Good Inside with Dr. Becky - Your Value and Worth Live Inside You
Episode Date: October 15, 2024What do you do when you see your kid engaging in a type of friendship pattern that makes you cringe? Or one that reminds you of yourself? Or one that makes you worry about their future relationships? ...On today's episode, Dr. Becky talks to a mom who doesn't know how to stop being triggered by her kid's tricky friendship moments. Good Inside's Building Lasting Confidence Workshop - https://bit.ly/3XkorMLGood Inside's Tricky Friendship Moments Workshop - https://bit.ly/4cjuJR6Get the Good Inside App by Dr. Becky: https://bit.ly/4ehhlOATo learn more about the How to Give Your Kid a Phone Workshop: https://bit.ly/4gOu8tEFollow 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: Before Dr. Becky was a parent, she thought planning a family vacation would be a breeze… until she realized how much has to come together for a trip with two adults and three kids. Then she discovered Airbnb Guest Favorites. No more combing through options, reviews, and features. Guest Favorites are the most loved homes on Airbnb according to other guests. And that peace of mind when preparing for a trip is huge. Using Guest Favorites couldn’t be easier: Just go to Airbnb, add your destination, tap the filters and hit the toggle for Guest Favorites. It’s that simple.Today's episode is brought to you by Hasbro: As a parent, no one understands play better than you do. That’s why Dr. Becky wants to tell you about Hasbro’s Innovators of Play Challenge. They’re inviting women all over the world to submit their ideas for a brand-new toy or game concept–starting right now! Whether or not you are in this field already, if you feel something inside you that is yearning to be creative, or if you’ve ever been playing with your kid and thought, “You know what could make this better?” This is for you. Winners will receive a $10,000 cash prize, a trip to Hasbro HQ, and the opportunity to be mentored by Hasbro’s award-winning toy and game design teams. If you’ve been looking for a sign to put yourself out there creatively, this is it! To be considered, make sure to submit your idea by November 12th! One important thing to note: all contestants must be 18+ and from select countries. For a complete list of rules and eligibility requirements, visit spark.hasbro.com/womeninnovators.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, Allie.
Hi.
So nice to meet you.
Thank you for being here.
Thank you for having me.
So let's just jump right in.
Tell me a little bit what's going on, kind of what's top of mind for you right now.
Okay.
So I have five kids.
My oldest is six and my youngest are one.
They just turned one out of twins who are one.
And then I have a five-year-old and a two-and-a-half-year-old.
So let's just jump right in.
So I have five kids.
My oldest is six and my youngest are one. They just turned
one out of twins who are one. And then I have a five-year-old and a two-and-a-half-year-old.
So life is really busy. And trying to cultivate really kind, thoughtful people is really important
to me. And my oldest, she is six and she is in grade one. She just happened to make friends who when
they spend time together and they're friends, they're lovely, but she's kind of
a mean girl and my daughter never knows that when she is gonna go to school if
she's gonna be friends with her friend. Like she's always just waiting to know
if she's gonna be friends with her or not She's always just waiting to know if she's going to be
friends with her or not. Waiting mode is never good for anybody, but waiting to know if you're
going to be liked that day is really hard. On the days where they're good, my daughter
comes home really happy. On the days that they're not good, there's big emotions everywhere
and just like not knowing how to navigate that. And we're also friends with the family
as well, which makes it a bit tricky. So just trying to encourage my daughter, like how
do I encourage her other than what I have been saying, like you should make friends
with people who make you feel like your best self rather than just waiting to be loved. I know that feeling. I had that
as a kid. And even if that my friend from when I was a kid talks to me now, I'm like,
yes, you know, like, I get it. I get it.
Yes.
Through and through. But how do you change the narrative and how do you encourage
making friends who make you feel like your best self all time? Like healthy
relationships. A healthy relationship. How do we encourage healthy relationships for a
six-year-old? Oh boy does today's episode resonate with me. What do you do when you
see your kid engaging in a type of relationship pattern that makes you cringe? Or that reminds you of yourself?
