Kirby Andersen

  • About
  • Work With Me
  • Store

TwitterFacebookInstagram

Live Better. Love More.
Leave A Legacy.

  • Parenting
  • Marriage
  • Health
  • Personal Development

Wednesday, June 08, 2016

Teaching Kids To Fight For The Bottom

Learning To Win By Preferring Others

Comments … Email Print

By Gail Andersen

I have long since forgotten where I heard this phrase—it may have been Zig Ziglar—but, “fight for the bottom”, has been used in our family for years and is now being quoted by my grandchildren. It has diffused many arguments in our household, and it has the capacity to do that for yours as well.

7190137_ml
Courtesy 123RF/designpics

When a child is born, he knows nothing other than himself. He has very few needs—to be fed, changed, or put to sleep—but those needs are immediate, and they become the central focus of a household. Babies don’t know how to wait. And the only way they know to make their needs known is by crying.

What if we took those same needs in an adult and allowed the adult to be so self-focused that his every need had to be met immediately? We think nothing of a baby crying, but what about an adult crying out for the same thing? This would be unacceptable—not to mention weird—because we expect that as a person matures, he learns that not everything focuses on him. We expect self-centeredness to be present in a child, but we also expect that he will start to think of the people around him as he grows up.

What If Everybody Did That?

This attitude was one we found essential to embed in the minds of our children. In a family with seven members, there wasn’t any room for being focused only on self. I found a good book that I read to my children when they were young: If Everybody Did. It is a hilarious book, but teaches some deep essential moral truths in a funny way.

What would really happen in a family if everybody did what THEY wanted to do? What would be the result if everyone was fighting to have first choice of whatever? It promotes thinking about others and how our choices affect other people.

Training To Put Other First

So the phrase fight for the bottom became a motto around our home. When two children were arguing about who would get the biggest piece of cake, or who would get to play with the newest toy, I would ask, “Who is willing to fight for the bottom?” Sometimes it took a few moments for them to think about it. Sometimes I would have to remind them that fighting for the bottom always brings blessings.

Of course, there were seasons that we even gave bonus points or pennies in their jar as a reward for fighting for the bottom. But then there were also the days that everyone was fighting for the bottom and wanted to think of others first. Who would have thought that such a family slogan could affect such changes in the minds of children?

What if everybody in your family would fight to put others first? How would your marriage improve? How much peace would you experience in your home? How much personal gratification would fill your hearts because you didn’t demand your own way but instead, you considered the feelings of others? Yes, eventually it does make a heart feel good to prefer someone else.

Give it a trial run this week. Make an effort to fight for the bottom each day where you might not have usually done so. After all, what can it hurt to let someone else in line in front of you, or to take the back seat rather than hurry to the front? It changes your way of thinking. And, in the long run, you’ll benefit the most.

Question: What is a common squabble point in the home where "fight for the bottom" would immediately bring more peace? Share your answer in the comments below.

Filed Under: Parenting

… Email Print

Like This Post?

Sign up for my blog updates and never miss a post. I’ll send you a FREE eBook as a thank-you.

Disclosure of Material Connection: Some of the links in the post above are “affiliate links”. This means if you click on the link and purchase the item, I will receive an affiliate commission. Regardless, I only recommend products or services I use personally and believe will add value to my readers. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”

Free eBook

7 Ways To Supercharge Your Family This Week

Great adventures begin with one step. So do great families. Creating a healthy, loving family isn’t complicated yet it does require doing relatively simple things consistently. That’s why I wrote my new ebook, 7 Ways To Supercharge Your Family This Week: Weekly Activities & Culture-Builders That Will Strengthen Your Family For a Lifetime.

It’s my gift to you—simply for subscribing to my free email newsletter.

About Me

I am a family man. I love and am deeply committed to my family—to become the best I can be for them. And I'm committed to you and your family. Nothing gives me greater pleasure than to help others reach for their full potential and hit the mark for which they were created.

I live to help others become better versions of themselves at home and work—to not only weather life’s challenges and positively impact their world, but to raise their children to do the same. In short, to live better, love more, and leave a legacy.

I now write, speak, and coach full-time. I am married and have three sons and two daughters.

More about me →

TwitterFacebookInstagram

Top Posts

  • Preserving The Sanctity Of Mom And Dad's Bedroom
  • A Simple, Convenient Home Salad Bar That Lasts All Week
  • The Myth Of Quality Time
  • Real Men Treat Their Wives Tenderly
  • Cut "Shame On You" From Your Parenting Vocabulary
  • 8 Tips For Making Great Family Vacation Memories
  • 3 Questions A Mom Should Ask Herself Daily

© 2025 Kirby Andersen · Privacy Policy · Terms & Conditions · Contact Me

Get my free eBook

Enter your name and email address to subscribe to my newsletter and receive my free eBook: 7 Ways To Supercharge Your Family This Week: Weekly Activities & Culture-Builders That Will Strengthen Your Family For a Lifetime.