Good Inside with Dr. Becky - How We Grow Up: Inside the Adolescent Brain with Matt Richtel
Episode Date: July 22, 2025In this powerful episode, Dr. Becky sits down with Pulitzer Prize–winning New York Times science reporter Matt Richtel to explore the urgent mental health crisis facing today’s teens—and the sci...ence behind what’s really going on in the adolescent brain.Expanding on his acclaimed reporting, Matt shares insights from his groundbreaking new book How We Grow Up, diving deep into the neurological, biological, and social transformations that define adolescence.This episode is brought you by Chomps. When it comes to school snacks, I’ve never been the “pack my kid a portable charcuterie board” kind of parent. If you are, more power to you. I’m more of a “grab-and-go” type - I want something simple, nutritious, and easy for my kids to reach for as we’re heading out the door.That’s why I like Chomps. Their full-size meat sticks have 10 grams of protein and zero sugar. They’re filling and made from real ingredients, so it’s one less thing to think about. And if you’ve ever opened your kid’s backpack to find a half-eaten snack from who-knows-when still wrapped up in there, Chomplings are great. They’re smaller sticks (the right size to toss in a lunchbox or that little front backpack pocket) with 4 grams of protein and zero sugar.Chomps are made of high-quality ingredients like 100% grass-fed beef, venison, and antibiotic-free turkey. They’re also free from the top nine allergens, so you don’t have to worry about sending them to school. Check out all the sizes and delicious flavors at Chomps.com/DRBECKY for 15% off plus free shipping.Good Inside is now eligible for HSA/FSA reimbursement with a Letter of Medical Necessity! We’re partnering with Truemed to make the process easy - go to https://www.goodinside.com/fsa-hsa-eligibility/ to learn more.Good Inside Members, love the podcast and want to keep the conversation going? Starting Tuesday, August 5th, join us every Tuesday at 10:30am for Podcast Club to dive deeper, share reflections, and connect with other listeners.Get the Good Inside App by Dr. Becky: https://bit.ly/4fSxbzkYour Good Inside membership might be eligible for HSA/FSA reimbursement! To learn more about how to get your membership reimbursed, check out the link here: https://www.goodinside.com/fsa-hsa-eligibility/Follow Dr. Becky on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/drbeckyatgoodinsideSign up for our weekly email, Good Insider: https://www.goodinside.com/newsletterFor a full transcript of the episode, go to goodinside.com/podcast.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
All right, today I'm speaking with Pulitzer Prize winning journalist and a dad of teenagers,
Matt Richtel.
Matt spent nearly two years reporting a powerful nine part series in the New York Times on
the post pandemic adolescent mental health crisis.
And the project evolved into a brand new book.
His book is How We Grow Up, Understanding Adolescence.
And it's out today, July 8th.
Matt and I had one of the most amazing conversations
I've had with anyone in my life.
It was truly one of those moments where I thought,
oh my goodness, how are we already at time?
I could talk to you forever.
You want to hear this conversation,
whether you have an adolescent or not.
I promise you, it's going to make you think new things.
It's going to make you do something different in your home today and I promise you it will not leave you feeling, oh it's too late
because it's actually all about what we do after the moments like me we mess up. I'm Dr. Becky
and this is Good Inside. We'll be back right after this. Hi, Matt. Hi, Becky. How are you? I am. I'm good.
I'm so excited to talk.
Matt, I want to jump in just talking about your new book, How We Grow Up.
I loved it.
It's so important.
And maybe we could just start telling me a little bit about either your research process
or your career.
I'm excited to talk about it.
I'm excited to talk about it.
I'm excited to talk about it.
I'm excited to talk about it.
I'm excited to talk about it.
I'm excited to talk about it.
I'm excited to talk about it.
I'm excited to talk about it.
I'm excited to talk about it.
I'm excited to talk about it.
I'm excited to talk about it.
I'm excited to talk about it.
I'm excited to talk about it. I'm excited to talk about it. I'm excited to talk about it. I'm excited to talk about it. I'm Up. I loved it. It's so important. And maybe we could just start telling
me a little bit about either your research process or your why, like what was going on
that led you to write the book that drove this?
Yeah. First of all, thank you for asking. And I will repeat, it's really great to be here. I've been listening to your show of late and
I really appreciate the fact that you're trying to make practical what can often be esoteric
and glib and I will make the same effort. And it's in that spirit in a way that got
me working on this.