Or makes you think, oh no, this is not a healthy relationship pattern for them to
be in when they're older. How do we differentiate what's going on today from
our anxiety about the future and what does our kid need today to develop
healthy relationship patterns? I'm Dr. Becky, and this is Good Inside.
We'll be right back.
Here's the thing.
As a parent, no one understands play better than you.
That's why I want to tell you about Hasbro's Innovators of Play Challenge. They're inviting women all over the world to submit their ideas for a
brand new toy or game concept starting right now. Whether or not you're already
in this field, if you feel something inside you that is yearning to be
creative, or if you've ever been playing with a kid and thought, you know what
could make this better? This is for you. Okay, winners
will receive a $10,000 cash prize, a trip to Hasbro headquarters, and the opportunity
to be mentored by Hasbro's award-winning toy and game design teams. How cool is that?
If you've been looking for a sign to put yourself out there creatively, this is it.
I can't wait to see what the community comes up with.
To be considered, make sure to submit your idea
by November 12th.
One important thing to note,
all contestants must be 18 or over
and from select countries.
For a complete list of rules and eligibility requirements,
visit spark.hasbro.com slash women innovators.
Hasbro.com slash women innovators.
First of all, Ali, I mean this, I'm bowled over by your thoughtfulness and just the way that you're thinking through this, I think you're able to see what's going on. And one of the things I think thoughtful parents do is they say,
oh, what is the actual dynamic underneath? And I think you're even saying, oh, no, I
see the adult dynamic version of this, right? And oh, I've been there. I've seen that. I
don't want that for her. I know the early years affect the later years. Like, what do
I do? And I just want to start by saying
I'm so glad in your mind you're thinking, hey, this is going on. Okay, what can I do
about this? And like maybe there are resources about this. Maybe I feel a little stuck and
maybe what I'm doing, I'm not sure. And I just think it's amazing you turned that into
calling in with a question as opposed to so many of us when we're struggling, we just
spiral into an abyss and we feel stuck and worse and worse. So I think that's amazing.
Especially I just have to say five children six and under like it's wild. That's yeah. And so you're a warrior for even like remembering your child's name.
So there's that okay.
Next step I want to know a little bit you started to allude to it.
What comes up for you?
What comes up for you when you hear about this, when she's talking about it?
Like if I just had a kind of camera, like into your internal world, what are some of
the worries coming up or the feelings or like you said, your own history, our body connects
our kids to our own memories.
So just let me into to that whole world inside
of you.
Okay. So inside my head, it's like freaking out normally. I'm like, I don't want this
for you. I know how debilitating it can be. Just like friends are your world, right? When
people see me, I feel like a million bucks. You know? Like you just feel like you can do all things.
And when I'm not seen, when people aren't seen, it's like you just shut down and you
just like, you feel lonely and loneliness is never good. And so I don't want that for
her at six, you know? Like to feel like she's not worth it, to feel that she is valuable
for who she is and not just on the off day, like every day. And I can tell her until like
I'm blue in the face, but I don't know how to get into her head that it's not just mom
saying another thing. It's that it's actually like I wish I had someone say it to me when I was little that you don't
have to wait around for someone to love you back. Like make your friends your friends come and go
and that's okay. But I want her to like I want to know how to, like, build her up inside that life doesn't need
to just be what other people think about you. And she's an affirmations girl, I know that.
And I'm an affirmations girl, I know that. And so, trying to, like, affirm all the time
and not just on the good days, when they're in good graces.
And it seems, Ali, like, you see yourself in her, you feel like maybe she maybe sees herself
in you, like you have a lot of similarities here.
So I just want to jump in and say a couple things about what you just shared with me.
Number one, I just think it's helpful for us to not limit ourselves at all to being
like one type of girl or person, right?
