TED Talks Daily - How to raise confident kids in an age of anxiety | Lenore Skenazy

Episode Date: October 11, 2025

The secret to reducing childhood anxiety is actually quite simple: just let kids do more stuff on their own, says Lenore Skenazy, cofounder and president of Let Grow, an organization dedicated to norm...alizing childhood independence. In conversation with TED’s Whitney Pennington Rodgers, Skenazy discusses why parenting has become more demanding in our safety-obsessed world — and offers a more joyful, trusting alternative to helicopter parenting, with tangible steps for how to start safely (and sanely) letting your kids grow. (This conversation was part of an exclusive TED Membership event. TED Membership is the best way to support and engage with the big ideas you love from TED. To learn more, visit ted.com/membership.)TED Talks Daily is nominated for the Signal Award for Best Conversation Starter Podcast. Vote here!Interested in learning more about upcoming TED events? Follow these links:TEDNext: ted.com/futureyouTEDAI San Francisco: ted.com/ai-sf Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey friends, it's Nikaela from the podcast Side Hustle Pro. I'm always looking for ways to keep my kids entertained without screens. And the Yoto Mini has been a total lifesaver. My kids are obsessed. Yoto is a screen-free audio player where kids just pop in a card and listen. Hours of stories, music, podcasts, and more. And no screens or ads. With hundreds of options for ages 0 to 12, it's the perfect gift they'll go back to again and again.
Starting point is 00:00:26 Check it out at yotoplay.com. P-O-P-L-A-Y.com. Did you know that socks are one of the most requested clothing items by organizations addressing homelessness? It's true. And it's also why we start at Bombus. Every time you buy, well, anything from Bombas, an essential item is donated to someone facing homelessness. That's Bombas's one purchased, one donated promise. Bombas makes socks, underwear, slippers, slides, and t-shirts, all designed to feel good and do good.
Starting point is 00:00:52 Since we're new in Canada, all new customers enjoy 20% off your first purchase. Just visit Bombas.ca. That's B-O-M-B-A-S-C-A and use code music. to start doing good and feeling even better. Calgary, also known as the Blue Sky City. We get more sunny days than anywhere in the country, but more importantly, we're the Canadian capital of Blue Sky Thinking. This is where bold ideas meet big opportunity,
Starting point is 00:01:15 where dreams become reality. Whether you're building your career or scaling your business, Calgary is where what if turns into what's next. It's possible here in Calgary, the Blue Sky City. Learn more at Calgary Economic Development, com. You're listening to TED Talks Daily, where we bring you new ideas
Starting point is 00:01:43 to spark your curiosity every day. I'm your host, Elise Hugh. What happens when we let kids take risks and solve problems on their own? This question led journalist and founder of the free-range kids movement, Lenore Skenezzi, to embrace the title she had been given
Starting point is 00:02:00 online of, quote, America's worst mom after she shared the story of allowing her nine-year-old son to ride the New York City subway alone. In a follow-up conversation to her 2025 talk released a few weeks ago, Lenore spoke with TED curator Whitney Pennington Rogers to dig further into why it's so important to raise independent kids in today's tech-heavy, safety-obsessed age. There are so many thorny topics that we parents have to confront as. we parent kids these days. And that's why I'm really excited to mention another show I'm hosting called Raising Us. It's a podcast from a kids company called A KidsCo.
Starting point is 00:02:40 This is their first parenting podcast, and it's for parents to help us talk to our kids about topics like gaming, social media, puberty, the environment, democracy. Like I mentioned, a lot of thorny topics. And all of these topics couldn't be better connected with the overarching point that Lenore Skenezi makes in her conversation with Whitney. Here they are. You actually, you start your talk by mentioning that you have been called America's worst mom after you let your nine-year-old ride the New York City subway alone. And you embraced that title.
Starting point is 00:03:25 After a while. Maybe not initially. But so, I mean, when you look back at that moment, what do you think struck a cultural nerve? Yeah. So he's 27 now, so I've been thinking about it for a while. And I think two things struck a nerve because I looked at older columns of mine where I'd let my kids play in the courtyard without me. I let them take elevators without me. I let them go. They're two boys.
