Morning Wire - Jordan Peterson Interview: “Parenting as Sacred Duty”
Episode Date: May 25, 2025In this insightful interview, John Bickley speaks to Dr. Jordan Peterson about his new Daily Wire+ series “Parenting.” The famed clinical psychologist offers profound reflections on the moral auth...ority of parents, the necessity of household boundaries, and the sacred responsibilities of motherhood and fatherhood in cultivating emotionally secure, socially capable children amidst today’s cultural chaos. Get the facts first on Morning Wire. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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There is nothing you'll do in life that's more challenging, difficult, and rewarding than being a parent.
Nothing with greater highs or lower lows.
You have little kids for a very short period of time.
is a major mistake not to notice that and not to appreciate it.
That was Dr. Jordan Peterson from his new Daily Wire series, Parenting, in which the famed
clinical psychologist sits down with parents to discuss their struggles in raising happy and healthy
children in a societal moment fraught with challenges.
When a disciplinary issue arises, you need to make space to master it.
I have to not do what I thought I was going to do for 10 minutes to set this right.
In this episode, we sit down with Dr. Peterson to discuss the launch of his new series,
what inspired him to create it, and the cultural trends he hopes it will help to address.
I'm Daily Wire Executive Editor John Bickley with Georgia Howe.
It's Sunday, May 25th, and this is a weekend edition of Morning Wire.
Joining us now is Dr. Jordan Peterson, clinical psychologist and host of the new Daily Wire Plus series Parenting, Dr. Peterson.
Thank you so much for joining us.
My pleasure. Thanks for the invitation.
Look, there's been a lot of excitement around the office.
about your new show. I say that in complete sincerity. Everybody's really aimed about it.
You've released episode zero to the public, which is what we're calling it around here.
It's sort of a teaser, but episode one goes live Sunday. I want to, of course, ask you about
the show, but first I wanted to ask you something personal. What was one of your proudest parenting
moments? My daughter, after she had surgery to replace one of her joints in her leg, I don't
remember if it was her ankle or her hip, I think it was her hip. She decided to take a motorcycle course
because her mobility was impaired and that wouldn't label her to drive a scooter. And that was a risky
endeavor and it was challenging for her and frightening. That was good in many ways. And it also did
provide her with mobility for several years and made a huge difference in her life, of hugely
positive difference. It also gave her a kind of indomitable confidence to be able to do something
that's dangerous like that and risky, even in the face of bone fragility, let's say.
So that was good.
There's been a lot of moments.
Mostly with my kids, I'm pretty damn happy with them almost all the time.
And that's been the case throughout their life.
So, I mean, we've had our difficulties, most of them health-related.
You know, and if you have to have difficulties, well, those are sort of necessary in a way.
You know what I mean?
and maybe we can cope with necessary difficulties in life.
I don't know how well we cope with unnecessary difficulties.
That's an interesting distinction.
Yeah, a lot of maybe resentment or self-consciousness when it's unnecessary.
A lot of stuff that we bring on ourselves,
maybe that adds another wrinkle complexity there.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Well, it does.
It really does, you know.
And life has enough instability, let's say, and uncertainty,
without adding the additional overlay of unnecessary suffering and stupidity.
Unnecessary suffering is really hard on people.
And so I suppose because there's an element of moral culpability to it
that isn't there with an illness, that's a rough division.
And I mean, one of the things that I'm trying to help parents be confident in
is their moral right to parent,
their moral right to run the household
in a manner that brings peace and abundance,
their obligation to do that.
We're afraid of our children in the Western world.
And that's partly a reflection of an overweening maternal love, I suppose,
but we're afraid that we'll damage our children by parenting them.
But, you know, you damage your children by not parenting them as well.
So, and the parenting that you should be doing is the establishment of a relationship.
And if the relationship is solid, you don't allow and certainly don't encourage your children to do anything that is counter to their best interest, especially socially.
So I'm trying to fortify parents to understand that they can do that.
and it is their responsibility and not something harmful.
You mentioned Western culture, this being a problem with Western culture.
Is this a modern phenomenon, this idea that's sort of reluctance, fear of heavy-handed parenting
or really embracing the parenting role?
