Huberman Lab - Dr. Becky Kennedy: Protocols for Excellent Parenting & Improving Relationships of All Kinds
Episode Date: February 26, 2024In this episode, my guest is Dr. Becky Kennedy, Ph.D., a clinical psychologist, bestselling author, and founder of Good Inside, an education platform for parents and parents-to-be. We discuss actionab...le protocols for raising resilient, emotionally healthy kids and effective alternatives to typical forms of reward and punishment that instead teach children valuable skills and strengthen the parent-child bond. These protocols also apply to other types of relationships: professional, romantic, friendships, siblings, etc. We explain how to respond to emotional outbursts, rudeness, and entitlement, repair fractured relationships, build self-confidence, and improve interpersonal connections with empathy while maintaining healthy boundaries. We also discuss how to effectively communicate with children and adults with ADHD, anxiety, learning challenges, or with “deeply feeling” individuals. The conversation is broadly applicable to all types of social interactions and bonds. By the end of the episode, you will have learned simple yet powerful tools to build healthy relationships with kids, teens, adults, and oneself. For show notes, including referenced articles and additional resources, please visit hubermanlab.com. Thank you to our sponsors AG1: https://drinkag1.com/huberman Mateína: https://drinkmateina.com/huberman Joovv: https://joovv.com/huberman AeroPress: https://aeropress.com/huberman InsideTracker: https://insidetracker.com/huberman Momentous: https://livemomentous.com/huberman Timestamps (00:00:00) Dr. Becky Kennedy (00:02:44) Sponsors: Mateína, Joovv & AeroPress (00:07:35) Healthy Relationships: Sturdiness, Boundaries & Empathy (00:14:34) Tool: Establishing Boundaries (00:18:24) Rules, Boundaries & Connection (00:22:19) Rewards & Punishments; Skill Building (00:29:48) Sponsor: AG1 (00:31:16) Kids & Inherent Good (00:34:06) Family Jobs, Validation & Confidence, Giving Hope (00:41:54) Rewards, Pride (00:44:48) Tool: “I Believe You”, Confidence & Safety; Other Relationships (00:52:15) Trauma, Aloneness & Repair (00:57:07) Tool: Repair & Apologies, Rejecting Apology (01:01:04) Tool: Good Apologies (01:03:35) Sponsor: InsideTracker (01:04:37) Tool: Rudeness & Disrespect, Most Generous Interpretation (01:12:32) Walking on Eggshells, Pilot Analogy & Emotional Outbursts, Sturdy Leadership (01:20:49) Deeply Feeling Kids; Fears, Sensory Overload (01:30:10) Co-Parenting Differences & Punishment (01:37:11) Tool: Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD); Meditation (01:41:20) Tool: Tolerating Frustration, Screen Time, Learning (01:51:57) Grace & Parenthood, Parenting Job Description; Relationship to Self (01:55:24) Tool: “I’m Noticing”, Asking Questions; Emotional Regulation (02:01:15) Adolescence & Critical Needs, Explorers vs. Nomads (02:09:58) Saying “I Love You”, Teenagers; Family Meetings (02:15:07) Self-Care, Rage & Boundaries; Sturdy Leaders; Parent Relationship & Conflict (02:22:08) Tool: Wayward Teens, Marijuana & Substance Use, Getting Additional Help (02:30:03) Mentors (02:34:26) Tool: Entitlement, Fear & Frustration (02:41:57) Tool: Experiencing Frustration; Chores & Allowance (02:46:31) Good Inside Platform (02:51:27) Zero-Cost Support, Spotify & Apple Reviews, YouTube Feedback, Sponsors, Momentous, Social Media, Neural Network Newsletter Disclaimer
Transcript
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Welcome to the Huberman Lab Podcast, where we discuss science and science-based tools
for everyday life.
I'm Andrew Huberman and I'm a professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at Stanford
School of Medicine.
My guest today is Dr. Becky Kennedy.
Dr. Becky Kennedy is a clinical psychologist specializing in parent-child relationships.
She received her degrees and did her training at Duke University and Columbia University
in New York.
She is the author of the best-selling book, Good Inside, a guide to becoming the parent
you want to be.
She is also the founder and creator of an online learning platform, also called Good Inside,
at which parents and parents-to-be can learn the best possible parenting skills
that are grounded in the fields of clinical psychology
that have been proven to work in the real world,
and that can allow people to navigate
common sticking points in parent-child relationships.
During today's discussion,
you will learn a tremendous amount of actionable knowledge
about what it is to be a good parent.
This is a conversation that pertains
not just to parents
and parents to be, but also uncles, aunts, grandparents,
and also those of you not planning to
or who do not want children.
I say that because while everything we discussed today
is grounded in the discussion
around parent-child relationships,
it indeed pertains to all of us
and relationships of all kinds,
including romantic relationships,
friendships, workplace relationships, and our relationship to self.
Dr. Kennedy defines for us and makes clear and actionable what the exact job of good
parenting is and how that relates to other relationships that we might have.
She explains how to set healthy boundaries and in fact defines exactly what healthy boundaries
are.
There's a lot of misconception about that.
We also talk a lot about empathy
and the need to make children and ourselves feel safe
in all kinds of relating.
We discuss how to navigate disagreements and arguments,
apologies and punishments, reward,
and on and on, all framed within a real world,
real time context.
What I mean by that,
and what I think really sets apart
Dr. Becky Kennedy's work from so much else
that you'll see out there on parent, child,
and other types of relationships,
is that she makes what to do and say,
and what not to do and say,
in a variety of real world contexts,
very clear such that you can access that knowledge
and do those specific things,
and avoid those specific things,
even when things get tense.
In fact, especially when things get difficult or tense.
By the end of today's episode,
you will have learned a dozen or more
very potent clinically backed tools
to navigate parent-child relating,
including your relationship to your own parents,
alive or dead, and your relationship to self.
Before we begin, I'd like to emphasize that this podcast
is separate from my teaching and research roles at Stanford.
It is, however, part of my desire and effort
to bring zero cost to consumer information
about science and science-related tools
to the general public.
In keeping with that theme,
I'd like to thank the sponsors of today's podcast.
Our first sponsor is Matina.
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If there's one thing I've
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And now for my discussion with Dr. Becky Kennedy.
Dr. Becky Kennedy, welcome.
Thank you, so excited to be here.
I have a lot of questions for you.
And as I mentioned in my introduction,
much of what we are going to discuss today relates
to parent-child relating, but pertains to relationships generally.
So people with children, without children, who don't want children.
Hopefully there aren't people that hate children, but for all people out there with children
or not, planning them or not, relationships are
really just fundamental to who we are.
And I actually place relationships, including relationship to self in what we now think
of as the six pillars of mental health, physical health and performance, sleep, nutrition,
exercise, relationships clearly vital to all aspects of life. So I'd like to start off by just asking, for all of us,
are there some simple or perhaps not so simple questions
that we can reflect on that give us a sense of,
how good a parent we are or would be based on,
I don't know, our previous parent-child relationships, our relationship to self.
You know, like what kind of things come to bear when we
think about really healthy relationships?
I can start rattling off a list of what I imagine they could be.
But what are your thoughts?
Like what's the parameter space, as we say?
How should we think about relationships besides just,
oh, I either like this person or don't,
or I feel good around them or I don't,
or separating how I feel about them
versus how they make me feel.
We can drill a little deeper below
the kind of more superficial stuff
that we often see out there.
The first thing that comes to mind when you say that
is this word sturdiness.
And to me, when someone says, what is good inside as an approach? And that's always the first word that comes to mind when you say that is this word, sturdiness. And to me, when someone says, what is good inside is an approach, and that's always the first word
that comes to mind. And I know that's an odd word. It's not a word we use a lot. Although I do think
most people, when you say that person's a really sturdy person, I think we all have some connotation
or feeling, at least, of what that means. And I use it a lot, being a sturdy parent, being a sturdy
leader. I talk a lot about the similarities to parenting and kind of being a pilot of a plane.
And that word sturdy always comes up.
And so I remember a little while ago, someone pushed me, they're like, what's your definition
of what that means?
And at that point, I thought, wow, I should probably have a definition given I use it
a lot.
But what I think it really means is inability to be connected to yourself and to someone
else at the same time.
And I think that is really the definition
of sturdy leadership, and that is the key thing
that's present in a healthy relationship,
that at once I kind of know my values,
what I want, what I need.
I feel like I can be true to that.
And at the same time, I can kind of connect
to someone else who probably has different wants and needs and
maybe even slightly different values at the same time.
And the thing that leads me to next is what I think about is like family jobs and a parent
job.
So in almost any other place, you could assume if I'm getting a new job at this company,
like there's just no way I could do my job well
if I don't know what my job is.
Right? If you go to your desk and your boss like,
have a good day, do a good job,
and there's no job description,
you'd be like, I think that's impossible.
But over and over with parents,
if I say to them, well,
what is your job with your kid?
Or when your kid is having a tantrum,
or they hit, or they're rude,
or they lie to your face or anything,
what is your job in that moment?
Most people, very well-intentioned educated people who would never ever take a job if
they didn't have a job description.
They look at me like, I have no idea.
So how can we do it well?
How can we then perform it to a place to get to the outcomes we want if you don't have
the foundation of what your job is?
And to me, I thought a lot about it.
I think parents actually have two jobs
and it relates to sturdiness, so you'll connect it.
Where one of our jobs is boundaries.
And to me, boundaries are things we tell people we will do
and they require the other person to do nothing.
And that's like really important
because a lot of times we think we're setting a boundary
when actually we're making a request.
And boundaries keep us connected to ourselves.
They represent our values and our wants and our needs.
And in a parent-child relationship, they also keep our kids safe.
If I just know in a simple way, like my kids watched enough TV today and they really have
to get to bed and I know that like I don't want them to
Stay up late. I kind of know what my family needs. I have to set a boundary
but the other part of my job is
like empathy and validation which is a way of connecting to someone else where
You see someone else's feelings and experience as real. You don't agree with it probably
You don't necessarily condone the behavior
that's the representation of the feelings,
but the feelings themselves you need to connect to.
And I feel like those are our two jobs as parents
and that's really the way to be a sturdy leader
and to be in a sturdy, healthy relationship with your kids.
Wow, so much there and I love it.
And here's one of the reasons I love it.
This notion of sturdiness, something that I don't think we hear enough about.
We hear about resilience, grit, also important terms.
But sturdiness as you've described it and the job of parenting, really seems to include a lot of verbs,
not just nouns and adjectives.
And I'm a huge fan of verbs because biology
and to some extent psychology, yes, also psychology
is all about verbs.
And so the labels often are mysterious,
but sturdiness just sends a clear message of something
that doesn't budge easily.
But then as you describe the job of being a parent,
having boundaries, and I'd like to drill into that
a little bit more, how you view boundaries,
but also empathy, it's not a walled off picture.
It's one that is semi-permeable.
Also, and I confess I'm a bit obsessed with
old school psychoanalytic theory, not as the be all end all of psychology, but it also suggests
like this other relationship. Like I'm a person, I have a self, you're a person, you have a
self. This is the opposite of codependency where obviously dependency
and two people being quote unquote codependent can be healthy in the context of relying
on one another. But as I understand it, when one person has a self and another person doesn't
have a self or this notion of merging, not just in romantic relationships, but child
parent relationships, you know, I'm best friends with my mom or dad. Is that a good thing? I don't know. But there's no issue of other other relationships. It's like, I'm a self,
you're a self, and we each see each other as another. Anyway, I think there's so much to
explore here, so valuable. You mentioned that boundaries are something that we do and that
the requires that the other do nothing. Can we go a little bit further into that because it's a beautiful concept and this notion of boundaries.
But like gaslighting narcissism and all the other things that we hear about nowadays,
I think is often badly misunderstood.
So tell us more about boundaries and how that looks in the action sense of it.
And this is also connected to what you're saying,
that other relationship, I'm a person, you're a person,
and so many times that's actually is what gets merged.
And so my kid gets upset that I say
they can't watch another show.
And a parent really in that moment,
it's like, whose feelings are whose?
Like, they were upset, was I was upset?
A second ago I thought I should set the boundary
and now all of a sudden I'm changing my mind.
There is this complete role kind of confusion and merger
which is one of the main reasons that kids get actually
really scared and escalate their behavior
because they don't have a sturdy leader
when they really need one, right?
So boundaries are what we tell someone we will do
and they require the other person to do nothing.
I like this definition for a lot of reasons.
I'm just very practical.
So it allows me after I I set a boundary to assess,
was that a boundary or not, right?
Because let's take the TV example.
It's whatever time at night.
My kid has just watched a show
and they know they're supposed to watch one show
and then turn off the TV.
I hear from parents a lot.
My kid doesn't listen
or my kid doesn't
respect my boundaries. And I'll say, okay, like, that sounds hard. Let's get into
that. So then I'll say, so I told my kid to shut off the TV. I just kept watching.
I just kept on. I told my kid to stop jumping on the couch and they kept
jumping. They don't respect my boundaries. They don't listen. To me, this is like a
beautiful example of like, this is a problem, I agree, but this
is not a boundary problem.
You made a request of your child.
And frankly, if you have your, I'm making this up, seven-year-old watching TV, I'm
not so good at putting away TV and a phone at night.
Like it's just hard for me to do.
So your seven-year-old probably is just, you know, addicted to what's ever happening.
And we're kind of asking our kid to do our job for us because we don't want our kid
to be mad at us or whatever it is.
A boundary in that situation would be saying, oh, you didn't put off the TV.
Look by the time I get over there, if you haven't turned off the TV, I don't want to
do this, but I will.
I will take the remote out of your hand and shut it off.
A boundary is saying, oh, after my request doesn't work, can you get off the couch? You can jump on the floor.
Look, if by the time I get over there,
you haven't gotten off the couch, I will pick you up.
That is, I was, I'm not going to put the success
of my intervention in my like seven year old's hand.
I care too much about my own needs
and my own role as a leader in my home to do that.
Right? Same thing with, let's say, in-laws.
My mother-in-law doesn't respect my boundary. She always shows up without calling. as a leader in my home to do that. Same thing with, let's say, in-laws.
My mother-in-law doesn't respect my boundary.
She always shows up without calling.
Now, I don't want to get to this point,
and there's a lot of things in a relationship
we can do before we get to this point,
but if that's really a boundary,
and I have a very intrusive mother-in-law,
a boundary would be saying,
look, this is going to be awkward,
and I know you mean well,
but the next time you come unannounced,
I will come to your car and say,
oh, this time doesn't work for us.
You cannot come in and I will go back into my house
and close the door.
Like, now there's gonna be lots of feelings around that,
but you are now setting a true boundary.
And when we say our kids don't listen,
those are often situations, not all of them, but
there's a big percentage where I'm actually not setting a boundary early enough and in
a sturdy enough way, which is what my kid needs because at that point, they simply don't
have the skills to inhibit and urge, and they need me to be the boundary for them.
We hear sometimes that kids are craving rules.
They're craving boundaries.
I don't know.
I was kind of a wild adolescent and teenager, maybe a little more than wild.
I don't recall ever craving rules, but I do recall paying attention to their lack of presence.
So what of that?
Is this notion that kids really want
and crave rules and boundaries?
Is that sort of a, I don't know,
projection that we put onto them?
And I'm not exploring this just for fun.
I'm exploring it because I think that one thing
that's very helpful in setting boundaries,
especially with kids, is the idea that gosh,
even if it's a bit painful to see them in discomfort,
there's that empathy piece that you talked about before,
that empathic attunement can get in the way of boundaries.
These are, and they're not mutually exclusive,
but these are somewhat competing forces at times.
So if we know or if we can acknowledge or at least explore this idea that rules are
deep down what they really want, not just what they need, maybe it would help.
Yes.
And I think, by the way, in my taking the remote away or taking my kid off the couch,
just to be clear, if I do that to my kid, like they are not gonna say, oh mom, you are the best mom in the world, thank you.
They are gonna cry and scream.
And that's where boundaries and empathy,
those two parts of our job actually do always go together.
I think they're actually partners,
they're not actually at odds,
because as soon as my kid is upset,
what I would say to them is,
oh, you wanted to jump on the couch.
It's not as much fun on the floor.
Oh, you really wanted to watch another show.
You didn't even want it this big.
You wanted to watch it this big.
It sounds crazy, because you're like, wait,
why am I empathizing with that feeling?
They just kind of disobeyed.
No, they're two different things.
I'm doing my job and setting a boundary.
They're actually doing their job
and feeling their feelings.
That's actually their job.
The only way you can ever learn to regulate a feeling
is through feeling the feeling.
So they're doing their job.
Now I'm gonna validate,
and this is how kids learn emotion regulation.
Boundaries, they feel, I validate, I hold the boundary,
over and over and over.
So do kids crave rules?
And I think one of the issues is that most parenting
approaches have one or the other.
And I think they're both very incomplete strategies.
If you just lead with rules, right,
I don't know who said it, definitely wasn't me, like what is it, rules without relationship
lead to rebellion? Yeah, that's what happens, right? So that's not good. But I see the
stainage we've swung the other direction. It is also not a complete parenting strategy
when your kids jumping on the couch to do nothing. If you think that's dangerous and
just saying, Oh, you really want to jump, jump, jump,
and such big feelings.
Like, that's not what kids need.
I think kids crave boundaries, and they crave feeling seen
and understood.
Because as kids are growing up, like,
I think the questions they're always asking parents,
even though, of course, they never say this,
is just, am I real and am I safe?
Every interaction, that's what they're asking us.