Starting point is 00:03:51 Let them go to the men's room without me, obviously. And nobody cared about any of those columns. So I think by writing about my kid taking the subway by himself, it was basically the subway. New York City subway does not have a great reputation and people think it's hell and why would you send your kid down to hell at least without you. And then I think it wasn't just me saying, you know, kids need independence. It was me actually doing it, pedal to the metal. And the fact that he loved it, I think was also maybe just interesting.
Starting point is 00:04:22 It wasn't something that we did because he should do it, he should learn, he should be tough toughened up. It was just he wanted to take the subway by himself and we let him. It's like, oh yeah, kids have things that they want to do on their own and maybe we should listen to them and see what happens. But I think it's the subway. Thank you. Yeah. Well, I mean, and all these years later, it's still something that people are still, it seems like, obsessed with and concerned by this idea of letting kids go on their own. And so could you, I guess, talk a little bit about this for those people who are new to your work, what exactly does free-range kids mean? I knew you were going to ask. And frankly, I've been asked this for a while. And I never have a
Starting point is 00:05:02 great pithy explanation, but it is basically believing that kids can do some things on their own the way most of today's parents and certainly the grandparents remember as kids. What's strange about childhood today is the fact that kids do almost nothing on their own. And I have some statistics. We did a study with the Harris people, the Harris poll people. And they found that the majority of kids age 8 to 12 have rarely or never walked around their own neighborhood without an adult. More than 50% had never gone to another aisle at the grocery without an adult. 25% weren't allowed to play on their own front lawn. So it's like, well, I have a front lawn. You know, if kids aren't allowed there.
Starting point is 00:05:51 So also there was this really amazing piece done in. I know it's the Daily Mail, but nonetheless, the Daily Mail did an incredible story several years back. And it was called how children lost the right to Rome in four generations. And it interviewed, it had a map, but it interviewed a great grandpa, 88, what had he done as a kid? He'd gone six miles in any direction. And then the grandpa, 66, had gone about a mile to the fishing hole. And the mother, who was in her 40s, had walked half a mile to school, and her son, who was eight, was not allowed. And I can't remember if it's not allowed off his block or not allowed off his yard.
Starting point is 00:06:32 But the map that showed this just showed really childhood shrinking. And free-range kids is trying to make it easy, normal, and legal to widen that again, to trust kids with some independence. And that's what Let Grow, the nonprofit that grew out of Free Range Kids is working on. And we'll definitely talk more about some of the work you're doing with Let Grow. But before we get into that, I'd love to just keep going on this thread around how independence for children has really begun to shrink. Why do you think modern parenting has become so focused on safety and control? It's my favorite topic. And we don't have 24 hours.
Starting point is 00:07:14 We just have one. I would say that the change really began in earnest in the 80s and into the 90s. And a couple things changed back then that were significant. One is that we got cable television in the 80s, which meant that we suddenly had a 24-hour news cycle, which had never been the case before. And, of course, if you have to keep people glued to the screen for all those hours, you have to find very compelling, and I would say very upsetting content, as we've learned from later on with the internet.
Starting point is 00:07:45 And so that's when we started to sort of obsess about stranger danger. And also there were two very high-profile kidnappings in New York, my city. In 1979, a boy named Aiton Pates was taken from a bus stop and never seen again. And what was interesting about that case, aside from utter tragedy, is that the working assumption on the part of the public at the beginning was that some lovelorn lady had seen this cute little kid and taken him home to raise as her own. So we weren't thinking at all about predators. And predators then were like lions and owls. And so it was only gradually as word got out, maybe from the police and from the news that, well, maybe it wasn't a lady. Maybe it wasn't taken
Starting point is 00:08:32 home to raise. That people became just shocked that there would be this weird and horrible and disgusting and upsetting crime. And then when it happened to Adam Walsh was taken from outside of this years in Florida in 1982, there was a miniseries done on him that broke all ratings records. And, you know, the news and the media are there to make money, right? Not just to inform you and help you, but really to make money. And when they saw that this is what really captivated audiences the most, they said, get me more of these. Don't get me. Don't steal more children. and get me more content like this because the appetite for this has been on ending. And we know that because to this day, law and order, I think, has been on for like 25 or 30 years.
