Psychiatry & Psychotherapy Podcast - Regulating Our Emotions as Parents with Alissa Jerud, PhD
Episode Date: August 18, 2025Parenting brings love, joy and plenty of emotional challenges. In this episode, clinical psychologist Dr. Alissa Jerud explores how parents can better understand and regulate their emotions instead of... getting stuck in cycles of frustration, anxiety, or control. Drawing on exposure therapy, DBT skills, and her Emotion-Savvy Parenting approach, Dr. Jerud introduces practical tools: the ART framework (Accept, Regulate, Tolerate) to help parents stay grounded during emotional storms. Whether it's managing anxiety, tolerating distress, or responding more calmly to your kids, this conversation is full of evidence-based strategies for building resilience, deepening connection, and showing up as the parent you want to be. Connect with Alissa Jerud on her Instagram or LinkedIn Check out her new book Emotion-Savvy Parenting. Announcement: for interest in psychotherapy cohort, go to www.psychiatrypodcast.com/cohort By listening to this episode, you can earn 1.25 Psychiatry CME Credits. Link to blog. Link to YouTube
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All right, welcome back to the psychiatry and psychotherapy podcast.
Before we start this podcast, I just wanted to give a brief announcement.
This is the second year.
We will be running psychotherapy cohorts.
I had a wonderful group of therapists, psychiatrists, nurse practitioners from around the world.
And our last one, we will be going into a deep dive on psychodynamic psychotherapy, reflective function, transference, countertransference.
We will be in the process of using.
utilizing these things in a highly applicable, like, how do we actually do this in therapy?
That's the goal of this type of cohort. And also this type of cohort is just a great time to get to
know each other, different professionals. It is weekly two hours. It's a commitment of reading
some material every time. If you're interested in this, we have a link in the show notes.
It will be on the podcast website, psychiatrypodcast.com, on the top bar.
If you're getting this later, then the application process allows, we already have some spots filled.
You can apply and ask to be put on the waiting list for next year.
My wonderful assistant, Jonathan, is calling each person to make sure that they get these emails once you submit the application.
And we will be building a wait list for future groups.
I also have some different colleagues who will be co-leading or not co-leading, but we're all leading.
the same material, but they will be leading their own groups. These are people that I trust
that have been through the process before. So if you're interested, please apply.
All right, welcome back to the podcast. I am joined with Alyssa Jared. She has written a book
called Emotion Savvy Parenting, a Shame-Free Guide to Navigating Emotional Storms and Deepening
Connection. She has a background in Dialectual Behavior. I'll Beavit.
therapy and specifically behavioral approaches to anxiety.
Can you give us a little bit about your background and how you got into this?
Yeah, sure.
Thank you so much for having me, first of all.
So I'm a licensed clinical psychologist, and I really, as you said, primarily specialize
in exposure-based treatments for anxiety-related disorders, but I also really enjoy working
with others to help them better navigate their own emotions.
And then I especially as a mom of two kids, I especially enjoy working with parents to help them do the same.
And so that's kind of a little bit about what I do.
And then also led to me writing this book that I wrote.
Okay.
So yeah, let's talk a little bit about your background here.
So you've been seeing patients for how many years?
Oh, my.
I graduated in 2016, started my postdoc then.
And then I was kind of on my own beginning in 2018.
Okay.
And what was your post-doc in?
I was working at the Center for the Treatment and Study of Anxiety at the University of Pennsylvania.
So really, they are doing a lot of exposure therapy for the, you know, for OCD, social anxiety, specific phobias, PTSD, all anxiety-related disorders.
Great, great. And then when did you get the DBT background? When did that come in?
I was really lucky. I went to the University of Washington.
to get my doctorate, and that's where Marshal Linahan is.
And so I actually was a part of her two-year DBT practicum.
So first, you know, we took like a good number of courses with her, and then I was part of
her treatment team.
And so really, you know, every single week getting to have meetings with her.
As part of that, we would watch videos of her and other therapists, other DBT therapists,
kind of doing DBT, and then also provide both DBT on an individual basis as well as kind of
to groups. So I led and co-led a DBT group there as well. Great, great, yeah. I haven't done too much
on DBT during this podcast, so it's good to kind of get some exposure in that. And then it seems like
we're applying this, a lot of your expertise to the parenting role and to the emotions that come up
with the parent. Yeah, exactly. And so, yeah, tell me about the, just the,
accept, regulate, tolerate, framework, art.
Yeah.
So this is something that I include in the book,
and then I talk about all the time.
Even in my private practice,
my website has this framework on there too,
because I think this is just kind of so key
to being able to live skillfully
with whatever emotions show up.
So maybe first I'll just say that, right,
as humans, we're kind of wired to want to avoid emotional pain, right?
And I should say pain of any kind, right?
So if our hands in the fire, we want to pull that hand out.
And if we're feeling anxious, we're angry, we're sad, we want to not have to feel that so strongly.
And that's so understandable, so normal, so natural.
The thing, though, is with emotional pain, oftentimes our attempts to avoid it can kind of prolong and exacerbate our suffering.
And so I could go through many examples of that.
But really, art is designed, this framework that I came up with is rooted in both the exposure-based treatments I provide, as well as DBT skills.
and it's about helping people accept regularly and tolerate their emotions and not just their emotions,
but other things in the environment as well. So for instance, with accept, right, we can accept not only
our own emotions, but also others' emotions, our thoughts, our physical sensations, our surroundings,
including, again, what other people are feeling, or thinking, saying maybe even what they're doing.
Not always, maybe we can't accept it, but to be clear here, acceptance really,
doesn't mean liking or approving of something. It just means kind of noticing what's actually
happening and just noticing the facts, nothing more. So we really can accept just about, you know,
most things I would say we can work toward accepting. That's accept. And then regulating is all
about how can we kind of like understand what we're feeling, understand our emotion so that we can
in understanding them, in accepting them and understanding them, use that information to help us be
less vulnerable to experiencing painful emotions in the first place and to help us begin to maybe
change those emotions when they arise and aren't serving us all that well. And then the final set
of skills, right, or the final kind of like letter in that framework is T, tolerate, which is for when
we are experiencing strong unwanted emotions and there's maybe a situation we can't change. This is just
how things are and it kind of, you know, it stinks. It's not enjoyable. It's hard. How can we
tolerate that situation, that moment, those emotions we may be feeling without doing something
that we might lead to regret that might make the situation worse.
Okay.
So that's the framework.
That's the framework.
And then maybe I could go through some difficult situations and see kind of what we're doing.
So, okay, so like let's say you have a parent, a new parent who's at home with a toddler
all day, feeling deeply alone, despite, you know, not being alone. And this deep loneliness is there.
So maybe there's some frustration with this feeling of aloneness, like, gosh, I thought I would
enjoy this more than I am. So what do you do with that?
Well, first I think you got to accept that you're feeling alone, because we can't change a given
emotion or circumstance unless we're aware of it, right? So first, it's in acceptance. And one tool,
one skill we can use to help us be more accepting is mindfulness, which is simply the act of paying
attention to the present moment on purpose without judgment as experienced through any one of the five
senses. And we can be mindful of just that emotion, right? Like, oh, yeah, right? That feeling of being
alone, just noticing that it's there. Not that it's a bad thing, not that it shouldn't be there,
just that it's there, right? And that can cue us in to say, okay, this is an emotion, it's an unwanted
emotion, doesn't feel good to feel lonely or alone. And it might not be serving her all that well.
