Something You Should Know - Fascinating Stories of Christmas Customs & The Art of Talking with Children - SYSK Choice
Episode Date: December 21, 2024Restaurants are crawling with germs. It’s not all the restaurant’s fault – where there are people, there are going to be germs. This episode begins with a look at the germiest things in restaura...nts that you may want to avoid touching or at least wipe down. https://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/11/19/germ-infested-areas-restaurants_n_2159281.html Christmas is chock full of customs. We travel home for the holidays, we wrap Christmas gifts, we eat Christmas foods, we sing Christmas songs, and the list of customs goes on and on. Joining me to explain why we have these customs and where they came from is Brian Earl. He is host of the Christmas Past podcast https://christmaspastpodcast.com/podcast/ and author of the book Christmas Past: The Fascinating Stories Behind Our Favorite Holiday’s Traditions (https://amzn.to/3FoB3bt). It’s a great segment for anyone who loves Christmas. Talking with children is different than talking to other adults – or at least it should be. That’s according to my guest Rebecca Rolland, a speech pathologist, Harvard lecturer, and author of the book The Art of Talking with Children (https://amzn.to/3Y2nYgd). You will want to hear this conversation if you will be spending time with children during the holidays. It will provide great insight into how to have wonderful conversations with kids that benefit them and you. You have seen the sign that says, “Buy one, get one free” – right? And while that sounds enticing, it isn’t always such a great deal. Listen as I reveal some retail psychology that you need to be aware of. https://www.businessinsider.com/7-way-stores-trick-you-into-making-impulse-purchases-2012-5?op=1 PLEASE SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS!!! INDEED: Get a $75 SPONSORED JOB CREDIT to get your jobs more visibility at https://Indeed.com/SOMETHING Support our show by saying you heard about Indeed on this podcast. Terms & conditions apply. AURA: Save on the perfect gift by visiting https://AuraFrames.com to get $35-off Aura’s best-selling Carver Mat frames by using promo code SOMETHING at checkout! SHOPIFY: Sign up for a $1 per-month trial period at https://Shopify.com/sysk . Go to SHOPIFY.com/sysk to grow your business – no matter what stage you’re in! MINT MOBILE: Cut your wireless bill to $15 a month at https://MintMobile.com/something! $45 upfront payment required (equivalent to $15/mo.). New customers on first 3 month plan only. Additional taxes, fees, & restrictions apply. HERS: Hers is changing women's healthcare by providing access to GLP-1 weekly injections with the same active ingredient as Ozempic and Wegovy, as well as oral medication kits. Start your free online visit today at https://forhers.com/sysk DELL: It's your last chance to snag Dell Technologies’ lowest prices of the year before the holidays! If you've been waiting for an AI-ready PC, this is their biggest sale of the year! Shop now at https://Dell.com/deals PROGRESSIVE: The Name Your Price tool from Progressive can help you save on car insurance! You just tell Progressive what you want to pay and get options within your budget. Try it today at https://Progressive.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Today on Something You Should Know, the germiest things you're likely to touch in a restaurant,
then the backstories of some of your favorite Christmas customs,
and how trains completely changed Christmas in the 1800s.
Now that rail travel was not only possible, but also pretty affordable to most people,
Christmas was instantly rebranded.
If you moved to the city for a job, you could come home for Christmas.
If you lived in the city, you could have goods shipped in from the farms for Christmas.
That changed everything.
Also, the traps retailers use to get you to spend more money,
and how to talk with children.
It's not always as easy as you think.
So we really want to get away from this typical dynamic,
which is the adult is the expert
and the child is someone who needs to learn something.
But actually, the insights that children have,
the ways they think about things,
can actually help us be more creative,
can help us be more playful.
All this today on Something You Should Know. things can actually help us be more creative, can help us be more playful.
All this today on Something You Should Know.
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Today, Something You Should Know with Mike Carruthers.
Hello, welcome to Something You Should Know.
I came across this article at huffingtonpost.com.
It's a couple of years old and things may have changed
with COVID since we're a little more conscientious,
but restaurants, restaurants are public places.
So it should come as no surprise
that there are a lot of public germs in restaurants.
And unfortunately, those germs are on items
that are really hard to avoid.
Here are the dirtiest spots in a restaurant.
Your seat, the menus, lemon wedges, salt and pepper shakers, the table itself, the rim of your glass,
the bathroom door handles, the faucets in the bathroom, ketchup bottles, and the salad bar tongs.
Now, as germy as restaurants are, you'd probably pick up even more germs at the gas station.
The handles of gas pumps have been found to be some of the filthiest things out there.
And that is something you should know.
And that is something you should know. Christmas is a holiday with a lot of traditions, from putting up the Christmas tree, to singing
holiday songs, eating holiday food, wearing holiday clothes, wrapping gifts, and on and
on and on.