Starting point is 00:09:20 And every day people are tuning in to see just the most depraved and upsetting crimes. And, you know, you breathe these in and gradually your lungs fill with this despair. And what seemed to be, you know, almost unheard of in the Aiton Pate's case, in 1979 becomes something like the same Harris Paul interviewed parents. And what was it? It was 50% of parents. No, when asked what would happen if there were two kids age 10, 10, double digits, playing at the park together, what is likely to happen? And 50% of the parents said they were likely to be kidnapped. That's wildly out of whack with reality, thank God. But that's the result of this constant drumbeat of terror and despair that we are marinating in thanks to the media.
Starting point is 00:10:13 So when we think about this then, now everyone has decided keep them close, don't let them roam, as you know, as you say. What are some of the hidden costs of this of overprotective parenting for both parents and kids? Well, let's talk about kids first. And I feel bad because my pet talk was really funny, and now we're getting really somber. But the sad thing for kids is that they are sad. They are getting anxious and depressed, and we all know this, but people think it's since COVID or since phones or whatever, since no child left behind. It's really been decades in the making.
Starting point is 00:10:50 One of my Let Grow co-founders is a man named Peter Gray. He's a professor of psychology at Boston College. And he did a big, long study that was published in the Journal of Pediatrics two years ago. And it showed that over the decades, like from the 50s to now, as kids' independence, ability to roam, problem solve, play on their own, has gone down. Their anxiety and depression have been going up. And he argues that it's not just correlation, it's causation. And you can sort of understand that because if you were in a job and you were micromanaged all the time and somebody was saying, Whitney, why don't you try it this way? Whitney, that's good.
Starting point is 00:11:27 But maybe you want to think about this. Whitney, will you have this to me? this is, you know, by 502 today, you know, nobody wants to be micromanaged and childhood has become micromanaged. And the other thing Peter Gray explains, which I think is really right, is that there's something called an internal locus of control versus external locus of control. And when external is when somebody else is deciding how you spend your day and whether you're doing it good enough and gives you all this feedback and tells you what you're going to do next. And internal is when you feel like, you know, I really feel like going and looking for
Starting point is 00:11:58 bugs today, or I just want to get better at my free throws, or I'm going to go on my skateboard. When you have an intrinsic, internal locus of control means an intrinsic, so hard to say, desire to do something and you go and do it, you feel like you can handle things, even if you fall off the skateboard, even if you don't find a bug, which would be odd. So when you have this feeling like I can handle things and people try, me, and if things go wrong, I'm going to be able to figure out how to make them better, you feel great. You're on top of the world.
Starting point is 00:12:32 And we have taken most of that out of children's lives because we're so worried about them that we do everything with them and for them. And as a result, they're sort of, they're like in the passenger seat of their lives. While we, very smart, helpful people are driving them to something that's going to be really important for them, especially if they're trying to get into college. Hmm. And I love in the talk, and I promise we are going to come away from some of the somber stuff to the later. And in the talk, you say that I did it myself are both childhood's magic words and the original anxiety buster. Think about it. Yeah. Yeah. Could you say more about that? And what role does risk taking and independence play in sort of raising resilient children? I'd say it plays a huge role.
Starting point is 00:13:24 And you probably remember this from your own child. It's something that you did yourself that you thought was a little scary or you're still proud of to this day. Sometimes I ask people, what did you do as a kid that went really wrong? And I'll just tell you one quick story, which is I was at an education conference of some sort. And one of the ladies told me that when she was a kid, she and her friends were riding their bikes down this. I'm sure it seemed like an incredible mountain. It was probably just a little hill. but it was covered with pine needles.
