—feeding myself before trying to feed, dress, and motivate my kids—dramatically changed how I felt (and how I acted) during our morning routine with kids before school.

When we meet our own basic needs, we’re less likely to spiral. Less likely to snap. And more able to show up the way we want to when getting kids ready for school gets messy—which, let’s be honest, it will.

Reframing Your Kids’ Behavior During the Morning Routine with Kids

A huge mindset shift that helped me stop yelling was this: my kids aren’t against me in the morning—they just have different goals.

I wanted to be out the door by 7:45. My three-year-old wanted to find all his snow leopard toys.

Once I stopped viewing his behavior as defiance and started seeing it as a different (and developmentally appropriate) priority, I was able to shift my energy and respond with more patience. This small reframe helped me practice parenting without yelling, even when I was feeling pushed to the edge.

Three Game-Changing Tips for Parenting Without Yelling During the Morning Rush

Here’s a quick preview of the three tools I share in the full episode:

  1. Take care of yourself first. Yes, really. A stable blood sugar level and/or a shower is a surprisingly powerful tool for parenting without yelling.

  2. Understand your child’s goal. They’re not being “bad”—they’re being kids. And their priorities are usually very different from yours when you're focused on getting kids ready for school.

  3. Have a reset strategy. Whether it’s a dance party, a playlist, or a moment of deep breathing, create a go-to way to reset your mood when things start going off the rails.

Each of these can dramatically change your morning routine with kids, especially when you’re aiming for a morning routine with kids before school that actually feels peaceful.

Let’s Normalize the Chaos—And Still Make It Better

Here’s the thing: messy mornings don’t mean you’re failing. They mean you’re human. 

But when we equip ourselves with tools that support our nervous systems, shift our mindset, and help us connect instead of control, the entire morning routine with kids before school starts to change.

You don’t have to lose it before drop-off. You don’t have to give up on parenting without yelling. And you don’t have to dread getting kids ready for school each day.


Listen to the Full Episode: Tired of Losing It Before Drop-Off? How to Create a Peaceful Morning Routine with Kids Before School

Whether you’re the parent crying in the car after drop-off or just trying to make it through without yelling over mismatched socks, this episode will meet you with empathy—and leave you with practical, doable tools you can try tomorrow.

Because you deserve mornings that feel calm, connected, and even (dare I say it?) kind of enjoyable.

Resources Mentioned in This Episode:

Calm and Connected Program

Let’s Connect:

Thriving Child Center

PCIT Experts

Instagram

Want more parenting tips? Join our newsletter for expert advice straight to your inbox!

Are you a provider? Subscribe here for professional insights and parenting resources!

  • Leah Clionsky 00:00:00  Welcome to the Educated Parent podcast. I am your host, Doctor Leah Clionsky, and I am so excited that you are joining me this morning. So I am meeting with you today. Just us, no guests to talk about something that is a major stressor for most of us parents, and that problem is getting out the door in the morning with kids. You're listening to Educated Parent, the Parenting Podcast, where I teach you realistic, expert parenting hacks to solve your everyday parenting problems so that you can reduce your stress, build your confidence as a parent, and raise thriving children. My name is Doctor Leah Clionsky and I'm a licensed clinical psychologist. Owner of thriving child center and asset experts, child psychology practices, and a real life parent of two young children. I am the same as you. I am invested in being the best parent possible and raising thriving children. I also get overwhelmed. I make mistakes and I forget what works. I do have three unique parenting advantages that you may not have a PhD in child clinical psychology.

    Leah Clionsky 00:01:12  Over 15 years of clinical experience working with families and a network of other experts that I can text for parenting advice whenever I'm lost. I'm here to bring my expertise and my expert network to you, so that we can solve your everyday parenting dilemmas together. I am so glad you're here. Getting out the door in the morning with kids is extremely stressful and challenging for most of the families that I work with, and also for me, a lot of the time the mornings are a really tough time. Why? Well, obviously everybody is tired, right? No one really likes waking up that early. Or at least maybe some kids do. But most of us parents are like, oh, I don't want to be up yet. So there's that whole factor of dragging yourself out of bed, being tired, being hungry, and then just the amount of things we have to do with time pressure at the other end. So you're trying to get yourself ready. You're trying to get your kids ready, and there is a critical time point where you will be late.