Each one of these Christmas traditions started somewhere, at some point, with someone.
And those stories behind how they got started are often really interesting, even though
they're not always widely known.
Here to discuss how many of our Christmas traditions got started is Brian Earle.
Brian is a designer, a writer, and a podcaster.
He's host of the Christmas Past Podcast, which has been around about as long as this podcast has since 2016
Brian also has a wonderful book out called Christmas Past the fascinating stories behind our favorite holidays
Traditions. Hey Brian, welcome to something you should know Merry Christmas. Hi. Thanks so much for having me
So maybe a good place to start is with Merry Christmas. Why do we say Merry Christmas. Hi, thanks so much for having me. So maybe a good place to start is with Merry Christmas.
Why do we say Merry Christmas?
Well, the short answer is that we used to say Merry Christmas
and then a lot of people wanted to move away from doing that.
In England, when the Puritans were in power,
they banned Christmas.
And then after the restoration, it came back in.
It kind of came limping back into public consciousness. It had kind of gotten wiped out, and it worked its way
back into the culture slowly. And up until around the Victorian period, Christmas was something that
we celebrated kind of like the way we celebrate, say, Halloween or the Fourth of July or Mardi Gras,
meaning an external and outside kind of celebration for communities to celebrate in the
streets rather than ones that families celebrate in their homes. And it had sort of taken on a
reputation of being kind of a drunken, carousing kind of holiday. Anyway, the upper class,
when they decided they wanted to domesticate Christmas, if you like. They wanted to move away from saying
Merry Christmas because it was associated with that merry-making, that kind of celebration style
of the common people and wanted to add the high-class touch of Happy Christmas. And indeed,
in George III's radio address, he started using Happy Christmas at the end of that as a way to
socialize that idea. But it's interesting that the word Mary, at least in the English language,
it seems to exist only to continue wishing one another
a happy holiday season.
Like when else do you use that word
unless you're describing a merry-go-round
or saying the more the merrier?
It's one of these antiquated fossilized words
that we trot out for six weeks out of the year,
and that's pretty much all it's good for.
This idea of, or the concept that we have now of
Christmas of Santa and Christmas tree and presents and when did that really
gel? When did that what are we think of Christmas become Christmas? Yeah I mean
first of all I like the way you frame the question what we think of as
Christmas because Christmas isn't one thing it's kind of it's gone through so
many different versions and this the Christmas we celebrate is just the current version. It won't be the last. And it
certainly wasn't the first. It all started to gel around the middle of the 19th century.
Before the Civil War, one in every three Americans was a farmer, right? And then as we became more
industrial, just the economy was changing, more goods were being made in factories and shipped to stores, store-bought items became a big thing. As did the print media, the number of daily newspapers,
something like triple during the late 19th to early 20th centuries, and that created new
avenues for advertising and also an avenue to socialize an idea about Christmas. Because prior
to certain communities didn't celebrate Christmas at all, Or if they did, it was highly regionalized and very specific to that area. The idea of Christmas is just
one thing that we all kind of understand what it is and how you celebrate it. That could
only be true if there was a mass media to propagate ideas like that. And as a matter
of fact, in 1849, it was Queen Victoria and Prince Albert who were shown in Godey's women's magazine
as celebrating Christmas around a Christmas tree. Now Christmas trees have been around for a long,
long time, but they were never popular until that point. And then it was the next year
that it became the must-have Christmas accessory on that side of the Atlantic.
Over here, Franklin Pierce was our president during that time. He had the first
national Christmas tree.
And then it was several decades later when Christmas trees were grown
as a commercial crop that they truly became as ubiquitous as they are now.
Isn't it also true that department stores in the metropolitan
big city department stores also changed
the way we do Christmas in some ways?
Department store shopping where you take things off the shelves and bring them up
to the register. That was new. Before that, you know, things were behind the
counter. You go into the shop and the shopkeeper would get things off the
shelves behind the counter. But now that we have these enormous department stores
and the perfection of plate glass, which created the, you know, an avenue for having these beautiful storefront windows and the perfection of plate glass, which created an avenue for having these beautiful
storefront windows and the Christmas displays
that introduced the notion of window shopping
and walking down the city streets
and just seeing Christmas as just part of your atmosphere.
All of that came into being right around that same time.
So many factors converging at just the right time.
And is that roughly the time when Christmas became
such a big deal as it is today?
I mean, you probably ask people on the street,
what's your favorite holiday?
Nine out of 10 of them are going to say Christmas,
I would imagine.
That Christmas is a big deal to a lot of people.
When did that become the big deal?
It was, yes, it was right around then.
You know, again, Christmas had kind of gotten beaten up a little bit
and was working its way back into the culture.