The reason we have to validate their feelings
when they're upset, even though they're so upset
just that their string cheese broke, whatever it is,
is feelings don't have markers like blood or like,
they don't know.
And so when we say, oh, you wanted your string cheese
to be together, what we're really saying
is the things you experience
inside of you are real.
But kids are also desperate to know like,
how far do things go?
No one likes to feel boundary-less as a kid.
That's terrifying, right?
And so when we said a boundary,
we actually say to a kid,
like, I will always protect you.
Like, I won't let things get so far out of control.
So I do think, I don't know if it's rules,
but kids crave connection.
And I think boundaries and kind of validation and empathy,
they are the two forms of connection
that kids are really desperate for.
What about rewarding kids?
And here, rather than start off by asking,
what are the best ways to reward kids in healthy ways?
And I will ask that in a moment.
How can we evaluate the notion of rewards or incentives
through this lens of sturdiness, boundaries and empathy?
Yeah. Because I you know, I could imagine, you know,
a reward that's outsized in comparison to what a kid did.
You know, okay, great, you know,
you took your plate to the kitchen sink after dinner.
You know, you get $10,000, obviously out of scale,
extreme example, but just by way of example,
you know, screw up their reward mechanisms
for life if you ask me, everything I know about reward in neuroplasticity says that
would occur.
But this idea that you can incentivize kids, if you turn off the TV now, then you definitely
can watch tomorrow night.
Whereas if you don't, you can't.
So you're sort of merging reward and potential
punishment. How do we bound rewards and how do we take into account that when we start adding
rewards to scenarios that we're mixing and matching life experience for them? Okay, so now doing what
I'm told, do I always expect a reward?
If the reward doesn't come next time, we know based on reward prediction error, we tend to be
worse off emotionally than had we never received a reward in the first place. Again, pretty vast
parameter space, but what are your thoughts on best ways to reward kids for standard good behavior
for standard good behavior versus achievement versus elimination of bad behavior. Yeah. Maybe. So three categories.
I think you're asking a much bigger question, Ramana, I think you are, which is like,
why do parents think we need to reward kids? I think that's, why do we think we need to punish
kids? And this is actually where everything I work on started from because the way I was trained
to work with parents, I went to, you know, the best gold standard evidence-based program.
And it was all about timeouts and punishments and rewards and stickers and ignoring and
praise and, and honestly, during the training for the years after I kind of practiced this
way, my, I feel like that, you know, this better than I am.
So I shouldn't even say this,
but like that left part of my brain,
like logic and linearity, I was just like,
this is amazing, oh my goodness,
we're gonna get more of the good behavior
and we're gonna not get the bad behavior
and I'd start teaching this to parents in my private practice
and there was this little thing in me,
I don't even know, that was like,
I don't know about this, I don't know.
And it get louder and louder to the point that in a session,
I literally said to a parent in front of me,
I was just like telling them how to do a timeout.
I said, I'm sorry, I don't believe anything
I've been telling you.
That's literally what I said.
Cause I just, it was so loud.
And there were, it was obviously super awkward,
but it led me to, I feel like from this first principles way,
be like, there are a million assumptions
that we have about raising kids,
and I think about relationships.
And if I just stripped them back,
what do I be left with,
and what would be a new building from there?
And rewards and punishments to me are these assumptions
that we have somehow converted from like,
the fiction shelf of the library,
and my mind to like the non-fiction shelf as like truths
and I kind of rail against all of them. So I think the question, if that's okay to go in that
direction to me, is like why do we think we need to reward kids and is there actually a better system
both short-term and long-term? I'm incredibly long-term greedy in my parenting approach because
at the end of the day, 18 and up
is where things really matter.
Not really matter.
I mean, they all matter, but I'd rather,
you know, I wanna help my kids become
sturdy, resilient adults.
But I'm short term greedy too,
because I'm a realist.
Like I just can't deal with like
all of these difficult moments.
You get both for sure without rewards and punishments.
So I don't know, what might someone
tell me they give a reward for?
Do you wanna use the like clearing the table or example? Let's start that there.
It kind of goes back to like believing kids are inherently good inside. I really think it goes
back to that. If you really believe kids are inherently good inside, which by the way, when I
stripped back every assumption, the only thing I was left was that literally the only thing.
And then I started to think, okay, so if they're good inside, why do they do
so many annoying things like all the time?
But that gave me a gap.
And I feel like that is very exciting to have a gap.
Like why do people who are good inside do such bad things, right?
Adults or kids.
And to me, right?
Kids are born with all the feelings and none of the skills to
manage those feelings, like period. And we've often thought, therefore, when feelings, feelings
without skills come out in behaviors. I think that's what bad behaviors are. Feelings or urges
or something without a skill to manage them or without access to the skill, maybe in that moment,
either way. And then we end up punishing behavior,
but the behavior was just a sign of the lack of skill.
So I can't imagine anyone thinking
I could teach my kid to swim by punishing them
for not swimming, like I think someone would say
that was crazy.
And but that's kind of how we raise kids.
And then we think rewarding them is gonna be effective, but it actually leads over
and over to what you said.
I've seen these parents over and over my private practice.
My 14-year-old literally won't pick up their clothes from the floor unless I give them $5.
How did I get here?
And I'm like, yeah, that's a problem, but I saw how they got there.
So let's take clearing their plate.
I know this is gonna sound cheesy,
but kids do have something in them
where they wanna feel like a purposeful,
meaningful part of society.
They do.
Impact drives adults and it drives kids.
It's not the same type of rewarding as playing Fortnite.
It's a totally different system.
But I think the question is like,
why do we think we have to bribe kids
or kind of trick them into doing things that are kind of like basic parts of human life?
And so if we take that and my kid chronically isn't clearing their plate, I could say to
them, look, every time you clear a plate, I'm going to give you a sticker.
After five stickers, you're going to get, I don't know, whatever it is.
To me, like a much more just effective way is I'd say to my kid, hey, I know't know, whatever it is. To me, like a much more just effective way,
is I'd say to my kid, hey, I know you know,
like clearing a plate is just one way
of being part of this family and taking care of stuff.
I know you know that, we're on the same team.
I say that for you, we're on the same team, right?
We are.
Something's getting in your way of remembering.
I'm gonna assume, I like the most generous interpretation.
That to me allows you to separate someone's bad behavior
from their good
identity. Then I'm gonna say, what would help you remember? We literally did this with my son who
always had his towel on the floor. And I was just like, I bet he just doesn't remember. He literally
doesn't see it. We talked about it and he's like, we talked about him putting a post-it, literally.
Something simple like a post-it on my door that just says pick up my towel. He wrote it in his own
handwriting, trying to facilitate him solving his own problems.
And now he has a much higher rate of picking up his towel.
Like I guess I could have said,
every time you pick up your towel,
you'll, I don't know, get a dollar or whatever it is.
But again, it makes me think,
I'm not building the generalizable skill that way.
I'm just kind of offering something at the end,
which sets me on this kind of awful cycle
that I think kind of misses the point.
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I love the idea that kids want purpose.
And am I correct in wondering if that goes back
to this am I real component of the am I real, am I safe?
Yes.
Like one way that we know we are real
is our ability to impart change on the world around us.
I don't want to get too abstract here,
but you know, as a neuroscientist,
I've often sat back and reflected like,
all the emotions we feel,
like no one sees that or knows that.
Unless we say something, we write something,
we sing something, we write something, we sing
something, we shout something, you know, all the forms of expression.
Just like none of our dreams, our creative insights or wishes exist except inside us
unless we transmute them into something in the real world.
So there does seem to be something about having this nervous system from a time we're really
on like it's seeing our effect on the world that really
makes us real and on others. I love the idea that, well, and I must say I absolutely believe
in my heart and I just feel it as a feeling that kids are inherently good inside. I just,
I can't imagine any other version of that, but does that mean that there are people out there
who believe that kids are inherently bad or or at least not good?
I mean, I mean, they're like how could that be but then again, maybe I'm just naive
I don't know if anyone consciously believes that but when I go back to that system. I was first
trained in rewards and punishments like it feels like a system of behavioral control and
To me like I've always thought about control and trust as opposites.
So I only control what I don't trust.
So nobody said to me in that program, by the way, Becky, everything you're learning here,
we believe kids are bad inside and so we do this thing.
But well, if I don't trust my kid and if I don't trust, they inherently have the things
in them to do good.
By the way, that's not going to happen naturally. That's why we have a big job as a parent to
coach our kids to bring that out, to set boundaries when they can't do it, and so many other things.
But I don't believe anyone would say, yeah, it's because they're bad inside, but there is a nature
where you're constantly interacting with your kid from that other system, looking at them like,
I don't trust you. I don't trust you.
And when you do bad things, I cannot hold on to the fact
that you have a good identity.
That's why I'm giving you a punishment.
That's why I'm sending you away to your room.
And so if I'm reflecting back to you constantly,
that you are just your latest behavior,
that I don't trust you, that I kind of have to bribe you
to do very basic human things." Well,
our kids form their identity from our reflection of them. And so then this is what really compelled
all of this. I'm like, we're raising generation after generation of kid kind of saying to them,
you're kind of a bad, untrustworthy kid. And then we wonder why we have such high rates of
massive mental health problems. Well, like I There's some linearity there. I'm curious about this notion of impingement. I've heard about this
You know this idea that you know when we're young we're forging life
Deciding you know, I like the way this tastes or not tastes, you know, by the way, I still hate anchovies
I don't need to be
Asked again to know the answer.
But when you're young, you know, we're encouraged to do things like eat your broccoli,
taste the anchovy. And some parents, it seems, are very comfortable with the idea of
allowing their children to have their feelings and their wishes. They're,
they're, as I always say, the nervous system seems to be divided into yum yucks and meh.
Mehs, I guess the plural would be mehs.
Yum yucks and mehs.
I mean, it's more complicated than that,
but like with people where you're like,
yeah, I really like them or now something's off there
or like meh, you know?
So it's not that much more nuanced than that.
The brain's got to make decisions after all.
Excuse me.
So, you know, kids have their yum yucks and mehs
and then we've got our ideas about what they need to do
in order to progress through life,
often inherited from our parents
and hopefully modified by the wonderful work
that you're doing and writing about and in your program.
Then we're talking about here.
But, you know, how much space should we allow
for kids to be unimpinj?
Like you don't want to eat what we're eating for dinner.
Like, okay, I'm not gonna cook you an entire new dinner,
but then I guess like you might go to bed hungry.
Sounds harsh, right?
But the other version is, okay, what would you like for dinner?
Well, I prefer, let's say they pick a healthy option.
They prefer pasta, not chicken.
Okay.
We won't do the ice cream chicken thing.
Um, do we do it?
Right?
Like how much impingement?
I don't want to watch a movie with the family.
I want to play in my room.
You know, at some level, you know, I've heard it both ways that impingement is
needed for safety and life progression.
But there's times when it's more subtle than that.
It's not about safety and life progression.
It's not about going to school or not going to school homework or no homework.
It's about like, do you want to come with us to the park?
You want to play at home in your room?
How often should we impinge?
How do we know?
This kind of the tricky
tricky areas of parenting that I think
Because it doesn't fall into the extremes. Yeah, I love this question. That's a word. I don't often hear actually what impingement like can you act like what?
like like impinging on like impinging on the child's in
inherent natural desires or a
Version to things.
Got it, okay. Like you say, we're going over so-and-so's house
and they say, you know, I don't like their kids.
You go, well, listen, you gotta learn to play
with other kids and go, no, I don't like their kids.
You can say, did something happen?
And so we're not talking about a dangerous situation.
But you're like, no, I don't like them.
I just really want to just stay home.
Yeah, this is a great-
So are we gonna impinge on there? I mean, because we're teaching them, either way, we're teaching them
something. You got to do stuff you don't want to do, even if you don't like it.
And here again, we're ruling out the possibility that there's
something unsafe about the environment, psychologically or physically unsafe.
But at the same time, we're teaching them, hey, I see you, I hear you, but
you know, your desires might not be right.
There's actually a tacit message of the way you feel might not be the best gauge of what's
best for you, which sends a complicated message to a kid.
Totally.
So this is again where I think I could inside family jobs are so useful.
Family jobs to me, when I used to meet with parents and they'd describe a situation, I feel like 90% of the time that's where I'd start because
then that flows from there. It's like a framework. So what is my job? I'm the one
who sets boundaries. Like I am the one who makes key family decisions. Obviously
as our kids get older, they should be making some decisions too. No one likes
to feel controlled, but key decisions and my job is to validate my kids'
experience. This is actually complicated because, again, over and over,
we think that validating my kids' experience
means they're going to dictate a decision.
My boundaries don't dictate my kids' feelings.
And my kids' feelings should not dictate my boundaries.
They're just two equal things.
So this is a great example.
My kids are like, you know, I don't like playing with those kids.
And can I just stay home with, let's just say grandma was home.
Can I just stay home?
And I'm like, I just think it's important to go as a family, but my kid doesn't want to go.
There's nothing dangerous.
Okay.
To me, this is that exact way of putting family jobs into action.
Sweetie, like, and to me, this phrase, I wish every parent could say this to their kid.
I believe you.
If you want to make a kid feel real and confident for life, confidence comes from the experience of being believed,
because that's how you, for me, confidence is self-trust.
It's not feeling good about yourself, it's self-trust.
I really do know the way I feel.
So let's say I say to my son in that situation,
it's, I believe you, I'm sorry, I believe you.
Look, I know you want to play football all day,
and the kid around your age hates football.
Like that would probably be lowest on your list
of types of kids you'd want to hang out with
for the afternoon.
I totally believe you.
And in this family, we know that
sometimes we have to do things we don't love to do.
We do that for a family experience.
I say this to my kid all the time.
You know, also just to end up being a good adult,
you just have to end up practicing as a kid,
doing things you don't wanna do,
things that are boring, things that aren't your preference.
So, you know, you notch in your belt for that.
So, you don't have to thank me.
And also, I know you have it in you to do your best
to be polite and engage.
Like, I just, I know you're a good kid
and this isn't what you want
and I know we're gonna get through it.
Now, if it's really hard, maybe young,
hey, let's create a sign.
Like, can you look at me and go,
when you feel like you're kind of at this
and then me and you, we're gonna go to the bathroom,
I'm gonna give you a hug and, right,
I'm gonna say, I know this isn't what you want
and when we get home, we could watch that football game,
whatever it was, right?
Because what we often do is we leave ourselves with two choices with kids. We either say, fine, stay home.
Their feelings actually just dictated the decision. That's not helpful for them.
I don't want my kid to learn in life. When I don't want to do something, people twist and turn to make that thing not happen.
Like that's disturbing for adulthood expectations.
But then we do the other thing, which is like you you are so selfish, just because you're of a friend,
your age doesn't mean that you can't come with us.
So we either let their feelings dictate
or we think our boundaries kind of give us the right
to be mad at our kid, right?
Like to do both is so important.
And so that's where I think to me,
when I hear impingement, like, I actually think that's
that is the exact space where you have the most bang for your buck as a parent.
Like it's not enjoyable.
And again, if I have my beautiful intervention with my son, do not think my kid will look
at me and say, I love how you explain that.
That was so beautiful.
No, he's going to roll his eyes.
My job is not to take the bait because I'm an adult and to also hold hope.
I think that's really important.
This concept of I'm validating my kids' feelings where they are today, but I need to be the
one to hold hope that they can cope with it.
If I can't name to my kid, I know you're going to get through it.
They're not going to be able to see that kind of next, more mature version of themselves.
And I actually think it's the same as your best boss.
You know, it's like, I know you don't wanna go on this trip.
I don't know, whatever it is.
I know this presentation topic
isn't the one you would have chosen.
And there were 10 things,
and this was literally number 10.
I totally get that, and it stinks,
and I'm not taking anything away from that.
And this is the thing I needed to do.
And I know something about you.
Like when you put your mind to something,
you always do a great job.
And like, it's probably not gonna be enjoyable,
but I do know you're gonna do a great job on this.
Like, that's like the boss you want.
Amazing.
Are you adopting children by the way?
I actually finished college.
And actually, I arrived with-
You I consider Andrew, you adult children.
What I'm hearing is don't dictate their behavior with,
and I'm gonna underline and bold dictate. Don't dictate their behavior.
You're going to do this because I said so.
That's dictatorship.
But at the same time,
don't quash the emotion behind the resistance.
Kind of acknowledge it, make them feel real.
I believe you.
I love this phrase, amazing.
And I love your definition of confidence.
If people didn't hear that, we're definitely going to repeat it again and we're going to
etch it into your neural circuitry because I love that.
It's a self-trust.
And this notion of giving hope,
you're giving them an incentive that's based on a reward
that's actually good for them
that they can translate to other situations as well.
Wow.
Can I double click on reward?
Please.
Because you know what made me think,
I didn't think until you said that,
like I think in a situation where you'd be tempted to say,
like, and if you go and you're polite,
I'll give you 20 extra minutes of Roblox, right?
That's like, and first of all, let me just say something.
Like, whatever I say to you, like for listeners,
like it's not like I do this stuff all the time
with my actual kids.
I'm the first one sometimes to be like,
here's your thing, I have to dangle.
You know?
We'll provide a little section in the comment section
on YouTube where your kids can,
no, I'm just kidding.
Yeah, exactly. Your kids are forbidden, no I'm just kidding. Yeah, exactly.
Your kids are forbidden.
No, wait, that's, wait, that's dictating.