Maybe it's the feeling of being isolated and alone is making it hard to show up as she wants to
with or he wants to, that person wants to with her kid, right? And so then it could be thinking
about, well, okay, that might be a situation where we can regulate, right? We can go in,
and possibly change that emotion. It's possible to do that. It may not be easy, but maybe this person
could problem solve, right? So that's an emotion regulation skill. There are a number of different
emotion regulation skills. One of them is problem solving. Okay, what might help them to feel a little
less alone, right? Might it be possible to join some play groups where, you know, the toddler can play,
they can connect with other parents, that sort of thing. Maybe it's just inviting friends over.
It's maybe it's hard to get out of the house with a toddler sometimes.
Could they invite somebody over to their house to just hang out, spend time?
If none of that is even an option, would it be possible to connect with people over, you know, over the phone, over FaceTime, Zoom, that sort of thing?
So that's, you know, that's just one option, problem solving at that level.
What I will just say, too, that might be helpful to know is that our emotions, it turns out, are much more complex than many of us realize.
And so part of the reason it's so helpful to understand that piece, that complexity, is because then that offers so many different avenues for intervention.
So on the regulate side, there are all those skills we can use to regulate emotions.
And other regulating skills that we can use would be to maybe like change the vulnerability factors.
Maybe there are things that are making this person feel especially vulnerable to being lonely.
maybe they're also, maybe because they're so busy as a parent of a toddler, not having time to do things that help to kind of help them feel good. So maybe they could get back if they're not getting enough sleep, if they're not having a chance to exercise or to nourish their body, right? Like they could do those things, which I realize might not sound like rocket science, but it can go a long way toward kind of enabling us to be less vulnerable, maybe, to that loneliness, for instance. Okay, so what if they feel like so much good?
guilt and shame that they're feeling lonely at all. Like, I shouldn't feel lonely. I should, you know,
like, so what do you, I mean, I imagine they could feel guilt and shame for anger, if they feel
frustrated, if they feel like, so what do we do? What's, what's your approach for the guilt and
the shame and just the self-loathing, maybe even, that I should be this. I, I didn't imagine it
this way. I didn't imagine I would ever feel anger towards my child. Right, right. Oh,
my gosh, well, this could be, I feel like a whole podcast just in and of itself. I think I will say that
those feelings, all the unwanted emotions that exist under the sun are all really normal and natural
for parents to feel at times. And I hear it so often parents saying, you know, like no good
mom or dad should feel this way. And what I would say is we all do, right? We're human. We're wired to
have those emotions. And so of course you're going to find yourself feeling angry sometimes, resentful
sometimes, lonely sometimes as a parent. And what's tricky is when we kind of judge ourselves for
that, we, you know, say we shouldn't be feeling that way. That's when we can turn that, like,
the pain that comes with feeling anger, you know, isolation, like lonely, sad. That turns that pain
into suffering. Because then it's not just, then we don't just have the pain of like or the discomfort
of feeling angry. Now I've got like the shame and the, you know, the judgment that I'm layering on top of that.
And that can just make our experience so much more overwhelming and hard to navigate.
And what I will say is we rarely do our best when we're feeling badly about ourselves.
So when we get caught up, when we start beating ourselves up, right, like we think we're doing that to maybe make ourselves like do better.
But it actually can make it harder to do better because we're kind of feeling so down on ourselves.
It's hard to then show up as our best selves.
And so the more parents can use the mindfulness skills there really practice.
practice noticing, not that that's a bad thing that you're feeling that way or that you're having
thoughts about your kid, like, oh my gosh, I can't believe, you know, like, who is this kid or,
you know, they're such a jerk. We all have those kinds of thoughts from time to time about our kids.
And so not giving yourself such a hard time for that, but instead just noticing, oh, I'm having
that thought or this is what I'm feeling. That can actually go a long way, but it's certainly
easier said than done. And I guess maybe I'll add in too, right? When we're
feeling a really strong emotion, trying to bring in mindfulness. If we haven't established a mindfulness
practice, can be really challenging because mindfulness is this skill that we really do have to build,
build up to. It's like, you know, strengthening that muscle for being able to tune into the present.
And so it's like trying to ride a bike for the first time on a downhill, right? It's almost going to be
impossible. If that's your first time to ever ride a bike, you need to first practice on the flat surfaces.
same with mindfulness.
So ideally, people would be first practicing, you know,
when drinking their first sip of coffee in the morning,
when doing the dishes, when going for a walk,
like at times where stakes are low, emotions are not super high and heated,
before trying to use it in these more challenging moments
when a strong emotion is on board.
What do you think is the easiest beginning approaches to mindfulness?
Like you said coffee, like I imagine just sipping the coffee,
slowly and just enjoying that first sip.
That's a great one.
I love it, right?
I try to do that every morning, and it doesn't mean I drink my whole cup mindfully,
but maybe it's just that merry first sip, right?
So we can practice Marshall Lenehan talks about it as like Pac-Man-size bites, I believe, she says.
Right?
You know, in the game Pac-Man where each time you get a little kind of dot,
the Pac-Man gets a little stronger.
And same thing, like each time we tune in, just even if it's for half a second,
Second, to the present moment, our muscles for being able to do so get a little stronger.
And so, yeah, whether it's that, I think it really depends.
Some people find it easier to tune into the external world first, because for many of us,
we are kind of taught to want to avoid our own emotions, especially those uncomfortable ones.
And so we're kind of used to more looking outward, and that can be an easier place to start.
but it could be, you know, the leaves rustling in the trees.
It could be tuning into the beats in a piece of music.
Or just noticing, this is more kind of turning inward,
but it might be just noticing, like, what does it feel like to have your hand on a table,
like on the flat table?
And I realize all this might seem kind of boring and mundane,
but it actually, like, we, it kind of really can open our eyes to things that we never even notice before
when we tune into these brief little moments.
and again can be a tool that we can use in general to sharpen our focus,
help us better appreciate moments when, you know, those kind of positive moments
and help us better tolerate those tougher moments as well.
So my understanding is that in DBT groups, they don't do walking mindfulness.
And I've heard Marshall Anahan tried to do it,
but then everyone hated the idea of walking around in a circle.
But I actually found that really enjoyable to like,
just walk and feel the bottom of my feet.
Yeah.
And I do that just kind of a grounding thing between clients sometimes to kind of re-center
myself.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Any thoughts on walking mindfulness and just feeling the very bottom of your feet?
Yeah.
I think it's a fabulous way to practice mindfulness or to go walk and maybe you choose
to instead focus on the external as you're walking.
What other people around you in the park are doing?
We're just, you know, again, like the leaves, like I said, Russell,
in the trees. I will just know in DBT groups that walking mindfulness exercise is actually one
sometimes we'll use to help with non-judgmentalness. So in DBT, mindfulness is broken down into
a number of different kind of skills that you use, the what skills and the how skills, and one of the
how skills is non-judgmentally. And it can be really hard to, if you're walking around in a circle
with like, you know, following other people who are walking slower than you want to be walking,
start to have a lot of judgments about that. And so it can be a way to practice just that walk,
noticing those judgments when they show up, because we're going to have judgments come up from
time to time. We're going to have distracting thoughts come up from time to time when we're practicing
mindfulness. It's all about noticing those and then gently bringing ourselves back to whatever it is
we're choosing to be mindful of. And so that's an exercise or it's like a great practice of being
able to like notice the judgments and then come back. And so same thing. We'll have people look at their
hands because most of us have like imperfections on our hands that we don't love. So you can just be
mindful of that. Notice the judgments when they come up, but then shift your attention back to like
kind of just noticing or describing what you see on your hand non-judgmentally. Same thing with like
you could write the alphabet with just your left hand. Or sorry, I'm assuming people here are all
right-handed. That's clearly not the case. But write with your non-dominate hand, right? And it's
going to look really messy and you're probably going to have judgments about how it looks. But
getting back to doing it and really throwing yourself into it without judging those letters
that you're writing. That's good. So it's kind of, it's like a behavioral experiment of reducing
self-judgment, right, so that when you get to harder things like your anger or like our anger,
we all have anger, we can have less judgment about it. Yeah. Realizing that the judgment and
maybe makes it worse, right? Because then we maybe don't see it for what it is,
or we make less of it, or create defenses around it. Is that, is that, is that, is that correct?
