Some days every transition turns into a battle: stop the game, get dressed, go to school, take a shower, turn off the screen… And the argument usually starts in the worst possible moment: when the body is already past the limit.
The 2-2-2 Protocol is a short routine (6 minutes) you use before you ask for the transition. It works because it flips the order: body → attention → action. It doesn’t rely on “willpower”. It relies on predictability.
When to use it
- Before transitions (especially screen → task).
- Before new demands (“now we will…”, “it’s time to…”).
- When you see early “yellow” signs: irritability, repetition, automatic “no”, rigidity.
Overview (10-second memory)
Regulation (body)
Lower input + quick anchoring.
Focus (attention)
One small task with a clear end.
Transition (action)
Tiny choice + countdown + next task.
Block 1 — 2 minutes of Regulation (body)
You’re telling the nervous system: “this is not a threat”.
- Lower input: low voice, fewer words, no long lists of demands.
- Body anchor: wall push (10s), blanket/deep pressure (with consent), hands busy.
- Rhythm: slow counting 1–10 or breathe 4–2–6 for 3 cycles.
Block 2 — 2 minutes of Focus (attention)
Now you give the brain a simple target. The secret: a small task with a visible finish.
- Sort 5 small objects by color (or shape).
- Find 3 things in the room (“something green”, “something soft”, “something round”).
- A short predictable activity (e.g., 60–120s of “Guided Breathing”).
Block 3 — 2 minutes of Transition (action)
Transition without fights is not “convincing”. It’s building the path.
- Tiny choice: “Put away X or Y first?”
- Countdown: “In 10… 9… 8…” (steady tone, no threats).
- One clear next step: a single instruction (“water”, “bathroom”, “backpack”).
Using Lumnix as a tool (without creating dependency)
Use it inside Block 2 (Focus): short, purposeful, with a clean exit.
Tip: state the time first (“2 minutes”) and use a timer.
Edge cases (when it “doesn’t work”)
- If it’s already red: skip Block 2 and reduce demand. Safety first.
- If screens are the trigger: Block 2 cannot be a screen — use room-based tasks.
- If hunger/sleep is the issue: no technique beats physiology. Fix the basics.
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