Starting point is 00:13:52 And when she went down, you know, it was really slick and fast. And so she's going down and she's holding on to the handle brakes. And she goes to break because she's put at the bottom. And the handlebars came off the bike. So suddenly it's like, like a cartoon. And she had a split second to decide what to do. And she threw herself into a bush, right? And she got all scraped off and it was okay.
Starting point is 00:14:15 And she put the handlebars back on. She kept doing it. And I said, well, you know, well, what did you tell your parents? And she's like, I didn't tell my parents. And then when other people in the audience started telling stories like this, this one guy, I think it was a principal, got lost on like some family hike and he had to actually hitchhike back to where they were. And of course, he didn't tell his parents.
Starting point is 00:14:36 And some guy played mumbly peg, which is the stupidest game on earth where you throw a knife at each other's feet. And, of course, somebody's foot got hurt. And they, like, hid the fact that they were taking them up to the bathroom to wash off his foot and get the blood down the drain and put on a band-aid. Oh, he's fine. Just taking a shower. You know, and none of them had told their parents. And when I said, why, it was because they didn't want their parents to know and then therefore take away their independence. So their independence was just, you know, innately so important to them that they were treasuring it and
Starting point is 00:15:10 protecting it. And they were doing two things at once. They were protecting their independence and they were saying to themselves, look what I can handle. And anxiety is the opposite of that. Anxieties when you worry like, oh, you know, this seems hard. What if I mess up? If I mess up, it'll be terrible. I'll be embarrassed. And if I'm hurt, it will be forever.
Starting point is 00:15:31 So I might as well not do it. I have to tell you, Nike just changed its slogan like last week. And while they're keeping just do it, they added the new slogan, why do it? like, why do it? And it's a recognition that kids are so afraid of messing up because they're watched all the time. So there's high stakes. You're always being judged. You're always being protected. And you never have a chance to see how much you can do. So you finally just go, well, why do it? You know, I'll look stupid. Maybe somebody puts my, you know, a reel on Instagram. Maybe I feel bad about myself. Maybe I'll get hurt. And so if Nike is recognizing a pervasive passivity
Starting point is 00:16:11 in kids, even wanting to play, I mean, Nike is about playing, right? Then something has gone awry. And so if you're asking what's the problem in the culture, it's that we're taking the childhood, the child out of childhood and replacing it with adult-oriented, adult-run activities and adult-supervised activities to the point where kids are like, okay, it's yours. Tell me what to do, I'll do it, but otherwise why?
Starting point is 00:16:37 Why do it? Well, okay, we've set the stage now for why this thing, thinking about this and having these conversations with yourself and your children, your community is really important. And our member audience is so eager to hear you share more about how we actually do this. So I'm going to integrate in some questions that we're getting from the members. But before we get there, if you could just, I guess, start us off with your simple, small steps for how people can practically be. begin to give their kids more freedom without feeling reckless. Yeah. First of all, it's not reckless to give your kids some freedom. I would argue that it's reckless not to give them some freedom for the reasons we've already discussed. But I recognize that it is hard in a culture that
Starting point is 00:17:25 says, like, there are schools that won't let the kids get off the bus at the end of the day unless a parent is there to walk them home. And it could be two blocks. It could be two houses. I was actually giving a talk in, I have no idea where I was. But the audience members told me that their school, the bus stops at each person's house and drops them off at the end of the driveway, and you still have to come out of your house to get the kid. You can't wave from the window. You have to come down and get them. So this is a culture that is demanding a level of safety and supervision and, you know, help for the kids that is just off the chart.
Starting point is 00:18:04 So I don't blame parents for being helicopters because the culture is recommending it and sometimes often enough demanding it. And so, you know, sketchers shoes for kids, they now have a hole underneath the insul where you can put a tracking device. I mean, that's how normalized constant supervision has become. But the way to fight it is the easiest way to change anything is collectively. If we're all afraid to send our kids outside, you know, what are the other parents? parents going to think, is it too tough? Is it too soon? Is my kid too spacey? Is to have everybody doing it at once? And so that's why Let Grow, the nonprofit that grew out of free range kids recommends that schools give kids a homework assignment called the Let Grow Experience. It's free.