So you're essentially like progressively desensitizing someone to the experience of internal judgment.
Yeah, and I don't even know, I'd say desensitizing, because like we're going to have those internal
negative judgments and sometimes they're going to be hard to sit with, right? Sometimes that we're going
to have thoughts about ourselves that aren't going to be pleasant, but ideally we're helping people
notice that when that shows up and know that like, oh, I don't have to stew on those thoughts on
that negative judgment. I can notice that. Notice that I'm having those thoughts and then choose to
shift my attention back onto the present moment, right? Choose to do something that's going to be more
effective in the present moment. And know that like I just, you know, this is a little separate from
mindfulness, but just for all of your listeners to know, right? Like, again, we are all human. We're all
going to feel like you said, emotions like anger. And so the more we can just give ourselves some
self-compassion, I think whether we're parents or not, like life is hard. And interacting with
other people or like just, you know, the challenges of our day to day can bring up really difficult
emotions like anger. And so the more we can just note that, that like, just about anyone would probably,
or many people would be struggling in this situation, right?
Or in other situations, even if somebody might not find this very situation hard,
there are other people out there struggling in other situations too
and feeling this kind of emotion.
And just giving yourself that compassion to, like, allow yourself to feel that way,
again, without that judgment, can be really freeing and can, again,
kind of like lessen the intensity of those emotions.
Okay.
Okay.
So some of the other skills,
that I've found helpful
that I've learned from DBT
is like holding ice
and this morning I went into
my sauna, went into the coal plunge
and I find the cold plunge
to be a whole lot better than holding ice
but I'm curious like what your thoughts are
in terms of where
you integrate that into this
sort of approach
obviously it's like a more
gripping
or like
you know like
walking mindfulness or breathing mindfulness, which I think learning those things is good as well.
But there's something about temperature, which really kind of just pulls you back into your body
in a powerful way. Yeah, yeah. So I think ice in general, I think of it as a skill that we can use
to help increase distress tolerance. So if you think about those, the different skills I talked about
the regulating skills are all about how can we kind of prevent unwanted emotions from firing in the
first place and start to change them when they do arise and aren't serving us all that well.
Distressed tolerant skills are really like when an emotion is there, how can we sit with that
emotion again without making the situation worse without doing something we're going to regret?
And that's where the ice comes in, at least in DBT, and where I talk about it in my book.
So the first kind of way it may come in, the example you're giving is more, and maybe you're not
using it as this. Maybe you're actually using that cold lunge in a more mindful way where you're just
noticing the physical sensations in your body when you choose to do the cold plunge, which is great,
fabulous. And yes, it's certainly you're going to really notice those physical sensations. It's
going to be easier to tune into them when you're feeling probably such, if I had to guess,
there are probably some, you know, pretty drastic shifts that occur in your body that can help
you really tune into those. Other times, though, ice, like holding, you know, ice cubes in your
hand, can be an example of distracting yourself, right? Just to get,
not as like a long-term solution to a given situation, but sometimes when we're so heated,
we're so aroused, our brains are kind of offline. The prefrontal cortex, like we can't engage that
because it's been hijacked in that moment by the more primitive parts of our brain. And so in those
moments, we can use something to maybe help just take the edge off of that emotion a little bit
so that we might be able to use more effortful strategies after the fact. And so the ice is a way,
we can kind of like distract a little bit from the, you know, from what we may be feeling in the
moments. You could hold icing your hand, for instance. Even like just drinking a cold glass of water
could be an example that you might do there. My favorite one of all, though, is actually
a skill that is designed to elicit what's called the dive reflex. And it's the, you know, what
tends to happen to us when we are submerged in very cold water. You may be familiar with this, right?
Yeah. So our heart rate.
kind of slow down, stop pumping blood to our extremities in order to conserve energy and heat our
core, right? And so we can elicit that dye reflex, especially when we're really, really aroused
by, say, taking like a cold ice pack or a bowl filling it with cold water, maybe adding a few
ice cubes. And then we can either put that ice pack kind of above on our cheekbones and our temples
kind of leave it there for about 30 seconds. Or we can dunk our head into that bowl of water,
which can get a little messy, but doing it for 30 seconds.
I should say for those listening that this is a skill that if you have a heart condition
or some other medical condition that might affect your heart, you want to talk with your doctor
before doing this.
But for those who don't, this can drastically reduce heart rates by about 50% or more.
I've seen it within 30 seconds, right?
I do it every day.
Yeah, right?
In the cold blood, yeah, exactly.
Put my head under.
And I can feel my heartbeat.
And it goes, you know, when I start out, because I usually come from the sauna, it's like
150, it'll drop down to 50 within 30 seconds. Yeah, right, because you're going all the way in,
right? I'm going all the way in. I put my head completely under. And I also have the,
where the water circulates, blasting into my face. So that, that, you know, water, when the water's
moving, it's even colder. Yeah. I would, yeah, for a caveat, though, for, for anyone with like
an arrhythmia. Yes. Like, the reason why I'm measuring,
my heart rate on my jugular is because if it drops too low, it'll keep dropping. And I've seen this on
TikTok and different shorts, you know, it's like people, people show themselves going into acystole even.
And so I usually don't push the amount of time that I'm under unless I have a friend that can
pull me out. And so it's good to kind of know your limits. But I love, I mean, that's, it's incredibly
powerful to drop your heart rate. Yep. And you're using it. It sounds like just kind of,
every day, maybe not necessarily because you're feeling a strong emotion. But this is something like
imagine you're really, really upset with your partner or with your kid in a moment. You can just walk
over to the kitchen. And I actually had a friend who told me because she had listened to me and give a talk.
She was about to lose it with her kids the other day. And she walked to her, to her kitchen.
She actually filled up a bowl of cold water, dunked her head for 30 seconds. And she was like,
oh my gosh, it worked wonders. Like I came in and I wasn't, you know, I no longer felt like I was going to
explode. And so, yeah, it's something we can use to really drastically change what we're feeling
inside as quickly as maybe using some sort of illicit substance, but without the harmful side
effects. Again, assuming you don't have a heart condition that would, you know, make that risky
to do. Yeah. And I would say, I mean, I do do it every day, like, as a practice, but doing it
when I'm emotionally dysregulated, I should start to do probably more. If I'm coming home emotionally
just regulated? Like if I've had like nine hours of patients and I'm exhausted, sometimes my wife
will be like, I think you need to go to the coal plunge. And I'll be like, oh, no, oh, that sounds terrible.
That sounds terrible. But I get it. I get it. Yeah. Okay, what about opposite action? Where does that
fit in? How do you use that? Yeah. So, Marshall Linehan considers opposite action an emotion regulation
skill. I actually group it under the distress tolerance skills because for me, I like to think about
yeah. That's a rebellious of you. Yes, it is. I know challenging something that I admire so much
decided to do. It's good. It's a good differentiation. I appreciate that. Yeah. So I enlarge for that
came from because as my work as an exposure therapist, really with that treatment, I'm really
aiming to help people break the habit of reducing anxiety through avoidance. And so this is me a very
long-winded answer, and I apologize in advance. I love it. I love it. Go for it. So we used to think long ago
that exposure worked. We would have people approach anxiety-provoking situations repeatedly and for
prolonged periods of time. And initially, we believe that the reason why exposure was so effective
is because people would go into these situations. And over time, anxiety would have a chance to
naturally decline on its own. They wouldn't avoid in any way to do that.
try to make anxiety go down, and so it would kind of like run its natural course, and they'd
experience what we call habituation. But we've actually since done a lot of research, we now have a lot
of data to suggest that that habituation or reduction in anxiety is neither a strong nor consistent
predictor of treatment outcomes. And what I will say, so I'm going to, I realize one thing that
might be helpful to know is that exposure therapy really is a form of opposite action.
opposite action is essentially doing the exact opposite of what your emotions are pulling for.