We understand why you, I believe that you would want to comment, but we're gonna trust,
we're gonna let you know why it's a, it's good for you if you don't.
Exactly.
Anyway, I'll practice this on someone else's kids.
But there were like, the, when your kid ends up seeing themselves capable of doing something they didn't previously think they could do.
You know better than me, like, I feel like that is like one of the best rewards,
even if it's getting through a social situation, or I think about this a lot with, you know,
my little kid is, I don't know, like struggling with a puzzle or something,
and I could just do it for them, or if I help them kind of regulate,
oh, this is a hard puzzle, and you can take a break.
I just know you're gonna figure it out.
Today, I just know it.
And then, because of that, they get there.
That feels in your body, like that is the best kind of reward,
and it's the type of reward that works for kids in adulthood.
When they're in a job, we want them to be motivated
by the feeling they're gonna have of pride.
Not be saying, hey, I finished my thing early.
Do I get a bonus to their boss?
Like that's not gonna play out as well.
I love it.
I'm just pausing and shaking my head
because I love it so much.
And I just wanna make sure that I don't quickly move
to the next question without drilling down even deeper into some of these concepts. I believe you as the feedback
or response that can instill real confidence over time, not to get too nuanced here, but
how is it different because I sense it is different than I hear you.
I hear you, but you're going to do this anyway.
Or I hear you, but listen in this family, da-da-da-da.
I believe you, the word believe is powerful.
And I believe there's real power in specific words, as is, for instance, sturdiness.
Again, that's such a powerful and underused word.
I believe you.
You're a psychologist.
What do you think we're hearing when somebody says, I believe you?
That's different than I hear you.
I haven't listed these out, but I think we all have these core needs as humans.
And I think being believed is one of them because it's someone else kind of saying, you're real.
That's what I might not feel what you're feeling, but that thing that feels strong to you, that
nobody can see or measure, is real.
And when I think about the most confident people, like I think about this girl who I
went to Duke with
and she was just brilliant, like so smart.
We were in this seminar,
it was one of these small classes with this professor
was like talking about stuff.
And like I for once, I was like,
I have no idea what this person's talking about.
But like I was like, no one else was stopping
and this girl raised her hand and she said,
I'm sorry if everyone else is annoying.
Like I have no idea what you're talking about.
Like is there any, cause I usually do. And like, is there any way you could say that in a different way?
That is, like, to me the utmost version of confidence.
That she believed her own experience of confusion was real confusion.
She didn't think it was a sign she was stupid. She believed it.
She believed herself. That is so confident.
And I think when someone says, I hear you, there are, there, they,
it's like a version of listening. There's many worse phrases. No damage is done.
When we follow anything but, but we tend to invalidate. So that's not good anyway.
I believe you, but is also not going to, but there's a million examples of this to me that build confidence.
And I actually think there's so many situations with kids where they say situations and we worry,
oh, they have low confidence. And then we intervene to quote, make them feel better,
which actually is the thing that lowers their confidence. Because it's like we say to them,
I don't believe you. You're not really feeling the way you feel. Where I believe you is the
exact opposite. So like, I like to give examples,
just because it makes it concrete,
like my kid will come home and say,
I don't know, I was picked last for, you know,
for dodgeball today.
I was picked last and something,
and they're clearly very, very sad, right?
And we want to say to them like, it's no big deal,
or everyone's picked last sometimes, or remember yesterday you told me you were picked first for
basketball, and we think like, I need to build up my kid's confidence. Those are
confidence, I won't say destroying us, to reducing interventions, because a kid is
kind of coming to a parent basically saying, I'm very, very upset that I was
picked last, and we're saying to a kid, no you weren't, and they're like, I'm very, very upset that I was picked last.
And we're saying to a kid, no, you weren't.
And they're like, but I am.
And what they learn is, and this is really terrifying to me,
is other people are better feelers of my feelings than I am.
And that's like a million really scary interpersonal,
I think, relationship kind you know, kind of consequences
later down in life.
But when a kid says, you know, I was picked last and nobody even wants me and they all
think I'm the worst athlete, whatever kids say, to sit and say some version of like,
I'm so glad we're talking about this.
And I could tell that was a really hard gym class and sweetie, like I, I believe you.
You will watch your kid, it is crazy to me
what parents tell me happen
when they say those words to their kids.
They're like, it also just like literally diffused everything
and they were like ready to move on.
Like they are just trying to tell you probably
like I was feeling something, it was a lot,
it was confusing, right?
Our feelings are always hardest when we're alone in them,
so I was alone in it and I bring it to you
and someone says, I believe you.
Not only are they giving you that core need,
they're also just like,
they're like sitting down with you in it
and that makes everything better.
And then meanwhile, what a kid feels like
when we say I believe you to a hard experience
or hard feelings, they're like the feelings
that overwhelm me don't overwhelm my parents.
They can tolerate it.
They're not scared of me kind of being a loser
in gym class one day.
And if my parent likes me when I have that feeling,
like I can start to like myself when I have that feeling.
It's so great because it sounds like it accomplishes
both things.
It makes kids feel real and safe.
Yes.
Real and safe.
And I can't help but ask, say, because how we started off today was that this isn't just
about parent-child relationships, but in friendships, in romantic relationships, in co-worker relationships,
that the words, I believe you, I have to presume based on everything I'm hearing now and feeling
inside about it, that it's equally effective. Huge. You know, years ago I was on like a podcast
early on and to me there are these three lines that kind of all go together when kids are,
anyone's upset and it's kind of like you start, and to me it's like a beautiful
invitation to have that conversation just to say to someone, I'm so glad you're talking
to me about this, right?
And then kind of, I believe you, tell me more.
My husband, when he heard it, was like, you know, you could like say those words to me
sometimes.
Like I would like that because, and I think about the workplace too.
Like you have someone come in there upset about, I don't know, I got staffed on this
or I'm not getting a promotion.
And I thought I was like just diffuse it
with just I'm so glad you're talking to me about this.
Yeah, I've been working nonstop for,
and just if you say to them like, I believe you.
Cause we usually don't say to someone, I don't believe you.
But what we'll say is we defend ourselves in that moment.
And the way the other person receives it is as if we're saying, I don't believe the
intensity of the experience you're having.
And when you do lead with I Believe You, same thing in a partnership.
You know, like every time I ask you to do something, you get really hot and bothered.
Like, it doesn't even mean you agree.
You're kind of just believing, like, I believe you.
Like, tell me more, all right?
I believe you that that really upset you.
And like, I'm obviously, I have a whole other story
in my head, but like, I hear what you're saying
and I know there's something there
and I believe it enough to like be open
to hearing more about it.
I don't know.
I was like, what's best?
That's what we all want in our partnerships.
I mean, I'm wide eyed.
I mean, what a beautiful acknowledgement that, as you pointed out, is not agreeing to accept
someone else's reality to the extent that you're going to dismantle the order of the
world or whatever it is.
But it's such an opening as opposed to a closing.
And as you said, it's non-defended, but it's such an opening as opposed to a closing. And as you said, it's non-defended,
but it's also boundaries.
I mean, there's just so many things about it
that feel good, seem good, and clearly are good.
You know, I don't wanna go down the
tragic rabbit hole of trauma,
but previous guest on this podcast,
you know, we should probably define
trauma just because it gets thrown around a lot, trauma, an event or set of circumstances
that fundamentally change the way that the brain and nervous system work so that there's
a maladaptive response going forward.
It's not every bad thing that happens, but there are micro traumas sometimes called small
T or macro traumas, big T again, could be multi event or single event.
But years ago, a different psychologist psychiatrist,
who's an adolescent psychiatrist at Stanford,
said something in a seminar that just really struck me, which
was that at its core, trauma is really
about confusion over who's responsible.
And here, we're not just talking about the more salient examples of sexual assault, those
too, of course.
But if we get screamed at or we observe something like third person trauma, the logical stance
is, well, okay, that was them, not me.
But when this happens, especially
when we're young, the nervous system, the brain, somehow interprets this as like, I
was there, I had a role in it just by being there. So like, what was my role? And somehow
the emotional response becomes one of responsibility, even if we know like, they're clearly the
one that initiated this. And so the reason I'm bringing this up in this context
is that it's almost like that lack of belief in self
somehow gets rooted in and then it all feels confusing
and then we don't feel safe.
That's right.
Because it's a confusion about responsibility.
Again, going back to this.
Can we go down that rabbit hole for a second?
Please, please, that's why I raised it.
I want your thoughts, not mine.
I always think trauma is actually not events.
It's the way an event gets processed.
And I love Gabor-Mete's definition of trauma.
It's not what happens to you,
it's what happens inside of you, right?
So to me, there's an inherent relationality there
where events that get processed, not any event,
events with high emotionality,
let's say that get processed in aloneness,
become traumatic. And I think that's where it gets linked to responsibility. So this is actually what my Ted Talk was about and why repair is so important. Who said this? Ronald Fairburn,
years ago, that for kids it is better to be a sinner in a world ruled by God than to live in a
world ruled by the devil.
I think it explains almost everything about child development right there.
Going back to goodness also, your parent just screamed at you.
And by the way, your parent, I scream at my kids.
Everyone's going to scream at their kids.
It's going to happen.
Okay, that's just the event.
The event's not going to have the impact.
What is happening for a kid?
Well, we know kids are oriented by attachment.
They literally need us to survive. Like they could not survive on their own. And so what
do you do when the person you're dependent on for safety becomes the source of danger
and threat? That's very confusing for a child in that moment. So they're super hyper aroused.
They're in the state of, you know, terror. And then usually after in my house too, I just yell at my kid, they're kind of alone
in their room.
I'm alone in the kitchen or wherever.
Meanwhile, spinning, so I come such a bad parent, like I'm proud, you know, but meanwhile,
because I'm so lost in my own guilt, I might not be going to my kid.
And so what happens for my kid if I don't repair after I scream at them or one of these
events, right?
Well, a kid cannot say to themselves,
my parent just had a bad day. Then the badness is in my parent.
My leader, I'm young now, right? Like I don't understand nuance.
My leader can't be bad. So I must take on the badness.
At least then I have control.
So kids after they're kind of yelled at,
in the absence of repair,
they really only have two options for how to regulate
and feel safe again.
They can self-blame, it's all my fault,
which is why I feel like most adults,
when they have a hard time, they tell themselves,
like, it's my fault, I'm not good enough,
it's like the legacy of that story from childhood,
or they use self-doubt.
Maybe that didn't happen, maybe I overreacted,
maybe I can't trust myself. Again, it leads to adults who basically say, like, did I overreact
or I may call five friends. Let me see if they think what my boyfriend did was a big deal because
they can't trust themselves. And so trauma, what I want every parent to know is I'll say,
I left my kid alone and I didn't pick them up at the soccer field. Is that going to traumatize them?
And I'll say, well, that's just the event.
Like, did you say to them, hey, that probably felt scary.
What was that like?
Oh, you're right.
Like, you were alone.
Now all of a sudden, next to the event that was scary
is my story and my connection.
It got processed in a safe connection.
It didn't get processed in aloneness.
And that's a massive, massive difference.
In this scenario, you are describing the parent who yelled goes to the child, having been that child,
and perhaps also having been that parent.
How do we deal with the fact that sometimes, you know, we don't want to be around the person that yelled at us. It hurts to receive the care. There's a textured landscape as opposed to
a smooth landscape there. Like, okay, now you're ready for everything to be peaceful.
I'm still with my feelings. I guess that's where the, I believe you comes in. And that's
where the sorting it through process begins.
Is that right?
I think it's like what version of a parent comes back?
To me, the first thing we have to do in a repair process
is actually repair with ourselves as a parent.
Really.
Because if you haven't repaired with yourself,
which to me is kind of separating your identity
again from your behavior, like, okay, Becky,
I'll use myself as an example,
I'm a good parent who just screamed at her son.
Like I did not mess up forever.
And you see when you try to repair it yourself,
those two things get collapsed.
I'm like, I messed him up forever.
I'm a monster.
Wait, like I'm a good parent who did something
I'm not proud of.
You can't repair with someone until you've repaired
with yourself.
They feel it from you.
They actually, it usually is like,
then you're asking for them. I'll be like, it's okay, right? Like, you forgive me, right? That's
not a repair. That's like using your child to try to do something we just have to do on our own or
with other adults. But if I've repaired with myself, I'm going to show up in a different way.
Might I have a feisty kid? I might. It's like, I don't care. It's not better. That's okay.
I'm not repairing to get something from my child.
I'm repairing to give an experience to them. So we can also get creative. You know, your kid is
older, you text them, you slip a door under the note, you say, okay, I just have to say this one
thing. To me, this line really matters to like snatch that self-blame out of a kid's body. It's
just like, I'm sorry I yelled. It is, it's never your fault when I yell. And it's not.
And people who argue, like, our ability to regulate our emotions
predated our child's existence.
Like that, you know, like, they had something, they did something,
and we felt frustrated.
But that's very different than yelling, right?
And saying that to your kid is so important.
Meanwhile, the next day you might say,
by the way, let's really figure out
how to get out the door in a smoother way.
You could work on whatever they need to work on.
But the reason I think most kids end up
rejecting parents' apologies is it's not really repair.
We're asking our kid for permission to be okay again.
Or our repairer sounds like,
hey, I'm sorry I yelled,
but if you just got ready in time,
that wouldn't have happened, or we say,
I'm sorry you felt that way.
I'm sorry you felt that way.
Those are not, none of those are actually repairs.
And if that's what a kid's been used to,
they're gonna keep a parent more at bay.
So is it safe to say that we can always come back
to making the kid feel real and safe.
I believe you is a great place to start.
And the reason I keep coming back to these simple things is that simple but very, very
potent, by the way, is that in the real world landscape of parenting, family and life, things
are happening really fast and it's very dynamic and it's multifaceted.
I mean, we haven't even talked yet about how when there's two parents,
like the one that didn't yell, when there's multiple siblings,
when there's human dynamics on one in the other landscape is hard enough.
And then when you start introducing the real world landscape, things happen fast.
So having something that people can reach to really quickly, what I call in the landscape of stress modulation,
which is something that I'm more familiar with
from my lab's work is real-time tools.
Real-time tools, like we're all at our best
after meditation, vacation, massage, and a good night's sleep.
But what about real-time tools when everything's hectic?
So what does a really good apology look like in the real world?
Because a really good apology in the ideal world of Instagram is, yeah, I believe you.
I'm so sorry with no buts, no this and that, but a real apology sometimes is
as you're boarding a plane or when there's a bunch of other things that are going on and you
haven't even dealt with those yet or when you're on your way to an event or you're, okay, so you
get it. What does a really good internal landscape for apology look like? Like how can we touch into
where we need to be? And then what are the words that even if we have to try again later and again and
again later with that person, in this case kid, but person more generally,
what's the like go to solid apology?
So yeah, I think you are never going to go wrong saying, I believe you to your kid.
Like obviously not if you say it randomly, but if they're really upset,
you yelled at me, I believe you. Like if that's all you can remember, you're crushing it. I think a realistic repair,
you have to do something for yourself. And like to me, it can be a very simple mantra. Like to me,
I'm a good parent who is having a hard time is the one I use, honestly, over and over. Just,
and after I yell at my kid before before I go to the bathroom sometimes,
and I'll say that to myself,
Becky, I'm a good parent, having a hard time.
And I'll kind of say it as many times as I need,
until I really do feel something like shift
a little in my body.
Just, because again, I think that phrase
separates what I did from who I am, right?
And then to me, a realistic apology,
it could be super simple.
If you remember nothing else,
it could just be like, I'm sorry I yelled.
That's great.
If you wanna, if you're like, I'm feeling it, Becky,
give me that next step.
I'm sorry I yelled.
Just like you, I'm working on managing my emotions.
And next time, even when I'm frustrated,
I'm gonna try to stay calm. Something about, next time, even when I'm frustrated, I'm gonna try to stay calm.
Something about the next time, you know,
if you wanna throw in that it's not your fault,
kids, it seems an odd thing because parents like,
why do kids assume it's their fault?
It is their default position.
And so it's never a bad thing to throw in.
But honestly, just simply, hey, I'm sorry I yelled. That
actually gives them that realness because without saying anything more, you're saying
that thing you think happened did happen. So that's powerful.
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How do you suggest parents deal with retorts and rudeness?
And again, let's extend this to all relationships. So you get in your
best mindset. And by the way, I love this I am thing, two of the most important words in any
language when translated to other languages. I am blank. I am a good this or I am whatever role identity is key to the brain.
We know this.
You go in and you say, I'm really sorry.
I struggle to regulate my emotions.
I believe that you're really upset.
And the kid says, I hate you.
Now earlier you said that good boundaries are about not expecting a change in behavior
from someone else.
They're about our own boundaries.
Or maybe the I hate you comes from, listen, we're not going to go to so-and-so's house
for a play date today.
Great example.
I hate you.
I hate you.
So is there ever a case for no response?
I mean, to me, the most underutilized parenting strategy is doing nothing, literally.
It's one of my most used strategies because there's like really good reason for it, especially
in this situation.
So, I always, to me, I would say we have to understand before we intervene.
So, I know every parent's like like what do you do in that situation?
But it's like trying like it's like trying to fix someone's tennis swing before you like look at their tennis swing, right?
Like what there could be a lot of problems. So
again, why is a kid saying I hate you and I would ask every parent to just keep this in mind
It's a tool and you can't use it in real time
Eventually you can but we have to say it at like the end of the night when my kids said I hate you
What is my most generous interpretation of why he would say that to me? And if you're like any human, me included, by the way, like your
least generous interpretation is immediate, right? Because he's a sociopath.