I had spent two years doing a series on the adolescent mental health crisis,
if you want to call it that. And I realized in the course of reporting that that there
was a fundamental question left unanswered and that is, what is the nature of adolescence
itself?
And Becky, interestingly, that question, there's a much fresher answer than there has
been in about 125 years.
And it is absolutely material in explaining what's happening now to teens and adolescents,
two different things.
And what we do about it.
That's what led me into this. Also, Becky, I have two adolescents and I was like,
hey, maybe I could learn something. But what I learned, Becky, fundamentally that I would love
to just ground this in unless you steer me otherwise is what adolescence is.
And I come up with a framework synthesizing a whole bunch of research that
I think reframes what we think of as adolescence and this is what I would offer you.
Adolescence is a process with a definitive purpose to integrate the known and the unknown.
What is known is what our parents and prior generations tell us.
And what is unknown is two things.
One, what actually works in the world.
Not what we've been told as adolescents, but what actually works.
And secondarily, what new ground might we carve out as a generation in an effort to
survive as individuals and as a new generation? So, what we've thought for decades, Becky, centuries, is that this was a period of almost
primitive, boorish, atavistic behavior.
In point of fact, it is an inflection point of information processing, the likes of which
you will never go through again.
So, just, I love that big picture idea.
So, adolescence, it has a purpose, right?
There's this goal.
There's something that has to be figured out and this integration of what's known and unknown,
what has been given to you and all of the things you could explore and discover. Like, your body, your brain is trying to synthesize, make sense
of balance, way, figure out that equation.
I want you to imagine that you've been given a user manual by your parents, except that
survival is too delicate and fragile to merely take the word of the manual. You
must explore and probe by definition, are you to survive? May I just pop into a bit
of biology for a second?
I love it. Do more than pop in, just wade in some biology.
I will go ramshackle. I will drown myself in biology.
And I will lift you out to continue the conversation.
So you go first.
In order to facilitate this evolution, if you will, biology.
In order to facilitate this period of experimentation and probing, it.
Sets off some hormones that prompt people to become hyper
aware of their environment.
Adolescents, at puberty, which we tend to think of as this gateway to reproduction,
in point of fact is this very fundamental neurological event in which a big bang of understanding suddenly the world around
you and you become hyper attune through your hormones to people and things outside your
home.
I'll just give you one. What's fascinating today, Becky, that distinguishes this moment from all prior research in science
is that for the first time we can look under the hood of the adolescent brain.
And for centuries, the idea was that we've watched their behavior and tried to reverse
engineer what was going on. But now, by way of example, we can see
the changes inside the brain that make people very alert at adolescence to their surroundings.
And I'll just give you one bit of science that might hone in. There's a study out of
Stanford called Pwydisch Walt, which sounds like a nonsense word and it is. Stanford researcher puts
young children and adolescents in an MRI machine and watches their brains and watches the brains
as the young people hear nonsense words spoken by three different people, their mothers
broken by three different people, their mothers and two complete strangers.
And as puberty on sets and the hormones set in, the young person's brain lights
up when the stranger talks.
At younger ages, it's when the parent talks.
The reward systems of the brain have become hyper attuned to the environment outside the home. Why would this be?
Because for 10, 11, 12 years, you've been taken care of in your home and now you have to survive outside of it.
You better well understand what's going on.
Okay. So there's so many.
First of all, I'm taking copious notes.
I'm taking copious notes and I know taking copious notes and I appreciate it.
I'm learning so much.
These are my favorite conversations and so many things are pinging in my brain.
But the first thing that's loud is that I want to run by you because when I talk to
parents about teens, right, and kind of what's going on and what they need and everyone's
like, what do I do about this?
What do I do about this?
And I love all the practical stuff I do, but to me, practical stuff without a fundamental
understanding of what's really happening
or a framework is useless.
It doesn't even come to us in the moment
because we have no grounding
to plant our strategic flags into.
So one of the things I tell parents,
and I'm wondering if this lines up with the biology,
is like essentially for the first number of years
of your kid's life, they live in your house.
And obviously they leave your house, but proverbially they live in your house. And obviously they leave your house,
but proverbially they live in your house,
they're so happy to be there.
They're building up comfort,
they're building up safety independence.
We all build up our capacity to be independent
by how comfortable we are being relatively dependent
and having that base.
And then the door opens.
And one of the things I think happens is, right,
kids in adolescence are supposed to be explorers.
They are supposed to travel around the world
because you can't really learn about the customs
of other countries if you're not there.
