Your Kid’s Not Special: A Guide to Raising Grit Instead of Entitlement Audiobook By Signal Fire Press cover art

Your Kid’s Not Special: A Guide to Raising Grit Instead of Entitlement

A Guide to Raising Toughness in a World That Rewards Whining, and Shields Mediocrity

Virtual Voice Sample

$0.00 for first 30 days

Try for $0.00
Access a growing selection of included Audible Originals, audiobooks, and podcasts.
You will get an email reminder before your trial ends.
Audible Plus auto-renews for $7.95/mo after 30 days. Upgrade or cancel anytime.

Your Kid’s Not Special: A Guide to Raising Grit Instead of Entitlement

By: Signal Fire Press
Narrated by: Virtual Voice
Try for $0.00

$7.95 a month after 30 days. Cancel anytime.

Buy for $6.99

Buy for $6.99

Confirm purchase
Pay using card ending in
By confirming your purchase, you agree to Audible's Conditions of Use, License, and Amazon's Privacy Notice. Taxes where applicable.
Cancel
Background images

This title uses virtual voice narration

Virtual voice is computer-generated narration for audiobooks.

About this listen

Let’s skip the sugarcoating: today’s kids are drowning in praise, cushions, and participation trophies—and it’s making them weaker. Your Kid’s Not Special is a blunt, unsentimental manifesto for parents who are done playing the emotional butler. If you’re tired of tiptoeing around tantrums, negotiating chores like you’re handling a hostage crisis, and watching other people’s kids treat adults like waitstaff, this book is your rallying cry.

This isn’t about being mean. It’s about being honest. Each chapter dismantles a modern parenting myth—like the cult of self-esteem, the fantasy of “safe spaces,” and the belief that discomfort is trauma—and replaces it with practical strategies for raising competent, self-reliant human beings. You won’t find sticker charts or “gentle parenting affirmations” here. You’ll find checklists that don’t blink, stories from the trenches, and a clear-eyed look at what kids actually need: limits, accountability, consequences, and the ability to be bored without losing their minds.

Written for Gen X and elder Millennials who are done being told their instincts are wrong, this book doesn’t pull punches. It reminds you that your job isn’t to be your child’s friend. It’s to raise someone other people can stand to work with, live with, and love. And that takes grit. Not gimmicks.

If you want your kid to survive in the real world—and maybe even thrive—this book won’t make you feel better. But it will make you parent better. And in the long run, that’s what actually matters.

No reviews yet