    Leah Clionsky 00:02:13  And just knowing you could be late is extremely stressful. And so, parents, most of us are watching the clock, trying to avoid the being late, and it feels like our kids aren't even. They don't even have the same agenda. And this leads to a lot of frustration. Sometimes a lot of yelling. A lot of people getting in trouble. A lot of drop offs where everyone has been upset all morning. Everyone is resentful. Maybe some of us have been crying, right? Mornings are rough. So what can we do to have an easier morning? To have a more pleasant morning that isn't so stressful. So here is the key. It's not going to be what you think you're going to expect me to. Talk about ways that you can manage your child's behavior in the morning. And there are things you can do to manage your child's behavior in the morning to have a better morning. But that's not really the most important part of having an easier morning. The most important thing you can do in the morning to influence the entire quality of your morning and your morning routine, and your school drop off, is being able to regulate yourself.

    Leah Clionsky 00:03:18  So being able to parent from a place of calm, being calm and cool, and approaching things in a way that you're proud of. So why is this so important? Why does how I manage my emotions in the morning make such a big difference in the way that the morning goes? Well, one of the main reasons is that I'm going to use much better parenting strategies if I am calm. If I am angry and upset and frustrated. All of my great parenting strategies are going to go out the window. So if I'm calm, I can, for example, praise my kids for doing positive things a lot more easily. So if my daughter comes into the room and she has her clothes on for school. I'll be aware of that. And I can say to her, thank you so much for getting dressed. I'm so proud of you for putting on your clothes all by yourself. You're such a big kid. And then she'll say to me, mommy, I'm going to put my shoes on by myself after breakfast.

    Leah Clionsky 00:04:20  Isn't that wonderful? And I'm like, that is wonderful. That will be wonderful. I am already so excited. So I'm there. I am noticing I am promoting positive behaviors. So all of my strategies are better if I am calm. Another reason why parenting from a place of calm makes the morning so much better is that our kids react to our vibe and our mood. I have so much power in the morning to make things better and to make things so much worse, depending on my mood. So if I am feeling good in my body, if I am feeling good in my mood, if my kids get upset, if they can't find their shoes and they're having a meltdown. I can stay calm and say positive things and wrap things up and help us move on. If I am upset and angry and disregulated myself, I'm going to respond badly and I'm going to escalate the situation. I'm going to take some sad feelings and turn them into a full blown temper tantrum by reacting and overreacting in ways that I don't feel good about, so I can sour any good situation with my bad mood.

    Leah Clionsky 00:05:32  I can also bring bad situations up into a more positive place. If I'm able to keep myself calm and think rationally about what's going on. Now, I don't have complete power and neither do you, right? So if one of my kids wakes up sick or in a really terrible mood, I might not be able to make the morning go perfectly smoothly. But I can certainly make it better than I would if I were very angry and frustrated and just, you know, reacting out of my own emotions all morning long. So that's why being able to have some strategies to take care of yourself in the morning and to keep your own attitude in a positive place, will make a really big difference in your morning routine. It certainly makes a night and day difference in my morning routine. And I'm going to share with you these strategies that I use myself by telling you a story about a time that I did not parent in a way that I was happy about at all. So we've talked about the fact that I am an imperfect parent.

    Leah Clionsky 00:06:33  I don't do everything the way I wish I did. I have moments where I'm just think, oh my goodness, I'm so glad. And none of my clients are watching me right now. This is not what I would be suggesting to anybody else. And one of these moments happened in a morning where everything was just going wrong. So remember again, I have a three and a five year old and we got up late. We were running late. They were eating breakfast forever. They were fighting with each other every time I was trying to get them dressed. They were, you know, in the other room. They weren't listening. They were hiding from me like everything was going wrong. I found myself getting more and more and more frustrated and angry. And then I started yelling. So if I am not parenting in the way that I feel good about, what you're going to see from me is yelling. Now, it's not the kind of yelling where I'm saying something horrible to them. Like, I'm not saying very hurtful words, but it's a loud and intimidating tone of voice.

    Leah Clionsky 00:07:28  And my kids call it the beast voice, like the voice from beauty and the beast, when he's being scary and yelling at Bell and saying things like, go ahead and starve. Remember when he yells that in beauty and the beast? Anyway, apparently that is what I sound like to my children. I sound scary like the beast. So I lost my temper and I knew I was losing my temper like I knew I was not. It wasn't like planned. I was just losing my temper. And I was using the beast voice and I was using it multiple times, and both the kids were crying. And we get into the car and everyone just feels awful. And I feel awful. I feel awful in my body. I feel guilty that my children are crying. I feel embarrassed that I've parented that way. In the moment, it just is. As my son would say, I felt yuck, right? That's how I felt. It was just really uncomfortable. And I'm driving to school late.