But one of the things that happens in this period
when kids are understandably,
and therefore also what you're saying, biologically exploring
is as parents, we take it very personally and we we then have our own defense
mechanisms we pull away and this is good this whatever I say this it makes me
very sad okay like instead of our kids being explorers, they become nomads. And the biggest
difference between an explorer and a nomad is whether you have a home base.
CUPPYCUP WESTCRAFT Becky, are you a genius? Can I borrow the... Is there time to get the metaphor into the paperback?
Look, you've said a mouthful.
Can I break it down even further?
Please. I just want to really ground what you've said about a framework.
Our framework has been fundamentally wrong.
We have we have looked at young people as causing conflict, as a form of rebellion, as a form of angst,
as a form of anger, this is not accurate. And the reason it goes so squarely to your
point is parents cannot take this personally. It is where the problems arise in that relationship. There are two reasons parents take this personally.
The first is we are all ourselves insecure and it's almost like our kids are a version
of social media saying I hate you and it's hard not to take that personally. But there's
another reason which is really vital, adolescence is the proverbial handoff moment in life's
relay race.
We are handing off some control and power to the next generation and that is freaking
scary.
It even reminds us of our own mortality.
So not only are we feeling personally slighted, we are sensing a power
shift. I cannot say strongly enough, Becky, that we cannot take this personally and I
do get into this in the book. I have a bit of a glib phrase which is love, lead and let
go but the let go part is essential. You cannot conflate yourself with your children.
Well, and I guess in this like visual,
because I find the visual helpful.
My kids in my house, then they need to be an explorer,
but they do need this home base to return to.
And again, the time your adolescents
want to return to your home base,
let me just be clear, is only the inconvenient moments.
You're like, I have been inviting my kid
into my fricking house all day and I am exhausted.
And they come into my room at 1130
and they wake me up and they're kind of like, I'm home.
And you're like, I'm sleeping, you know?
And so, and it's true, they do, they come, they're explorers
and they're kind of like always on the night shift
and they wanna come home and you wanna come home.
But if we don't take it personally,
it doesn't mean we have to stay up with them for an hour
when we have a big meeting the next day, but your reaction is very different, right?
And so I think though, and this goes so far
in terms of not just adolescents,
but how we prepare ourselves and our kids for this period
is when our kids are in our house, right?
Which they are, right?
But like that time, those early years,
to the degree we are getting our self-worth as a parent
from our kids being a mirrored
version of us, or from the way they tell us all the secrets of their friends, or from
the way we plan all their play dates and make sure they're in the right classes, if we are
getting our self-worth not from things unrelated to our kids, or even not from the way we are preparing our kids to
be successful adults, but from the way they kind of attach to us so intensely, adolescence
is going to feel very injurious.
The challenges that get presented when we, when our self-esteem is taken from our kids and what it winds up doing later on is it
not only confuses us with them but it makes it hard to set boundaries.
And the reason I emphasize bound, I'd like to come back, I mentioned I alluded to Las
Vegas and I'd like to mention that earlier I mentioned
that the adolescent brain becomes hyper attuned to the environment around it. I think of it
as like a kid just stepped into Las Vegas and there's bells and whistles and temptations
and as a parent, you're saying to them, I already told you this place is entirely fake,
here's the good restaurants, here's the places you should go, here's the places you shouldn't go,
but they cannot take your word for it in that moment. So, once you understand that framework,
let's just start with the most basic thing. You don't take it personally when they walk into the
casino or the back alley because they're not doing it to tell you to go screw yourself or they're
not listening to you. They're doing it because they fundamentally need to understand the
environment on their own terms. So, that's one thing I'd say. But the other thing I'd say and this goes to boundaries, if they're in
this environment, there are some places and spaces that we don't want them to explore
but they will survive. And there are some places and spaces that may kill them. And
we are, this is where we're duty bound to set clear boundaries even if it means they scream, I hate you, you don't understand me because they can only survive if they get past the worst stuff.
What do I mean? There are areas around addiction, around drinking and driving, around certain criminal behavior that you may not bounce
back from. You could say to yourself as a parent, well, I lumped those all together with missing a
day of school or you know, staying out past curfew, but they are not the same things.
And as a parent, I would really urge you to set the boundaries around the important stuff
and not care if your kid gets upset because that's your job.
So a couple things about that.
Boundaries are my love language, right?
And I think, again, like, and I know we haven't even gotten into it yet, I'm sure we will.