So what anxiety usually pulls for is avoidance.
And so exposure therapy is doing that opposite.
We approach instead of a void.
So you were going to jump in.
It looked like a minute ago.
Oh, no, I'm really interested in, yeah, what is the most important aspect of exposure therapy to make it work the best?
because so many of our patients have anxiety,
and I think this is going to be really helpful for the audience to hear from an expert.
So, yeah, go for it.
So we now think that the more critical ingredient,
the secret sauce to exposure therapy,
is increasing distress tolerance.
Because if you think about it,
anxiety is this normal, natural emotion.
We all feel at times.
And what I aim to do in treatment with people is to help them learn to develop a new
relationship with anxiety, where they can feel anxiety no matter how intensely it happens to show up,
no matter how long it happens to stick around for, and not need to do anything to try to fight it
or make it go away. They can allow that anxiety to tag along for the ride, still do what's
effective for them and important to them. And that's in general what we now think of as being the
most critical ingredient within kind of that reduction in anxiety that sometimes occurs. Sometimes it just
does occur, right? You approach a situation many, many times.
don't make it go away. You build those muscles for tolerating distress, and what do you know?
Over time, anxiety does go down. When that happens, though, I like to think of that as a bonus side
effect of exposure or like icing on the cake. It's not essential. It's kind of nice when it happens,
but that's not what we're aiming for. And one of the other reasons I say it's not what we're aiming for
is you can probably imagine a situation where somebody starts to see exposures as a way to avoid anxiety.
Oh, I feel anxious now. So I'm going to do an exposure.
so that I don't have to feel this way anymore, right?
And so that anxiety, the exposure in and of itself can start to almost function as
what we would call a ritual or avoidance behavior.
I want to help people learn to say, like, ah, I feel anxiety.
How fabulous.
This is another opportunity for me to like learn that I can tolerate that anxiety and distress.
And so that's kind of what brings me then to talking about opposite action and why I view
it more as a distress-tolerant skill.
we know that people get better in exposure therapy even if anxiety never decreases even if anxiety gets
high they can still again get better do great in exposure therapy right and so we could talk more
about that if you want but because of that again opposite action whether that's exposure therapy
or some other form of opposite action opposite action for anger that emotion may not necessarily budge
for me that's not the kind of the barometer for success it's more can i do what's effective can i act
opposite to that emotion not given to the urges that come with that emotion and tolerate the emotion
in the process so that's why i think of it more as a distress tolerance skill plus we can't really
act opposite to a given emotion unless it's already there right like i can't act opposite
to anxiety if i'm not feeling anxious already and so and i think of the
distress, talent skills is kind of being the skills that we bring in when an emotion is already
in full swing, whereas those emotion regulation skills, we can use when an emotion is already
there. But oftentimes we're using it too, those skills too, even to like prevent an unwanted
emotion from arising in the first place. Okay, so, so key to doing like a, the behavioral
experiment type of thing is to allow ourselves to feel the anxiety and to, to tolerate the distress
of the anxiety to not avoid the anxiety.
What about the idea of when we run behavioral experiments with patients?
Like the thoughts that they have going into the experiment and then the thoughts after
and then the discrepancy between when they go in and what they actually experienced.
And then like looking at that discrepancy, is that important?
Yes.
I'm so glad you asked that.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah. So from an exposure therapy perspective, I don't want to try to touch those thoughts before an exposure, right? So there are some therapists who won't want to try to reframe those thoughts before I give an exposure.
Okay. You know, for instance, for somebody who has a fear of flying, maybe the therapist will first try to, like, you know, challenge those, those, the thoughts they may be having about the riskiness, the safety of flying. So maybe somebody is really worried their plane's going to crash and the therapist comes in and talks about how, well, it's really unlikely that the plane's going to crash, right? Statistically speaking, how many flights have you been on in the past where you had that thought and then the plane didn't crash? You may try to go after all of those thoughts in that way. But we actually know that learning is strong.
when there is a mismatch between what somebody thinks is going to happen and what actually happens.
So if I go in and I try to challenge and change those beliefs ahead of time and then the flight ends up being fine,
that kind of is going to map on with what they were maybe kind of thinking was going to happen anyway.
But if we sit with the idea, you know what, it's possible.
Maybe this plane is going to crash.
And then they get on that plane and the plane doesn't crash.
And they do that plane ride after plane ride after plane ride.
That's going to provide more powerful corrective learning.
Right? That initial thought I had that planes are dangerous isn't necessarily true, right? I've got a lot of
data now to suggest that that doesn't always end up being what happens. Plus, in the case of anxiety,
what can happen is those kind of attempts to restructure those thoughts, the anxiety-provoking thoughts,
you know, to convince yourself it's unlikely to happen or things are probably going to be fine.
Might work in the moment. So maybe somebody feels better briefly. But anxiety is kind of sneaky.
And what's going to happen is if there's even the tiniest bit of doubt or uncertainty, even if like the chance of something happening is like 0.000-0-0-0-1 percent, super small, that's going to be enough for anxiety to latch on to. And it's going to come back and say, but what if this time is different? What if this time the plane really does crash? And so what happens for people is they end up yo-yoing. You know, they have the thought the plane's going to crash and feel anxious. You know, no, it's probably going to be fine. Statistically, it's a lot.
unlikely to happen, and then they go back up again, and then it just keeps going up and down.
I'd rather help people learn. They can sit with that thought, right, tolerate that and not have
to do anything to make that thought go away, to, you know, to reassure themselves in any way,
shape, or form. And so then we can explore that in the processing conversation after an exposure,
right? So that's where we can maybe start to restructure some of those beliefs. Like how, so,
you know, beforehand, you were telling me, you thought it was really likely that this
plane could crash, and now you, or that when you would fly one day, a plane would crash, and now you've flown,
you know, 15 times. And none of those planes have crashed, even though you weren't doing any of the
behaviors that previously you thought you needed to do in order to stay safe on a plane, right?
What are you thinking now about planes? And, you know, like, how do you feel about them?
How safe do you think they are now? So we can explore that. And then how did that shift occur, right?
How is it that you've come to this place where planes no longer seem as dangerous to you?
Okay.
Okay.
So now let's think about how to apply that to parents.
Okay.
And maybe some of the, what would be common, like, anxiety provoking things for parents to imagine.
I mean, the first thing I think about is, like, I have some clients who are just afraid of having kids at all, right?
Like, oh gosh, I'm going to have kids.
And I have a couple clients who their own childhoods were so awful that they would, it's almost like imagining bringing a child into a world where their child would be in a situation that might be as awful as their situation.
It's like they don't even want to consider it almost, but they do want it.
It's like they have this drive to have a child, but also this incredible fear to have a child.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Any thoughts?
Yeah.
I mean, really at the end of the day, what's neat about exposure therapy is that we don't have to reinvent the wheel, regardless of the fear, right?
So because anxiety can show up in so many different ways.
Sometimes there was an ice cream store that used to exist near me called Little Babies, and they would have all sorts of different flavors of ice cream.
They would have your vanilla, your chocolate, your strawberry, but then they would have like pizza flavored ice cream and ranch flavored ice cream, saracha flavored ice cream, right?
These bizarre flavors.
No matter to the flavor, though, you would eat it the same way, right?
Either in a bowl or on a cone.
And the same idea with anxiety, right, that we can have the more common flavors of anxiety
as well as these, like, you know, maybe less common flavors of how anxiety might show up.