Well, I would say it's got its roots in a philosophical doctrine,
and that would be the doctrine of Jean-Jacques Rousseau,
that the natural state of man is noble savage, that we're all good,
and that all culture does is corrupt us, which is an insane doctrine.
We're rife with possibility for good and evil.
That's our essential nature.
And proper cultural intermediation, which is, at least in part the role of a parent,
fortifies the good and puts what could otherwise be pathological and even malevolent in its proper place.
So if you have an aggressive child, for example, and you sort of,
socialize that child properly, which can be a challenge because an aggressive child,
especially one that's extroverted, will push the boundaries hard. If you can socialize them effectively,
they can become extremely sophisticated competitors. Now it's a pretty high level of achievement.
So there's the philosophical element, which is a child is perfect and good until they're warped by
culture, which is completely one-sided, insane, progressive, naive argument. And then I think the other
thing that likely happened was that after World War II, we became wealthy enough in the Western
world so that our children and teenagers had disposable income. And then they were heavily targeted
by corporations, which have a right to market, but heavily targeted by corporations. And
their narcissism, their self-centered narcissism was encouraged and exaggerated.
And that's kind of where the permissive consumerist culture of the 1960s emerged.
That was when, you know, at the beginning of the 60s, you still saw shows like My Three Sons or Father Knows Best.
Can you bloody well imagine a show called Father Knows Best now?
And that breakdown of, oh, yeah, well, there.
That the only, one of the few positive examples I've seen of a man in recent comedic history is Ted Lassau.
You know, and even Ted is divorced and has his problems, but he's a very good mentor.
That's quite rare.
So another good man in Landman.
Yes, Libelibald Thornton.
Yeah, yeah.
And so that's more of dramatic.
And so some of that's starting to make a comeback.
But a lot of that dissolved in the hyper permissive 60s.
And all that 60s culture, including its progressivism,
was a form of politicized immaturity and a mindless hedonism.
It's not useful and not sustainable.
With the parents that you've spoken to so far for the show,
do you feel like a lot of their questions are rooted in this issue,
this idea of a fear of embracing sort of the harder-edge parts of the parenting roles?
It depended on the parent.
Like some of the people I talked to had,
genuine problems, let's say. I'm not saying that I'm not trying to make a distinction
exactly between the kinds of problems I dealt with, but some of the parents I saw had a very
ill child, for example. And that's just a whole rat's nest of insane, inevitable trouble and
conflict. It's certainly something that can split a marriage apart. There are other
parents whose problems were very much likely a consequence of the disciplinary strategies they imposed or
failed to impose. And so part of what I did with the former people was to strategize about management
approaches to degenerating illness, which is the worst kind of illness obviously to having a child.
with the disciplinary issues while we talked strategy and also goal.
You know, you want to have a sense in your household of how you would want the relationships
and the household to operate.
You need a vision of that.
And that's what allows you to detect deviations from that.
And then you have to negotiate disciplinary strategies when that isn't making itself
manifest. It's not helpful to have children who are whiny and miserable. It's not pleasant for you.
It's not pleasant for them. Parents often use intermittent reinforcement when their children are
whiny and miserable. So here's how to have a terrible child. Imagine your child will whine and
complain when they want something. Okay, if you want to have that happen all the time,
then vary the amount that they have to whine and complain before you
capitulate
unpredictably.
That's what a slot machine
does.
It rewards
intermittently and
variably.
And that's
impossible to
eradicate because
what the child
learns is if
they're persistent
enough,
you will
cave.
And, you know,
you do that
30 times,
around bedtime,
for example,
you'll have
a problem that
might take years to
resolve.
I might have
caved a few times.
I'm just going to
go ahead
confess that.
Yeah, well, you know, people, it's hard.
A few times, it is hard.
But generally, especially with things that repeat every day, you know, meal times,
bed times, these little islands of stability and routine, it's very good to be pretty
rigorous around those events, even during times of illness and strife, because otherwise
you get regression in the child.
