More reminders raise stress, which invites resistance, which triggers sterner tones, which accelerate stress again. That spiral can be met with a simple counter-loop: earlier wind-down cues, co-created rituals, playful transitions, and dimmed lights that reduce arousal. Parents track their own energy, pause sooner, and reinforce calm moments. Over days, the balancing loop strengthens, lowering the push needed and restoring cooperation gracefully.
Nagging increases avoidance, which increases nagging again. Replace that loop by clarifying outcomes, offering choice, and rewarding visible progress promptly. A simple chart, timed focus sprints, and praise for effort shift identity toward capable helper. As ownership grows, reminders decrease naturally, resentment fades, and the new reinforcing loop nurtures initiative, freeing parents to coach rather than chase compliance around the house.