So even to say like, yeah, I noticed like I like affirmations And anything that works for us in life also works against us in life.
And I think this is what you're saying.
Wow, when I get affirmations, I have really good feelings in my body.
Hmm, when I don't get affirmations, there's a big swing.
And I struggle to have those good feelings in my body.
And after that, Ali, I think there's almost two roads
that we could think about.
One is, well, how can I surround myself with people
who are more likely to give me those affirmations?
It's actually not the road I'd recommend us going down.
Because I think there's a more resilient
confidence building road, which is,
how can I start to generate good feelings inside myself
so I can feel good even in the absence of affirmations.
Does that make sense as like a kind of different road?
And I like the sound of this road.
Great, great.
We're going to walk down it.
It's a good road.
I like it too.
It's a harder road.
Well, it's actually not hard or long-term, but it's hard or short-term like everything
in life.
If something's easy, short-term, it's probably not great.
Long-term, and the opposite is true too. But it's hard or short term, like everything in life. If something's easy, short term, it's probably not great, long term.
And the opposite is true too.
Because I could go around now and say, what friend can I find who could always tell me
I'm amazing?
Okay, I found one.
I found one.
I found one.
Short term, that works.
But it's also kind of exhausting.
I'm like on a treadmill finding these people versus what's a little harder short term,
but boy, will it help me in the long run is, wait, what is it like for me when I'm around
people who aren't giving me positive attention?
What is it like for me when I want someone's attention and they don't give it to me? Okay, what is it like for me when I'm around people who aren't giving me positive attention?
What is it like for me when I want someone's attention and they don't give it to me?
Okay, that is hard.
I have to dig deep.
But what would I say to myself in those situations to generate worth and value as opposed to
do I need in the situation then to kind of spin around my head and say, well, who will
give me those feelings?
Where are that person?
Because that actually can be really frenetic and actually kind of gets us away from the core thing, which is how amazing
it is to feel pretty good about yourself even when other people aren't reflecting that back
to you.
And so here, Ali, is where I think we have this amazing opportunity. Guess what? And
this is always how it happens, at least at Good Inside. You and your daughter are going
to work on this together. And I actually think that's so powerful to like even share with her as you're going through
this. Oh, you know, to say to a kid, I actually have a hard time with this too. Isn't that
amazing? You do, I do. We're going to try some things together. Hey, I tried this today.
What do you think? Hey, I did this. Right now, of a sudden, instead of it being her
issue,
It's ours.
Yeah. And the issue maybe is even too harsh.
It's like we all have things we're working on.
We all have roads we're walking down, and it's lonely to walk down a kind of bumpy road
by yourself.
It's also kind of scary, right?
So I hope that framework makes sense.
And then actually, I think you'll say, wow, maybe I even grew from this even more than
my daughter, and she really grew.
So that's saying something about me, right?
So number one, I think even just acknowledging
that framework is helpful. My job isn't to find people who tell me I'm great. My job
is to talk to myself when no one is giving me that affirmation and start to slowly build
up the muscle of feeling great. And I want to say slowly because it's kind of cheaper and easier to get that affirmation
from someone else.
And let's say we feel like a zero.
If I can go to someone else and they say something amazing, I'm going to feel like a 10.
If I try to do it myself as I'm working on this muscle, the best I'm going to get is
like a two at the beginning.
I just want to be honest.
Okay.
It's just not the same.
But when you know that, it doesn't bum you out so much. Right? So I think mantras are actually a really good place to start.
So I'm going to throw out a couple just to get us started. And if you say, Becky, all those are
horrible. I don't like any of them. That's actually a win in my book. So I'm just going
to throw things out there because sometimes it helps get it going. My job isn't to get people to like me. That's one.
I'm going to throw another one. My value and worth live inside of me. Another one. I am
lovable and good inside always. Any of those hit you? And if not, that's...
I like number two.