And then, well, and then you have to deal with the cold.
consequence of the schedule, let's say, falling apart. It's good to have a vision of household
peace and prosperity and abundance. Like your household is a walled garden. That's what paradise
means, by the way. Paradise means walled garden. And the walls are there because they
protect you from the outside and they circumscribe a space. Right. And a garden is a place where
nature can flourish. And if you set up a walled garden properly in your household, the children will
play, and that will give you an opportunity to play house with your wife, which you want,
if you have any sense. So the emergence of play in your household is an index of optimized harmony.
That's an extremely useful thing to know. Same applies in the context of a marriage.
And I don't know if this is actually a real study. I've always heard the discussion about
the studies that show that children within fenced areas use more of the space than children in areas
that are not fenced in. Is this true psychologically true that we want? We actually want
boundaries. We want a sense of how far we can go. Well, look, boundary is an impediment to
exploration, but it's also a enclosure that produces security. So boundary as fence reduces anxiety.
And that's the same thing with stable household rules. You might say, well, the rules are
restrictions. It's like, yeah, but
partly what they're restricting is the
chaos that produces anxiety.
So now you want to adjust the
boundary so the child can expand
its his or her exploration.
But boundaries of
the abstract sort, so the principles
by which you run the household,
produce the kind of predictable stability
within which play and exploration
can take place, and they quell
anxiety. So you're doing
your child and you and your wife
a great favor by
imposing that regularity. Now, there's another way of thinking about boundaries that the Rousseauian types
and the progressives miss completely. So you might say, if you're playing basketball, that the rules are
boundaries and, right, they're restrictions. You can't do this. You can't do that. It's like,
yeah, but they're also enabling principles. So good rules are enabling principles in that they're
game rules, right? And so it's a misapprehension to only think about
a regulated environment as like fences and enclosures and restrictions.
It's like, well, you can't play football when you're playing basketball, and I suppose that's a
boundary.
But without the rules, there's no game.
Right.
And like there's something that should be burnt into your psyche.
Without the rules, there is no game.
Now, if the rules are well-forms,
Minimal, right, but enforced, like a good referee,
then not only can the game be played,
it can be played with multiple people,
and it can improve as it plays, right?
And then it can generalize to other games.
And that's the purpose of sports, for example,
is to teach you to be skilled,
but to be a good sport so that you're invited to play many games
across the course of your life,
that's a very good conceptual schematta
for what you're doing as a parent.
I love what you said there about how other people can be included.
It strikes me that if you set up the right rules of the game,
that the most effective games are going to be the one
that mirrors the actual real world
so that they can play the same game as they move on, right?
So what does that look at?
100%.
What are the kinds of things that you see
that are actually weaknesses and a lot of parenting approaches?
Well, I think you actually put your finger on it.
Like your role as a parent, there's two that are fundamental.
One is to encourage your child to be maximally socially acceptable.
And you want to have that more or less in place by the age of four.
Or there will be trouble.
And it'll be severe and it will be hard to fix.
And then your household should be a proxy for the real world,
which means that it's your responsibility as a parent to,
encourage behavior in the household that would translate well to the real world. So your children
roughly should conduct themselves at meal times as they would conduct themselves in the house
of a potentially welcoming stranger or a restaurant. You know, now maybe that's a little bit too high a bar
for the typical domestic meal. But I don't know, do you want to raise barbarians who aren't welcome
wherever they go? We had children come over to our house at one point. Their parents were completely,
they're very permissive.
And were tyrants because of it.
These kids were quite young.
They had to follow the kids around every second in our household
because they couldn't be trusted not to destroy something.
My kids at that point, they knew what they could play with
and what they couldn't.
And so I could just leave them be.
They had maximal freedom because they mastered a few simple rules.
When we sat down to dinner,
the children immediately ate all the centers out of the bread bowl.
It's like, well, we didn't invite them back.
And now you've got to think about what that means.
It means that their poor disciplinary interventions,
which were based on either lack of skill or lack of courage,
made their children socially undesirable.
Right.
That's a terrible thing to allow to have happened.
Because, look, most people, terrible consequences.
Because that means that when the children go out,
they face disapproval and frowns that are often hidden.
behind a mask. And so that's their world. Vaguely disapproving people who don't want them around for
reasons they don't exactly understand. Jesus, that's awful. That's awful. And so you're a proxy for the
world as a parent. And so you want to be stringent about what you encourage your children to
manifest and what you bring under control. And you can. If you're,
If you're aware of that, you know, that's your responsibility.