Certain things couldn't have become popular until we had all of those conditions
coming together.
Another one of them is right around the mid to late 19th century lithography.
A printing technique was coming into its own,
which allowed pretty cheap and efficient color printing.
And that's right around the time there were certain postal
reforms in the UK, the invention of the postage stamp,
a uniform price to send things to and fro,
coincided with the creation of the first Christmas card.
And you have to think before that,
communicating across long distances wasn't really a big part of life for most people.
The other thing that happened in the 19th century in America and in England is rail
travel. Now that rail travel was not only possible, but also pretty affordable to most
people, Christmas was instantly rebranded as a time where you can have a homecoming.
If you moved to the city for a job, you could come home for Christmas. If you lived in the city, you could have goods shipped in from the farms for Christmas.
That changed everything and really made Christmas what it is today.
Certainly our image of Santa Claus has changed over the years. And as I recall, Coca-Cola had
something to do with the current version of who we think of when we think of Santa.
If you remember the poem, Twas the Night Before Christmas, that came out in 1880.
In a newspaper, there were no illustrations. But the words are really interesting if you pay
attention to them, where he rides in a miniature sleigh with a tiny reindeer. He has a little
round belly. He's an elf in that poem. He's described as an elf. And Houghton Mifflin did
an illustrated version of that that you can find online pretty easily. That was in 1912, I want to
say. And the pictures of him show that he's, yeah, he's about three feet tall. So shortly after that,
we start to have a bunch of different artists creating their image of Santa Claus. And where
Thomas Nast was doing things for Harper's Weekly,
Norman Rockwell and J.C. Lee and Decker were doing covers for the Saturday Evening Post in the early 1920s. And we're starting to see in those images Santa shifting toward more of the
notion that we have today, that he's not an elf, he's not this gnome-like little creature, he's a
six-foot guy, he's a fully human grandfather. And then it was Haddon Sundblom, who was a
commercial artist who worked for Coca-Cola, same guy who did the Quaker Oats guy, started
doing Santa Claus in the early 1930s. And he would do at least one or two of these paintings
every year. And then it was Coca-Cola's massive marketing budget that allowed them to just
propagate this one image of Santa really far and wide. So there's, you know, kind of one of those internet rumors that Coca-Cola
invented Santa Claus. I think it's more, there's a little bit of truth to that.
It's more accurate to say that that's the work that had in sunblom did is kind
of the point that we stopped iterating on our notion of Santa Claus.
So it's more like they, they, they finalized our image of him.
Talk about the idea of giving presents to each other,
wrapping the presents, putting them under the tree,
that tradition that so many people follow.
Well, giving gifts at Christmastime
wasn't always a huge deal.
I mean, it was in as much as it's common to give gifts
on almost any kind of celebration.
But Christmas wasn't a major gift-giving holiday until a couple of things were true.
Number one, until we started getting the notion that it is,
and that was really a matter of there being more goods to sell.
You think as we become a more industrial society,
you're going to have the media giving merchants an avenue to advertise through that media,
and also the merchants
and producers themselves saying, oh, this Christmas thing is another way that we can
get people to buy goods.
So it wasn't until we get to this period of the late 19th, early 20th century that Christmas
became a major gift-giving holiday.
Prior to this, Christmas gifts were something that would be very, very small.
Children would get gifts in their stockings that they'd leave either at the end of their
beds or on the mantle. Adults would give each other gifts to some extent, but maybe not
much. They'd usually be handmade items and they'd almost never be wrapped. You'd always
just give it over to the other person.
Gift wrap as we know it, it can probably trace its roots back to the early 20th century.
Merchants would sell tissue paper,
they used to refer to it as gift dressings.
It was usually plain white.
It was often if something came in a box,
if it was a product that you bought from a store,
it came in a box, you'd want to wrap it up.
Smaller gifts would typically be hung in the tree.
You'd either hang them,
stick them in the branches or hang them from something.
It wasn't until an article that came out in Good Housekeeping,
and I want to say this was in the early 20th century,
that actually recommended putting gifts under the tree.
In the 1920s, there was an incident at
the stationary store in North Carolina,
where they were selling their tissue gift dressings,
but they ran out. It being a stationary store in North Carolina where they were selling their tissue gift dressings, but they ran out.
So it being a stationary store, one of the owners ran into the back and found some spare
paper that they were going to use as envelope liners. It was this bright yellow paper and
said, well, I guess this will do. It's better than nothing. Put it out on the shelves and
the stuff just flew off the shelves. They couldn't keep up with the demand for it, even
though it wasn't intended as a gift dressing.
And most people would say that that is the point where this idea of brightly colored
or ostentatious decorative wrapping paper really got its start from that one mishap
at that store in North Carolina that was run by J.C. and Raleigh Hall, who are the brothers
who are famous for creating Hallmark.