At some point, everyone's like, well, how do I make sure my kid, I don't want my kid
to get a phone until this age and all this stuff.
And I always say, you know, look, boundaries are a muscle.
The idea that you're going to set your very first boundary and tolerate your kid being
upset with you
when they ask a phone, that's a joke.
That's like asking a basketball player to miss a free throw,
to make a free throw when game seven is on the line,
when they've never made one in practice.
That's not happening.
So boundaries are a part of your relationship
with your kid.
In my mind, they need to be built into the fabric,
which is, I probably have a different version.
My job is to set boundaries and care about your feelings.
By the way, the caring about your feelings
does not mean those feelings dictate your decisions.
That's the duality we've lost,
is the ability when our kids are young
to start that with TV time is over,
it is your bedtime, you're not having a sleepover,
no, you can't have ice cream for breakfast,
and oh, I know, you wish you could.
It would be so yummy, no sweetie,
I am blocking you from going to the freezer
because that's just not an option. Like it's warm, it's firm, and so you wish you could. It would be so yummy. No, sweetie, I am blocking you from going to the freezer
because that's just not an option.
Like it's warm, it's firm.
And so you're building that into the fabric
of your relationship so that by the time you do say,
this is actually a limit, even as you're getting older,
your kid's body is kind of like, I am accustomed to this.
Like this is not the first time my parent has done this.
And Becky, can I reinforce why that's so in the child's interest?
Yep.
The world is challenging and difficult.
If you actually want to help your kids survive, you don't mimic an environment where they're
entitled to everything.
No one calls you and says, Becky, hey, how would you like to have one of the top podcasts in the world?
All you have to do is show up and smile.
It doesn't work like that.
You got to work your tail off.
Hey, Matt, how would you like a job at the New York Times?
That doesn't happen.
So, when we say don't go to the freezer, these are the rules.
When you break the rules, this is what happens.
It's much more consistent with the world around them.
But I'm going to just jump in here
because I think it really matters,
because my version is different.
And I actually, I'll say this to you
because I think boundaries are very misunderstood.
And I think people think they're setting a boundary
when they say to their kid,
don't go to the freezer, or it's not iPad time.
I would say those are requests.
A boundary is what you tell your kid you will do,
and it would require your kid to do nothing.
Anytime you're requiring your kid to do something
for you to be successful,
not only are you not setting a boundary,
you're literally giving your power away
to your two-year-old or to your 14-year-old.
So a boundary would be saying,
I'm not letting you go to the freezer,
and you're gonna be there.
And if you're saying,
but my three-year-old is gonna go there when I'm not there,
I'm like, yeah, because there are three.
So they would do that. So you have to you have to figure this out.
Right. Like, I'm not going to let you even see your iPad if it's not your iPad time.
How many of us are successful at not taking our phone when it's visible?
Right. I like how you just set a boundary with me.
But I think you might have.
I think I might have. But this is actually a good back and forth because it's so interesting.
We're a good pair. You have a lot of research and biology in the way that's, you know, I'm aware of and
not the thing I look into.
But a story comes to mind that to me really, really shows why kids need boundaries.
Okay.
And I think it's right in line.
So, right.
I'm in private practice.
I'm seeing this like 16 year old who's the snarkiest, the snarkiest human being I've ever met.
And I love it, I love a good challenge, you know,
cause under snarkiness is always pain
that's just waiting to be seen.
And she came to me after she was cutting for years,
she was cutting her wrists, right?
She was cutting, you know, and she was really struggling.
And I remember the very first session,
I was like, okay, how long have you been cutting?
She was two years.
And like that two years, like such attitude.
And I was like, oh, well, you told me
this is the first time you've seen a therapist.
She's like, it is.
My parents made me come, you know, or something like that.
And I go, well, have your parents known about the cutting?
And she's like, they have.
And I was like, well, why have you not seen a therapist
in two years?
And Matt, I'll never forget.
She goes, well, my parents tried two years ago and
they and they said you know we're have to see a therapist we're worried about you and I said oh
so you're saying okay earmuffs anyone here you're saying I'm fucked up you're saying I'm
fucked up and I'm the only one who has to go to therapy you know what I'm gonna do I'm gonna go
and I'm gonna lie and I'm just gonna make up stories and waste all of your money you can't
make me okay whenever I tell the story my heart heart races, okay? And then I somehow, in my good therapeutic moment,
just knew to shut the F up.
Becky, do not say anything.
I just, and her entire body language changed.
She looked to the ground like a five-year-old.