    Leah Clionsky 00:08:19  I know we've missed carpool. Everything is going wrong. So I took some deep breaths. I was listening to some music in the car at this point. Took some deep breaths and I'm like, okay, I have to apologize to my children because I don't like how I reacted. So I said to them, guys, I am so sorry for using the Beastie Boys. I got really frustrated, but I should not have used that voice. I know it's really scary and my daughter, who is such a wise little five year old, she said to me, that's okay mommy, but I have some questions. And I'm like, okay, what are your questions? Mommy, did you eat breakfast this morning? No, no, Ella, I did not eat breakfast this morning. Mommy, did you drink coffee this morning? No, Ella, I did not drink coffee this morning. And she just sat there and she said, mommy, that's why you used the beast voice. And you know, she was right.

    Leah Clionsky 00:09:13  That's why I used the beast voice. The problem was, I had not taken basic care of myself, basic care of myself, and I had been doing that a lot lately. I was so preoccupied in getting my kids fed and dressed and out the door that I was not meeting my own physical needs at all, right? I was not eating breakfast. And by the way, I come from a family of people who, like, get low blood sugar and are really cranky if they don't eat breakfast. And like most of us, I'm a little addicted to caffeine. So I was exhausted because I didn't have any caffeine, and I felt terrible because I hadn't eaten any breakfast. And we do this all the time. As parents, you know, we would never let our kids not eat breakfast, but we let ourselves not eat breakfast. And then we wonder why we're using the best voice right? Or why we are overreacting, or why we are so angry. So she really put that together. She is smart.

    Leah Clionsky 00:10:07  And I thought about that. And then I made a policy that I always eat breakfast. The coffee is not as important. It turns out it's the breakfast. So I eat yogurt. When my kids do, I make sure that I'm going to eat breakfast because it is a night or day morning, depending upon whether or not I have had breakfast. That is this kind of a scary amount of power to have over a morning. But there you go. So my first recommendation, my strategy for you, is make sure you have taken basic care of yourself. And in a lot of times in the morning that will be. Did you eat breakfast? Right? Just like try eating breakfast or, you know, for some people, it's not that. For my husband, it's showering. If he showers, he feels much better than if he doesn't shower. Food doesn't seem to make as much of a difference for him. But find out what your thing is. What is the thing you need to do to take very basic care of yourself and do it non-negotiable, even if you are running late.

    Leah Clionsky 00:11:08  Doesn't have to take a lot of time. But eat breakfast. All right. Do that for yourself. Game changer. The second strategy I'm going to recommend is thinking about the morning from your kids perspective. So how we think about other people and what they're doing affects how we feel. So sometimes in the morning when I am trying to get my kids out the door and they are not on the same page, they are not headed toward the door. Their goal is not to get out the door. Sometimes when that's happening, I feel like they're against me, like I am for getting them to school and they are against getting to school. They are directly against me and my goals. And if I think about them that way, I'm going to be pretty angry. I'm going to feel really frustrated and resentful that they are against my goals. But if I think about what they're really interested in, they're not against my goals. They just have different goals. So in the morning, my goal is to get us out of the door on time so that I can get us dropped off before carpool ends, and we won't be late, and I can start work on time.

    Leah Clionsky 00:12:16  My three year old son's goal is to find all of his snow leopard toys, so he's really into snow leopards right now. This is just like his thing. He, like, fell in love with The Lion King, and somehow that turned into an interest in snow leopards. And so in the morning, he doesn't actually care about getting out of the door on time. I don't think he understands this concept, but he does care about finding every single snow leopard toy and snow leopard adjacent toy and knowing where they are. So he is not anti me. He is not against me. He's just pro snow leopard. So sometimes I'm trying to get us dressed and he's trying to find the snow leopards and I just have to remind myself he's not against me, he's just pro snow leopard. Which honestly is funny enough that usually any frustration I have starts going away. So if I know like what is your goal here you are pro snow leopard. Then I can think, how do I help you meet this goal so that we get out the door on time? And usually that means pre finding his snow leopard toys so that they're all organized.

    Leah Clionsky 00:13:17  And he is not upset that they're gone. And that way we can get out the door. Right. It's just about the goals. Sometimes my daughter has the same goal because she likes going to school early. So sometimes we are like lately we've been very much in the same goal. So morning has been going great with her, but sometimes her goal is to dress like a princess or make a card for her best friend. And that goal is bigger than getting out of the door on time and again, just reminding myself it's not against me. It's just pro making a nice card less angry, right? And then I'm using strategies. I'm not using the best voice. I am parenting from a place of a lot more calm. And I'm not just escalating conflict unnecessarily, so eat. Second thing is, think about your child's goal and tell yourself why their goal is reasonable from their perspective. The third strategy that is very helpful is having a very easy way that you can reset your own mood. If you wake up grumpy.