Like that's what we say all the time. We're like, wow, or because he's like a
horrible kid, because he's spoiled, because he's nasty, it comes easily.
So that's fine.
But what is my most generous interpretation?
And when I don't know, I'll push myself to say, okay, well, like, I was in a
situation with my husband, what would lead me to say that?
All right.
What would lead you to say that to someone?
That I hate them?
Yeah.
Like they like say something to you like, Hey, Andrew, we're not going to be able
to, you know, do this dinner.
It would have to be some sort of deep betrayal of trust.
And when I, and I have to acknowledge that if I said that to somebody that I really care about or love,
as I'm saying, I hate you, what I'm really saying is, I love you so much.
And that hurts unbelievably at such an unbelievable intensity that what's coming out of my mouth is I hate you because if you because if you didn't love them.
That's right you would have no effect I would be a meh it would be it would be a it would be a meh but instead it's a it hurts see we somehow there's a neural circuit in there that goes.
You know I whatever insert explicit hate you that's right what you're really saying is I love you so much
Yeah, and as a consequence that thing you did or said hurts so much. That's right
And so I think that's like exactly what's going on for a kid
Or like to me my most generous interpretation a simple way is my kid when I said we couldn't go to this friend's house,
that he thought we were going to,
his friend he was gonna sleep over,
he had like so built it up in his mind,
he'd like, probably like kids do,
like they have this whole image,
oh, and then we're gonna do this and this,
and like the let down was so intense,
and again, I go back to kids have all the feelings we have,
and they're born with none of the skills,
so it takes a lot of,
it takes like a pretty well-developed skill to be really disappointed,
by the way, and surprised, right, in the moment, and like manage it in like a mature way.
I'm sure we both know adults who aren't really capable of doing that, right?
So the fact that my seven-year-old is doing that.
So if I think about it that way, we latch onto to our kids' words as if they're the truth.
They're not the truth. It's not to say they don't matter, but they're not the truth.
The truth is whatever world is under the words. Like, I'm disappointed and I don't know how to
manage that. So if I think about the outcome, like, what do I want to be? What I would love in that
situation? Because the truth is, when I say to my kid, sorry, we can't go to Bobby's house,
I wouldn't even want, it's not normal for my kid to be like, oh, no problem.
Because I'm just picturing my 25-year-old trying to get a job and being like, mom,
oh, I didn't get it.
And then he's like, no problem.
I'm like, that's kind of weird.
Like, really?
Like, that's weird.
Like, I'd want you to be disappointed.
And so what I want my kid to be able to do is to be like, I don't know, what's the best
to get? It's like, oh, man, I was really looking forward to that.
That's like ultimate maturity.
So how do I get from I hate you to, oh man,
I was really like, you know, looking forward to that.
The whole, all the things we want to do,
just like don't even make sense,
like sending my kid to their room saying,
like you're such a nasty kid.
I've never seen any of your friends say that
to their parents.
And I'm good at acting these things out,
because, of course, I say these things too.
But all I'm doing is basically telling my kid
the version of themselves I don't want them to be.
So now I'm further away from that outcome,
which is not effective.
My kid obviously literally needs to learn
some of those skills and practice them.
We don't think about simulations with kids nearly enough.
We know that in sports. People practice all the time. We don't think about simulations with kids nearly enough. We know that in sports.
People practice all the time.
We don't do that with emotion regulation.
So what do I do in the moment?
I think the best question here is,
what do I do outside the moment to help my kid build the skills
so they actually have more of a skill
the next time that moment comes?
Still, I'm a pragmatist.
What do I do in the moment?
I hate you.
I probably would do nothing first.
When someone is rude to you and they say something nasty, I don't know, I just like
this is one, this is my son, this is me, my son just hurled, I hate you. It's like
sitting between us. When we say back to them like you know, I hate you or like
go to your room, we take all the energy from what they said and we just like
throw it and then like we have this ping-pong match. When you do nothing, I always picture,
if this is like that I hate you, it just sits between us.
My kid has a much higher chance of kind of re-owning
what they just said because I'm just kind of sturdy
in that moment because I didn't just take it from them
and say something to them, which just gives them
the opportunity to like take what I said
and have no responsibility for the first thing they said.
It's always true in adults.
When someone says to you like something nasty, if you actually just stay there, they're kind
of like, oh shoot, I shouldn't have said that because like it's right there.
So I'd probably say nothing.
No, a couple, I don't know if I'd really do that, but I'd want to do that.
Let me be clear.
Something else you can say in that moment,
which takes a lot of presence,
so it's not gonna happen right away,
is just something like, whoa,
like clearly you're disappointed.
I get that.
I believe you and I know there's another way
you can say that to me.
That's actually right back to family jobs.
I'm validating and I'm setting kind of a boundary in some ways.
Like I know, maybe there's a hope there too.
Like I know there's another way.
If my kid keeps saying, I hate you, I hate you, you're the worst, you're the worst.
Then I'm gonna say, listen, I love you, you're a good kid, you're having a hard time.
I really won't stay in your room while you keep saying this to me.
And part of that is because it's not good for you either.
Like this isn't a good dynamic.
I'm gonna step outside, I'm gonna come back and we can talk about it when we're both in a place where we can
be a little more respectful or something like that.
Right?
You don't have to be a punching bag.
But at least now, I'm helping my kid see that he is having a feeling under these words.
If I can't differentiate the feeling from the behavior. How can I expect my kid to ever learn to differentiate those two?
Which is how my kid can actually get to a more regulated place.
I've sometimes wondered whether or not parents are either afraid of or not afraid enough of their kids.
I've known some parents that are afraid of their kids because and perhaps
as a consequence, who knows what the chicken egg is there. All we know is the parent was alive first.
The kids learn to control their parents through not necessarily emotional outbursts,
but the threat of emotional outbursts. I've seen this again and again,
and it's a pretty wild thing to observe.
And of course, as an observer,
it's far easier than when you're in it,
but this idea like, well, like they're like a pop rate
or boil over, you know, like they're gonna pop.
And I've seen this in teachers in the classroom.
I've seen this in teachers in the classroom. I've seen
this in so many venues where whether or not the child understands that they're somehow
controlling the situation or not, there's just an inherent fear of what could happen.
And then I think kids feel a certain power, but they don't feel safe, right? I mean, how
could they, right? Their children.
Yes.
So for the parents out there that are afraid of their kid's potential responses and or
how bad their kid quote unquote might turn out if they were to really lay down the law.
Here I'm using kind of old school language.
But listen, I grew up, you know, I'm 48 years old.
So, you know, I, yeah, I mean, my parents,
you know, didn't physically abuse us,
but there might have been a spanking
every once in a while,
or I don't know what the rule is nowadays,
or the standard out there.
You know, I think I won't say which,
but I might have taken a smack here or there,
but not many.
And there was also a lot of love.
But clearly, and here I'm not supporting
the use of corporal punishment, I wanna be very clear.
But you know, kids can be tough.
And then also, it wasn't long into my high school years
when I was physically larger than both my parents.
I never used that to intimidate them.
But I have to imagine when your kid is larger than you
if you were already psychologically afraid of them, now you, it's clear to both of you that the table's
have turned.
That's right.
Right?
I'm talking about the unconscious, semi-conscious aspects of this.
I'm not talking about who can, you know, obviously physical fights.
There's not something I ever want to see or participate in a household.
So this is an amazing topic, like walking on eggshells.
This is right?
And this is terrifying to a kid.
Because again, if a kid is trying to figure out,
like, am I real and am I safe?
Kids do experience feelings in such an intense way,
because they don't have any of those skills,
and they're so surprising, and they're so visceral,
that it is scary to them.
And there are kind of, especially these groups of kids,
I call them deeply feeling kids,
that do feel things more intensely.
And they do have more of these big massive tantrums.
They even look animalistic often during they try
to scratch you, they'll hiss during them, they'll growl.
Yes, really?
Yes.
I grew up with some biters.
Yeah.
Kids that bite.
Yes, that's because again,
those are just feelings literally uncontained
that are exploding out.
And where do they explode out?
They're your extremities.
So that's really what it is.
And so what will happen,
and this is this really unfortunate dance,
one of my favorite things to help people turn around,
is then kids kind of sense from a parent,
like I really am as toxic as I worried I was, right?
And again, if we go back to that pilot thing,
like I think about a pilot who's like,
we have to make an emergency landing.
We're not gonna be able to go to LA
and we're all gonna land in Cleveland, whatever it is.
A picture of the passenger who's like,
you are going to take us to LA. And the pilot's like, whatever it is. A picture of the passenger who's like, you are going to take us to LA.
And the pilot's like, okay, okay.
Like, can you imagine?
You're like, it doesn't matter that this person is pissed.
Like, you're the pilot.
You don't have to keep us happy.
Please keep us safe.
And if you're on that plane and you're terrified
because you're like, we have to make an emergency landing,
I promise you, you're way more terrified when you hear this person change the
decision because of the threat that a passenger is going to be very, very upset.
And that is actually what we do when we're walking around on eggshells.
Now the alternative to this, again, we live in this world on parenting where
there's a binary where we say, and you said it yourself, so I'm going to lay
down the law. Like, I don't recommend that either. Like, especially with binary where we say, and you said it yourself, so I'm gonna lay down the law.
Like, I don't recommend that either.
Like, especially with a kid like that,
that's not gonna be the best solution.
These kids have to be seen as good kids.
They are good kids.
And when I meet with parents of these kids,
I hear about them.
And like, I always say I hear about them,
and I have a kid like this, so I get it.
And I'm just like, I really like your kid.
And they're like, what? I was like like your kid. And they're like, what?
I was like, I do.
And they're like, and then they usually start crying.
And they go, you're literally the first person
in 11 years who's ever said that,
including like the parents.
Like you like our kid, why?
I'm like, they're tenacious.
They're, they know what they want. They seem like they
have 0% people pleasing in them. These kids will change the world, but not if they're
boundaryless, then they'll become tyrants. And that's, that's really terrifying. And
I'm going to teach you how to be the sturdy leader, which is equally firm as it is warm.
And that's going gonna start today.
And so like here's an example of these
deeply feeling kids.
I think he said something about like watching like
a TV show where these kids, it feels like they hold
the family emotionally hostage, right?
And because if you don't pick the movie
that they wanna watch on Family Movie Night,
they will scream, they will cry,
and they will do that for three hours.
They will. Other kids after you're like, they don cry, and they will do that for three hours. They will.
Other kids after you're like, they don't peter out these kids.
These kids, interestingly enough, get in an awful cycle with their parents
because they have such intense emotions more often, which more escalations,
which tend to get met with invalidation.
You're so dramatic.
You ruin everything.
They are that much more desperate to be believed.
They escalate further.
You can understand how that would lead to more distance
and invalidation.
And we're off to the races in a bad direction.
And I would say to the parents, during family movie night,
tomorrow night, this is what you're going to do.
And you're going to, by the way, I would say,
this is how concrete I get.
You're going to write this down, and you're
going to say it to a voice recorder with your own voice.
And I want you to play it back and see how sturdy you sound and they'll often do
it and they'll be like wow I didn't even believe myself when I said that I'm so
scared of my child right you're gonna do it again and then you're gonna do it
again and this is this is just like any other skill we practice and you're gonna
say to your kid look I know in this family you know Bobby usually we let him
pick the movie he gets really upset if not we all tonight's gonna be different
Bobby it is your sister's turn to pick the movie.
And I know you're gonna be upset
and I just wanna tell you exactly what's gonna happen.
And I'm gonna, in this example,
I'm saying there's a two-family household,
which is an assumption, but even if there's one,
I say, if you're super upset and screaming,
I'm going to bring you to your room.
And this is important.
I'm gonna sit with you and I'm gonna stay there.
And this is a line that I know if I'm our deeply feeling kid workshop has really and you have to
Believe it to say it. I am not scared
Of your feelings and I know parents will say to me
Like yeah, you're gonna fake it till you make it they need to hear that
Because if you think about the image of these kids,
their feelings feel so overpowering to them.
They feel more, but they're actually
more porous to the world.
So they both have more coming in,
and they are actually always terrified of how much of them
can flow out.
And so they feel their feelings that way.
It's almost like my tantrum in the house
takes up the entire living room.
That's why you actually have to bring them to a smaller room. And you actually have to contain them in that way as a way
of kind of saying, like, it only goes this far. Like literally, I will not let you dictate
family movie and always sitting in the front seat and your favorite chair at dinner. It
only goes this far. And that is truly an act of love and protection
and safety for those kids.
How often do you observe that these deeply feeling kids,
is that how they refer to?
Yep.
I mean, I made up the term, so, but yeah.
Deeply feeling kids, yes.
You are qualified to qualify too.
So deeply feeling kids also express these
deep feelings in the positive sense.
I mean, because I can think of some kids I grew up with and I can look at my own experience of
like, it's hard to know, we don't have a calibration point, it's not like body temperature of like how much I feel versus how much you feel. We look at the external expression of these things
like did the lacrimal glands secrete some tears or not?
Like, you know, as you were talking about this thing
before I noticed that I like welled up a little bit
and I'm thinking, yeah, like I can remember seeing things
and feeling things and like, whoa, it's a really big inside.
I don't remember screaming at my parents telling them
I hate them.
I probably did at some point,
but I have observed other kids, peers that grew up,
that clearly fell into this category and have gone on to do remarkable things.
Yes.
Remarkable, like extraordinary things because it's a capacity that doesn't always skew
towards a negative expression. It can also, like immense expressions of love.
And, you know, I think these days
that there's a tendency to for unqualified
or like truly unqualified people,
because they're not trained to do so to slap labels
like borderline, right?
Splitting, like good object, bad object, splitting.
And indeed that exists in the, as a diagnosis
and symptoms of borderline.
But that we punish rather than believe and observe that these things exist.
There's range in nervous system tuning and affect.
So put simply, do deeply feeling kids also tend to express love and joy and positive
emotions with the same intensity or near same intensity.
I would say it depends on the kind of like,
it depends on kind of their stage of development
and the nature of the interactions
they've kind of received back.
I think deeply feeling kids, I always say, are super sensors.
Like if you've won these kids and I've won these kids,
we live in New York City,
she will not go into New York City garage, okay?
Like where we park our car.
And she's like, the smell.
And the rest of us are like, what are you talking about?
Meanwhile, I have another friend who lives
in a totally different area of Manhattan
and she's a deeply feeling kid.
She's like, my daughter, the same thing.
Like I actually believe that my daughter smells something
that I don't smell.
Like they are super sensors in that way, right?
And she notices the little detail of something. Now, in terms of the intense love, I think for
these kids, their vulnerability sits so close to their shame. This is why they get so explosive.
They almost experience their feelings as attackers, which is again why parents can get scared of them.
And they do. Because again, they feel that feeling so intensely
that they have this deep fear of abandonment, of being too much.
And so that shame tries to shut it down,
although it obviously doesn't work and it explodes.
What I've noticed with deeply feeling kids,
and this to me is actually truly my proudest body of work.
And you mentioned borderline, so we'll go there.
People have said these sound almost like kids
who have some predilection to borderline, so we'll go there. People have said these sound almost like kids who have some predilection to borderline.
And obviously, having gone to a PhD program, we're told a lot about invalidating environments
and things like that.
I'm not really one for labels either.
But I just got so much insight from, honestly, my own kid where I was like, wow, she is so
different in how she processes things and what she needs and how she responds to my very same interactions as my other kids.
Like, they're very different and that fear of abandonment and being too much, it was like,
it was like, they're from the start.
It really feels like it was like, there.
What's so interesting is I feel like through working with her, by the way, in a very different way,
because these kids reject almost every typical parenting strategy.
You go to validate these kids reject almost every typical parenting strategy.
You go to validate these kids' feelings, it's like you're trying to intrude on them
and steal their heart because if you think about their porousness, they're so terrified
of being taken over that when you're like seeing a feeling, they feel like you're like
seeing into them and so they reject you.
I always say you can't go in the front door with these kids, you've got to like find these
side door approaches. But now of all my kids, she is by far the cuddliest, the most loving, the most emphatic
about our relationship.
Oh, this trip now, I'm going to miss you so much.
The idea when she was four that any of that, I would say to someone like, you are crazy.
You are talking about a different kid. So I think that, yes, that deep love is there.
And we just have to kind of make it a little safer
for those kids to access it.
Is there any kind of general statements
that one can still make accurately
about differences in the expression
or perhaps even the experience of deeply feeling kids
in boys versus girls.
Great question. I actually haven't noticed a ton. There might be, I'd love to look more into that,
but in terms of I want to be accurate, I haven't noticed that yet. I think one of the things you
know you have one of these kids is if you know the moments when you're a parent
where your kid like needs you.
Like they're, and in those moments,
your kids push you away.
They push you away when they need you the most.
If that's like, I think a really common quality
for those kids.
And how common is this?
I sound like such a like a biologist,
this deeply feeling kid, a phenotype.
I don't want to, you know, I don't want to lessen the importance
of what you're saying by saying it that way.
Because actually what I think you're saying
is incredibly important resonates with me
on a lot of different levels, in fact. But as far as I know, it's not a DSM diagnosis. And thank goodness it's not,
because that would pathologize it. Right? So, but you know, in a classroom, let's say,
in a big classroom, 100 kids, how many of those kids, and I'm guessing it's a continuum,
but would fall into this category of deeply feeling?
I think you're right, it's a continuum.