And when she looked up at me,
literally what she said was, can you believe they let me
make that decision?
Can I, can I reinforce, you mentioned our partnership where you actually do the things
and I read the books.
Can I reinforce what you've just said with some research?
Yes, please. So, there's a lot of talk today about a mental health crisis and we can quibble over the
questions. There's no doubt kids get, young people get overwhelmed. I mentioned this Las
Vegas environment that they're in. What is so vital about what you said based on the research I've looked at is that there are times,
many of them, when what we need to help an adolescent do is move past a period of
information overload or emotional overload. And what you're telling that story for one purpose,
but I hear something else in it also. I hear that you let that young person burst that emotional bubble.
And what the research shows about therapy, DBT, CBT, and there's some other things I'll
mention in a moment, is that helping young people get through an intense emotional moment
before you try to engage them in the
substance.
Yes.
Will let them in effect reboot their brains.
So, the listener can't see but I can see you and it looks like you're agreeing.
Yes.
I mean, I just, it really, you know, I think the most underutilized parenting strategy in the world is
These are with capitals doing nothing doing nothing on the outside
Where everyone would say you're just gonna let your teen talk to you like that
You're gonna do nothing and what I would actually say them if I was in a snarky mood is it looks like I'm doing nothing
It's cuz I'm doing everything on the inside and managing my emotions. When I vomit my frustration and say, you can't talk to me,
that looks like I'm doing something.
I am literally a child on the inside doing nothing.
But letting your kid finish it out, just holding it,
letting them finish it out so they don't have to keep seeking
more ways to finish it out, trusting, having time,
being there and then having a moment
and something usually shifts
even before you have to do something.
When they are ready,
because when they're inflamed that way,
everyone in eighth grade hates me.
You make that food every night.
I despise you.
I wanna go to the circus.
Or, you know, to be extreme,
I don't know if I wanna be alive.
A lot of those are happening in such a
heightened emotional state, such an inflamed state that trying to either reason or be angry
only intensifies that state. And I might add one more bit of biology here that is important.
The age of puberty in the year 1900 started at 14 for girls and now it's down to 12.
We can talk about why that is but just setting the why aside for a second, boys are roughly along
the same lines. It's hard to tell with boys because they don't have a menstruation which is a
demarcation point. But why is that important? It's important because those adolescent hormones,
the sensitivity is starting earlier. It's starting earlier at a time there's a lot of
fast information moving in the world. Remember, we talk about integrating the old and the
new, the new is coming furiously quickly. So, that can lead to these kind of heavy emotional experiences earlier and more often, but they
don't mean your kids any crazier, if you will, or that everyone in eighth grade hates them.
It's just moving into Las Vegas even earlier than your ID says.
And I know, I know, right, that that puberty is happening earlier but your prefrontal
cortex is not developing earlier, right? 100% right. It's what causes the scientists in this
field to speak of a neurological mismatch between what you're taking in and what you're able to
process. Hence these big emotional outbursts but then then we come in and say, don't talk to me that way.
And the emotions go through the roof even more.
And I think the don't talk to me that way is aversion.
And again, we're not, we all say that.
And I always like to say, anyone listening,
you know, I always say at Good Inside,
we're experts in imperfect parenting.
That's what we're expert in.
Everyone says, I say, don't talk to me that way.
I can't talk to you right now.
Whatever it is, we all say that and then we repair.
That's the best it gets in a lot of moments.
But when you repair and go back, I wish I didn't say that.
I want to hear the end of your story.
Something important was happening.
This is what brings me back to like,
you are not leaving your kid as a nomad.
Because if they are a nomad navigating this time truly
without a base to come home to, that is when they get
anchor-less.
That is an anchor-less experience.
And when you come back,
by the way, you're not gonna get it right the first time
because unless you're a parent who's listening to this
and says, you know what?
Whenever I said to my parent, I hate you,
you're the worst, I hate you,
they were so calm and grounded,
which probably everyone listening is like, yeah,
that's like totally not what happened in my childhood.
Then of course it's not gonna come naturally.
Like what comes naturally in parenting
is how you were parented.
So often the best it gets is returning.
And when you return to your teen,
I'm sorry, I reacted that way.
There was something important.
Let's figure it out.
You are kind of saying I am still that base.
You can still explore, but like you are not alone.
If I play this out, Becky, over the years, the reason I named this book How We Grow Up is
I don't think the things we're talking about are expressly limited to adolescents.