The traditions of Christmas.
That's our topic today.
And my guest is Brian Earl.
He's host of the podcast Christmas Past and author of the book Christmas Past, the fascinating
stories behind our favorite holidays traditions.
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So Brian, when you look at this, when you look at all the traditions that we
celebrate around Christmas time, what
is it about this that really fascinates you the most?
Well, I think in general, the thing that fascinates me the most about Christmas is that it is
so much newer than you probably realize. You think this is based on a 2000 year old religious
story. It's filled with all kinds of candles and wreaths and Christmas trees, things that
feel ancient, things that you think they must have been around for centuries.
But most of how you experience Christmas are made up of things that were produced in the
last decades.
And on the one hand, that's really obvious, right?
I mean, White Christmas was written in the 40s.
My grandparents didn't grow up with that song.
But even the Santa Claus that we know really came from the 30s.
Again, like my great grandparents didn't grow up with that song. But even the Santa Claus that we know really came from the 30s. Again, like my great grandparents didn't know that. And again, with the Christmas trees,
they didn't really become especially common in American households until, you know, about the
late 19th, early 20th century. Well, that's my great-great grandparents for someone my age.
It's not exactly ancient history. I mean, those are people I know their names. I have pictures
of those people. So
so much of Christmas is just brand new. And a great deal of the remainder isn't all that
much older. And that even is true of certain Christmas songs. You think like Hark the Herald
Angels Sing just kind of has this ring to it that it must be this really, really old
song but no, that was mid to late 19th century.
Yeah, let's well let's talk about the music of Christmas because there are so many Christmas carols and Christmas hymns and
Christmas just pop songs
It's it's almost like its own little industry
the interesting thing about that is that it did not become an industry until about the late
1930s and the logic was in the entertainment industry
Why are we going to invest in creating a product
that people are only gonna be interested in
for a couple of weeks out of the year?
And so you notice there really aren't a lot
of great Christmas songs, American Christmas songs,
prior to the 1940s.
Now, Winter Wonderland was written in the late 1930s.
The original version is no longer popular.
You can find it online,
but it just has too much of like an old timey feel.
So what changed?
Well, the movie industry came along and a lot of songs were written for movies that
either featured Christmas or were about Christmas.
This is another interesting thing.
Even though a lot of our favorite Christmas movies come from the 1940s, there really weren't
Christmas movies in the 1940s.
It wasn't until television came along that you
have this annual tradition of watching movies on Christmas. You have to imagine the same couldn't
be true before TV, that movie theaters would show the same Christmas movie every year and that
families would have a tradition of going to the movie theater. That just doesn't make sense.
So a lot of these movies like Miracle on 34th Street and It's a Wonderful Life actually premiered
during the summer, but that's a bit of an aside. But it was really during the 1940s that a lot of these songs were written for movies.
And then once that sort of proved the concept, you had a lot more of these Christmas
songs being written. All of this, of course, coincided with World War II. And you notice
the lyrics to a lot of these songs are like, I'll be home for Christmas, I'm dreaming of a white Christmas. This nostalgia for the way things used to be in
family gatherings. And that music really, believe it or not, had a lot to do in shaping how we see
Christmas today is this time for gifts and romance in the snow and and homecomings and thinking
about the good old days and all of that. They've made
an enormous impact and had an enormous influence on shaping Christmas for this generation.
I'd like to talk about Christmas food because no holiday has more food attached to it than
Christmas. So let's talk about that.
Well, one of the probably the most interesting thing about a lot of our
Christmas foods is that they didn't start out as Christmas foods.
They only became that through a process of elimination.
Fruitcake is a really great example.
In Victorian times, fruitcake was just something you had.
You might have it with your cup of tea.
It was common to serve it at weddings.
And as a matter of fact, it was served at Queen Victoria's wedding.
And she very famously saved a slice and didn't eat it to practice her restraint.
There were all kinds of legends around fruitcake
where if you cut a slice and put it under your pillow,
you would dream of your future love, things like that.
But only recently has it sort of disappeared
outside of the Christmas season.
The same is true for gingerbread.
Gingerbread for a long, long time
was almost like the funnel cake of its day, the thing that you would go get at a fair. You would look forward to the
festival having the stands where you'd get your gingerbread. And then it's mostly been weeded
out of the rest of the year. Eggnog, or some version of eggnog, right? Well, eggnog is more
like a family of drinks called posset, these milk and egg punches that are spiked with alcohol.
You'd see those all over England. And they came over here too. I think George Washington famously
served some something that we would recognize as eggnog to visitors. Martha Washington published
a recipe for it. How these things disappear outside the Christmas season is really the story.
