Good Inside with Dr. Becky - Holiday Hiccups: Surviving Holiday Travel with Kids
Episode Date: December 10, 2024If the thought of traveling with your kids is causing you anxiety, then this is the episode for you. This week on the podcast, Dr. Becky sorts out how to handle sleeping in new places, airplane meltdo...wns, and backseat showdowns. Get the Good Inside App by Dr. Becky: https://bit.ly/4ghbE4VFollow Dr. Becky on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/drbeckyatgoodinsideSign up for our weekly email, Good Insider: https://www.goodinside.com/newsletterOrder Dr. Becky's book, Good Inside: A Guide to Becoming the Parent You Want to Be, at goodinside.com/book or wherever you order your books.For a full transcript of the episode, go to goodinside.com/podcastTo listen to Dr. Becky's TED Talk on repair visit https://www.ted.com/talks/becky_kennedy_the_single_most_important_parenting_strategyToday’s episode is brought to you by Airbnb: Let's be honest, parenting is expensive, especially around the holidays. If you’re traveling over the holidays and have an empty home consider making a little extra income by becoming a host on Airbnb. Every little bit helps, especially during the holiday season! Being an Airbnb host means that you are providing another family with an amazing experience and it's a great way to earn some extra money for all the different things you wanna do. Your home might be worth more than you think. Find out how much at Airbnb dot com slash host.
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I remember the first time I got on a plane with two kids under the age of four.
And nobody told me what I think I probably needed to hear to be a little bit more prepared.
And I think one of the reasons nobody told me is I was one of the first ones of my group
of friends
to have kids.
And so actually people were saying,
oh, it's gonna be amazing.
They're gonna love the plane.
Like all these things that I would seriously never say
to someone.
And I went in with the best intentions.
I mean, my snack box that I packed,
my coloring books, my removable stickers.
I was like, this is going to be four hours of fun.
That's not what happened.
It's definitely not what happened.
And I think part of the reason that first flight was, I don't even know how to say it
in a better way, just so awful, okay, was how different the reality was from my expectations.
I mean, there might've been a moment of fun.
I mean, I can't remember it.
Maybe there was one spark of a moment of that,
but mostly it was difficult
and totally different from flying without children.
Today, I wanna talk about traveling with kids
because it's something that a lot of us do.
And while it is so challenging,
there also are some things we can do
to just make it a little bit easier.
And that's what I wanna make sure I give you today.
I'm Dr. Becky, and this is Good Inside.
We'll be back right after this.
Hey, Good Inside listeners.
So sometimes with parenting, a podcast does the trick.
And sometimes with parenting, we need a bit more.
And I wanted to be sure you knew that we're set up
to help you in those trickier times.
The Good Inside membership platform is your parenting encyclopedia, coupled with a community
of parents and experts you trust, which means that no matter what you're going through,
we've got you covered.
And then we take it a step further.
Because I know that we're people who don't just want to solve a problem and return to
baseline.
We want to raise our baselines, right? And
this is what we really do, together. Reduce triggers, learn to set boundaries, and access
that sturdy leader that I know is inside all of us. It's all there when you're looking
for that next step. And until then, please do check out goodinside.com slash podcast.
Scroll down to the Ask Dr. Becky section at the bottom
and let me know what you want to talk about
in future podcast episodes.
All right, so today we're going to talk about travel
and this is a topic that I received
so many questions about, so many great questions.
So I'm going to go through three of them, and let's start by jumping into the first.
Okay.
I'm feeling pretty nervous about our upcoming trip.
It'll be our first time flying with kids who are two and four.
They do okay on car rides, but the idea of being on a plane stresses me out, especially
when I think about having meltdowns in the airport and during the flight and the reactions
of other passengers.
Do you have any advice?
How can I travel with my kids without all this stress?
Okay.