Starting point is 00:18:50 Where every kid gets the homework that says, go home and do something new on your own with your parents' permission but without your parents. And then we give a list of giant, you know, you can climb a tree, you can make pancakes, you can walk to the store, whatever it is. But if everybody is doing it. All the third graders are, you know, getting themselves to their guitar lessons or picking up the milk for dinner. You're not the crazy mom letting them do it. And all the kids are talking to each other and all the parents are talking to each other. And you re-normalized letting go. But letting go is not just good because, okay, they're getting little independence. Maybe they're less anxious. Letting go is really important because it rewires you, the parent. Because when you see your kid come back from that errand and they got the, the milk or I was just talking to a lady today, who was I talking to right before you? I'm losing
Starting point is 00:19:38 my mind. But oh, she let her kid go into the grocery and get the things for dinner. And he came out, he was six. He came out with only cookies. And I was like, I agree with that. I think that makes a great dinner. But she was a little disappointed, but also so proud because he'd gone in and he came out and he said, I think I got the exact change, didn't I? And then they're looking over the change. And you, the parent, it's like the grinch, your heart grows three sizes when you see your kid do something on their own. And that's the only solution. You almost have to let your kid go a little before you're totally ready because you will be ready when they come home and they will come home. And if they screwed up, that's okay too, because then you realize like it's okay, he got a little lost or he only bought the cookies.
Starting point is 00:20:24 And that's okay too. and you just have to realize that this level of supervision and hypervigilance is new and unnecessary. And it's not only a burden to a kid, it's a burden to you because it has made your job as a parent watching every single second. You know, you can't send them to get the bananas. That's too much to ask of any parent. You know, the birth rates are going down.
Starting point is 00:20:48 And I think maybe one unspoken reason, maybe even subconscious reason, is that it's becoming such a drag. You have zero time. Parents today are spending way more time with their kids than our parents spent with us because they think they have to be there to knit every synapse and to watch every play date and to eat every piece of pizza at every party. But one thing you touched on just now as well is this idea of getting other people involved to talk about with let grow, how you have this assignment for schools where they can have encouraged children to be more independent. And so we have a question actually from Lori C, you know, if she just as a single, as a parent and not somebody who can influence what's happening in her actual classroom, in her child's classroom, she says,
Starting point is 00:21:34 what advice do you have for parents who want to give their kids more freedom, but maybe feel judged by other parents or family members? How can they help bring other people along on this journey? The family member's a little harder, but I would say find a friend. I've heard of parents who like, you know, two women go and sit at Starbucks and they send their kids. kids to the other end of the strip mall and here's $10, go buy something at the dollar store or go pick up the dry cleaning, we'll be here. It's really much easier for your kid and for you. You're distracted because you're talking to your friend and your kid has somebody to do something with. I mean, everything's more fun with friends. So I'd say find a couple of people who want to
Starting point is 00:22:15 practice this with you. All the stuff at Let Grow is free. So I'm going to, it's Let Grow. I'm just going to say that we have the four weeks to a let-grow kid kit. And it's like the first week is like have kids start doing stuff for themselves that you've been doing for them, you know, whether that's tying their shoes or getting them out the door or let them bake cookies and they take them out of the oven themselves. Imagine that. And then the next week is getting around the neighborhood. And then there's like, do something with a friend and I have no idea what the fourth week is, but you'll find it out. And another thing that somebody once recommended to me, there's two cool things. One is free play fry.
Starting point is 00:22:51 And I actually just heard of a kid who organized Free Play Friday in his neighborhood. He went around and put postcards in everybody's mailbox. And it said Friday afternoon, like at 3 o'clock, 3 to 6 or 3 to 5, how about all the kids? No, grownups, don't come grownups, meet at Locust Park or whatever. And we'll just see what happens. We'll just play. And he didn't know if anybody was going to come.