And for each of them, it kind of just has its own
little trajectory. Gingerbread is an interesting one because I think it's mostly in America that
we tend not to think of it outside of the Christmas season, whereas in places like Germany,
you're more likely to find it throughout the year. Minced pies are a particularly interesting one
because previously, minced meat was literally
that.
It was meat that was minced up and you would preserve it by adding sugar and dried fruit.
Over the years, the meat was taken out and it was just the dried fruit and the sugar.
And we now have the version that we're familiar with today, which is usually this sugar fruit. Usually you preserve it with a little bit of alcohol so it has a bit of a boozy kick
and then wrapped up in a pastry shell. Well, word is that during the Puritans ban on Christmas in
England, mince pies in particular were banned, that you could get fined for baking one. I did
a chapter on this in the book where I interviewed this journalist from the BBC
who said she looked into that in particular,
and it turns out there's probably not a lot
of historical accuracy to calling up mince pies in particular.
And it's more that a legend spread about the Puritans
really being petty about mince pies,
you know, as a way to sort of mock
just how ridiculous the ban on Christmas had become.
Tell the story of Rudolph the Red Nosedosed reindeer. Where did he come from?
This was back in the 1930s. The Montgomery Ward department store would hand out little
booklets to shoppers. So parents would come in, they'd give something to the kids to keep
them busy while the parents shopped. And what they did is they tapped a copywriter named Robert L. May
and said, what we'd like you to do is come up with something for this year's Christmas season.
And so he had a daughter who really loved the reindeer exhibit at the zoo. And the legend goes,
it's probably a mixture of fact and legend that he got the notion when he was driving home one
night and it was very foggy and he kind of put two and two together. He wanted to do something his daughter would like. He wanted to make a story
about a reindeer who gets caught in the fog. So he wrote up the story and he worked with the
commercial artist there to kind of do a little bit of a mock-up and he took it to his bosses
and they just rejected it. They said, no way, I don't want to do this. This doesn't work.
He tweeted a little bit. And part of
the feedback that he got was the red nose. This was a time when
WC Fields was really popular in the 1930s. And they said, well,
I think the red nose people are going to associate that with
alcoholism or to someone being a drunkard, we don't want that. But
anyway, he eventually got them to agree. So they printed up a
bunch of copies of this booklet,
which it's a story told in rhyming verse.
You can find it pretty easily online.
And eventually it just sold out.
Or not sold out, they gave it away, they ran out.
And then something really interesting happened
where Montgomery Ward gave the rights to the story
over to Robert L. May, which is really unusual.
He was just a copywriter who worked for the company.
But anyway, Robert L. May's brother-in-law was a guy named Johnny Marks, who if you know the song
Silver and Gold and Holly Jolly Christmas, he wrote those songs. So he asked Johnny Marks to write a
song based on Rudolph, which he did. And it came out I think in 1934. And then the following year,
Gene Autry's version came out, which was a number one hit.
And then eventually, he sold the rights to it to, to make that
animagic movie that came out in the 1960s. So and during all of
this, Robert May was again, kind of a workaday copywriter, he was
writing catalog copy for Montgarn reward, you know, just
things like about buying, you know, the sweater and things
like that.
But during all of this, his wife was dying of cancer. And so he was in financial straits.
He was raising a young daughter who's still alive today, by the way.
But after all of the success with Rudolph, he died a very wealthy man in the 1970s.
And Rudolph, for all practical purposes, should have been just an other annual leaflet handout
for Montgomery Ward, but it really caught on.
And now it's just a central part of the Christmas season.
Well, this has been really fun.
It's really great to hear the backstories
of some of our traditions, Christmas traditions,
and where they came from, how they developed,
and what they mean.
I've been talking with Brian Earl.
He is a designer, writer, and podcaster.
The name of his podcast is Christmas Past.
And it's also the name of his book.
It's called Christmas Past, The Fascinating Stories
Behind Our Favorite Holidays Traditions.
And there's a link to the podcast
and to the book in the show notes.
Thanks, Brian.
Merry Christmas.
Thank you.
Appreciate that.
And you as well. This episode is brought to you by in the show notes. Thanks, Brian, Merry Christmas. Thank you, appreciate that, and you as well.
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Children are a big part of the holiday season for many of us as families get together to celebrate this time of year.
So I thought it would be interesting to take a look at how we adults talk with children.
Sometimes I think, and I know I've done this, we talk to kids as if they're just little adults.
Or perhaps we talk to kids as if we're so smart and we need to tell them what we know without really listening to what they have to say.