And connecting topics I know you've spoken about,
I've been doing a lot of looking into this overlap
with deeply feeling kids and neurodivergence and ADHD.
And what I think is interesting about that is,
we have these workshops,
these deeply feeling kid workshops,
and a lot of them we do live,
and there's this whole chat, right?
And I'll say these things to people like that,
you know, and they're definitely ideas they haven't heard,
but what I think is more healing
is thousands of people in the chat and saying,
I thought, when I say the hissing thing,
the chat is like a waterfall.
I thought I was the only one.
I thought, so like there are so many of these kids.
Why I think there's more and more of something
I need to look more into, but I think it does really,
if you think about these kids as more porous
and you think about how insanely stimulating the world is
that we bring up kids, what comes into them,
it would make sense that I think this is like a growing type.
I'm guessing it's similar with ADHD too.
There are so many more kids diagnosed than in the past.
The world we bring up kids in, the sensory overload, if you're kind of that much more
porous, that's going to overload your system.
And I think that's also why more and more kids are.
So what's the percentage? I don't, I don't know, like, uh, maybe 20, but that,
that's a fairly high percentage. I think it's a fairly high percentage.
But that feels right. It just sort of feels right based on my observation of adults also.
Yeah. Um, feels right. Might also explain a lot of the apparent conflicts and
misunderstandings in adult relationships.
That's ex- and we, I mean, so many people like they'll say to me,
I was, oh my goodness, like that was like years of therapy for me watching that.
I thought I would took that from my kid, like this was me.
And I finally talk about I believe you, that's what, I mean, deeply feeling kids are
desperate to be believed and they're desperate for our
attempts to connect with them because their deep fear is their unlovability.
And so they do reject typical, you know, it's a stance, get out of my room, fine, you're
so difficult.
And then see, I really am as unlovable and bad as I worried I was, right?
Unless we kind of reverse that cycle.
I'd be willing to bet my life that most of the ultra successful performing artists that we observe
You know, I'm not gonna name names, but just think of ultra successful that the people whose words music poetry writing acting
Presence evokes immense
Emotion in other people so much that people will pay money
To see these people express their
emotions and what's inside them fall into this deeply feeling category.
100%.
I mean, it just can't be any other way.
Right.
Yeah, the muted performer, unless that's the shtick, so to speak, is just not compelling.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And a lot of what we're talking today is about the kind of tuning fork nature of emotions.
It's a, wow, what a tricky balance.
Speaking of that, I'd like to just return to something I raised earlier and then I made
the mistake.
It was my fault of shutting the hatch on it.
I'd like to reopen that hatch, which is when there's two parents.
Maybe they're under the same roof.
Maybe they're not.
Or let's just say two caretakers.
So kids are pretty darn good at figuring out
who to go to for what and how to balance out
negative experiences by seeking out
the positive reinforcement of the other,
sometimes even pitting parents and caretakers
against one another.
I mean, it makes children sound diabolical, but adults do it too.
It's called gossip.
What can co-parents, co-caretakers do to try and align strategies or if necessary to offset some like bad stuff that the other
parent might be doing.
And in today's landscape where it's about 50% of marriages ended divorce, at least in
the US, you also have the situation where then there are new significant others come
in and now you've extended the landscape to sometimes five or six different parents.
My family's, my biological family
starting to look like the UN. We've got so many countries and religions and like this thing. It's
kind of nice on the one hand, but lots of divergence of opinion and emotional stance and background.
So how in the world do we, do we wrap our efforts around this?
Yeah. So one of the most common questions I get from a parent at Good Inside is like,
can you convince my partner why the way they do things
is wrong and do things more like good inside?
And so essentially I always say like,
yeah, I'm not for a million reasons.
I'm not too interested in taking that phone call.
But.
Yeah, I don't get involved in a couple disputes either.
You know, but again, assuming,
and you've said this a couple of times, which I love,
like I'm assuming the way your kind of partner
or you know, the co-parent does things,
it's not like really like damaging your child.
Obviously that's like really time for an intervention.
No hitting, no emotional abuse.
Exactly, but you know, even like,
I'm not a believer of saying a timeout, right?
Like I don't believe in timeouts on punishments.
I don't think they feel good to kids or parents.
And I also don't think they're effective. No, so timeouts not effective.
I don't think so. Okay. And we probably should have closed the hatch on.
I have to imagine that the going word in the profession of psychology and raising kids properly is
you never spank them, you never hit them. Yeah. No. Okay. All right. For the record.
So maybe we'll get back there, but just to go on the record, and I think you can sense from my style,
not punishing or timeouts, like doesn't mean you're permissive at all.
There's 0% permissive or even softness, I think, you know, and not, well, there's softness.
There's 0% permissive in those moments, but we can get back there.
But let's say your partner does do that or the co-parent, right?
Like, I would be the first to say to someone like, do I think that that's like messing up your
kid? I don't. I really don't. Especially if, for example, in that situation, let's say
I'm divorced and my now ex, you know, I just know that they do timeouts or this and I've
tried to talk to them, but you know, whatever, they're not getting on board with the style.
And to me, what happens is like, you have a kid, they come back to you and they're like,
you know, Papa gave me a timeout and we don't do that in my house.
And my first thing is I call my ex.
That's usually what I do.
Or the school did this and I call the school.
I call the ex and I'm like, why did you do that?
We don't do that.
What I think is really important, and I actually find it very like relieving as a I'm like, why did you do that? We don't do that. What I think is really important and I actually find it very like
relieving to as a parent, like what's actually most important is helping my kid
understand their experience.
Like we center the other person and what they're doing wrong, wrong, instead of
centering our kid, we might need to call a parent, the other parent and say like,
Hey, we really great to get on the same page.
Can we do this course together?
That would just be great.
You don't have to agree with anything.
I think that would be great.
But in that moment, what my kid needs actually is more like, wait,
that's kind of hard and confusing.
So like in our house, when you do something like you scream,
I hate you, you know, I intervene in one way.
And when you go to your dad's house, he intervenes
in a very different way.
It's a lot of like, it's a lot of switching to make sense of, you know, or maybe my kid
says, um, mom never apologizes to me after she yells and I would call, you know, or maybe
it's my own wife and I'm like, hey, you know the importance of repair, haven't you listened
to all this literature?
You know, I would like to have some influence on that, but what I feel like my kid needs
in the moment is to tell me what happened.
Oh, oh, she yelled at you and, yeah, look, something I know, like I know mom was, I know
she had a really stressful day at work and look, this isn't your responsibility, but
you can just know this, mom has a really hard time apologizing to her, has a really hard time apologizing.
And actually when people have a hard time apologizing, they seem cold and like they don't care.
I actually usually just feel so ashamed of what they did.
And the reason I'm telling you that is not because you have to take care of her, but
just so you know this, so wasn't you.
And anytime something happens with mom that doesn't feel good and you feel like you can't
resolve it, like you can talk to me. And I'm going to get out of role play for good, and you feel like you can't resolve it,
like you can talk to me.
And I'm gonna get out of role play for a sec,
but I think you can see like, I'm not throwing
my wife under the bus, like at all.
But I'm centering what my kid needs.
What my kid needs going back is they need to process
that experience with an adult they feel safe with,
rather than being aloneness.
And I often picture like this kid on the couch
who tells me a problem at their dad's house or at school
and I like go off to make a call
and I picture them alone being like,
oh, like now I'm alone.
Like I, where's, like, I didn't really want you to go do that.
I just wanted you to like listen to me, you know?
There might then be a step two, you know,
to kind of get on the same page.
Or when parents say get on the same page,
I think the problem is that we're not like looking at the same page, forget get on the same page. Or when parents say get on the same page, I think the problem is that we're not like looking
at the same page.
Forget getting on the same page.
We're not even speaking the same language.
Like people say to me, my partner won't even watch a video
with me, that I just want to, even if they disagree.
That is the problem.
And frankly, that's not a parenting problem.
That's also what I'll say to someone.
If you say to your partner, look,
I've been a member of Good Insight
and it's been really helpful and it resonates
and you don't have to agree with it,
but like I would love to watch this four minute video.
If your partner says no,
that has nothing to do with parenting.
That is a core relationship problem
that they just don't care to do something
that you say is important to you.
That's a marriage problem.
That's all, right?
So, and I think it's really important.
And we talk about this a lot.
Like, if that was someone I'd coach them to say,
hey, and you don't have to agree,
but if you don't commit to watching a four minute video
with me and just talking about it a little bit,
and I promise I'll try not to be judgy or provey,
I'll just listen,
I don't really think we're talking about parenting.
I think you're telling me you don't really respect me enough
to do the things I'm asking you to do.
And that'll stick with me.
Like that's the way I'd handle it.
Yeah, this is very helpful.
I'm curious about these ADHD diagnoses slash kids
because there's a lot of, you know,
loose hand diagnosis this hand diagnosis these days.
Years ago, I was a camp counselor, took kids backpacking
and I learned an important concept of
when working with adolescent and teenage boys,
which is be a channel, not a dam.
When they're super energetic, they're not sitting still.
Where it's not nap time. There's just no way.
So, there's no notion of getting it out, like allowing some place for physical or emotional
catharsis that's safe, obviously. And that kids have a lot of energy. I mean, damn it, the adult
population seems to be trying to regress themselves to have that energy. So, how can we blame them
for having so much energy? And of course there are children who have
and adults with clinically diagnosed ADHC
that really struggle.
But for the kid that's more energetic,
maybe even has a hard time sitting
still to the point of discomfort.
And when the rest of the world that we can't control
is telling them like,
hey, like your kid is like needs to be regulated on the subway, on the bus, in the classroom.
You know, what are some things that we can do in terms of communication with those kids?
And probably some of those kids are listening as well. And to just be a channel,
not a dam, to allow their best expression to come forward. Yeah.
I mean, I love this idea in general.
Like we, it's much more effective to tell anyone
what they can do, rather than telling them
what they can't do, right?
Across the board with kids,
because there's usually a can that is possible.
And then like you can work with the urge
instead of, I don't even know,
like trying to suppress it or have it not act itself out.
It's like our urges and feelings, our forces,
like they're gonna come out.
And so, yes, I think this idea of like me and my kid
are on the same team here.
I think that's so important to start with.
And you can definitely, if you have a kid
with some intentional struggles,
like we're on the same team.
You can so easily get into me against you.
And then you look to shut down everything about them. But yeah, we're on the same team. So let's say like it me against you, and then you look to shut down everything about them.
But yeah, we're on the same team.
So let's say like it's hard to do homework right now.
I see you, okay.
Like let's take an amount of time, and it seems like you have a lot of energy.
Like let's do some heavy work, or let's run outside.
And maybe homework always has to start after a period like that.
Maybe they need a break, but this idea of yes, I'm working with my kid as opposed to against my kid is always going to be more successful.
Do you think that some of the new emerging tools, some of which I've talked a lot about,
but many, many people have talked a lot about things like meditation, kids doing some long exhale breathing,
you know, in addition to that, you know,
the way I grew up, it was like PE time or recess time,
you know, like run around like crazy.
And do you think that these tools are helping kids
get some self-regulation or is whatever self-regulation
they're gaining offset by the fact that, you know,
there's just so much more input.
You know, we hear so much about the challenges
of social media for adults, but certainly for kids,
you know, bullying, obviously being one of the more
salient ones, but also just the fact that when they go home
at night and they're in bed, they're potentially still
in interactions with their friends.
We used to have a phone landline that we'd sometimes call one another on, but I wasn't really much of a phone kid
with my friends. So when you're home, you're home. You were separated from all of that. I mean,
how bad is it? And what are some things that parents and kids might consider?
Yeah, I mean, meditation, things like that, like always icing on the cake,
like that's always helpful.
And certainly like teaching kids real tools,
like those are like literally something I can do.
I've learned this meditation, I have a mantra,
something like that, like huge fan, right?
You have to be able to like touch it in some way.
But to me, I think what's coming up
is you bring up this larger point
and it actually goes back to where we started.
The cost to children of parents not being able to set boundaries has never been higher.
And at the same time, it's never been harder for parents to set boundaries.
And I think this stuff starts way before social media.
To me, when I think about the earliest years of a kid's life,
you get so much bang for your buck in life from helping kids just learn to
tolerate frustration.
And so much of kids early life right now in the world we live in is all about the immediate escape from frustration and not only escape from frustration,
but from frustration to gratification and like an instant.
It's like so fast.
How did that just happen?
Like it didn't used to be like that.
There wasn't even an option.
Like me and you, like, I don't know, you wanted a movie.
Like, I don't know.
Maybe your parent could drive you to blockbuster if you had an account and then
like maybe I don't think I remember going, like, are they going to have it?
Are they going to have it?
And then you see the thing and there's nothing behind it.
And you're like, they don't have it.
That whole thing.
Blockbuster, by the way, was a video store. Just kidding. I'm just totally kidding. I'm totally kidding. have it and then you see the thing and there's nothing behind it and you're like, they don't have it. That whole thing.
Blockbuster, by the way, was a video store.
I'm just totally kidding.
I'm totally kidding.
But some of you out there, like, I sometimes do this to myself.
You know?
Yeah, absolutely.
I used to love going to pick out movies at the VHS store.
But if you think about that as one tiny thing, it's obviously tiny.
And you think about, like, I remember that in my childhood.
Anything about that tiny moment compared to some parallel in a kid?
The, there's no frustration.
The want and the gratification, there's zero space.
There is zero space.
And, and also I have to say our generation of parents and me too, 100% me too, are
tolerance for frustration has gone way down because of the gratification world we live
in, which means our tolerance of our kids' tantrums
is at an all-time low, because we're like,
hey, my life is pretty easy in a lot of ways.
This is a massive inconvenience.
So kids have more gratification than ever.
We have lower tolerances for frustration, everyone does,
which means the way we interact with kids
over and over and over, plus just the natural things
they're exposed to or not,
like Netflix versus Blockbuster,
just means like their circuitry around expectations
and what feels good, like to me,
that's what really scares me, it does.
And like figuring out how to tolerate or even insert,
insert frustration into your kid's life as early as possible
to me is of critical importance.
I could not agree more.
And I say that with the understanding
that I have also shortened the latency
in my reward prediction errors, which is nerd speak for,
when I wanna watch a movie, I go into Netflix
and they're like, it's near infinite.
And I can get right then.
The internet's a little slow.
Then I start barking about how slow internet
is worse than no internet.
And you start observing yourself and you just go, oh my goodness, like what's
going on.
Yeah.
I mean, there's the ability to tolerate different wait times between anticipation and reward
is so critical.
And that's what getting a degree is about.
That's what doing anything challenging is about.
I've gone on record saying that too much dopamine without
effort exerted in order to get that dopamine is very detrimental.
Well, that to me in all the screen time kind of discussion, there's so much screen time in
social media and like all the things that screen time do for kids. And again, like my kids watch
TV and they're young, they have iPads, like I'm so not a purist,
I'm a pragmatist and whoever's listening to this,
no one messed up their kids forever.
So we can just, like we were talking about before,
use this information to make slightly different decisions
on the margin, that's as best I guess.
But I think about this a lot,
when our kids are especially young
and they're building this circuitry around like,
what does it mean to get success?
Like what are my expectations there?
How much effort do I have to put in?
And I think about like a young kid, you know,
playing some mindless, just dopamine giving game.
The circuit they learn is like,
mindlessness, zero effort, dopamine.
And then I think, and I find this really interesting,
like how many people say like their kid is sick now,
having a really hard time learning how to read.
And they're gonna have all these learning assessments
and the learning assessments are coming back,
like no dyslexia, right?
And I know some of these families,
they say this with love is I literally think
this is the first time in this kid's life
that they kind of have to put like concerted effort
without in the moment success. And so yeah that like that looks like a lot of
things it can it can even present like ADHD right because you know it can
present like that it might be but it might also just be that these dopamine circuits
have developed in a way that's not conducive
with something like learning how to read, right?
And so when parents ask me now,
like, I know reading and academic skills,
like what can I do when my kids are younger?
I got them flashcards, no flashcards.
Like, I mean, you can get flashcards, that's fine.
It's not like detrimental.
But to me, it's like, well,
what is my kid's relationship
with frustration?
Because I think about this thing called the learning space.
Again, I'm visual.
There's not knowing how to do something,
and then there's successfully doing something.
And the space in between is the learning space.
That's what learning is.
And the learning space inherently is frustrating.
That's the right feeling to be feeling.
And when kids have learned to collapse those two things,
then like they don't have a lot of space to learn.
Versus, I don't know, even like I'm thinking about my kid
who wants to like draw a rainbow or sun when they're young.
And they're like, that doesn't look like a sun.
It would be easy for me to be like,
let me just do that for you.
And by the way, yes, I give myself permission
to do that sometimes.
Like sometimes I can't deal with this.
I've got other things to do.
But sometimes I think like long
and that long-term greedy like,
oh, this is gonna be the same circuit
for learning how to read.
It is and for learning how to do that project.
And what if my only goal,
forget them drawing a son and I've gotta to do that project. And what if my only goal, forget them drawing a sun,
and I've got to tolerate the whining,
my only goal was just to lengthen the amount of time
they let themselves be in that learning space.
That's it.
Because I think we know as adults,
it's not about getting to success,
that comes when it comes.
The longer amount of time you let yourself
be in that learning space,
the more successful you can be with hard things.
Cause like, it just is, right? You just got to traverse through. And so to me, that's like honestly one of the things time you let yourself be in that learning space, the more successful you can be with hard things.
Because like it just is right, you just got to traverse through.