Starting point is 00:23:15 And I wish I could remember where he was. Anyways, to his delight and surprise, 20 kids showed up, and the mom sent photos. And it just looked like, you know, it looked like the Peanuts Gang, you know, minus Lucy, but it was just kids in the park. Some of them were playing with a ball and some of them were doing whatever. And it's just so great. I mean, it fills your heart as much as it's fulfilling for kids. So that's one idea, free play Fridays, just, you know, use.
Starting point is 00:23:47 a list serve, use next door, use Facebook, and say, how about we all send our kids to the park on Fridays? And Fridays because it leads into the weekend, and maybe they'll do it again on their own for the rest of the weekend. And the other thing is this one mom in California started what she called a friendship club. And that was she found her son had like three or four friends in the neighborhood. And she contacted them and she said, how about we form a friendship club, which in my day would have just been called normal life, where if I can't, I mean, really, all of this stuff is just like, aren't we all just trying to recreate our childlets? But anyway, if my kid knocks on your door and your kid is free, you know, is, you know, Cynthia home or is, you know, Oliver home, yes, okay.
Starting point is 00:24:29 Then they come in, they don't have to organize a play date beforehand. You're not going to see this as an imposition. I'm not using you as a babysitter. Or maybe I am, but you can do the same with me. And so then the kid has like three or four doors that he can knock on any time, you know, any time of day, I would say. and they can go play outside. They can play in the lawn, the front lawn, the back lawn. They can go to the park.
Starting point is 00:24:52 And that just sort of re-nits the neighborhood, too. And I also think one of the things Peter Gray always says is that kids are not attracted just because there's a sidewalk and a tree outside. They're attracted by other kids. And once you have some kids playing in the neighborhood, and I've seen this, then other kids start joining them. Once you have a couple kids walking to school, other kids start joining them. So you just want to sort of reseed, S-E-E-D, the neighborhood,
Starting point is 00:25:17 with kids. And you do that with a little bit of planning with the other parents. I love all of these ideas. And we have so many other questions about different people within the community and how they can be involved in this. So there's a few members who are curious about how grandparents can support. So Richard R, for instance, says, do you have any suggestions on how to constructively help our children, let their own children grow without risking undermining their trust in us as caregivers? I feel for grandparents, because a lot of us can remember this free-range childhood, and then we see the kids scheduled within an inch of their lives. I'd say maybe you just, you know, happen to leave the, you know, Peter Gray had a great Ted X talk
Starting point is 00:25:59 about how free play is just so formative for kids. And so maybe if you help the parents see without lecturing them, like this free time is not stupid wasted time, interstitial time between the important time, you know, chess, soccer, and school. But it's when, you know, they're learning how to make a friend, how to compromise, how to explain an idea, how to be creative. If, you know, parents are very concerned about every aspect of their kids' lives, and if they see that free play, unsupervised free play is actually educational and will get their kids ahead, then it becomes something that's sort of speaking their language. Another thing that's really helpful is when we did this Harris poll, we were asking kids,
Starting point is 00:26:47 about their phone use, as well as their independence. And it turned out that, you know, parents are very, very concerned about phones and screens. So this is a way to speak their language about that, which is that when the kids were asked, these are kids 8 to 12, given the choice of how to hang out or play with your friends, would you rather just play with them old-fashioned way, you know, outside, no agenda, no adults watching, just figure out what to do, have fun that. way or would you rather be in an organized activity you know like soccer or travel baseball or you know piano recital ballet or would you rather um be online with them playing games you know
Starting point is 00:27:31 or um just socializing or scrolling you know together what would you what would you prefer to do and the vast majority the overwhelming majority was free play they just want to be with their friends And then second choice was the organized activity. And third choice, the distant third was being online. So I know we all complain like kids are glued to their screens. That's all they want to do. You know, once they get it, it's like heroin. But they wouldn't be on them as much if they had an alternative.