But I know for me that every once in a while you can have an
amazing conversation with a child. And so to help have more of those kinds of
conversations, whether with our own kids or other kids we come in contact with, I
have as my guest Rebecca Rolland. Rebecca is a speech pathologist, writer, and
Harvard lecturer, and she's author of a book called The Art of Talking with
Children. Hi Rebecca, welcome. All thanks, thanks for having me. So what is
it you think we get wrong when we talk to children, especially people who maybe
don't have kids or aren't around them a lot, what is it that goes wrong in the
dynamic of a conversation with a child? What we're really talking about here is having authentic relationships,
and actually learning from kids.
Because kids, for the most part, are so authentic
that they can teach us about having authentic relationships
if we take the time to listen and learn from them as well.
And so how do you do that?
So let's dive into some specifics here.
Like when you're thinking about talking to kids,
what's the shift that goes on in your head that, okay, now we're talking to kids, so
things are going to be different here?
Yeah.
So we really want to get away from this typical dynamic, which is the adult is the expert
and the child is someone who needs to learn something.
So the child is the subject or the person we're going to question or the person who has to learn something. So the child is the subject, or the person we're going to question,
or the person who has to answer the question.
We wanna flip the dynamic
and have it be much more back and forth.
So the child is able to ask questions just as much,
the child is able to stoke our curiosity
as much as we're stoking their curiosity.
So we often don't think about that back and forth
as actually teaching
the adults and teaching the children simultaneously. We often think that we're
the ones who are the repositories of knowledge and kids are the ones who need
to learn things. But actually the insights that children have, the ways
they think about things, can actually help us be more creative, can help us be
more playful if we're able to actually take the time
and have those back and forth conversations.
So give me an example of that.
Yeah, so one time I was with my daughter
in the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston
and we were looking at the mummy exhibits.
And we were staring at them for a while,
and she asked me,
well, where did the mummies go? And I said to her,
well, they're right here. They're right in front of us. And she said, no, I don't mean
that. I mean kind of where they went, kind of their souls or their spirits. She didn't
use that word. And I said that I didn't know. And I asked her, you know, what did you think?
And she was wondering, well, where did they go before they were born? That was her next question.
And then she wondered, well, where were you before you were born?
So she had a series of these questions that made me actually reflect and say,
I'm actually not sure about that.
I've never thought about where I was or who I was before I was myself.
And I asked her, I turned it around and said, what do you think?
And she said, I still remember this.
She said, well, I was an old man,
and I got sick of being so old,
and so I turned into a baby again.
And I thought that was so interesting and philosophical.
She just said it completely with a straight face
and really made me reflect on,
well, how much children often think about things
in quite different ways than we do
and in ways
that are really profound, if we can take the time to listen.
You mentioned that we often have this dynamic of the adult is the expert, but what else
do we tend to do wrong when we talk to kids?
What else are we missing by not really paying attention to the type of person
we're talking to, which is a child.
Yeah, so oftentimes we come in very much
with our own agendas, and the child
comes with their own agenda.
And often, the two of us never actually meet.
So one example of this would be a child comes and says,
look at my toy robot.
He's running out of batteries.
And we say, OK, it's time to go to soccer practice,
or it's time to go see your grandmother.
And the child says, but look, it can go upside down.
And we say, OK, where are your shoes?
So you can see this dynamic playing out,
especially with children.
But really, you can think about this also as playing out
sometimes with adults.
When we have these two differing agendas, it might sound as if we're being heard.
It might sound as if we're having a conversation, but really we're having two one-way monologues.
And over time, if we continue to do this, both of us end up feeling not very heard and
not very seen and not very appreciated.
So a lot of the goals of what I do and what I think about
is how to actually have more fulfilling
and meaningful conversations.
And so if someone comes to you and says,
I wanna have more fulfilling and meaningful conversations
with kids, my kids, whoever, what's your advice?
So I really think about what I call the ABCs
of rich conversations with kids or more
meaningful conversations. And the A just stands for adaptive, meaning that you really want to focus on
knowing the child in front of you. So adapting to their mood, to their temperament, to their age
and their stage and even their interest. The B stands for back and forth. So
thinking rather than talking at kids, really talking with them. So actually
balancing that back and forth between you and a child. And the C stands for
child driven. So actually focusing by starting on what's on a child's mind. And
that might be positive, what the child's excited about or, you know, wants to tell
you about or even neutral or negative if the child is worried about something.
So by actually combining those three ABCs, you're much more likely to have a meaningful
conversation.
And yet there are, as you were talking about before, you know, you the kid wants to show
you his his toy and and you're saying, you know, where are your shoes?
Because sometimes we need to get your shoes
and get in the car and go somewhere,
and we can't stop and have a meaningful conversation
with the child.
Yes, definitely.
And I've been there.
I'm also a mom myself of two kids.
And so I'm not saying, for example,
that we never have these logistical conversations.
Sometimes we need to.
But what I would like to think about
is how can we not have these mostly?