Okay. Yeah. Like the other I like number two. Okay.
Yeah.
Like the other one, the third.
Yeah.
It would go two, three, one.
Love it.
Love the ranking system.
Perfect.
You know yourself.
And even that, Ali, I think actually is an amazing moment to take something in.
Like, wow, Becky said a couple of things.
I noticed inside of me what really struck me.
I noticed how that felt. Like that's pretty cool of me that I know me. I noticed how that felt.
Like, that's pretty cool of me that I know that.
She didn't tell me, she wasn't like, this is the one, right?
She didn't give me the answer.
Like, I noticed that.
That's already building what I call interiority.
I think about a lot with this concept
with adults and kids.
Interiority, I think, is the idea that like,
I have valuable, worthy things.
I have ideas, I have instincts, I have feelings,
I have interests that live inside of me. No one put them there. No one can give them to me.
I have that as part of my interior self versus kind of people have
old, light, beautiful things and I kind of want them to like give them to me.
Right?
Through affirmations, through praise, and then, oh, I have those feelings inside myself
versus the idea of interiority is, well, there's actually, some of that lives inside me.
I just kind of got to like search and find it.
We're switching our gaze from being primarily out to primarily in.
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If you're like me, it's almost impossible
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I mean, the data is clear.
Our kids are really struggling.
But you know what's also clear?
Parents need a solution that's practical, actionable,
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So let's even talk about how you could talk about this with your daughter.
I want to make this link.
I think it would be really cool to find your daughter today, tomorrow, and just say, I
want to share something with you, okay?
It's not something I've told any of the other kids, okay?
So, but I feel like you're old enough, you're going to get it.
You kind of build up some specialness there, right?
Anytime someone tells us, I just want to tell you specifically this thing,
we're like, oh, okay, perked up.
I would say, you know, sometimes even for me as an adult,
it's like, oh, who wants to have lunch with me?
Who texted me?
Who liked my photo on Instagram?
I'm like, kind of with my eyes looking all around me
and hoping people say good things.
And you know what I realized?
I'm a pretty cool person on the inside.
Like, it's nice when people do those things, don't get me wrong, but it's not like everything
and I'm going to do this thing with my hands, Ali.
Like here's how I am as like a cool person and I guess people sometimes make me feel
a little better.
But the truth is I don't want to give them the power anymore to either make me feel amazing
or horrible or here because like I'm already pretty up there.
I'm really working on that.
Now, your kid, just to be clear, is not going to say, that's so profound.
I'm going through that as well.
She will not say that.
Okay?
Because the only thing she'll say is she'll look up at you and she'll say something like,
can I have my pretzels now?
And you'll be like, oh my God, I prepared the whole day for this amazing moment.
You just want pretzels?
But it's fine.
It's truly, truly impactful to our kids even if they don't produce something back.
Right?
Okay.
So then let's kind of move to how do I actually help my child?
And I want to share something that might sound a little counterintuitive, but those are actually
my favorite interventions
because I think it helps us see something differently. I'll make the point generally
and then move to specific about the friendship stuff. When we want our kids to stop doing any
behavior, we actually have to double down on trying to understand what's compelling about
that behavior first. So my kid is always saying poopy pee pee at the table. If you're like
me, you're like, stop saying that, stop saying that, stop saying that, because I want them to
stop. But if I realize this counterintuitive idea, I'd actually say, hey, before we go to dinner,
what is, like, what's so fun about saying that? I'm not asking that because I think it's not fun.
Like, what's the best part? Oh, it's funny. Oh, it's funny. It's fun to say funny things at the table. Oh, okay. Um, is it funnier than saying?
La la lu lu. Oh, it is why oh, you know, oh I get upset. Oh, so it's kind of fun to make me upset, right?