Here's the first thing I want to say. And to me, this extends so beyond
travel. We set ourselves up for more stress when we ask ourselves any question that has
this formula. How can I do X without Y? How can I travel without stress? How can I travel with my
girlfriends without my kids without feeling guilt? Whatever it is. How can I
do X without Y? How can I go on a flight with my kids without them having a
meltdown as an example, right? And actually the most powerful intervention
is to just ask ourselves a different question.
Whenever we feel really stressed, a big reason is we are asking ourselves the wrong questions.
We're asking ourselves impossible questions that no one has the answer to.
So I want to do something that I often do with parents.
I call upgrading the question.
Okay?
I'm going to upgrade this question.
How can I travel with my kids without stress?
Watch this upgrade.
How can I travel with my kids and manage my stress?
So instead of, how do I go on a flight with my kids
without them having a meltdown?
How can I go on a flight with my kids
and do whatever I can to reduce the likelihood of meltdowns,
while also being prepared for the inevitable meltdowns that will happen?
If you notice these shifts, instead of feeling, I know for me, kind of constricted and I'm like racking my brain,
they really get me back in touch with my capability.
On second, I'm an adult, I felt stress a million times in my life.
Why do I have to not feel stress on the airplane?
I'm gonna feel stress.
Maybe I don't have to be scared of that.
I can think about how to manage it.
Wait, my kids have had meltdowns
most days of their toddler lives.
That's normal.
Instead of crossing my fingers
and hoping they don't have a meltdown on a plane.
Maybe there's a few things I can do to reduce the likelihood,
but also maybe I can prepare myself to be the sturdiest leader I can be
when my kids have a meltdown during the flight.
Two things are true.
We don't have to do one thing without another thing. This mindset
is so important to shift. So let's talk about those meltdowns on the plane. First of all,
it's always helpful to tell kids what to expect. To some degree, kids meltdown because they're
like, what's happening to me? Where am I? Where am I going? I mean, think about that.
Think about someone dragging
you to an airport and putting you on a plane and buckling you in and you having no idea
what's happening. I don't know about you. I would have a meltdown. I mean, I would feel
like I was under threat. And if someone said, why are you freaking out? I'd say, why am
I freaking out? I am trying to survive here. What are you doing to me?" So talk to your kids about what's going to happen.
That is so important. Second, what do I do if my kid has a meltdown? Look, the truth is,
we don't end meltdowns for our kids. That's like someone saying,
if there's a tornado, how can I end it as quickly as possible? What would you tell your friend?
If there's a tornado, how can I end it as quickly as possible? What would you tell your friend?
I think I'd tell my friend, I feel like we're asking the wrong question.
What is your job during a tornado?
Okay.
And then they'd be like, oh, I probably have to get somewhere safe.
Okay.
What is your job during a tantrum?
Your job is never to end a tantrum or a meltdown.
Your job is to keep your body as calm as possible and to keep your kid safe.
That means you stop them from kicking a seat,
you stop them from scratching the passenger next to them,
but it's gonna happen and that's okay.
Here's the last thing I wanna leave you with.
You know, sometimes I think about the good inside community
and I actually do imagine that strangers surrounding me
in a public situation are actually all either,
you know, good inside members,
they're good inside kind of, you know, movement makers,
but they're kind of part of the good inside world.
And so they kind of get what's happening.
And I almost imagine that if my kid's having a hard time,
they're looking at me and just saying,
I get it.
Don't worry.
Do your thing.
We've all been there.
Don't worry about us.
Right?
Every person remembers, I hope at least, the first time they took their kids on a plane.
Right?
And it was hard.
It's new.
It's different.
It's stressful. I think if you shift from, oh my goodness, is everyone judging me?
Which is just a fear. It's not a fact.
To, oh my goodness, maybe everyone understands.
You're going to be able to better manage your stress.
Okay, next question.
My five-year-old never sleeps anytime we leave the house.
Whether we're traveling to family we visit or staying in a new place,
sleep becomes such a problem.
And when he doesn't sleep, then there's more meltdowns or so much crankiness,
and then I don't sleep.
Any tips?