But we're going to take the same approach.
And so for me, what tends to fuel anxiety is uncertainty, right?
We don't know how the future is going to look if you have kids.
For sure, we don't.
rather than try to convince you that it's going to be better that you're going to do just fine as a parent,
when in reality you're probably going to make mistakes, maybe not the same mistakes your parent made,
but we all make mistakes as parents.
So rather than try to convince you otherwise, we could sit with the possibility, you know what?
Like maybe it's not a good idea to have kids, right?
Maybe.
But just because it might not be a good idea, does that mean that you then can't have kids?
Could you still have kids anyway?
choose to do what's effective and skillful and, you know, and see kind of to your point on these
behavioral experiments, we'll never know unless we give it a try. So that would be an example. But I think
other common scenario, so for instance, my son has a pretty severe egg allergy. And we decided
the summer to send him to summer camp for the first time because he really wanted to go. And the initial
camp we were going to send him to. We decided we couldn't do. It's where my daughter goes, but
they're like an hour and a half away from the nearest hospital. If he had an anaphylactic reaction,
it would be really dangerous for him. We decide, and they also like couldn't, the kitchen wasn't
able to accommodate him really fully. We decided to send him to another camp that serves eggs on most
mornings, but that, you know, could really accommodate well, could make sure he had vegan food
that was prepped separately from other food. And that was only 15 minutes from a hospital.
But we also knew it was possible. He could still.
have an anaphylactic reaction while at camp, right? And so a lot of the work that I had to do
for myself was to accept might happen. I knew we had taken reasonable steps to reduce the likelihood
of that happening. But beyond that, it wasn't fully within my control. And I had to be able to accept
that because I really believe, like, as somebody who loved summer camp as a kid, and, you know,
I just, I believed it would be really good for him. And he loved it. And so I'm so glad he went.
And he ended up being fine. He didn't have any anaphylactic reaction.
but he could have. And I needed to accept that possibility and acknowledge that whenever that
that kind of fear would come up. Yeah, that's great. I could see how you're actively using
your own, your own things you're learning here. Yeah. I think like in one of your other podcast,
you talked about like sleepovers and the risks of sleepovers. And I have to admit, I was listening
to what I was like, I'm, I'm, like, paranoid to let my kids do sleepovers, you know?
Like, I have, like, you know, I mean, there's like a couple couples where I'm like,
maybe, you know, but I'm like paranoid, you know.
Yeah.
And I don't blame you, right?
I feel anxious about it too.
Yeah.
Let my kids have sleepovers because I really do think it's this really important thing for them
to be able to do developmentally.
Like, it's a fun, you know, a way to connect with their kids, with other kids.
and to like have some independence. And so and I will say part of my anxiety comes from the piece
that like I treat post-traumatic stress disorder oftentimes stemming from child sexual abuse.
And so I've long had a fear of that happening and a sleepover. And so for me, right, from a very
early age, I was talking to my kids about, you know, okay touches, not okay touches and what to
do if a not okay touch occurred. There was a book I would read to my kids called my underpants rule.
And, you know, like we talked about it all the time.
So that, like, I feel pretty confident if they ever were touched in appropriately,
they would, you know, know, to tell me immediately.
And that doesn't fully protect them.
Something bad still could happen.
Obviously, there are other things that could happen at a, you know, at a play date or sleepover, too.
And I've decided, same idea, to, you know, accept all those things could happen.
And I think it's a reasonable risk to take to let them have those sleepovers still.
That's where I have fallen or where I've landed there.
That's good.
I think a lot of emotion comes up for parents in the bedtime routine and just like kids protesting going to bed, kids protesting, brushing their teeth, kids protesting, you know, each individual step that moves them closer to bed.
So, like, how do you redeem the bedtime routine?
Yeah.
That's such a good question.
And it's one, I think we all struggle with myself included, right?
So I want to be clear that, like, that is normal to be expected.
And I may not have, my answer may not work for you or for your listeners.
I think the more, though, we can focus on regulating our own emotions in those difficult moments,
the more likely we're going to be met with success.
Because what can happen is when our kids start protesting naturally, they don't want to go to bed.
And so they're like, oh, no, I just want to play for another 10 minutes.
I don't want to brush my teeth.
or like, I don't want to go to bed ever, right?
Like, they're saying that we have this natural reaction.
It brings up that discomfort in us.
And the way we want to try to get rid of that discomfort is by exerting control over them.
So we're like, nope, you have to brush now.
Or, okay, you can have five more minutes, but then we're brushing and you're kind of like,
you know, maybe you're getting a little firming or tone in a way that can be kind of
dysregulating for kids.
And so I'm not saying you can't be firm.
I actually think a firm, you know, like just, nope, sorry, sweetie.
I know you want to do this.
and this is, you know, or I know you don't want to brush your teeth and it's time to
brush your teeth.
That's so me being firm, but doing it in a kind, loving, compassionate way as opposed to, you know,
kind of really coming down hard on my kids, as I say now is the time to brush your teeth.
And so really, the more we can keep our own cool in the moment, even if we're like act
from a place of calm, even if we're not quite feeling calm inside, and this is where opposite
action comes in, right?
Like, I can let my value of, I want to show up ideally on an ongoing basis with my kids and
a kind, loving, compassionate, supportive way. And so I can do that in a respectful way I should add in.
I can do that even when I'm feeling frustrated, annoyed, angry inside. That's opposite action.
That's acting opposite to those emotions that I may be feeling in a given moment. And I can do that then.
So again, you know, you may what you decide on one night might be different from another night.
Maybe some nights you're able to give, you know, you have a little more bandwidth. You're not as fried that night.
Maybe other nights you're just absolutely exhausted and like you can't.
stay up another second longer for them to dilly-dottle. And so you decide, you know what,
hey, sweetie, I'm sorry, we really do have to get ready for bed now. And if maybe, get in there
and lovingly help them, right? If they're having a hard time purting from a toy, like,
up, you know what, I'm going to give you a helping hand. I'm going to walk you over to your room
so we can get started with bedtime. And so you can do those sorts of things that might
help expedite the process, but the more you can like also when they're stalling, not get
worked up about that or not like start acting kind of heated in the moment because if you start
coming down hard on your kids or really trying to exert control oftentimes kids pick up on that
it disregulates them even more and then what do you know you're going to have an even harder night
in your in store for you okay it's good yeah i like uh multiple warnings like okay three minutes
and then I like starting to shut the lights off.
And then a routine, like this happens and then this happens and this happens and then this happens.
Oh, yeah, for sure.
Those routines are so helpful for kids to have in general.
Yeah.
But I think that kind of keeping our own cool.
But, you know, I appreciate that you say, like, it's okay to be firm.
It's as a parent.
Is there ever a role for a parent to,
shame their kid?
So again, I want to be clear, like, I don't think there is a writer, like, I don't think
there's only one right way to parent. And so I, there may be some folks listening who
are like, you know what, I think shame is really important sometimes. And I don't want to tell
you that you're doing it wrong by any means. If that's working for you, you think that's
important, then by all means, you don't have to change a thing there. For me, though, what I
would say is, again, if you come back to that idea that we do best when we feel better,
about ourselves, right? I think coming when we shame our kids, oftentimes we leave them feeling
badly about themselves. I feel like, oh, no, I'm a bad kid in some way. And so oftentimes we're
going to then see more of that behavior we don't want to see because they're not feeling good about
themselves. I also like, you know, the way we talk to our kids is going to be kind of how they
learn to talk to themselves too. And ideally, just like we don't want to beat ourselves up for, you know,
when we're having a hard moment, when we make a mistake, ideally I don't want my kids to do that.
and I want them to see me as a safe person to come to even when they do mess up and make mistakes.