Whatever it is. I'm actually getting to know the behavior
Because before any of us can stop doing something we all have to kind of understand what's in this for me
There must be something
in it for your daughter because if there wasn't, she's a smart girl, she would say, you know
what, the bad feelings I get from this friend aren't worth the effort. So she really would.
That's what we do. But there must be something compelling. And the more we ever try to convince
a kid to stop doing something that clearly has some compelling motivation, we actually
only make them more attached to that behavior
because they stick to it more.
And so what I would actually say to her,
I'm gonna call this other girl Mary for now, okay?
I'd say, you know what I'm thinking about?
There's something about the times you're playing with Mary
where she really wants to play with you
or like there's the days at school where she's like oh yeah I'm so glad you're here
let's hold hands let's sit next to each other you're the one I want to be with
on the soccer field whatever it is I wonder if that feels good like I'm gonna
do my hands again like this good this good or like this good and I have a
feeling she's gonna say no mom it's it's this good or something, right?
And I don't know, my heart like feels that.
It's like you're just kind of trying to get,
oh, it feels so big and amazing.
I get that.
But I might say, what about the days when you're like,
oh, Mary, Mary?
And she's just like pretentious and even know you.
Does it feel this bad, this bad?
And my guess already, I don't know.
What do you think she would say?
Pretty bad.
Yeah, like maybe this bad.
Oh, I would just reflect back.
Oh, that's so interesting.
She's the type of friend that can either make you feel this good, which is amazing,
or this bad.
And then I could see myself using my favorite word
in the world.
That's really tricky.
That's really tricky to have a friend
who does have the power to make those good feelings
feel like as big as they've
ever been or make good feelings kind of be as small as they've ever been?
That's a tricky kind of friend to have.
So as opposed to lecturing my kid, as opposed to trying to teach them a life lesson, interestingly
enough, through my words,
we try to teach our kids life lessons through our words.
You know, sweetie, it's nice to have friends
who are kind to you and generous to you all the time.
I just don't know about you, like, they're just words.
They're just logic.
They register in my brain.
But like my experience in life is probably being driven
by all the feelings in the rest
of my body except for my brain.
This is why we all do stuff that's not good for us because logic is always saying, no,
but our body's like, yeah, yeah, I'm searching for something and our body just always wins.
So when we tell our kids different things or life lessons, that's kind of pure logic.
I always say when we're telling our kid what to think
Doesn't register but what I just modeled is actually starting the process of helping your kid learn
how to think
Because I know Ali if your daughter comes to you and she's 16 and she says mom. This is so tricky. I
Have a friend who can make me feel like the most amazing
person in the world, like sunlight is just all over me.
But Mom, this same friend on different days
can make me feel as low as anything.
Like, it's literally a dark rain cloud over me all the time.
Isn't that tricky to figure out?
I mean, if my kid ever said that to me, I could be like,
you just kind of figured it out more than anyone else.
Now I have to figure out what to do.
But actually, your ability to notice that is the foundation
for good decisions, right?
So what you're doing is you're really, I always think about you're setting the circuitry for
noticing, for putting language to things, for reflecting, for how we process things
around us, which probably won't lead to the next day.
She's not going to say,
you know what, thank you for this. I don't want to invite Mary to my birthday party. She's probably
not going to say that. She's probably going to be like, okay, yeah, yeah, could I still have a
playdate with Mary? And you're like, oh my God, did that not register? But it did. Okay, so I've
been talking a lot, I'm going to pause. Tell me what you think about that. Is that different from
what you've been doing? What resonates? What doesn't? Do you want to throw it all away? We'll
start again. Nope. I think it is helpful because she is like
very emotionally intelligent and like
People were always her toys. So people like are what she
Gets and so I do like they're like
She's actually home today. So I might have this conversation later, but
and then she'll honor pretzels. But I think using the visual would be helpful.
Like the size of the bad or the size of the good.
Yes, yes.
I think it would be very helpful just even for her to get a picture in her mind.