Okay.
First, I just want to say...
this stinks.
Like when our kids aren't sleeping, which maybe some of you are thinking,
my kid just doesn't sleep separate from travel. So this is just a chronic problem. Sleep struggles, I just
think for me at least, they were some of the worst struggles because I was just exhausted.
So any tank I had to manage the day to day of parenting life, it was just always lower
because I wasn't sleeping. Right? And then you travel, maybe you're visiting family
and you wanna have a good time with them.
Maybe you're like paying for somewhere to stay
and you're thinking, oh my goodness, I'm paying
and now I'm like up with my kid, it stinks.
I just wanna validate it stinks.
Why do kids have such a hard time sleeping in new places?
This is actually the essence of what I wanna explain
because it'll help so much to understand it.
Sleep struggles are not unique struggles.
They're not like their own category of struggles.
Sleep struggles are anxiety and separation struggles
because during sleep, your kids separate from you.
We don't think about it that way.
We often think about separation
as like I'm dropping my kid at daycare, right?
But if you think about daycare, okay, well, I'm dropping my kid at daycare with other
adults with other kids in a room with toys and it's bright.
Now I'm thinking about separating from my kid at night.
They're in a room, maybe staying somewhere they've never been.
They're alone without an adult, without other kids in the dark.
And by the way, instead of daycare, which is, I don't know, four hours, eight hours, sleep is like 12 hours.
It's also longer.
It's major separation.
And kids have anxiety about that.
They get nervous.
Now, to be clear, kids at night don't say,
hey, mom, feeling a little nervous sleeping in a new room.
No.
Kids say, I need another book.
Wait, I'm still hungry. Wait, you can't leave my room. No, kids say, I need another book. Wait, I'm still hungry.
Wait, you can't leave my room.
Wait, I feel like we have to make an appointment
at the dentist.
Wait a second, I don't think I checked my rock collection.
Like they will say anything.
Those kids are smart.
But really what's happening is they're feeling anxious.
So what can we do?
One big thing we can do is very similar to the guidance I gave in the first question.
We have to prepare our kid.
Try to get a picture of the room your kid is sleeping in before they get there.
Look at it together.
Talk about it.
You can even make a guessing game.
Oh, I wonder what color the wall is going to be.
Oh, do you think there'll be one pillow on the bed or two pillows?
Okay, think about that.
Now your kid gets to this room. And instead of it being new, it's familiar and there's
play around it.
Ooh, mom, you thought there was one pillow.
There's two pillows.
I was right.
Ooh, we thought there would be a blue wall.
It's actually a red wall, whatever it is.
My kid's now engaging in their space.
So when they do go to bed, instead of it feeling completely new and unexpected, it feels familiar, which
always feels more comfortable.
As a family, our needs are constantly changing. That's what I love about Airbnb. I can find
a place based on what my kids and family need right now.
Whether that's being close to family we're visiting,
separate bedrooms for separate bedtimes,
or a backyard to play in.
I can easily find a spot that checks all the boxes.
And with all the stress that comes with the holiday season,
it's such a relief to have this one thing be super easy.
And I learned about something you might want to know about too.
Your home could be an Airbnb for another family while you're away.
This is a great way to make some extra income around the holidays.
Or anytime, really.
Your home might be worth more than you think.
Find out how much at airbnb.com slash host.
Okay next question.
We're traveling to a family member's house for the holidays and I am dreading the car
ride.
I have two kids, five and eight.
There are always so many fights.
He's touching me.
This is the best one, right?
I love what the parent wrote.
She's looking out my window.
Tell her to stop.
It drives me and my husband crazy.
How do I make this stop?
Okay.
This is honestly one of the most common things I hear with siblings.
It's like, yeah, sibling arguments are kind of an issue, but the stuff in the car is like out of control. Like, how do I manage when my kids even get physical? When
they're screaming, when they're talking about what feels like nonsense to me, looking out
my window, like, what are you even talking about when I'm trying to drive a car? First
thing I want to say is I have been there myself. It's just a good time to remind you all that like,
I play a good game as Dr. Becky, okay?