I think this is what I see happening broadly in society is that we're at a time where there is a
ton of information and things are changing quickly.
Each of us come across moments where we become overwhelmed and emotive and we're learning
to cope with a very challenging environment. The things you're describing here, Becky,
are like the lifeblood of being able to do it later. And the phrase I've come up with
for this is, I'd rather have a teen life crisis than a midlife crisis.
Get the coping mechanisms down now and then you can have those other 30 years to be happy rather than buying a Porsche and a mistress or mister when you're in your 50s.
Yeah. when you're in your 50s. Yeah, and look, the version of that, that I think, you know, in my language, I would say,
is like when my kids, right, there's 18 years about
that they'll be in my house, right?
And then, I mean, hopefully then they're out.
But like, let's say we have those 18 years.
And in a way though, like our kids are out of our house
way longer than they're in our house
and the stakes only get higher.
Every year the stakes get higher.
Like my kid freaks out and I don't know,
even like let's say they cheat on a test,
they plagiarize a paper at age 13.
I promise you the version of that that manifests at 30
is way more intense, okay?
So whatever the issue is, my kid hits.
My kid says, I hate you.
Like I really invite parents says, I hate you.
Like, I really invite parents,
and I think you need this phrase to be able to hold it.
I really do give myself a sense of sick joy
when I have moments like this with my kids.
I really do, okay?
Because the sick joy is like,
if I'm driven by impact and not instant gratification,
which is hard in this day and age,
but if I am driven by impact,
what my kid is saying is you have the opportunity
to help me wire some circuitry
for how to be resilient through this moment,
because it's true, I'm freaking out at age 13
that I wasn't invited to this person's Sweet 16.
Okay, and I say to myself, who cares if it's a Sweet 16?
The Sweet 16 situation will change,
but that is the exact same thing
as not finding a roommate in college,
not being invited to the mom's coffee after drop off.
It's the feeling of being left out
and feeling less than and not knowing how to cope with it.
Our feelings never change.
And so when they come out in these huge ways,
if you have a voice in your head that says,
wait, I'm not doing something wrong,
this happens to be inconvenient and hard.
And it happens to be a moment
where I could have massive impact.
You do have like this almost kind of sick joy
to help you reframe that moment.
Can I ask you, Becky, when did it dawn on you in your own life that these are versions
of the same thing?
Was it through training or did you personally experience a kind of epiphany or revelation
about the nature of emotion?
Really good question.
I mean, I think maybe part of it and one of the privileges
I've really become acutely aware of.
From my childhood that I never knew was a privilege is I did have a mom. I almost look like a shame to admit it, right?
We all have shame. I had a mom who like me and my friends
would sit around our kitchen table with my mom a lot.
And she was so non-judgmental
because she is just like this deeply curious person.
And we would talk about things.
And like, I remember in these moments, like,
oh, like, and she'd helped me probably connect the dots.
Like this is like
My perfectionism and how it came out trying to be the best in my teen years
That that's the same as when I you know had a hard time
You know not making the soccer team in third grade like they're all versions of the same thing and I think it's a training
to realize that the themes in our life have nothing to do with on the surface and
Everything to do with the feeling.
And there's actually not that many feelings we have.
They're all like, you know, they're very similar.
Becky, may I interrupt and seize on a word you said that
I've circled two words for myself in my notes
about things I'd urge parents broadly to encourage in their kids.
And one of them is curiosity. And the reason I mentioned curiosity in the nature of your mom, in the story with your
mom or more broadly is, to the extent we approach things as curious, they become less threatening
on their face and our emotions don't explode to the point where we're then anxious or uncomfortable.
And I think one of the challenges that parents face and our culture faces is that we are very tempted to know the answer,
to want to know the answers to everything or feel like we have to.
everything or feel like we have to. You can see this running through the media environment, the political environment, but in point of fact, is during this period when your brain
is open and plastic through adolescence, you are going to lay down certain habits.
To the extent as a parent you can teach curiosity, you will make someone adaptable,
flexible, able, and less and more emotionally resilient. The other word I just want to say,
I circled here or should I leave that aside and we'll talk about curiosity for a second?
Well, to me, let's start with curiosity. To me, curiosity and judgment are opposites. They're
inherently oppositional, right?
And our brain, when we see behavior, whether it's I hate you, whether it's hitting in a
kid, whether it's a kid lying to your face, even though they say, I didn't take money,
and you're like, I literally have a camera in my bedroom and I see you taking the money
from me to go to that concert, whatever it is.