And so to me, that's like honestly one of the things I'm most passionate about teaching
parents is like literally like, what do you do during that time then?
How do I change what my goal is?
If my goal is to stop my kid's tantrum, I'm going to collapse it.
But if my goal is just to lengthen that, I might do something very different.
Oh, drawing a circle, that's not your right.
You didn't want to draw that. Oh, drawing a circle, that's not your right. You didn't wanna draw that.
Oh, drawing a circle is so hard.
And my kids, can you do it for me?
Can you do it?
Like, of course sometimes I will,
but I might say like, I'm not gonna do it, sweetie.
I'm not, you know why?
Because I know you can do this a little more.
I have faith in you.
And I think this is so powerful to say to kids, this is so frustrating and that's the
exact way you should be feeling.
You don't want our kids to be feeling, that's the right feeling.
I'll even draw that learning space, visual.
This is where you are, you're doing an amazing job.
And it is actually interesting when kids are young, like they actually do adopt that.
Like someone said to me, like, I've been doing stuff for a while, my kid literally says to me,
I like to do hard things, mom. Like they believe it. Like that's an amazing
self-belief to develop in a kid. That's awesome. That's awesome.
So yes, I think this stuff, especially compared to how easy it is to get that gratification.
It's just, it's like more important than ever
to have an offset.
Yeah, I'm doing my best to get the word out into the world
that the only reason the brain changes at all
is if there is these neuromodulators
like epinephrine, adrenaline in the body and brain,
because that's what signals
that the nervous system needs to change.
If something can be accomplished, there's no reason for the nervous system to change by definition.
There's also, I don't want to spin off into a
neuroscience of resilience and willpower
lesson here, but there's some amazing literature that
shows that there's this area of the brain that enter mid-singulate cortex, which is activated when people do things
they don't want to do,
and it generalizes to other things.
But this is not the, I love to work out,
so I'm gonna work out.
This is the, I hate to work out and I do it anyway.
And it translates to success in academic endeavors,
success in all sorts of environments.
And so I think the beauty of it is
that this brain structure is highly plastic
and can be built up through one thing
and that translates to others.
So doing hard things, experiencing what I call limbic friction,
just as a gateway to learning,
just understanding that it always feels hard.
That's what learning is.
In fact, I can remember in graduate school, even as a
young adult, in my 20s, I was struggling with an analysis and my graduate advisor,
she was wonderful this way. And I said, she clearly knew how to do it. And I said,
can you explain how to do this? And she goes, no. I was like, just done. And she's like, no,
it's called learning. And she just walked out.
She was also a great parent to her children.
And I also tried to get adopted by her and that failed.
So, you know, I'm, you know, exactly my poor parents, like they, they did their best and
I'm grateful to them for many things.
But I think that including the encouragement to do hard things, do things that suck that
are beneficial for us.
So it's a knife edge, right?
Now I'm reflecting.
It's like, do things that suck.
I believe you it sucks.
And then what did my mom used to say a lot?
You know, hate me now, love me later.
You know, I loved her then and I love her now.
But yeah, there were moments where I was like, I hate that you're making me do this.
I don't know about the hate me now, love me later.
Old school.
But I think what she was trying to say is,
I have your best interest in mind.
Definitely.
That's it, right?
Definitely, yeah, no, definitely.
Can I say one thing just cause it's loud in my head.
Please, please.
It's like, one of the things in this,
like I think it's easy and I'm hearing myself like,
we hear this and I think it's easy to listen to me like,
oh man, I never thought about it that way,
or I didn't know that, or again,
we just spiral as a parent so fast,
like I messed up my kid forever,
like nobody messed up their kid forever.
It doesn't matter how it is just not true,
and this is where I think we can spiral into like,
yeah, what's wrong with me?
And like, I kind of ask parents in this situation
to like, come with me to a different location,
which is kind
of like anger.
And I have started to feel angry, and I think angry, anger tells us what we need.
So I'm like, well, what is that anger telling me?
It is messed up.
The system has stacked against us that when you become a parent, it is literally the hardest,
most confusing, most triggering, most important job we have,
and we are given zero resources, right?
Like nobody I know would tell a surgeon
who never went to med school
and was struggling at surgery that they were a bad surgeon.
They'd be like, wow, like you probably deserve
to go to med school and residency, by the way.
Like that's an important job you have. And so I think it's easy to go to med school and residency, by the way. That's an important job you have.
I think it's easy to listen to all this and spiral into like, oh no.
But I'd ask you to almost feel a little protective, helpful anger next to it,
which is like, yes, this is an important job I have.
This is complicated and maybe there are resources out there that I deserve.
I think that's the perspective I would ask parents to listen from.
Earlier, you described the job of parenting as boundaries, right?
Imparting boundaries as well as empathy and validation.
I just want to remind people that your basic, but very practical job description for parenting
is something that I think we can return to over and over again.
It also makes me wonder in thinking about the generalizability of these concepts to other
forms of relationship. What about the relationship to self? Right? It's something we don't often
talk about. Relationship to self. We want to have boundaries and we also want to be able to empathize and
validate ourselves.
Yeah. And I think, right, like, I don't know, my friend didn't invite me. I don't know,
I found out she had five friends for a dinner and I was like, oh, you know, I'm so hurt.
I would say to myself, I believe myself like I'm allowed to feel that way. I think our
feelings love when we tell them they make sense. I just think they're something magical
about that phrase. It makes sense I'm upset.
I mean, my friends were all there and I wasn't.
That makes sense.
And there's a boundary because when my feeling tells me,
well, I'm about to plan a dinner party for 200 people.
And if I, everyone I know, but her,
I feel like there's important,
and I'm like, you know what feeling?
Like I'm not gonna let you go that far.
And the image I always think about is like,
I'm the driver of my car and all the different feelings
and urges, like they're passengers.
And we can't get them out of the car.
You just can't, they're in your body,
but you don't wanna let them take over the driver seat.
That's really what it is.
And as long as they're a passenger,
they actually won't cause you that many problems.
They'll be annoying.
And to me, that's like, hey, I see you.
Like I see you.
And I will often say hi to my feelings for that reason,
like high anxiety that woke me up at four in the morning.
You know, like, yes, there's a lot of my mind high.
And then there's like a boundary.
Like you're not, like you're a part of me and not all of me.
So I think that phrase for regulating our own feelings,
you're a part of me and not all of me
is the essence of validating and having a boundary.
What about our need, I think healthy need,
to know whether or not the lesson stuck.
So I've observed this before.
Kid is catastrophizing about an upcoming event,
maybe a concert or a test or a homework thing
or a social thing.
And we're using all our best tools to try and help them.
And I believe you, I hear you then.
And they go through the experience
and they do pretty well, maybe even great.
And then we said, like, did you notice?
You were so concerned before and you did it.
You really did it.
Is there something that we can or should do
to try and stamp down that recognition?
Because one thing that's so beautiful about childhood
is the
short-term horizon nature of childhood, which kind of like trying to, I mean, we talk about
adults trying to take it one day at a time or even half a day at a time.
And kids are navigating on the basis of like first period class, second period class.
Their horizon is often very close in. And I do wonder if they're internalizing these, these more global lessons, um, on
their own, or whether or not we should, uh, try and help them internalize what
they just did.
Like, do you get it?
You were super concerned.
You were like almost dissolving into a puddle of your own tears.
And I believe you that was the appropriate response then.
And now you did it like, think about that.
Is it good that we reinforce those wins?
Yeah, I mean, I think that,
I think our kids do internalize kind of the patterns, right?
But I hear you, there are these moments,
it's almost like we want to like encapsulate it for them.
Like, hey, that was a thing, right?
I think kids pick up on whether our interactions
were doing something for them or for us.
So if it's from a like, hey, that thing I taught you
was really helpful, right?
Like it would just be like, if my husband was like,
hey, your presentation went well
because I told you to do that thing.
And I'd be like, stop talking to me, right?
But if he said to me, hey, like, what was it that led to that?
It's probably like, that's helpful to talk out.
I'd be much more open.
So I love the phrase going back to just real tools,
I'm noticing.
I think actually often we wanna praise our kids
or tell something just saying I'm noticing
because again, we wanna be seen.
We don't wanna feel controlled.
I'm noticing does that.
Like, hey, I'm noticing you were so worried about this test.
We kind of talked about this way
of talking to your anxiety. And then I'm just noticing you felt so worried about this test. We kind of talked about this way of talking to your anxiety.
And then I'm just noticing you felt really good about how it went.
Even that, I think, because that's the biggest thing now
in our crazy fast world we live in, just pausing to notice.
That's already encapsulating.
Or saying to your kid, and I think a question's only a question
when you don't know the answer.
Sometimes we ask questions. they have question marks,
but it's like a statement or criticism.
So if we say to our kid, that thing I taught you
was really helpful, right?
Do you think that was helpful?
That's not really a question.
We already have an answer, but if I say,
hey, I just thought it would be good
for us to talk through for a second.
Like what was it you think that led you to really feel good that day in the test?
Then if I really don't know what my kid could say, I think they'll receive it.
And then they might say, oh, that thing we talked about.
Like, that's so great to know.
I'm even thinking about Spanish coming up.
And I wonder, do you think that would, I wonder, is also a great phrase for parents?
Just wondering.
I wonder if that would be helpful there.
Again, they just lower defensiveness because there's maybe there's like movement with wondering, it doesn't
feel controlling. So yeah, I think there is like those are nice moments if it comes from a place
of like connection, not from control. That makes sense. We had a guest on this podcast,
Lisa Feldman Barrett, who's a world expert in emotions. And she explained that in cultures where there's more nuanced language for different emotions,
rather than what I call the emojification of emotions, there's better emotion tolerance.
So understanding that it's not just sad, happy, depressed, thrilled, but there's a lot of nuance.
It's very context dependent.
Can be very useful.
Do you think there's something to be gained from letting kids explore the range of emotions, not just how do you feel good or bad? I mean, most adults need to learn that good or bad are
valuations. That's not actually an emotion. It's not actually an expression of how you feel,
but that's what we do over shorthand. Do you think that, let's just say in the United States, but elsewhere perhaps
as well, that there's some value to teaching kids to pay attention like what is going on
inside?
Yeah.
Like what is this feeling of what I call anxiety?
Is it excitement and anxiety? Or like being able to better pinpoint
what one is coping with,
but also the positive aspects of emotion.
Yes, I mean, I am the clinical psychologist.
The question, how do you feel?
I always find like a lot of pressure.
I don't know.
Like I tend not to ask my kid that,
but I tend also never to have asked patients that.
So I think what we're getting at is we want, and I think this relates to resilience.
Resilience is our ability in my mind to tolerate the widest range of emotions as possible,
because as humans, we're going to feel that whole range.
So the more of them you've learned to tolerate, the better off you'll be.
And so that's what I want for my kids.
I don't know if that has to explicitly come from naming although. I think that point is
Definitely true the more things we can name the more things we can understand
To me just showing up for your kid in a way that's like with believing maybe with boundaries
It's probably the best way to help your kid tolerate the widest range of emotions because they learn that every emotion
like can be held in connection with someone else, right, versus held in aloneness and is bad.
So I guess that's the way I think through it.
Maybe we could talk about adolescents and teenagers specifically.
Teenage years are wild. I always say that the single most traumatic aging event and the most rapid rate of aging
that we ever experience is puberty.
I mean, just fundamentally brain circuits that were for one thing or that were dormant
change and come alive in ways that the world forever will look different to us, feel different to us,
and our self-perception changes, period.
It's something that biologists still understand at the level of hormones and in a hypothalamic
circuitry, but that has really not been matched to a psychological understanding in vice versa.
So, like nothing is quite like the music you listen to when you're a teenager.
It brings you back. The memories you form, positive and negative, stamp down, boom,
now and forever. The emotional salience can change, but those are wild years.
What are some of the more critical needs of late adolescents and teens that are actionable?
teens that are actionable. Yeah.
You know, and yeah, I mean, I'm just, I mean, my teen years were crazy, but even if they're
less crazy, they're always crazy.
Yes.
Yes.
So, and one of the reasons I think, at least in America, that adolescents have seen as
such a huge shift,
like my kid is out of control, they're always out,
they're always rejecting me.
I actually don't think it's unrelated
to the behavioral control approaches
that are inherent in American parenting,
because you refer to, your kid becomes 14,
and they kind of realize, wait,
I'm bigger than one of my parents.
Like I literally don't care about their sticker charts anymore.
And we might have missed 14 years of building a relationship.
And so what that kid's adolescence is going to look like is markedly different than if for those
past 14 years you weren't giving into
everything. No, but you were leading in a sturdier, more connected way. So I really
think this whole idea that American adolescents like reject everything. I
actually think not all of it, a part of it is completely developmentally normal,
but a big part of it relates to this tradition of behavioral control that
kids cannot reject until they're at the age that they kind of could survive on their own, which is adolescence.
So I think that's really important.
The things I would tell parents to really keep in mind
that are critical, number one is related to that.
Like a teen's job is to separate
and to start to form their own identity.
And I think there's a couple things about that
parents need to know.
Number one, like I don't think we prepare parents enough
for the true sense of loss they feel
when their kids are adolescents, because that's very real. Like, you've just spent all these years
and, like, you've driven them to every soccer and they kind of talked to in the backseat,
and maybe you have family movie nights, and then all of a sudden, they don't want any of that.
And it's just so important parents know, like, I'm going to feel sad.
I'm going to feel lost.
And if we don't know to expect it,
we often kind of infuse that into a lot of anger toward our kid.
And so I just think that's normal.
And we should talk about that more.
Parents about lessons need to be talking about that
with each other.
Of course, you miss that.
That's totally normal.
Number two related to that separation.
If you think about identity formation, like here's a kid and us and we're kind of close
and they now are at the stage where developmentally their job at that stage is to figure out who they are.
They have to overcorrect.
Like you have to kind of overcorrect in the amount of space you take because it's really the only way you can figure out,
like, wait, maybe I do want to take parts of that.
That part's okay.
And so I think that's like a powerful image to think about. Like they are moving far away.
That distance they take from you is not their final point. They will move closer.
Now going back to loss, not as close as they used to be. And that is different.
But that's not, that's it. This is their way of trying to figure out who they are.
Then the last thing I'd say that relates to that image,
is even as they move away, I think parents massively
underestimate how much they still need us there making
efforts to connect.
And I always think the difference in an explorer
and a nomad is whether or not you have a home base.
And if our teens feel like nomads,
is not a good situation.
They're explorers, they try a million different things,
but like they really do need us,
they need to know that they have a home.
And I'll never forget my private practice.
I used to work with teens, not the long ago,
just the teens, sometimes the parents too.
And this teen came to me, and this was extreme.
She'd been really in a bad place with her parents,
like intense, intense conflict.
And they got in this huge fight,
and she was really, really upset.
And she was describing this to me, she's like,
and then I was like, get out of my room!
Get out!
I hate you!
Get out!
And I was just sitting there listening,
and then she's like, I push him out, I know, and I was just like sitting there listening and and then she like I push him out
I slam the door
It was a couple minutes later
Open the door
my heart's racing
Can you believe they weren't there?
Can you believe they weren't there?
and
To me it was just this like and again, it's not about being a punchy bag
but I like under
like her seeming anger and her like intense pain were so close together in her own story
that it's just over and over the same thing.
Like they're gonna reject you, they're gonna say get out of of my room. And yes, it sucks, but they want you
to slip a note under their door.
After you've taken a couple minutes,
it says, that was really tough.
Or like, wow, that out of control.
You're a good kid and I love you.
And I wanna just tell parents of teens,
you're gonna do that.
There's gonna be a pause.
And then you will hear them rip up the note.
You will.
And like, I swear to any
parent that that still resonated and your kid is again trying to figure out how do I stay close
with my parents and I'm figuring out who I am. So like they rip up the note because like they
almost like have to do it to like take in how much they're still desperate for those bids for connection.
desperate for those bids for connection. Sounds a lot like the dynamics of adult relationships, although hopefully with a little bit less
dramatic accentuation.
But even if it does, these circuits that are laid down in childhood, early childhood, they persist, right?
I mean, I think if anything has become clear to me in understanding brain development and
brain function, it's that we don't discard circuitry for attachment and go, oh, that
was for mom and this one was for dad and that was one for the dog and then the romantic
relationship is different.
We repurpose the circuits, hence all the beautiful work on
childhood attachment that's now being translated to adult attachment. I mean, I realize there's
nuance to it. But I was reflecting a bit on this, again, incredibly potent phrase or mention of
explorers versus nomads of having a home base and thinking about the psychology experiments
where children are observed in the presence of their caretakers.
Sometimes the strange situation task where kids are separated from their moms and their
mom and child, typically mom.
Nowadays, it's also been done with other caretakers and dads reunite.
But one doesn't even have to know about those experiments.
All you have to do is go to a park or be out in public
and see a little toddler venturing away from parent.
And then what do they do every once in a while?
They look back.
They're just trying to check to make sure they're there.
Even the kids that aren't taking off on the tricycle
like crazy will eventually stop and look back.
It's like this fundamental circuit.
We're looking back, you know,
and how far they
feel they can go is in direct relationship to presumably the number of times that they recharged.
That they recharged and were able to see that verification that the parent was still there.
I think this notion of explorers versus nomads and being an explorer, obviously being a good thing, a healthy thing
within reason and nomads just feeling adrift, untethered.
Yes.
You know, one of the scariest words, at least to me in the English language.
So the note under the door.
Yeah.
It included the words, I love you.