Right. Right. As opposed to like, oh, no, I can't let my mom know that I did this because if I do, she's going to shame me for it.
So that's where I come in. I'd rather not use shame as a way to bring about the behavior I want to see, but instead I'd rather use that connection, connect with my kids. And maybe that means there's not going to be a change in behavior right here right now.
but maybe later on I'm going to be more likely to have that.
So just as an example, the other day my son was he had like a thing of black beans.
We put like our beans into these big containers.
And this one doesn't have the greatest lit.
And he was like flipping it upside down.
I was like, oh, you know what, sweetie?
I think that might actually come off if you keep doing it.
Well, you know, he did it one more time and flew off.
We have black beans all over the kitchen.
And I was kind of annoyed.
I was like in the middle of cooking dinner.
And it was kind of the last thing I needed to have to do.
deal with. And I recognize that in that moment, shaming him. Like, I told you not to do that. And
like, now we have this big mess on our hands. He already felt bad about it. There was no need to add
that extra layer of shame. And so I was just like, you know what? It happens. Now you know.
That means probably shouldn't be flipped upside down. Let me get in there and lovingly help you.
And that's what I did. Yes, it made my day a little more stressful. But from my perspective,
there was no need to shame him in the moment. He learned the lesson. And he probably, like, first of all, I made
sure to not convey any annoyance, even though I was annoyed. Maybe he could have picked up on some of it,
but I don't think he did. And yet he probably apologized to me like 15 times in that interaction,
which he didn't. And I let him know, I was like, you really don't need to apologize.
Like, I know he didn't mean to do that. But he did feel, he felt so badly already. So why come down
hard on him now? Yeah, absolutely. No, I think of this scenario where like, we're in a parking lot
and my son's running between two cars,
and he's about to hit the section
that I can see a big car going really fast.
And I yell, like, stop.
Yeah, yeah.
And he stops and crumbles and cries,
but then he realizes there's a car there,
but he's still like that crumbling is the experience of shame, right?
Yeah.
Where it's like, yeah, but you're about to die.
Right.
You know, so it's like...
Yeah, I mean, to be clear, in a situation like that,
please yell, right?
Yell at your kid, because, again, that's life or death right there.
And so you don't have to worry about making them feel bad in that moment.
Your job then is to keep them safe.
And so I think, yes, right?
To keep them alive.
Exactly.
And they may not, it might not feel good being yelled at in that way.
Right.
But it's really important.
And so, and again, so, like, they are, yes, I think there's a time in place when safety is, like, truly an issue.
You can raise that voice and know that, but you weren't trying to shame him in raising the voice, right?
You weren't raising your voice to shame him to make him feel bad for running ahead.
It was more to make sure you could keep him safe.
Right.
Yeah.
And I think the other thought that I have, though, is like, okay, if we're hiding our frustration,
are we hiding from them the ability to know how they're leading for us to be experiencing them?
Yeah.
Okay.
So let me give like a question, the question here.
okay. So imagine they're doing something that's annoying and you as the parent are being annoyed
and they're doing it over and over again. And so would you tell them that they're being annoying
or would you take a more positive parenting pseudo-science pop culture sort of take of like
not telling them, right? And now they're going to be annoying around their teachers,
They're going to be annoying around their friends.
They don't know how knowing they are, maybe.
And I even see some parents like only always defend their kid.
Their kid, nothing is ever wrong with their kid.
Their kid does no wrong.
Their kid starts annoying the teachers now,
annoying their classmates,
but it's always the parents' problem,
or it's always the teacher's problem.
Right, never the kid.
It's always the other kids.
And so what role do we have?
have in that sort of.
Such a great question.
So I think you certainly could let them know, hey, sweetie, you know what?
I'm finding myself feeling a little annoyed when you do that, right?
You could let your kid know that.
But I think a few things to keep in mind is that sometimes just our kid knowing that they're
like kind of pushing our buttons or some kids might like lead them to want to see like,
oh, well, like how far can I take this?
And like, how long is it going to take before mom or dad kind of snaps because I'm annoying
them. So for some kids, that might lead them to do even more of the thing that was annoying you.
But if you can, especially in a moment of calm, talk about it, sure, you could tell them.
And I would say recognizing that that may not lead to a change in the behavior.
Maybe it's become a habit for your kid in some way to do something that you find annoying.
And that might not change right away. And so every time, if every time they do that behavior,
you're like, you know what, that's annoying, right? Remember, I told you that was annoying?
It's probably not going to feel all that good for you. It's going to reinforce
the belief that you can't tolerate that annoyance without having to try to correct it and change
it in that moment. And then again, it might not, you know, it might not actually lead to change.
So you might get more and more frustrated and exacerbated, more annoyed. So just as an example,
my daughter, she is the sweetest person and she will oftentimes when I'm like, especially in
the kitchen and I am trying to move around quickly and do lots of stuff, she just wants to stand like
right next to me, which is the sweetest thing, right? Like, but when I'm, like, especially in the kitchen, and I'm, like,
But when I am busy and I'm working, like, you know, trying to go fast, like, I actually find it really annoying.
And I've told her that before.
I was like, you know that, sweetie?
Like, when I am really busy in the kitchen, it's hard for sometimes.
Like, I love that you want to stand near me.
And sometimes it's hard for me in those moments because I know that, like, I need to move and I can't because I'm kind of like boxed in a little bit.
And so I've let her, I let her know that one time.
Okay.
She still stands next to me all the time.
And so I try in those moments to just accept it, right?
and to like see that it is this beautiful thing that she wants to stand so close to me.
I feel a little annoyed inside and don't try to change it, correct it all the time.
She knows.
And every now and then I think she moves a little bit away if I like, if she can tell I'm like having
a hard time moving around.
But I don't feel the need to like let her know.
And you know what?
Maybe friends, maybe teachers.
Maybe sometimes she's standing close to them in a way that they may find annoying.
And maybe one day they're going to let her know.
For me, I'd rather it happened that way.
Like, you know, then maybe she learns, okay.
And I also don't know that she does that with her friends or teachers necessarily.
I think it might just be a thing she does with me.
But that's just one example where, like, yes, I have let her know while also accepting that behavior is probably not going to change anytime soon.
And in some ways, I hope it doesn't, even though it does kind of, you know, just regulate me a bit.
Okay, I like that.
I like that.
Okay, so here's my, I want your feedback on my approach here, okay?
So my daughter started saying sigma this and sigma that because, you know, it's like kind of the new vernacular, right?
So every time she would say it, I would start to sing baby shark, okay?
And she like within a day, stop saying sigma this, sigma that.
So what do you think?
Good approach?
I mean, it sounds like you did it in a playful way, my guess is.
You weren't like, you know, right?
So you didn't shame her for being annoying.
Right.
You just decided to do something.
was a little annoying too. And yeah, I think that's totally fine. You could do that for sure.
And if she kept saying Sigma, I would say, accept it. That's what she's going to do now.
And I think the big thing, like both with the treatment for anxiety with exposure therapy and what I try to
help parents do is instead of seeing those moments where you feel annoyed, anxious, angry,
as like these terrible moments that should be avoided at all costs, what if instead we shifted
that lens and started to view those moments as golden opportunities to practice.
relating differently to those uncomfortable emotions. So learning, it's not about, you said, like,
if we're hiding that we're annoyed. But I wouldn't think of it as hiding or suppressing that
annoyance, just learning, yeah, right, I can feel that. I can acknowledge it, accept it.
Maybe I even sometimes let my kids know, I am annoyed, and I can choose the act opposite. And when I do
let them know that I'm annoyed, like you can say, yeah, I do find that behavior annoying. But making it
clear, like, whether or not I find that behavior annoying, to be honest, is still on me.