Curiosity is really hard because our brain likes to see something that's behavior which is visible.
And it short circuits and it tells us we know everything about the person.
And then instead of having a gap between who someone is and what someone did, we actually have no gap.
And so we respond to the person like they just are that behavior.
And curiosity is the thing that breaks it down because what you said is curiosity. And I think this is what resilience is.
It's our ability to not fully know.
Oh, well, I wonder what was going on.
I wonder. And people often say to me, oh, so it's OK.
They stole the money.
How did we get from curiosity to approval?
Those are completely different things.
And I would I would I love that the way you framed that.
And it made me think of this phrase, judgment is a sprint. Curiosity is a marathon. Oh, I love that the way you framed that and it made me think of this phrase, judgment
is a sprint, curiosity is a marathon.
Oh, love that.
And if you want to get in...
Love it.
Matt, you're on fire.
It's a tandem.
It's a duo.
It's good.
Yeah.
I want us to do like jazz hands and dance. If you want to get in shape, if you really want to
be fit, you need the marathon mentality. And people, there's a way in which judgment versus
curiosity is fundamentally a resource question. It's an easier resource to just come up with a judgment.
But the problem is you will then spend your life spending those resources with no
positive return.
Yep.
When you do the marathon, when you invest the resource in trying to understand
what's going on, you get a major feedback later on.
And just for everyone listening, and I think this is like really poignant,
a lot of the reasons we jump to conclusions and judge our kids in their worst moments
is a resource thing. But a lot of it is because if we're honest with ourselves
in our worst moments when we were kids, we were met with instant judgment.
Like, so your body wired something bad on the surface
next to, I know everything I need to know about this person.
Bad thing equals bad person.
And then, of course, we have fear and we're treating the other person like the enemy.
And so I think there's a moment right now just for everyone even listening to pause
because there can be so much judgment. I do that with my kid. Oh no, I'm messing up my kid. Just pause for a sec.
Compassion is not dangerous. And just say to yourself, like, I bet there's a lot of
moments when I could have used a lot more curiosity instead of judgment. Like that would
have been something that felt so good to me. And if I even do that one moment out of a
hundred for my kid and repair the times I didn't, like I'm literally
doing something probably no one's ever done in my lineage. Like literally, I am starting
a new pattern.
Wait, tell me about the other word. I know we're going to be announcing. What's the other
word you circled? Let's jump into that and then we'll pause for now.
The other word I want to say is coping mechanisms are calm. And I think if there's two things we could
get our adolescents, our young people through adolescence with, it's curiosity and then
a sense that the thing to apply that curiosity along with compassion to the way they process
their emotions.
And though sometimes I think of this generation but I could argue this of prior generations,
I think of adolescence a little bit as generation rumination. It's easy to channel an intense
emotion into a very specific thing. Everyone in eighth grade hates me, everything would
be all right if just x or y. But in point of fact, what those represent,
just like you mentioned earlier, how things in your life were part of the same or a piece of the
same thing, in a lot of ways, those ruminations, that intensity is an outgrowth of a really
overwhelming emotional period. And to the extent that we can teach our young people
period and to the extent that we can teach our young people how to work through those emotional periods without having the conversation with themselves, does everyone in eighth grade
help hate me?
So earlier, we talked about this idea that you wouldn't have the conversation, does everyone
in eighth grade hate me until they were over the emotional hump? Similarly,
could we teach young people to get over the emotional hump and then have the conversation
with themselves? Oh, wait, I'm not in a heightened emotional state. I don't actually believe
everyone in eighth grade hates me. Can I give you a crazy personal example from yesterday?
Sure.
I was coming on this podcast this morning and I am aware that that makes me a little bit nervous and anxious.
I've thought about this stuff forever, but nonetheless, I know myself well enough that there's some performance here and some challenge here.
And I got mad at our electrician yesterday.
Yep.
And I was walking with my wife afterwards and I was like, I'm not actually mad at Ben remotely.
I love Ben.
I know that tomorrow morning I'm going to get up and get on with Becky and I really
want to honor this work I've done and her show and not make a fool of myself.
And so, last night, I got into bed and my wife came into bed and I'd already understood
this mechanism was at work and she's like, hey, can we do this on Sunday?
And I found myself getting mad and I said, I love you, Meredith.
I cannot process that information right now.
This is something I've just got to go through and cope with.
And after like roughly around noon Eastern tomorrow, we could talk about
whatever you want. And she was like, I feel you.