I don't wanna get too detailed here,
but those words sometimes are never spoken in a home,
sadly.
Sometimes are spoken so often,
and under so many circumstances that one wonders,
like, do they lose their potency?
Yeah.
But I notice that in that note,
there it finished, I love you.
It's sort of like stating at the end of the day,
no matter what you say, probably even what you do.
I mean, I've been in the presence of parents of kids
that were criminals that did horrible things.
They still love their kids.
So reminding kids that under any and all circumstances.
Yeah, and again, and I think what's so critical because our brain collapses is that doesn't
mean you think their behavior is okay. And I get the fear, like, I would never want to
send my kid the message that it's okay to quote, do certain things, right? Like that
it's okay to just scream at your parents. Of course course it's not okay. It's just, I think we miss like that happened.
Like that happened already.
Like if I dropped my phone and it broke
and I was trying to understand why it broke,
trying to understand that doesn't mean it's okay
that I dropped it.
Like it just, it just dropped.
Like it already happened.
Now what?
You know?
And yeah, our kids need to know,
they need to know that they're loved.
And that, again, there's kind of like in that message,
I think, like I still see you're a good kid
under that moment.
And I actually think it's a powerful strategy
for every parent to kind of conjure up a good kid image.
Like what is it?
Was that that last time we were playing this game
and it was just so fun?
Or is it a memory of my kid when they were three?
And like, I don't know,
they did this really cute thing.
And it kind of like really crystallizes that.
And like even under, you know, this bad behavior,
that kid, like that kid's still there.
And the kids who behave the worst are in the deepest pain.
I mean, the adults too.
And that's not to say it's okay.
But again, we're talking about relationships
we want to be in.
Like if you're in a relationship with your teen,
it's not one where you're like, this is toxic.
Like this is my kid.
I'm gonna be in a relationship with them.
So, remembering that they're in pain.
Teens are in a lot of pain.
They're exploring a new world.
Frankly, right now, like teens have world,
we don't understand it.
That's so helpful for parents to approach your teen
just as a tangible tool and say,
there's so many things in your world
that I don't understand. And frankly, probably I might like criticize or judge.
Like, can you take out your phone? This, you know, whatever it is, this app you're on,
this video game, like, can we just even time box this five minutes? Like, I just want to
end this conversation saying I understand it better. Like, I promise you that's probably
going to do more for your relationship with your kid than anything else because yes
They do and they might reject you and if you do again, don't take the bait
But ask again next week like again, they do they need us to return
Yeah, one thing's for sure. None of us except those that are teens know what it's like to be a teenager in 2024
Just like they didn't know what it was like to be a teenager for me in the late 80s, early 90s.
Right.
How could they?
Right.
So what are your thoughts on family meetings?
Once a week we sit down, we check in.
I hear that people do this, maybe participated in these before.
Do you feel like those can be useful or is it more window dressing?
I mean, I guess it depends what's happening in there.
I mean, the idea of like, hey, there's a lot going on in our life and we have a ritual
of coming together and talking things through, working through problems.
Like if that's what it is, that's a beautiful thing.
Like I hear that my first thought is I should do that, you know?
But you're right, like life gets messy.
But if it's done in a way where it feels we end and everyone feels a little bit more understood and a little bit more purpose and, you know, making things
move forward in a positive direction, that's amazing. I think family meetings, it's funny
the way I think about them often, which is just different, is it's actually a great strategy,
especially when your kids are older. And there's like somewhat of an ongoing conflict. So maybe
there's like an ongoing conflict about how much video game time or how late they can stay out.
And to say to a kid, and again,
this just comes from, again, so important for teens,
we have to approach our kid like we're on the same team.
I would say, me and my kid against a problem,
not me against my kid where they are the problem.
Like, and so to say, hey, you've been late,
or we have to figure out your curfew, and like, look, you're a smart kid. You're a good kid. My number one job
is to keep you safe. But you're old now. And if I just tell you a time, it's the same thing
that happened last year, we're gonna get in fights all year. Why don't we sit down and
we will do what I do in my office. There's two people that each have ideas. I'm gonna
bring a pad of paper and that's actually super important. And I'm gonna write down all of your ideas and my ideas,
and then we're just gonna kind of go through
and cross out the ones that feel completely unreasonable,
and I have a feeling when we do that,
we're gonna come to a good place.
So again, you can see there's that hope I'm giving.
I hold the positive outcome, same team,
I'm giving my kid credit in advance.
This is actually really,
it's usually the opposite of what teens feel,
which is just my parents don't even listen to me or care and think they have all the answers.
I've heard this notion of couple parents come first and kids come second.
And some people are probably like, what?
Well, clearly, never parented.
Well, no, actually, it's an interesting idea, perhaps not correct or incorrect, but maybe
dynamic across time
where the real question is if kids know that they are running the family in terms of what
they do or their inability to not be attended to, etc., is driving the whole relationship
that the parents are in versus recognizing,
and here I'm imagining two-parent home,
but we could talk about divorce or people
with significant others or single-parent homes.
In all of those,
you gotta wonder, like,
are kids really paying attention to how much
they are being prioritized to the point
where if they observe their parents tending to their own needs that they feel deprivation or is it make
them feel safer like hey mom and or dad are taking care of themselves and can
show up better. Yes I think that is critically important and it kind of goes
again to boundaries like of a parent like my relationship with my kid is so
important and I'm not gonna let that take over me like that is not all of me to boundaries of a parent. My relationship with my kid is so important.
And I'm not going to let that take over me.
That is not all of me.
I am not only a caregiver to my kid.
I would stand by that all day long.
Is that an important part of me?
And it's still a part of me.
And I think this is really important to own as a parent.
Because again, we tend to get, we get apologists for it, or we look for our kid's permission.
We'll say, look, I need to go out with dad without you, okay?
Like we have a relationship too,
like and we, again, there's that job confusion
and my kid feels that.
And again, it's that kind of giving them too much power.
I've said this to my kids a lot.
So they'll say, why do you go out with dad without me?
I'll say, it's a great question.
You know, first of all, dad and I were married
before we had kids.
Our relationship is really important to us.
And we love being with you.
And being with you is different than just being the two of us.
And that really, really matters to us.
And so you don't have to be happy about it.
You can, you, and let's say I have a babysitter I know they're safe with.
You can cry when I leave and the babysitter will hold you and we're gonna go to dinner and we're gonna come back and you know I'll
see you in the morning. Yeah I think that is so important. I actually think this
topic like this topic of like rage and parenthood is like a big topic like the
way why do I get to these moments of rage so often that my screaming is not
just screaming at my kids it it's really rageful.
And I think the parents often who are the most vulnerable
to that are the ones where they're not meeting
like any of their non-caregiving needs,
which makes sense that a part of them is like screaming out.
Like what about me?
I used to go to dance class.
I used to see friends.
I used to go out with my partner and talk about things other than, you know, our kids. And so, again, if I think
the kids need a sturdy leader, right, more than anything else, and sturdiness is not allowing
yourself to be taken over by anyone thing, including your relationship with your kid.
Is it truly better for there to be two sturdy leaders than one sturdy leader?
I realize this is a controversial question.
Yeah, I mean, I know, and I know there's research
to back this up that like having one kind of sturdy leader
in your life is massively protective.
I really believe that.
And so when parents also say my partner isn't like,
we have research, this is true, is two better than one.
I don't know the research probably, I don't know, you know,
but what I think is important in there too is what's not great for kids is having like
all the caregivers be some like perfectly attuned caregiver, right? Like that actually does not set
up your kid for life at all, right? Because I don't know anyone who thinks the partner I'm going
to be with one day is going to be perfectly attuned to all my needs.
Let me go find that person.
So, you know, you have one sturdy leader, you have two, but like being sturdy part of that is you're going to rupture.
You're going to rupture, you're going to mess up, you're going to hopefully repair, you know, after.
But sturdyness, I just want to make clear, is so not the same as like perfection.
Perfection is creepy. It's not a thing, no one needs that.
I love that. So for some of you I've laughed out loud on this podcast about a statement like that.
Yeah, the notion of perfection is kind of creepy. But sturdiness is anything but creepy. It's just such a beautiful word for all the right reasons. What about behavioral examples in parents? So,
for instance, if children observe parents being affectionate to one another in appropriate ways,
right? You know, you know, attending to one another in in boundaries, but empathically attuned ways.
Do you think that projects forward into their notion of what adult relationships are like
and should be like? Conversely, if parents are yelling at one another, do you think that projects
forward into it's okay to yell in adult relationships? Yeah, I mean, I think kids are
they're expert noticers. They notice everything, right? It's part of how they've learned to survive as such helpless humans.
So they definitely notice, they definitely act like sponges.
So yes, if you're kind of privileged enough in that way
to grow up in a home or you have parents who in general
are fairly affectionate, they take responsibility
for their stuff, they communicate and out the way,
I think that is like a true privilege
you go into adulthood with. Yes. The other extreme, right? You grow up with parents who, you know,
they yell or they can even yell in scary voices. Again, what I think is really important
is the witnessing of that isn't going to be as impactful to a kid as the witnessing of it and nobody naming it
and talking to them about it.
So this is why so often like kids will be in different cold stages, intense tantrums,
major issues at school, and someone's like, what do I do?
Like, what do I do with this?
Well, I gave you all the strategies in the world, but if that is just your kid's way
of kind of manifesting all of their struggles with this like huge marital conflict
that's happening, it's not going to work. So it's all part of the same system. And so
saying to your kid after you fight with your partner, hey, I think you heard daddy and
I screaming. And I'm sure that felt scary because it does feel scary because they know
you're their base. So if their base is of a house is like, you know, feels like an earthquake,
it feels scary. Like, and, you know, another line I like is like, you were right to notice that.
We were using loud voices.
Again, I think that's massively confidence, you know, building.
Maybe what was that like for you or if you have a little kid, just that's enough.
You know, and they might look at you and say, like, can I have my snack now?
But it's still really sunk in.
So if there is a lot of conflict again, I think it's really important we talk about that
with our kids and don't leave them alone.
What about teens that are really wayward?
And this could be behavioral outbursts.
There's also the whole underside of this thing
where it's also about withdrawal.
Like the kids are withdrawn.
I mean, we were talking about outbursts and yelling.
There's also the example in parents
or the instances in kids that they're just like really
withdrawn.
Yes.
They're just like disengaged.
Depressed.
Depressed.
Maybe even dissociative.
Who knows, but not good.
And this can show up on one end is violence, on the other end is isolation.
It can show up as eating disorders.
It can show up as all sorts of things.
Intervention before age 18 is, quote-unquote, easier in the sense that one has legal control.
But oftentimes, it's hard for parents to know like, how bad is this?
And I did an entire episode about cannabis and I spoke to some of the medical benefits
of cannabis for adults who are non-addicts, but I also talked a lot about some of the risks.
But let's take an example that I think is pretty common like kids 15, 16, starts smoking some THC with their friends and you go, okay, well everyone does that.
Quote unquote, non alcohol, which I think is the lame argument.
This is lame.
It doesn't make any sense.
Yeah, you're getting hit by a, you know, cars and bags, getting hit by a train, but okay.
But the point is, you know, most all parents are like, okay,
you know, clearly they're self-medicating, you know, they think they can't stop them,
but you can stop them.
You know, at what point do you then take, you know,
you put them into a residential treatment program,
if you could even afford that?
I mean, it's really tough for people to know how much to intervene in what is clearly not
good behavior and it sometimes can be bad behavior.
And yet the kids are using it to self-medicate and there's a peer system that sometimes reinforces
that.
I mean, this is a huge landscape.
Maybe we have you back to talk just about this, but but maybe we can precede that discussion
But by like what do you tell people in your in your practice like get in there now?
Pull the emergency cord and get this handled or do you say listen you just got to work with the
You know work with the system and it's tough problem. I'm throwing at you
Yeah
But I think the first thing is like right how do How do I as a parent, like kind of even assess is like, is this normal?
Is it not normal?
Is that a problem?
Is it not?
So I think there's a couple of things we could think about there.
Number one, just seeing like impact on overall functioning is always like one barometer, right?
So, okay, can my child perform the kind of tasks of their developmental stage?
Okay. So this is not the only thing,
but like, are they still going to school?
Wow, I noticed since they're smoking a lot of weeds,
their grades went from Bs to Ds.
Like, okay, they don't care about school anymore.
They used to actually go out with friends.
Now, unless they're with this one crew
where they smoke in the park,
like they're not even seeing these kids
they used to be friends with.
They don't wanna go to family functions anymore.
They used to play soccer. Like, if I'm answering this I'd be like wow
I'm not really talking just about a marijuana problem. I'm talking about my kid not engaging and kind of like the developmental tasks that I would say is
Just like it's time to seek additional support, right?
Another sign is just kind of how how limited their world has become Because of this right so again is this kind of how limited their world has become because of this, right?
So again, is this kind of taken over everything they do?
My kid is depressed, let's say, and all of a sudden their world has gotten really, really small,
and it's not just that that's the way they've always lived.
There's a big change, the amount of conflict in the home.
Again, is there a conflict when you have teens? Of course there is, but like,
wow, like, is it really hard to talk to my teen for more than four minutes?
Walking on eggshells to me is also a sign that we need additional help.
Am I scared to intervene in a way that would actually be in line with my values?
That's not a good sign, right?
Then the other thing I just want to make sure everyone knows is, I mean, like, seeking additional help is a sign of every single thing that's right with a family.
And I think we think it's a sign of something that's wrong. And it's like,
also a sign of what's right to your, in terms of messaging that to your kid. Again,
I think about a kid who I used to saw seeing in my practice, she was probably 16 when she
came to me, she was cutting serious. So I thought, right? And I remember saying, just intake,
hey, how long have we been doing this?
She was two years.
I don't like, did you see another therapist before you saw me?
She was like, no.
She was like very like kind of, you know,
kind of quippy and quick.
And I was just like, why?
And she's like, well, I told my parents
that if they took me to a therapist, I would go
and I would just waste all their money.
I'd be quiet.
And then when they left me there, I would leave and who's gonna stop a 14 year old from walking away.
And they might as well save their money
because they can't make me.
Okay, and again, I just kind of sensed to stay quiet.
And she seriously, one of the next things she said is,
can you believe they let me make that decision?
Literally said that.
Wow, validates everything you set up until now.
And it is, this is why, this is where like,
I feel like I get my best ideas. Like, that. Wow. Validates everything you set up until now. Everything. And it is.
This is where I feel like I get my best ideas.
That's right.
A 14-year-old can convince her parent that she won't go to therapy when she's cutting.
That is not okay.
And again, then we go to, okay, so I'm going to say to my kid, you are going.
I'm like, no, there's so much between that.
We're in these binary states.
Your kid's feelings about therapy cannot dictate your boundary, right?
But we can't just then come down harshly.
And so I coach parents in this all the time.
What do you say to a kid?
I love you.
Hear me out.
I love you.
We're in a tough stage.
I see this problem.
And I do think even when our kids get older, we can say this.
My number one job is to keep you safe.
It is not to keep you happy with me.
And I actually love you so much that I'm willing to do things that make you unhappy
with me. That is actually how much I care about you.
And so I am going to be driving you.
And if you want to like curse at me the whole time, I will sit in that waiting room
and you know, I'm gonna do the next week,
I'm gonna tell you I love you,
I'm gonna do the same thing.
And I think adults hearing that on some level,
there's some internal truth,
I'm like, I probably needed that.
Like that feels oddly good
because there's like, you know I'm not messing around,
but there's this way where as parents we've said,
like the way to show my kid I'm not messing around is to be mean to them. Like there was nothing mean you know I'm not messing around. But there's this way where as parents, we've said like the way to show my kid
I'm not messing around is to be mean to them.
Like there was nothing mean about what I said.
I think it was more loving than saying to a kid,
okay, let me know when you wanna go.
That is not loving.
And so I think like our teens sometimes in those moments,
they need us to do our job and like be the pilot.
Like they, it is the small amount of time
where they're still a passenger. When they're 18, like be the pilot. Like they, it is the small amount of time where they're still a passenger.
When they're 18, they are the pilot.
And so we have this window.
There's nothing I want to probe more into that.
I think you captured it beautifully
and it gets back to this issue of safety.
Like in letting them make their own decision
when they're clearly in trouble.
Like if anything could make a kid feel unsafe,
a teen or younger or adult, it's that.
Yes. Yes.
It's like laying the passenger on the plane.
You're like, hey, instead of rerouting, how about you just come up here and fly?
That's exactly, that's literally what it is. And they're like, I can't believe you,
you believed my little protest. Now I'm in the cockpit. Like this, they don't, they don't want
that. That's why they're words, teens words. It's not that we don't want that. That's why their words, teen's words,
it's not that we don't believe them.
Like as I just, I'm beginning believing
their words often are a representation of their fears.
All of us in our worst moments, get out.
Like I feel like sometimes like that's their fear
or like they're kind of talking to their emotion.
They're so like, they're not really talking to you
in that moment.
They're so dysregulated and like just learning learning to not take it so literally and be like,
what am I really believing?
My kid isn't paying their cutting.
My kid isn't paying their smoking weed 30 times a day and don't quote a class.
I know that they need help.
And again, any parent who can say that to me is the strongest parent and that is such
a sign of health.
I don't think I'd still be alive today if it wasn't for
non-parent mentors and just examples in the world.
These aren't always people that were like,
hey, I'm going to take you under my wing and be your mentor.
Actually, that was rarely the case.
But people in my real life or in my reading or there wasn't YouTube back then.