It makes it concrete. Yeah. And I think, not that I have been doing bad things to try and get her to see the bigger
picture, but it is helpful having a tangible thing for her to like picture in her mind
and go.
She was at this friend's house a few weeks ago and the friend didn't even acknowledge
her the whole time. She did go up to the mom and express that she was really disappointed.
I got a text from the mom being like, her emotional intelligence is just like, but they
sat down and chatted about it. She's like, maybe she needs food to be enjoying me more.
Maybe let's try and problem solve. She is a problem solver in her mind. And so just even for her to take a step back and go to
what you said, like it's giving her tangible things to think about for herself and not
just for her friend.
That's exactly right. Because I just have you, have you done my mini friendship workshop?
No. Okay. It's one of the many things I think will help. I also think you have you done my mini friendship workshop? No, okay
It's one of the the many things I think will help
I also think you're gonna be obsessed with the confidence workshop because it's all about long term how we build this inside first
Inside-out confidence, which it's kind of at the core
Because this thing you're noticing your daughter, which is amazing. Well, it'll pop up in different ways
So if we can help just build that type of confidence, it'll like be 20-fold the impact. But one of the things I also talk about in there is going from,
how do I solve this problem? To just, what's going on for me right now? Because a lot of us,
and I think a lot of us women, we're like, this thing isn't going well, or this person isn't
liking me. How can I fix that problem? The truth is,
that's not really the core problem. The bigger thing is, wait, what's going on for me? Why do I feel like I need to fix this problem? Maybe it's not about coming up with a more fun activity.
Maybe it's about saying, hey, I'd like my mom to pick me up. If I'm going to go to someone's
house, she doesn't want to talk to me. No bueno. I'm just going to move on, you know? So I think that starts, though, with reflecting.
I'm like, wait, how do I feel right now?
Moving from kind of, again, our gazes,
this person doesn't like me, what do I do?
To, wait, I don't, I'm not really having such a fun time.
What should I do?
And so I think, again, that takes time.
It's not going to happen overnight.
But one more idea that I think would help kind of accelerate that.
The more we speak to kind of these same processes in our own life around our kids, the more
able they will be to kind of mimic that in their own life.
So I'll give you an example.
I could see saying around your daughter, maybe just saying to her or actually
maybe I would just be like pontificating out loud when she just quote happens to be next
to me.
Obviously this whole thing is planted because I want her to hear it.
I could hear her saying, oh, this friend didn't invite me to lunch today.
I'm like, I invited like all these other moms in the grade and I don't know, I think I'm
going to call her and be like, what did I do to not get invited?
Wait a second, wait a second, wait a second.
My worth and value are inside of me.
I'm worthy, I'm valuable just as I am.
I probably didn't do anything.
Wait, I think I'm saying I wanna go to lunch with someone.
Wait, why do I wanna go to lunch with someone
who didn't wanna have me there? Wait, I actually to go to lunch with someone. Wait, why do I want to go to lunch with someone who didn't want to have me there?
Wait, I actually really like friend X and Y.
You know what?
I'm going to text X and Y and see if they can have lunch this week.
Yeah, yeah, that's what I'm going to do.
Right?
Now, I wouldn't turn to your daughter after and say, just like you can do with Mary.
We do stuff like that and then we just take away all of the magic of the moment.
Just trust that the things we say around our kids that they have a magnet for, which they
inherently know they do because this is what she's struggling with, it clicks.
It just does and the power is how it clicks and will impact them after.
You're also kind of modeling something realistic.
She's not going to come to you one day and say,
Mom, I don't care about Mary anymore because my worth and value are inside of me.
And so I'm only around.
She's just not going to say that.
It's like none of us say that.
Okay.
The best it gets is we watch ourselves do something that's like probably not the healthiest for us.
We pause.
We kind of notice it.
We question it.
And then we maybe consider a different route.
All the years I've worked with adults in therapy, the best it gets is that when we have patterns,
the idea that we are just going to click in naturally and easily to some totally different
pattern.