How can we make sure, at least a couple of times a day,
that whatever child is in your life,
you take the time to move away from that type
of logistical conversation and really have
more of this back and forth?
Well, I think any parent, anybody
who has kids in their life knows that so much of the conversation
is about, let's get things done.
You need to clean your room or get dressed or brush your teeth.
It's all about getting things done
rather than sitting and talking about something
deeper or more meaningful?
Definitely. Yeah, so that's what I've seen as well. And I think that what's so interesting is actually it's not just at school that kids are learning. So we actually know that kids, they did a study that
kids are only in school about 15% of their waking hours. And so actually, kids are learning from
each other, from us, from these conversations all the time.
So we actually have the chance to move
beyond what's really in the here and now
to do a lot more of this imaginative work,
to think about predicting the future,
talking about the past.
And these are actually so important
for children's well-being,
as well as for their school success.
And how do you know that? I mean, it sounds like it's probably true, but is there research that supports what you just said?
Yes, there's a ton of research. And a lot of this goes into many different areas of children's
development. Just as one example, there's something called emotional reminiscing, which is where you talk in pretty detailed
and using a lot of emotional words to children about their past experiences.
So things like if they went to the doctor, you're going to ask them to talk about it in a detailed way.
What did it look like? How did it feel? And talk about how they tried to cope.
For example, what did you do when the doctor gave you a shot?
That kind of thing.
And research has found that this kind of talk
actually really helps children be less anxious and less
depressed, and even changes their experiences
of painful memories.
So we actually know that talking about memories,
and especially focusing on coping strategies
supports children in coping better
and actually feeling better about what happened in the past.
What else about these kinds of conversations
do you think adults don't get?
Because, you know, we were once kids,
it seems like we should somehow instinctively know
how these conversations should go, and yet we don't. Yes, I think a lot of times there's so
much of a push in our society to think about sort of academics first or
knowledge of, you know, colors, of numbers, of facts, that we forget that even if
kids don't know those particular things right now, they're often
thinking about other very interesting things.
And we can think back often as kids, you could spend hours staring at water dripping and
looking at wondering questions like, I wonder how long it's going to drip for, or I wonder
what happens at the end, or how much it could go on until it overflows. So actually helping realize just how curious kids are even at older ages and younger ages
can help us get away from some of those more rote questioning strategies, like how many
are there or what color is this, those kinds of things.
Well, I would imagine that how you talk to kids changes as kids age and so how does that
change?
How as kids get older, how should you change the way you talk to them?
Yeah, so a lot of times I think about a couple of different factors as changing.
The first is how concrete you are.
So as kids get older, you can tend to focus less on what you hear and see right in front of you.
And you can talk about things more abstractly.
That changes as kids develop and as they're
able to think more in the abstract.
And younger children, you can also think abstractly.
But oftentimes, you want to start from something
that you see right in front of you, just like I was talking about the mummies in the past.
Similarly, you can also do more predicting and going back into the past,
remembering, especially with older children. So you can go kind of further
and further out into the future and the past. Whereas with younger children, you
tend to stick more to things that were more immediate
because they're more in their closer memories.
But at the same time, you can always
think about trying to stretch a child to see how they react.
And if they seem like this is out of their comprehension
or too difficult, you can always cut it down.
But I think I always try to think first
about stretching a child.
I've noticed that when you talk to a child, it's sometimes different than when you talk to them with their siblings.
That the one-on-one conversations tend to be a little different than group conversations.
I'm not sure why or if it's important, but it does seem to be the case.
Yes, I've noticed that as well in my work.
And I think there's a couple of things going on.
One is that when kids are with their friends
or even with siblings, there is this sense
of either competition or wanting to impress,
or even being embarrassed to share things
that they don't feel embarrassed to share with an adult.
So I do think it can be so important to have one-on-one time with a child, even if you have multiple children.
Not necessarily every day, if it's not possible, but at least once in a while to really get
a sense of what's on their mind, what they might not want to tell other kids or might
not feel comfortable sharing. Are there things or ways that you see
or that you know the way people talk to kids
that really is headed for trouble that we shouldn't do?
Yes, I think one thing that I see a lot
and what I think can be damaging over time
is really this projecting of what we want our children to be or who we wanted to be as a child
onto our children. So for example, a child really doesn't want to
continue playing the sport or they really aren't a person who's very energetic in the morning or they really aren't
someone who needs to have a lot of friends to be happy.
And just recognizing that sometimes we can take our own desires that went unfulfilled
or our wishes or hopes for ourselves and put those onto our children and sort of be disappointed
if they're not that way or if they didn't turn out the way we would have wanted them
to turn out.
And I think that kind of unfulfilled desire
or disappointment can be very hard and damaging for a child.
Talk about praise and criticism, because it's
very easy to criticize kids when they mess up.