But sometimes now, people have, I'm a huge fan, for instance,
of these young neon psychologist, James Hollis,
who has these beautiful lectures on making a life.
And I'm learning so much, like I consider him a mentor.
Sorry, James, you didn't have a choice, you're a mentor.
But these people that we can internalize certain
healthy aspects that our parents just just
Apparently can't seem to arrange for themselves and that we wish they had but I think that we
as children of all ages
Like we want perfect parents. We don't get them
But it seems appropriate to me. I love your thoughts, it seems appropriate to me to have, you know,
kind of a foraging for examples of where we can get
certain things that we can internalize for ourselves
so that we can benefit that maybe our parents just
aren't interested in, capable of,
or even alive to provide us anymore.
Yeah, yeah, I mean that like being everything to someone,
like I don't want my kids to ever say that about me.
My mom was everything.
She fulfilled my every need.
Again, I do find that creepy whenever, I don't know.
And like, and just setting them up
for so much relationship disappointment.
My mom gave some things and you know,
now that I also work a lot of money with my kids,
like there is this mom, like when kids have a sleepover at her house I
mean it is the best sleepover experience like I see pictures I'm like wow that
was so thoughtful that was amazing she's like she puts it out she's creative
like and me and my kids joke like they're like yeah mom you you're like
bottom of the list and that stuff and I am I am And like I know I'm toward the top of the list
and other things.
I don't want to be toward them.
First of all, I don't want to hold myself to that standard.
That's like a great way to implode.
So yeah, being able to say to my kid,
oh, you guys want to have a sleepover?
You'd rather go to her house?
Cause that's okay.
Like that's not an indictment of me.
And so maybe this is some quote mentor like figure
for someone who can like put these details
and make people feel really taken care of in that way.
That's great.
And I think, yes, giving your kid permission
and encouragement, again, I think is such a gift
to them later on.
Like, yeah, our relationship with our kids
becomes not only the foundation, their expectations
for their relationship with other adults.
I mean, I also think it's literally
what they're attracted to. I think when they're attracted to someone later on, it's just the activation of that
earliest attachment. And so if they can get activated around someone who seems to be pretty
attuned and respectful and validating and boundaryed because they also have other things in their life
and not everything, that's a privilege to say that's what I'm expecting.
So I think those other relationships,
and as a parent, to hear your kids say,
my coach taught me this thing,
and sometimes they say it in a catty way,
so much better than what you said to do at La Crosse.
Just to like take a deep breath,
and again, this is where you can say,
like, I'm still a good parent,
even outside this moment.
I'm so glad you're talking to me about this.
I believe you. Tell me more about this.
Like, such a beautiful example for your kid.
So being able to validate and embrace the fact that there are other sources of healthy
upbringing is, yeah, not just perhaps is clearly a good thing.
Do I have that right?
I think that's right. And I think if that's hard for a parent,
what I'd say is like, it's a question
without an exact answer, but like,
where did I learn that I'm supposed to be everything
to someone?
Like, and is that, and I think a lot of women,
we learn that in our families of origin to be good girls,
which really just means I have no wants
and needs my own.
And I just kind of gaze out and see how I can do things for you
and I can be everything for you.
And then we have kids, we don't realize we put that onto them.
But like you said, those patterns travel with us.
And I find it like very relieving to be like,
maybe if I don't, wow, it just gave me like a good percentage
of energy back.
Like I can do like so many other things now, you know?
It's very, it's like empowering.
I love it. Something that it's an unpleasant topic just by, as soon as people hear the word, but it's something that I think comes up on the child side, the teen side and the parenting side,
and in adult relationships of all kind, which is the dreaded entitlement. Ooh, dirty word of parenting.
Entitlement.
Maybe we could put some definition on entitlement
and talk about when it's bad, is it always bad?
When it's neutral and when it's,
I don't know, is it ever good?
I don't know, entitlement doesn't sound like it's ever good.
Yeah.
There is a healthy entitlement, right?
And I think that is kind of the entitlement to like,
I'm allowed to want things and I'm only allowed to,
at moments in my life, even act on that,
to turn that want into a fulfillment of my want.
I think that actually goes back to what we were just saying,
like versus how can I please you?
Like maybe I want to do something.
So I think that healthy entitlement, that's a good thing.
But when I think, when I hear parents say like,
please,
I just don't want an entitled kid,
they're not talking about that, right?
And they're talking about, and to me,
the story from my practice is just the key thing
that makes us parents cringe, was this family
of seeing a New York City, and they were very wealthy
and they had the 16 year old son,
and they're flying back from Hawaii or to Hawaii,
and they were just getting ready to board, and class was boarding and the sun goes up and they're like,
oh, so we were not like in first class. We have to wait.
We had basically a full tantrum in the airport.
Like every parent's first nightmare, literally.
And they came to me afterwards being like, how did we like, how did we get here?
Right?
Now this is a family in general, it's true.
They flew first class, they had private play
and said a lot of, you know, money.
But entitlement to me doesn't always have to be about money.
I'm gonna give you my definition of entitlement.
I think it's very different.
But to me, the definition like boundaries is useful
because it gives you a pathway of what to do.
I think entitlement is the fear of frustration.
Beautiful.
Because if we go back, okay, that thing didn't start at 16.
And if we started, you know,
I started kind of collecting stories and right,
this is a kid who they had, and again,
like they had a driver,
there's nothing wrong with having a driver.
But I'm just thinking about like waiting for a subway.
It's frustrating.
You just missed the subway.
We're gonna be late.
Like, no, right?
This was a kid who didn't make,
instead of seeing it all,
I remember like they'd make the soccer team.
Don't worry, we have someone who's gonna take you
to the nearby town in New Jersey
and get on that soccer team, right?
And I think about what this kid started to learn about being frustrated.
And it was kind of like frustration comes up.
And what gets layered next to it is someone else bringing you
an exit.
Frustration, exit from frustration, maybe even
exit to success, right?
And then I started to think, well, what would it be like
if there were 16 years of kind of a guy,
because this doesn't have that pattern and that circuit,
reinforcing, because what you're really learning as a kid,
I'm frustrated, and that's very overwhelming for me,
but the adults around me must be scared of my frustration because they won't let me sit in it
They won't let me feel it. They will actually kind of run in circles
To to not have me feel so I actually encode my frustration next to fear
Now I'm 16 and I'm expecting first-class and I get you know lowly coach, you know
It's not people are like oh
What a spoiled kid.
Like I actually, I feel like this kid was like
insanely vulnerable in that moment.
This kid was like, I'm frustrated.
And what I expect to happen
and what I know to happen isn't here.
And so it is explosive.
It appears as entitlement on the surface,
but it is a deep intolerance and almost fear of frustration, which is in your body.
So you're terrified of a feeling that is living in your body. And it looks demanding because it
kind of is desperate. Like you can't let this happen. Wow. Fear of frustration as the definition of entitlement lands
like square in the bullseye for me.
And yes, I think we all default to the kind of stereotypical
example of the ultra wealthy family kid.
There was that movie, the toy in the 80s.
It was really dreadful concept.
Actually, a kid that was just giving everything and then wanted a person. I mean, it's really dreadful concept, actually, a kid that was just given everything and then
wanted a person.
It was really like talking about foul.
I mean, it's just bad at every level.
And then they tried to create this narrative where then there's a deeper understanding
about humans and stuff that evolves from it.
But the starting point was, and I've observed this in certainly not my family, but other families where kids
are given everything they want.
It never feels like enough.
Big surprise.
Dopamine is a real thing.
The circuits recalibrate to a higher threshold.
They want more and more and more.
It's like that movie, Wall Street.
What's your number?
More.
Okay.
All right.
Nothing wrong with wanting things, but without
a ceiling on any of that and without a ceiling on pleasure or balance on experience, it crushes
everybody. That's also what that movie was about. It just crushes people. So to build that into a
child's neurology just seems like the worst possible thing. Because it's not about the world
being a place of immense possibility.
It's about the world being a place of like snakes
in broken glass everywhere except this narrow knife edge
path that you follow that is all about infinite resources.
An ease, that's right.
And I think it's fear is because if you're in fear,
you're in like a threat state,
which is why it, when kids are in that state or adults,
it seems like nasty, like in its mean,
when you're, you know, and there's this like
narrowing of your eyes, right?
So I think that's really, you know, what's happening.
And it's not, it's not always tied to money,
but the truth is, and like money can easily buy a kid's way out of frustration.
And by the way, it buys the parent out of having to tolerate their frustration while
the kid is frustrated.
And so it's tricky.
I think I've now like, you know, talked to a bunch of parents who grew up in a very
different way, were very successful.
And I get it.
They're like, I feel like I've, I've earned, I've literally have earned the right to have certain parts of my life feel a lot easier, right? And then
like, how do I though not, how do I raise a kid who isn't entitled, right? And it is
a conundrum, right? I don't think like, you know, we raise our, raise our kids in a candy
store. It's hard to expect them to appreciate candy, right? And so like, how do we, how do we balance that gratitude, the entitlement?
And I do think though that idea is like, we just have to, sometimes like other people
hearing this would be like, yeah, like my life is frustrating all the time.
And some people's are, right?
They won't end up with entitlement.
But for other families, they always have to be like, I have to like dose it.
I have to make sure my kids literally have experiences and I probably have to
go through it too, where we are almost like purposefully making sure they get
enough of that, you know, so they can build different circuits.
Yeah, so much shown back there.
I think, um, it's clear that some of this is tied to financial means. I think it's a pretty scary thing
when someone looks out on the landscape of the world as infinite possibility without any frustration.
As we talked about earlier, the ability to lean into hard things as a skill that can extend to other things is so valuable.
Do you think that some of the smaller practices that any kid, any parent, any family, regardless of
means can lean into can really help there? Some people say grace or prayer before a meal,
others simply express gratitude. But stopping and thinking about, I mean, being breathing, being ambulatory, being any number of good things that allow us agency in life about to eat food.
Those moments, I think are, I know that our nervous system reflects on those.
How could they not? And just recognizing that at least something went into the creation of the
meal. I think for the entitlements up in the frustration, there's all these small moments How could they not, and just recognizing that at least something went into the creation of the meal?
I think for like the entitlements of the frustration,
like there's all these small moments
that we can start to make a difference.
And I think it's saying to yourself,
just cause I can, doesn't mean I will.
So like my kids young and I picked them up from a play date.
And like, let's say I have a babysitter at home,
or my husband at home, and I'm like,
I have to go to a store in Samaritans.
Like it's like, can have to go to a store in some errands.
I'm like, it's like, can you drop me off first?
Maybe I'm like, you know what?
Like, no, like you're gonna come with me.
And I'm not gonna say this, I'm boring errands
because you just have to tolerate
that like sometimes you have to do things
you don't wanna do.
And like, you're not gonna learn that
by me telling you that.
You're gonna learn that by experiencing that.
You know, something with my kids, you know,
the other day we were at an airport and like there were,
you know, in the airport, like it kind of winds around
like to get and there was like no one there.
So they started to like duck under all the like things.
And it just made me think like as a small moment,
like entitlement also was like,
the rules don't apply to me in some ways.
And I just remember like you guys when we're in airports.
Oh, the the lines leading up to security.
Yeah.
And you can mess them up and it wasn't like forever.
But I was like, you guys, like these things, someone put these here for a reason
and we're just going to, it's like, like, these things don't have to be such.
It's a small amount of frustration.
But it's just like, I don't always get to duck the line.
Sometimes I have to like walk a little longer.
I remember my kids saying, and don't always get to duck the line. Sometimes I have to like walk a little longer.
I remember my kids saying, and I'm not immune to this.
Like I am in a financial position where I have someone come,
sometimes help me be my housekeeper, right?
And she'll fold the laundry.
I remember on a Sunday, my son said to me,
and he was younger, like, why do we have to fold the laundry?
Kind of like, I don't think he said it,
but he was kind of like, don't we have someone, you know,
who could do that?
And I remember being like, this is a moment where I could be like,
we're gonna fold the laundry on Sundays.
You know who loves folding laundry?
Maybe some people like, I don't love undoing the dishwasher.
It is inherently not that enjoyable,
but like, and so frustrating.
It's just like not great.
And like, I know I need to make my kids do that.
Like they just have to go through that mundane thing.
And so I think there's all of these moments,
taking your kid with you on errands,
you know, doing the laundry, right?
Before you say to your kid,
let's go to try out on another soccer team.
Just like, oh, you didn't make the team.
Maybe let it go two days.
That's at least two more days of feeling upset and frustrated.
Right? They don't have to be these big grand things,
but all of those little moments can add up
in a really positive way.
What's your stance on household chores
and should kids be paid for household chores?
Yes, I have a whole guide to chores and allowance.
And I actually, you know, I think there's a lot of salt,
like should they be separate?
I don't know, I think it could be done either way.
But to me, the question for a parent is like,
what is the point for me? Like what is my goal for chores? What is my goal for allowance? Right?
And I think that has to then structure how we do it. So my guess is for chores, part of it,
is I want my kid to, number one, maybe like help around the house, want them to have that purpose.
Also like I know for me for chores, like sometimes your life involves doing boring things.
That is just true. And like I want my kids to know that, which means they have to experience it.
That's one of the reasons we do chores. So for me, if that's one of the reasons, I'm not going to pay
my kid. Because for me, in my family, what I think my kids need to get out of it, is just like knowing
that sometimes you do boring things as part of being a good human. For someone else, that might
be totally different.
So I think we just ask ourselves as parents, like, what am I trying to accomplish?
And then let me structure it around that.
Across the course of today's discussion, I've been feeling both immense gratitude and relief
for certain quote unquote hardships that I experienced and things that my parents made
me do or ways that they were negligent.
And I was forced to figure things out.
Also, you know, some things where I was like, huh, like wish they had done this.
I think everyone listening to this will feel that way.
And if you're lucky enough to still be in the parenting child or being a child process,
then there's still time.
So I guess there's always still time.
My introduction to this episode, I touched on a few of these,
but tell us what you're doing these days to help parents and kids indirectly or directly
to be more effective in their relationships. And I know you've written about this in books
and you have a wonderful social media account on Instagram and elsewhere, I follow it and there's so much learning there.
But how are you translating this knowledge into actionable programs?
Yeah.
That is what gets me out of bed every morning is translating.
I always say deep thoughts, actionable, practical, can do with today's strategies.
That's the only way I can work.
I'm like, tell me what to do to put that idea into action.
Love it.
So, you know, a couple of years ago,
one of the things that really struck me
was just like, I really did feel angry.
Like this is so messed up.
We parents have the hardest job
and it's the one that impacts the world the most.
And I don't think any of us think the world
is in like a great place right now, right?
No, it's not.
Right.
And this is, and I remember someone coming up to me
and saying parenting is also the only job you care about
on your death bed.
And I think that's probably true if you have kids.
So like, for every reason,
this should be the place that they're,
like that we invest the most
or that the system is like set up to help us.
And most people I know, they don't want to parent the exact same way as they were parented,
maybe take parts.
And that is the way we'll parent.
It's just kind of the language we use.
And learning a new language we know is totally possible.
Duolingo has showed us that.
You can learn a new language.
It's hard.
Sometimes you revert to your language of origin, especially in stressful moments, same thing, parenting, and then you go back. And so I remember saying to some people
around me, like, I want to create that, like, kind of duolingo for parents. It is learning
a new language. And we should have a product where we have resources in one place. We should be able
to connect to other parents around the globe. We're kind of doing this with us. We should have
access to experts we trust, not because they always know better, but
they might just help us have a different mindset and some ideas to help us again.
And me, my mind is just act more in line with your own values.
That's what it's about.
And so that's what we created.
And that's what I'm working on.
And that's our good inside membership.
And so excited about all the ways, you know, that's already impacting tens and tens of thousands
of parents and that's where the resources are.
It's bite-size, it's actionable.
We're really known for our scripts.
It's like, what do I say to my kid when?
Like literally, we have a script for that.
And I think in a small way people like say,
like I come for the scripts and then I stay
for the revolution.
Like this is actually a journey of my own sturdiness and honestly becoming a
sturdier, more confident leader is the only way we can raise sturdy, more
confident kids.
Well, I've said this again and again throughout today's discussion, but I love
it.
I love the gathering of information, the organizing it and dispersing it in
actual ways.
And you've done all of that and you're continuing to do that.
And you also have the clinical background and you're a parent.
So you're speaking from professional and immediate experience and
you put so much work into it.
I can tell that by the directness and simplicity of the actionables
that you've taught us today,
and also how much resides underneath
those direct, simple actionables.
Just beautiful.
I've had many conversations on this podcast
with many brilliant people, including yourself,
but this is among the ones that I really say
has really made me thinking. And I
don't think I've ever said, wow, so many times during the discussion here. And there's just so
much knowledge to be gleaned from today's discussion thanks to you. And just on behalf of
myself and everyone listening, parents and kids and those who want to be parents and those who don't
and who have made the choice not to and are certainly
engaged in other forms of relationship.
This is just absolute gold that you've provided us.
Thank you ever so much, your generosity, your clarity of communication and the heart behind
it really comes through.
So, thank you.
Thank you so much. Thank you for joining me for today's discussion about parent-child and
other types of relationships with Dr. Becky Kennedy. To learn more about Dr. Kennedy's work,
please see the links in the show note captions, including the links to her best-selling book
Good Inside and to the online learning platform for better parenting. You can also find links to her social media accounts.
As I mentioned during today's episode,
she has a terrific Instagram account
in which she regularly posts practical tools
for better parenting and other types of relationships.
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