I'm like, why do we set ourselves up to think that's successful?
How about success is noticing an old pattern, pausing?
That's so powerful.
That's so cool to be able to do that.
Wait, there's that thing.
It's not a bad pattern, but it's not always useful. Wait, maybe I want to do
something else. Yeah, let me try that. That is so amazing as a human to be able to do
that. And I think for you to model it, it really takes the shame out of it also. It
doesn't set her up to think she's all of a sudden going to do something that's kind of
far from where she is. And like I was saying, that is something that I bet
would be helpful to you, period.
Oh, yeah, those people are doing something without me.
Like, wait, that's where that first mantra comes in.
My worth, my value, live inside of me.
Okay, you're only gonna half believe it
when we start to say new things to ourselves, that's fine.
Okay, what would be a different action?
Okay, yeah, maybe I do wanna,
who would I wanna have lunch with? Like who would I want to have lunch with?
Like, do I even want to have lunch with those people?
Sometimes we forget to ask ourselves that.
It's like, I don't even like what they usually talk about.
Okay, I'm going to reach out to this person.
And I think that is something that would really be helpful to you probably as a grownup and
such a powerful thing to model for your daughter.
Yes.
I think you're right.
My brain is like, go right now.
And that is why truly I want you to have the workshop too because parents tell me like
the things I'm working on.
Like, it's just helpful to watch a five minute snippet because I have it.
It's a new idea.
It goes to the bottom of my list because logistics and laundry and kids soccer schedules goes
to the top.
And like, what was that thing?
Right.
Okay.
Little refresher. It activates in my body. It's back there. I always say, I really feel like good inside
is a language, right? And most of us were raised in a different language. And it would
be like if you said to me, I was raised in English and I want to speak Mandarin to my
kids. Is that possible? And I'd be like, that's of course possible. But I'd also say, you
probably have to like do something to like practice Mandarin. And guess what? In high
stress moments, you're going to go back to English.
You just will.
It doesn't mean all your lessons are lost, but it probably means, wait, let me get that
Mandarin refresher.
Do I have that in my back pocket?
Okay.
Moving on.
So you will kind of quote, forget a lot of this.
It's great to have something.
You do a little refresh.
You do one thing.
And that's again, kind of that pattern of noticing old patterns.
It's funny we're back here.
Pausing, doing a refresh and kind of trying something a little bit new.
So you're doing this exactly right.
No one is meant to absorb everything and I'm excited for you to take a step, lose focus,
realize that, do a refresher and take another step.
I appreciate that.
Thank you.
Well, thank you.
I just know also, Ali, like this is something so many of us struggle with with our kids. I appreciate that. Thank you. Well, thank you. I just know also, Ali,
this is something so many of us struggle with with our kids.
We see it.
Again, I just wanna commend you on being so aware of it
and saying, okay, what are some little things here and there
that I could do, not just for now,
but to build this longer-term confidence
and kind of focus on healthy relationships.
I think it's such a gift to our kids
when we think that way.
And so she's lucky to have you.
Thank you very much.
So if this conversation resonated and it makes you think,
I really would like to help my kid build the type of confidence that helps them develop healthy relationship patterns,
I wanna make sure you check out those two workshops
that I mentioned to Ali,
the Tricky Friendship Moments Workshop,
as well as the workshop on building lasting confidence,
which is truly one of my favorites.
All of that can be found within Good Inside membership.
Check out the link in the show notes for more.
Thank you for more.
Thank you for listening. To share a story or ask me a question,
go to goodinside.com slash podcast,
or you could write me at podcast at goodinside.com.
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Good Inside with Dr. Becky is produced by Jesse Baker
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Our production staff includes Sabrina Farhi,
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I would also like to thank Erica Belsky, Mary Paniko, Brooke Zant, and the
rest of the Good Inside team. And 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.