Right? Like not everybody may find the behavior annoying, so it's not like, and it may
always an objectively annoying behavior. But even if it is, I don't have to be annoyed by it.
And if I am, it's still my responsibility to choose how to navigate that because the only
person we really fully control is ourselves. And so if we're fixated on controlling our kids,
getting them to stop doing behaviors, maybe we get one behavior to stop, but another one's going to
crop up. So rather than see those moments where these annoying, frustrating, infuriating behaviors
show up as like terrible moments, what if each time we saw those moments as those fabulous
opportunities or gifts from the universe a chance to practice building those muscles for
relating differently to unwanted emotions?
And then, so what about if the child is like very emotionally disregulated? And I think this
is kind of like the same answer from what I've heard from some of your other interviews, but
It's like this kind of idea of if they're very dysregulated and you're disregulated to kind of see that as an opportunity to grow in these strategies, that's, that's kind of a nice way of flipping the script of like, okay, how can we learn from this opportunity, you know, this moment, right?
Yeah, yeah, and it's easier said than done, right, to like view these really, really difficult moments.
with our kids as, again, gifts. And I think when we can, we can recognize, like, oh, wow,
instead of me losing it in this moment, even, you know, I'm feeling dysregulated, my kids
disregulated, rather than lose it, which is probably just going to fuel whatever's going on for
our kid, right? Or maybe it even gets my kid to stop in their tracks and they, like, you know,
stop having their tantrum, maybe, because they're, like, kind of afraid in that moment. But even if that
happens, that emotion doesn't just go away altogether. And then they kind of learn, oh, it's not
safe to express these feelings in front of mom. And so I have to like kind of shove them down when they
show up. If instead I can be welcoming and accepting of their emotion as well as mine, practice on my
end, you know, maybe it's opposite action, maybe it's mindfulness. Maybe I bring out some other
distress tolerance skills to help me weather that storm without doing something that's going to make
the situation worse. Well, then I can be somewhat of like a grounding force for my kid instead
of fanning the flames of their dysregulation, maybe they can see, they can borrow some of my calm.
And maybe, you know, maybe that emotion still needs to run its course. And so they're going to lash out.
They're going to yell. They're going to scream for a while. But eventually afterward,
oh my gosh, like how connecting is that for a kid to see, wow, you are willing to wade into that
really difficult moment with me, not like shamey for that, not try to fix things, get in there,
or swoop, you know, swoop in and try to solve everything. But let me feel that way.
Even though you were having a hard time too, maybe your kid doesn't even realize that. Maybe they do.
But that can be like, wow, they can feel so accepted, so seen and so safe in a moment like that. And as parents, for me, like when I'm able to do that, and to be clear, I'm not always able to, you know, to stay calm in those really heated moments. But when I'm able to, it feels so empowering. Like, wow, I just did that. Like, I was so skillful in a moment when I could have so easily lost it.
That's good. Yeah.
that's good okay so it seems like there's this kind of you know a couple new challenges that parents have to face
one i would say is um youth sports and the all-encompassing nature of youth sports and then how it kind of like
can pull the family in many different directions and um how do you feel the family in many different directions and um how do you
feel like this relates to that in general and kind of like this the new challenge of what it's like
to parent, you know, with with the demands that our kids are like sometimes being pulled in
many directions, you know? Yeah, it doesn't make our lives any easier by any means. I think it can,
you know, if we are taking our different kids to, you know, multiple sports, multiple nights a week,
And on the weekends, we're at, you know, baseball tournament after tournament, soccer tournaments, right?
We're like kind of all over the place.
Well, I mean, we're all going to be exhausted.
And so I'm not saying that's if that, if you really value sports, your kid loves to play soccer, right?
Like, I'm not saying your kid shouldn't play soccer, but I think recognizing that that might
leave you more vulnerable.
So coming back to like understanding our emotions, that might think you more vulnerable and
your kid more vulnerable to sometimes experiencing those unwanted emotions.
And so I think just recognizing that can be really important because then you can decide,
is that a vulnerability factor that you want to change in some way?
So, for instance, my son loves baseball.
And he was on a travel team for a bit that, you know, was pretty demanding.
And he actually, we purposely found probably like the least demanding travel team of all,
because we know ourselves.
We knew that was going to be too much for us and probably for him,
although he probably could play all the time.
But we ended up deciding to shift just to doing the like local little league.
So, you know, we do.
that instead. He plays with his friends. We actually have a coach sometimes that like has, you know,
occasionally he'll do like a one-on-one lesson, but it's that. And we don't do the higher level.
Because for us, it's just, it's too much. We're not going to be our best selves if we're
constantly schlepping him from place to place to place for games and stuff like that. And I think for
kids, if they don't have that downtime, they're coming home from school and then they're practicing
for hours every day and they never have that unstructured playtime. Yeah. How are they not going to
serve them all that well, unless that's like truly their passion and that's really what they want
to do. And then by all means, assuming you feel like you've got the bandwidth to support that,
then you can do that. Okay. Issue number two is probably screens. And, you know,
how much screens, how long, thoughts? Again, I don't know that there's a right or wrong answer.
but for many families, I think they find that their kids tend to be more dysregulated after being on the screen.
And that the screen, even if that's not the case, it can, for kids, almost like, it doesn't give them the chance to learn that they can be bored, that they can find something to do in a moment when there's nothing else to do, right?
They can come up with their own thing.
And so for me, my kids watch TV.
They don't have, you know, they aren't, my daughter has like a phone that doesn't allow her to,
do anything other than text or call, but, you know, she's got it.
But she doesn't want to be on it because it's really boring.
It's like one of those dumb phones.
That's what we do.
And we do let them watch TV, but otherwise we don't really have much in terms of screens.
And, you know, other families will.
But we made that choice just because it is dysregulating for them.
And I want them to be able to choose something else.
There was a day one time where I was in sessions and they were both home.
And they watched a little bit of TV, but then I like let them know, you know,
going to be an hour or something like out of TV and then that was it and they were kind of going to be
on their own to entertain themselves. And they ended up deciding, we didn't have the game clue,
they ended up deciding to make the board game clue together. Like, wow. If they had just had
unlimited access to screens all day, that wouldn't have happened. And now we have this game of
clue that we play all the time as a family. We wouldn't have had it. So again, that is not,
that's just, you know, my and my family. I think in other families, they may choose to have screens
or more, I think it's just noticing how does that leave your kid afterward? Are they more vulnerable
to those like meltdowns afterward? If so, it might be worth considering shifting. And then you may
need to problem solve with your kid. Talk about it. Let your kid know, you know, hey,
I've noticed that like after you're on your computer, on your iPad for an extended period of time,
like, we seem to be having a harder time, right? It's hard to come back with the family. And so I wonder,
like, what do you think we could do? Have a conversation there. And then,
And, you know, again, I ideally go from there.
And sometimes you may decide, like, even though your kid may not be open to it,
that, like, you're going to enforce some new limits.
You know, you don't always have to wait for your kid's permission to say,
take away the phone or the, and, but you may choose to do something along those lines
or to limit the times when those screens are allowed.
Yeah, that's good.
I like how you approach it of, as a parent, notice if it's making them more emotionally
disregulated, we have, they have iPads, they can play chess as much as they want.
That doesn't seem to emotionally disregulate them.
Yeah.
Because they're using like their brain, it's not just this passive watching, right?
And they're actually being active there.
Yeah.
Whereas like, and I think there's, you know, from a lot of the studies I've looked at,
once you go beyond an hour and a half, two hours a day of screens, like you're having
issues, you know, increase.
And I think with the short form video and TikTok and the access to all that stuff,
my patients who use a lot of those things, they can't read anymore.
Yeah.
And imagine growing up as a kid and not being able to read.
Or like, I'm hearing it from teachers as well.
