Ask any therapist what makes consequences work, and they won't say "stricter" or "softer." They'll say consistent.
And the only reliable way to be consistent in the moment is to decide what the consequence will be before the moment.
The improvisation trap
Most parents already know the rules they care about. The struggle isn't identifying the rule — it's what to do when it's broken. So the response gets invented on the spot, under stress, often after a long day.
One day you let it slide. The next day you take away screens for a week. Your partner does something different. The child learns the rule isn't fixed — it depends on the mood in the room.
That isn't a parenting failure. That's a system failure.
What "predetermined" means in practice
In famio, every rule has a habit card attached to it before it ever gets broken. The card is the consequence. It's short, it's written, and it's the same every time.
When the rule is broken, no one has to think. The card gets handed over. The child completes it. Done.
That's not coldness — that's relief. For the parent, who no longer has to invent a response. For the child, who knows exactly what to expect.
Why this is the heart of ABA
Applied Behavior Analysis — ABA — has been used in clinical settings for decades, especially for children on the autism spectrum. One of its core principles is exactly this: the consequence is decided in advance, communicated clearly, and applied consistently.
An ABA practitioner we spoke with put it bluntly: "If they break a rule, it's preset, predetermined with the family. This is the consequence you're gonna get."
That's the same logic famio uses at home — applied by parents, not therapists. The habit card is the consequence. Rule → known card → practice.
Especially powerful for families with neurodivergent kids
For children with ASD or ADHD, ambiguity is exhausting. "Maybe later," "we'll see," "it depends" — these phrases create cognitive load that neurotypical kids can absorb but neurodivergent kids often can't.
A predetermined consequence removes that ambiguity. The child doesn't have to read the room. The rule is the rule. The card is the card. There's nothing to negotiate, nothing to misread, nothing to spiral about.
Many of the families using famio aren't neurodivergent — but the structure is built around the same principles that make life easier when neurodivergence is part of the picture.
The unexpected side effect
Parents who switch to predetermined consequences usually report something they didn't expect: their relationship with their child gets warmer.
That makes sense. When you're not the source of the consequence — when the system is — you're free to be the parent. You hand over the card without anger. You hug your kid afterward. The argument doesn't exist anymore, because there's nothing to argue about.
That's what structure actually buys you. Less conflict, more connection.