Like as Dr. Becky, I feel like I have a lot of,
you know, fairly intelligent things to say.
Dr. Becky does not parent my kid.
I would not wish that on my kids.
My kids have Becky.
I am a normal parent.
I truly do have to like take some of my own advice,
do some of my own workshops sometimes
because I forget, because I get triggered.
And I know for me, the stuff in the car,
it's so infuriating.
And I just want us to understand that together first
because I think understanding our own triggers
is helpful in staying grounded
so we can even use the new strategies we learn.
I think it's so triggering honestly,
because we feel so helpless.
Like in the day to day of our lives outside the car,
our kids are arguing, we can jump in there,
we can separate, we can do a lot of things.
When you're driving, you're like,
I literally am not there.
Plus it's like getting my way of focus.
And I have to pull over to the side of the road
and then we tell ourselves like in this situation,
what, my kids are five and eight,
I can't even drive somewhere.
And then we fast forward, make up a whole story.
My kids are never gonna be able to function as adults.
And I have the worst kids in the world.
Okay.
My kids, when they were five and eight,
still argued in the car.
I mean, my kids are seven and nine and 12 right now.
And there are still some moments
when I have to pull over the car.
Definitely way less.
But this is part of family life and I just
really want you to know that so at least you can tell yourself the story the next
time. Wait I'm not alone. I don't have awful kids. I'm not a failing parent.
Everyone goes through this. I can do this. The other thing I want to say about
this is again I think sometimes we ask ourselves
questions that set ourselves up for failure and to feel awful.
Dr. Becky, when my kids are hitting each other in the car and I'm driving, what can I do
to make it stop?
My honest answer, like not much, but I have more to say, okay?
Not much.
It's like saying, I remember this other question I got recently.
I have three kids and the other day I was alone with all of them and my baby was crawling
and I feel like about to fall off a couch and my other kid had a Sharpie near the wall
and my other kid was screaming from the other side of the house, what would you do?
I was like, I literally don't know.
I don't know.
I just try to survive that moment.
There is no magic we have.
In a way, what we're saying is we're on a road and we get
to some point where there's like a cliff and we're saying, how do I not fall off the cliff?
Well, when you're teetering on the cliff, like there's not much you can do. You cross your
fingers, right? Here's a better question. How can I get on a road that doesn't end in a cliff?
And how can I start to recognize that I'm on a road
that leads to a cliff and like exit before I get there?
That is the type of question we have to ask with car travel.
What do I mean?
Instead of what do I do when my kids are fighting like crazy?
Let's ask a different question.
That's really a different road
that has a different destination.
What can I do before my next car ride
to build
certain skills and have certain practice that my kids generally struggle with? So there's
less of a chance of that explosive argument. Now, I know I honestly like roll my eyes a
little bit like what I have to do something in advance, I don't have time, I don't have
time. But if I think about the literal time it takes to pull over every two minutes to feel like
you're not being safe, where you then yell at your kids, you make some threat, you don't
follow through, you feel awful, you repair, I just think we forget that's a lot of time.
It's just how we're used to spending our time.
But I promise you it's actually more time.
So what might I do? Hey,
we have a car ride next week and it's a long one. Let's be honest, car rides can be really
hard. And I think one of the reasons they're hard is just it's a little boring. You're
in each other's space. We're probably also just used to like this kind of nature of an
argument. I want to do this car ride differently,
and I believe we can.
I believe in myself that I can stay calmer.
And that's when I look both my kids in the eye and say,
and I believe in each of you.
I believe you can keep your bodies to yourself.
I believe we can even think of things that could be fun.
And I believe we can figure out when things are starting
to get hard, but don't get to the point
where we're screaming.
We're a team, let's do this together.
And then what would I do from there?
Like I brainstorm things.
Okay, well, what could be fun?