Patients that are teachers, it's like the kids cannot, their attention span is so short, right?
And so I love your idea of like, okay, boredom is not a bad emotion, right?
Yep.
It's good to be bored.
Out of boredom comes creativity.
Okay.
Can I just jump in for one more thing?
I think that point you noted about like, right,
social media, it's all these like quick videos and then you just keep scrolling.
And there's always one more and you just kind of want to keep doing it.
It's so hard to resist the urge as adults, right, to like want to not just look at everything.
And our kids don't, their prefrontal cortexes are still developing until the age of 25.
Now, we may not say they can't have social media until 25, so you may decide at some point to let them have a phone, let them be on social media.
But I think it's worth having those conversations with them about that, right?
That, like, this really is designed to pull you in.
It can be really hard to stop.
And, like, if you find that you're struggling with that, you know, I'm here.
I want to know.
I want to try to help you.
So even just that, if you decide you want to let your kids have screens, I think having a really open conversation, normalizing that experience.
that experience so that ideally if they do,
because, you know, kids are pretty insightful
and they'll realize, like, you know,
I can't pull myself off,
but I also don't really love how I feel afterward,
then they can open up even if you don't notice something going on there.
Yeah.
And, yeah.
Okay, the third, the newest issue, the newest iteration,
is kids' use of AI.
And so what I heard, what I've heard is that a lot of them are not,
It's not like they're using AI as the new Google, you know, Googling things.
Some people do that.
But they're actually interacting with AI to get advice on every decision that they're making some of these kids to almost like decrease the anxiety.
Yeah.
Thoughts on that?
Oh, well, I mean, that's my jam, right?
Like, that's what I'd want to talk with them about how totally makes sense, that you'd want to try to decrease that anxiety, that you'd want to, like, be as common.
as possible that you're making the right decision.
And I want to talk with them about how each time they do that, they turn to AI to get the
right answer, the best answer.
That's strengthening the belief that they can't tolerate the anxiety they feel when they're
unsure as to whether they're making the right decision or not.
And they're going to be moments in their lives where they can't turn to AI, where AI might
even lead them astray.
And so, Anne, right?
Oh, I've seen it.
Yep.
And not only that.
But, you know, anxiety is going to show up.
So what tends to happen with avoidance is that it grows and spreads over time, right?
Because each time we avoid anxiety in some way.
So we feel anxious about a decision, go on AI to get an answer, and then you reduce anxiety.
Well, now that habit, I've strengthened that habit.
So the next time I'm feeling anxious, whether it's about a decision or maybe even
something unrelated, a school presentation, a dance, you know, my basketball game,
whether I might be contaminated, right?
Like, whatever it may be,
that I've now strengthened that habit
of reducing that anxiety through avoidance.
And so I'm probably going to be more likely
to need to turn to some sort of avoidance behavior.
And what can happen over the long run
is that avoidance, again, it grows and spreads
as kids or pupils' worlds contract more and more.
There's less and less they can do either, like, you know, full stop.
They just start avoiding more and more things,
or there's less and less they can do
without some sort of avoidance behavior or ritual on board, where maybe they're approaching
a given situation, they're making a decision, but they're only doing so with AI's help, right,
or with some other kind of thing there that's going to try to reduce their anxiety at the moment,
as opposed to learning, no, I can let anxiety be there in full and not need to let that anxiety
dictate what I do or don't do. I can sit with the anxiety and the uncertainty and still make
those decisions and then see what happens. That's how we learn too, right? We like learn by making
mistakes sometimes. And so it almost like robs them of that process too. So good. So good. Yeah.
I was listening to this one person who was like, he had a nutrition background. A. I told him to
use sodium bromide instead of normal salt. And he like created some toxicity. I don't know if you've
seen that clip of this girl who fell in love with her psychiatrist or whatnot. She thought the
psychiatrist fell in love with her. And she's like, there's these, it's, it's really viral right now on
like TikTok and X and stuff. And she's like holding up chat GBT and chat GBT is telling her,
you are the Oracle. You are the one standing up against all that is evil in the world.
You are the one who sees truth for what it is. And like she's, she's smiling in this kind of like,
yeah. Yeah. Yeah. This is true.
truth, yeah.
I am the Oracle.
And so, but I think this kind of speaks to exactly what you were talking about, where it's like it's reducing her anxiety.
Probably the way that I see it with this particular case of like attachment anxiety, like, okay, it's reassuring me, you know, over and over again, right?
Yeah, yeah.
Which can kind of like decrease the doubt.
Yep, in the moment.
In the moment.
In the moment, yeah.
Yeah, but it's a short-term fix, right?
As opposed to the long-term, powerful learning that can come.
And we say, like, oh, wow, I can feel that anxiety, that doubt,
and not have to do anything to try to make it go away.
Great, great.
Well, I, in this time spending this with you,
I would probably refer a patient to you.
I think like there's a, yeah, I can tell like there's a lot of goodness that you're giving to people.
And so if people are wanting to connect with you after this, are you on social media at all?
I am.
I'm on Instagram a little bit.
I'm still honestly learning how to use it.
Sometimes I'm like, I don't even know when somebody mentions me in a reel.
I'm like, how do I even accept that?
But I think I've figured that part out.
Okay.
But I'm still getting familiar.
So I'm on Instagram at Emotion Savvy Doc,
and then they can also go to my website,
elissajarred.com.
Okay, thank you, Dr. Jared, for your expertise
and for coming on here.
Anything that just kind of as we wrap up our time,
anything that you feel like you didn't quite hit
that it's like one last little pearl
that you would like to share
to a group of mental health professionals
listening to this,
or future mental health professionals?
Oh, yeah.
Yes. Yeah. So I think for those mental health professionals, we are in this job, most of us,
because we want to help people. And what I see oftentimes is the writing reflex kicks in, right? It's
hard to see a patient in distress, a patient who's struggling with anxiety, for instance, or any other
emotion. And we want to jump in and fix things. And so a lot of times there are, you know,
tools, coping tools that psychiatrists, psychologists, social workers are offering. And I will tell you,
especially when anxiety is the kind of thing that somebody is really struggling with, those coping tools,
you know, breathing, retraining of some sort box breathing, or, you know, maybe saying a certain mantra
to themselves, those sorts of kind of things that are intended to reduce anxiety in the moment.
They may work wonders for a period of time. At some point, they're probably not going to work all that
well for people. And so, again, as therapists, as much as a psychiatrist, you know, the listeners here,
as much as you may want to try to jump in and fix the emotion in the moment for them,
maybe even prescribe a benzo so that if they're having panic attacks, they can stop.
It might work for a period of time, but it's actually going to reinforce that habit
of trying to reduce anxiety through avoidance.
So in the long run, it's probably not going to serve them all that well.
And most of the people, not most of them, a lot of the people I end up seeing are the people
who were prescribed a benzo, who were taught coping skills by a friend.
former therapist. And maybe they got by for a period of time until those tools, the medication
stopped working. And now they're really struggling. And so I think the kind or more compassionate
thing we can do, even though it's hard to see people in distress, is to, you know, to teach them a new way
of relating to that distress. If that's not something you know how to deal, maybe referring them
to a therapist who can do so. Yeah. Yeah, good. I think there's like,
exposure response prevention and those types of things I've taught me a lot about just not trying to
get rid of the anxiety so quickly, right?
It's like we can be a part of the avoidance with our clients, right?
Whereas the sitting in the doubt, whether for OCD or sitting in anxiety, can be so potent
and trying to reduce the shame or trying to reduce the internal critic of the
in the midst of that. Yeah. Yeah, good stuff. Okay, well, thank you so much for coming on. I really
appreciate it and we will leave it there for today. Thank you so much for having me. It was so
fun talking with you.