You can do that.
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Final question
here, I know
we're going to
wrap up.
For the series,
what are you
hoping parents
get out of this series?
What's your
ultimate goal here?
Well, I hope
they, first of all,
see that the problems
that they're having
are shared by many people,
right?
And that they're,
they're real,
and that there are
solutions,
and that the series
describes
some of the actual solutions, but it also describes the process by which solutions to many
problems can be generated, which is even more useful. You know, how do you identify a problem in the
household? Well, something that's disruptive occurs with regularity. You know, here's another take.
People often focus their attention on the exceptional happenings in their life, Christmas or vacation,
some special occasion.
But your life is what repeats.
So I've had clients, for example,
who had a war with their child for 25 minutes
every night when they put them to bed for like five years.
That's their whole relationship.
So it repeats every day.
You want to get everything that repeats every day, right.
Smooth functioning, right?
Because that's your life.
You know, one of the things you can do,
with your wife, for example, is negotiate how you greet each other when you come home.
Because you come home likely every day or even several times every day.
You know, and if the situation is that we'll do a stereotype here,
mothers at home taking care of the kids, the father comes home,
and the second he steps in, he's met with a litany of complaints
and an insane boatload of responsibility, that's a pathway to,
associating home with resentment forever, right?
Figure it out.
It's like, how do you make the transition?
Because you do it every day.
You know, you can do the math.
Maybe you come home, the transition to come home,
let's call that 20 minutes a day.
So that's 105, let's say 120 minutes a week.
That's two hours a week.
That's eight hours a month.
So that's a work day a year.
That's 12 work days a year.
That's the amount of time you're spending. Half a month of days coming home. Right. Okay, so half a month,
you get 24 of those things right. 24. That's all. Your life is in order. Wow. Yeah, yeah. Arithmetic,
man, it's very useful. You know, one of the things, of course, this is what you do, but bringing our minds into
our parenting in a more strategic way, I think a lot of people parent by emotion, and that's part of it, but it's
to hear this sort of stepping back and looking, thinking, what are the trends? How does this
turn out over time, repeat it on, say, every single day. Every single day, man. It's a huge impact.
Well, and you want to think, it's like, okay, what relationship do I want with my children? This is a lifelong
relationship. Your children want more than anything to have the best relationship with you than anyone
has ever had in their life. That's what they're offering. And you could have that. And then you
you could think about what that would mean over the whole course of your life, right into your old age.
And then you could think, okay, I'm going to start running my household on that principle today.
And I'm going to be stringent about it because I want this to work.
Right.
I want the world to open up to my kids.
I want them to want to be around me when they leave and become adults.
I want to see my grandkids.
I want the household to thrive, you know.
and then you, having established that aim and thought it through, well, then you can detect deviations and negotiate with your wife and your kids to course correct.
And your kids will love that.
Like the kids will push against interventionist attention, let's say.
But that's mostly to test it.
One of the things we learned with my son in particular, who was a more assertive and competitive person in some ways, especially when he was young than my daughter,
was a very easy child until she became ill.
Julian would start to fray at the edges
because he was a pushy little rat.
And my wife and I would get together and say,
okay, that kid he's starting to fray a bit.
So like two weeks, he's not getting away with anything, right?
And so we'd link arms and vow to be a united front.
And every single time, it was quite shocking
because I didn't really realize this would happen.
Every single time he liked us better.
It was market.
Like he thrived with that attention
because that discriminating attention is
that's the capital that you offer your children.
There's nothing they want more than your attention.
Your differentiated attention.
And so use it.
Use it for the good.
And you say this in your sort of teaser episode.
I mean, what an honor to have that role, to embrace it.
It's hard.
But in the end, so rewarding,
just like you really can.
in your series. Dr. Peterson, thank you so much for joining us. My pleasure. Thanks very much for the
invitation and the opportunity. That was Dr. Jordan Peterson and talking about his new Daily Wire
series, Parenting, and this has been a weekend edition of Morning Wire.