    Leah Clionsky 00:14:19  So again, imperfect person here. Sometimes I wake up in a terrible mood and it has nothing to do with anybody, right? Sometimes I wake up and I didn't sleep well, and I looked on social media and something's upsetting me. Or I just, like, don't feel great for whatever reason. And it has nothing to do with my kids. But I am in a bad mood, right? And I just can feel in my whole body I am angry and irritable. I woke up on the wrong side of the bed, and if I do not do something about that, it will come out in my parenting and I will do that. Ruin the vibe thing where I create a bad mood around my kids, and then they will start acting up because they are very sensitive to my mood state. So I'm not saying you can't be human, but if you notice, like wow, I am in a really sour mood. What can you do? That is very quick. That might help. For me, I have a playlist of songs that usually improve my mood.

    Leah Clionsky 00:15:22  So if I wake up like that, I will have a dance party in the kitchen while we are eating breakfast. And it for me, helps so much. Right. The music puts me in a better mood. It puts my kids in a better mood. We're all just in a better mood at that moment. And I just know that that's a strategy that works well for me. But that doesn't have to be your strategy. But I would think of one. What would be one thing that would really, really help you in those moments when you're just are, you know, you're just upset because you can't expect your kids to change anything about what's going on, you know? Do you need to call a friend and just have a five minute pep talk? Are you the kind of person who is spiritual and you need to connect to your spirituality? Do you need to hug your dog? Like, what is something that's going to reset you just a little bit? Again, I don't need to be in the best mood in the world.

    Leah Clionsky 00:16:15  I just need to be in not the most terrible mood in the entire world, because that is going to make it really hard for me to parent in a calm way. And if I'm in that kind of mood, you know, it's going to be hard for me to remember. Like, hey, my kids are pro snow leopard and not against me. And, you know, how can I reinforce this good behavior and how can I address this difficult feeling they're having in a calmer way? So just to recap, your three strategies are number one, you are going to eat. Number two, you're going to remember that your kids have a different perspective that is not against your goals. Number three, you're going to have one strategy that you can use that doesn't take much time in order to reset your mood. If you wake up and you're just super, super irritable now, nobody is perfect. I am certainly not a perfect parent or a perfect person. This doesn't always work every single day, but it is helpful to have some strategies in my back pocket.

    Leah Clionsky 00:17:13  However, if you find that you are really struggling a lot with this, if you are noticing that you are often having a hard time parenting out of a place of calm, you know we do have a program at Thriving Child Center that might be really helpful for you. It's called the Calm and Connected Program for parents, and it has a group therapy element. So it's eight weeks of virtual group therapy where you are learning some strategies and connecting with other parents who are feeling like you are just kind of not sure what to do to make themselves feel better in difficult moments, and really wanting to be calm and to parent out of that calm place and wanting to get there with a little bit of extra help. So if you join the program, you'll get the group plus weekly therapy with Doctor Whitney Fosco, who's pretty much the nicest child psychologist I've ever met and really just has this value system that all parents are doing their best, that everything we do makes sense in context. So it's a very collaborative, caring person who will help you individually work on your own stuff, you know, understand where you are coming from, understand your own emotions so that you are able to parent well.

    Leah Clionsky 00:18:24  So if you think that that would be good for you, you can join that full program where you get the group and the eight weeks of individual therapy. There's also the option to just be in the group, but I think it's fantastic. I highly recommend it if you find yourself really struggling to implement some of these strategies. But even with anything we do, we're all human. No one is going to be able to parent from a place of calm all the time. So be gentle with yourself. Offer yourself some real self-compassion if you have a difficult moment. I do hope these strategies I discussed with you will help you feel that you have some tools in your pocket for those moments. You know I'm here for you. I know it's hard, but at Educated Parent, my goal is to continue to give you strategies that are effective and that will work. So have a wonderful day. It was wonderful speaking with you this morning and I'll talk to you another time. Thanks again for spending time with me on Educated Parent.

    Leah Clionsky 00:19:18  If this episode helped you feel more confident in handling those parenting curveballs, hit follow so you never miss an episode. Know a parent who stuck in the endless cycle of conflicting advice? Send this their way because we all deserve parenting strategies we can actually trust. And hey, if you have a minute, leave a review. Your support helps other parents find real, expert backed solutions instead of just another opinion online. One last quick reminder. This podcast offers general advice, but every family is different. The advice offered in this podcast is not medical advice and is not appropriate for every family. If you need personalized parenting support, connect with an experienced clinician at Thriving Child Center or PCI experts. That's it for today. Thanks for listening and I'll talk to you next time.

Next
Next

Is Your Child in the Right School? Key Factors to Consider When Choosing a School for Your Child