And perhaps we don't praise them enough
when they do good things.
So talk about that and why it's important.
Definitely.
So obviously kids do need praise and encouragement and they get a lot out of that, but there's
also a way in which we can take it too far.
So some researchers have created what's called the praise paradox, which is they found that
especially for children who have low self-esteem to start,
overpraising a child can really further lower their self-esteem and make it so they often don't want
to try again. And this overpraising really means things like when a child brings to you a simple
drawing or something maybe they don't feel that great about, you say things like, oh, that's so amazing
or that's so fabulous
or I've never seen anything that amazing, things like that.
And the reason is because children often
can sniff out false praise.
They can sense if we're not being authentic
and if we're overdoing it.
And this can further lower their self-esteem.
And criticism?
Criticism obviously is important as well and what I think we really want to get to is to
helping children through criticism and critique to be their own judges of their performance.
So this doesn't mean this happens all at once, but we want to support children in becoming
self-reflective.
So rather than criticizing them, for example,
oh, this part of your drawing isn't good,
or your math test, you got a bad grade on it,
it can be much more helpful to really point out, first,
things that were going well, and second, help them analyze
what didn't go so well, and even take that step of, well,
why didn't it go so well? And take that step of well why didn't it go
so well and when children are able to do this on their own they're much more
likely to be more independent going forward and actually analyzing their own
performance and that's what we want over the long term. When you talk to kids I
mean I've heard I've heard it said that you know you should get down to their level physically get down to their level that you should you know
Somehow kind of adopt more of their mindset and try to talk in their languages
Are those things valid?
To some extent yes
I think when you picture especially a young child and especially if they're in a heightened state of excitement
or frustration or upset, and they're staring at your legs or you're staring down at them,
it can feel very frustrating for a child and they can feel as if you're much more distant.
So getting down on a child's level can really support them in looking into your face, in
seeing your expression, and in getting comfort or understanding or
whatever they need from you at that point.
Talking at their level, I would say is slightly different.
So you do want to support a child in understanding what you're saying and not using too difficult
vocabulary or too long sentences, but we know that children can understand a lot more than
they're able to express as they develop.
So oftentimes understanding of language comes first and expression lags a bit behind.
So I wouldn't feel as if you really need to mimic a child's speech patterns in your own speech,
but you can always see how far you can stretch your own language before a child doesn't understand you.
There's also that tendency you sometimes see people where they almost baby talk a child
much below the child's level, like they think the child's an idiot or something.
Exactly, yes.
And we know that baby talk with actual babies can be very helpful, because it does actually the intonation helps the child
listen for specific words and make sense of this world around them.
But definitely as they grow out of babyhood,
our baby talk should grow out of us as well.
I wonder, because as we've been talking, we've been talking about this
from the adult perspective
of what it's like for an adult to talk to a child.
But what's it like for a child to talk to an adult?
I mean, is it stressful?
Is it hard?
Is it something they like doing generally?
What's your take on that?
I think that oftentimes kids really are longing
to have someone to talk to.
So oftentimes we don't see it or there may be a veneer of coolness or of I'm not interested
or apathy.
But I think if you peel that layer back and especially if you present yourself at least
once in a while as the person who has something to learn. If you ask the child to teach you something,
I think you'll find that many children are very excited to engage in conversations.
Well, as I said in the beginning, this isn't one of those topics people think about,
you know, talking to children. We just do it.
So it's interesting to hear a little more about it and maybe how we can do it better,
especially now around the holidays.
Rebecca Rolland has been my guest.
She is a speech pathologist, writer, Harvard lecturer, and the name of her book is The
Art of Talking with Children.
And there is a link to that book in the show notes.
Thanks Rebecca.
Thanks for being here.
Awesome.
Thank you.
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Merry Christmas everybody! My name is Eric Peterson. I'm here with my good buddy,
Danny Jordan, and we are the co-hosts of the Christmas,
let me try that again.
Merry Christmas everybody, my name is Eric Peterson,
I'm here with my good buddy, Danny Jordan.
And we are the hosts of Christmas Countdown Show.
We're so thrilled to be bringing the Merrymen to you all
this holiday season.
It's gonna be awesome.
It's gonna be massively merry,
gigantically jolly, fantastically festive,
as some people might say, Eric.
We are all about alliterations
and we are all about Christmas spirit.
On Christmas countdown, we love to count down
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That could be food, movies, music,
everything that we all love
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So wherever you get your podcasts,
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Eric, are you ready?
I am ready and we hope that you are too.
Merry Christmas, everybody.
Let's go. It should be like, let's go, ho, ho, ho. Eric, are you ready? I am ready and we hope that you are too. Merry Christmas everybody, let's go!
Should be like, let's go ho ho ho.
Yeah, should be, yeah.