Yeah. And and look, I think that example, first of all, thank you for sharing
that. And again, I think sometimes the best it gets is realizing after that is like, wait,
I think I took that out of my electrician. That's probably a me thing. And again,
it's just being curious. I wonder what was going on for me.
To be clear, I did not actually get mad at the electrician. I felt some frustration.
I really do. Ben, I'm sorry. We all love Ben. Ben seems, Ben seems
wonderful. Good dude. And needs his name and number. But I think that that's exactly right.
And just the thing I think we underestimate
when we talk about coping,
and I know this could be its own,
this is at some ways its own episode,
I feel like actually this is the good inside platform.
So it's not even say it's an episode.
There is no better coping strategy.
You can teach your kid
than your ability to tolerate the things
they can't tolerate.
Kids learn emotion regulation.
You can teach your kid breathing skills.
And if we can't be with our kids in their hard times,
it won't land.
They learn that through, we are relational beings.
Now that can feel like a lot of pressure.
I think about that as what an amazing opportunity.
Wait, I also struggle when there's uncertainty.
I can build my own coping skills that can help me as an adult
while it helps my kid and knowing I'm never going to be perfect
and I always have repair in my back pocket.
Like, that's a lot of bang for your buck in my mind.
I would also put it another way.
I tend to think of adolescence as startups and we are people who have been through, we've gone public.
Yeah.
And the thing is that those startups will upend us in some way.
And so we are trying to tell them what we know while feeling a little threatened by them.
They're very clumsy startups,
but they're vital to our collective survival.
And if we allow it,
I think, right, like we all probably unconsciously
think parenting is gonna heal us,
and parenting triggers us.
Our kids tell us everything
we still need to work on in ourselves.
And so, yes, when you're like, I don't know if I know what I'm doing,
your kids will reveal the stuff that you need to work on for me, too.
You know, and if we see that as an opportunity and again,
if we think about even that as a marathon, OK, I don't have to know all the things yet.
You know, there's a little fake it to you make it.
But I think actually we're talking about parents having resources, having education and feeling like they don't have to be perfect all the time.
And I think that like adolescents, if there's a group of kids who see through fakeness,
and it's adolescents, and so they know, you know?
And so I guess my message to parents is, look, like it is okay that parts of parenting, lots
of stages feel hard.
I would say it feels hard because it is hard.
And you can take this opportunity as your own marathon,
not in a way that you have to sprint it,
but like little by little.
What if every week you learn one thing
that makes you feel a little sturdier,
helps you feel more connected to your kid,
helps you feel like you're building their confidence
without losing yourself, one thing a week.
Right, we all know that graph.
You get 1% better a day.
365 days later, that 1% is compounding and I think that's, you know, that's what
I believe is really possible for every single parent. On that hopeful note, this
has been an amazing conversation. Not only do I have the name of an electrician
I'm going to contact, which has been very useful, I've learned a lot. I've taken a
lot of notes and without a doubt I'm gonna be contact, which has been very useful. I've learned a lot. I've taken a lot of notes and without a doubt,
I'm going to be contacting you for some follow-up conversations.
So this was awesome.
Just a huge thanks for having me on.
And I feel like I also learned some stuff that I will integrate into my talks,
will not take credit for, and then
will quote you explicitly in the paperback.
Well, right back at you.
So thank you.
This is so valuable.
And I will really say until we talk again.
Thank you. Really appreciate it.
I have to say that I absolutely loved this conversation and I'm going to make an
assumption, I don't know if it's right, that you did too.
This kind of visual metaphor of whether our older kids
feel like a nomad or an explorer,
to me, it really does hit my heart
and almost brings me to tears
thinking about that difference.
I really feel like I'm not doing my job if I don't let you know about how to take that
metaphor and turn it into the day-to-day interactions.
Like, well, what does that mean about setting curfew?
What does that mean when my kid wants social media and I don't know what to do?
What about when my kid is on a text chain that I find out about that they weren't even
supposed to be on and really awful things were happening.
No matter what you're thinking, I promise you,
we can help you through it.
So many people don't know in our app,
we have so much for teens,
that whole nomad versus explorer idea,
that's our framework and we bring it to life
with every very real moment that I promise you,
I am not afraid to name and talk about.
And so if you're interested and you're ready
for that next step to go a little deeper
into the practical day-to-day stuff,
I hope you check out goodinside.com and jump in.
I'm so excited for the relief and hope
you're about to feel.