Kids, when they're brought in as a teammate
instead of as an enemy, you better not do that
in the car ride, right?
When you're brought in as a teammate, kids generally want to be part of the conversation.
They actually have good ideas.
They're willing to brainstorm.
They almost feel honored that you brought them to the table in this way, right?
Again, picture your boss saying, in the meetings, you've been really disruptive.
If you do that again, I'm not paying for your lunch next week, okay?
Versus think about your boss saying, there's been a lot of disruptions in the meeting,
but look, we're on the same team.
Let's talk for five minutes and just brainstorm
how to work together so the meetings can run
a little bit more smoothly.
I mean, we'd all respond and actually probably have ideas.
We even would get to the bottom of like,
why we were being disruptive in the first place.
What might that mean?
Well, you know, what's really interesting is this episode came right after one of maybe
the longest thread in our kind of good inside community, the private community within our
membership and there are so many great ideas there.
And I just want to read you a response because there we had a question that was basically
the same as this question.
Where was there's always pinching, hitting in the car.
This was with twins, right?
But very, very similar.
What do I do?
And I just want to read you one of the responses or I'm going to read part of it.
And I think every parent has first said, this is so tough and I've been there.
This is exactly what I would say too.
So two things that came up over and over, okay, is when the disruptive behavior begins first.
This is key.
First, this is when it's at a two out of 10.
That's my area.
You have to intervene then.
We can't wait and ignore it because in a way, a kid's saying, is there a limit around here?
Is anyone noticing?
Do things have to escalate to further get my parents' attention?
Intervene then.
And this woman wrote, channel your sturdy pilot,
just like a sturdy pilot,
there's the beginning of turbulence.
And in that moment, pull to the side of the road.
I know this sounds counterintuitive.
I'm trying not to pull to the side of the road.
But we actually want to get out of the habit
of my kids get to a 10 out of 10 and then they get my attention by
pulling to the side of the road. That's not what we want. Pull to the side of the road
then. And this is what someone wrote that I thought was brilliant. I did this in silence
for 30 seconds. There wasn't such intense arguing, so it wasn't dangerous. I didn't have to
get to the back seat. I just pulled to the side of the road and sat in silence for 30
seconds. I breathed. I kind of said a mantra to myself. And the kids got quiet. Before
getting back on the road, turn to your kids and just say, I know car rides can be boring.
Let's get back on track, okay?
Again, same team.
So different, I know, from what I usually do,
but other people were saying,
wow, I'm going to really try that.
The next thing is just try to be preemptive.
Explain to your kid driving is a full-time job. You know how I always say my
number one job is to keep you safe? Well, that's really relevant in the car. Driving is a job that
takes your full attention to keep everyone safe in the car. And so what that means is for me to be safe, there has to be calm energy in the back. Again, doing this preemptively,
explaining it to your kid rather than reacting to your kid, especially as if you've done what we
talked about earlier, see what your kids want to do. Maybe they do want like a coloring book or they
want something to hear for music or a certain podcast to listen to.
Now all of a sudden, I'm getting ahead of things.
I'm making sure I'm on a road more toward peace than towards the cliff of really intense
sibling arguments.
All right, everyone.
I just want to end by reminding you, travel is tricky with kids.
This isn't a reason that you shouldn't travel.
In fact,
so many areas of parenting are tricky and we do it anyway. Having reasonable
expectations, preparing your kids so they're not surprised, giving them what we
always talk about a good inside, the most generous interpretation, and intervening
with struggles early before they get to a 10 out of 10,
that seems to be the theme of what's really helpful.
I wish you all the luck in the world, and all the joy, and all the calm,
and all the sturdiness in your holiday travel ahead. [♪ music playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, chimes playing, Thank you for listening.
To share a story or ask me a question, go to goodinside.com slash podcast, or you could
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One last thing before I let you go.
Let's end by placing our hands on our hearts and reminding ourselves
even as I struggle and even as I have a hard time on the outside,
I remain good inside.
I remain good inside.