Starting point is 00:28:07 So if the grandparent is talking to, you know, their child who's a parent who's worried and they don't want them to be on the iPad all the time and they want to restrict their screen use, which a lot of parents do, understandably, the phrase that we use, Jonathan Haidt is one of the other co-founders with me of Let Grow, and he also wrote The Anxious Generation. And one of the things we say is, if you want to take away the screen,
Starting point is 00:28:33 you have to open the door. So opening the door becomes not just something that I think is good, but it's an alternative to the phone-based childhood that is worrisome. Omar B asks about how, how you can tell the difference between sort of healthy independence and maybe pushing a child into a stressful situation before they're ready. Are there, I guess, are there some signs that we should look for in the child to know that this is the right thing you're doing?
Starting point is 00:28:58 I think everything is stressful at the beginning. It was stressful trying to set up this camera today. It's like, oh, this is leaning this way and you look terrible and get closer. I mean, there's no such thing as a stress-free existence. And I think one of the things that has happened to pay parents is they've been told that their kids shouldn't ever be frightened, you know? I mean, there's people who are against Halloween because there's scary costumes. You know, fear and stress and a little bit of, you know, stage fright. They're all part of everyday life in childhood
Starting point is 00:29:34 and in adulthood. And that doesn't mean you shouldn't face them and try them. And if things turns out, so I have to tell you, so independence is being used. Did I tell you this already? there's independence therapy is a new thing, which is giving kids, as you might think, some independence to do new things if they have a diagnosis of anxiety, a professor named Camillo Ortiz at Long Island University, did a pilot study where he had four families and he talked to each of the sets of parents first and found out what was bothering them most about their kids' behavior. And one of them was they had a nine-year-old who wouldn't go upstairs or downstairs in his own house without a parent. And I thought that was the only family I'd ever heard of like that.
Starting point is 00:30:18 And I've heard of other families since then. Anyways, when the next week comes for therapy, the kid comes with the parents. And Camillo normally would do cognitive behavioral therapy. I hear you're afraid to go upstairs. How about tonight you go up for five minutes? You know, I'll give you a watch. You'll time it. And then you'll see if it was bad or good. And then we'll try it maybe seven minutes the next week. He doesn't mention anything about the kid's deficit. or the parents worry. Instead, he says, you're nine. I'll bet there's some things you're ready to do that you haven't tried yet. And then the kid says, are you kidding? I want to take the Long Island Railroad. I want to walk home by myself. And this particular kid who wanted to walk home by himself,
Starting point is 00:30:59 his mom was so worried, she took the day off work on the day that the first day he was walking home. Anyways, and then it got more and more normal. But one of the kids wanted to take a city bus. And and she was afraid to sleep in her own bed, but she was willing to take the city bus. That was something exciting for her. And when she was on the bus, her phone stopped working. And she was like, oh, no, you know, where do I get off?
Starting point is 00:31:23 I don't know what I'm supposed to do. And she was like very frantic. And the lady sitting next to her saw, like, is there something the matter? Can I help? And she said, yes, I don't know where I'm supposed to get off. And the lady said, well, my phone works. Oh, you're, you know, you missed your stop.
Starting point is 00:31:34 You have to get off the next one. You've got to walk back a few blocks. And the girl said, thank you. And she did. And that night, she slept in her own bed, which sounds like it's too pat and perfect to be real, but it really happened. And my whole point is that psychologists believe, A, that independence is important, but B, messing up is great.
Starting point is 00:31:57 When something goes wrong, that's when you realize, like, oh, I could handle this, or that wasn't the end of the world. And that is very freeing. I think that's the whole Nike idea, too. why do it, you might mess up. It's like, that's okay. That's part of the process. And once you realize that, that it's not doom, it's just a hiccup, then you are way more free. You learn by doing, by experiencing things. I'd love to broaden this out a little more. So we definitely understand the benefits that you think exist for children and for parents to do
Starting point is 00:32:33 this and, you know, others in schools and that sort of thing. But what's in it for everyone else? What is the benefit for the wider community for people without children by giving it, by allowing children to have more freedom? I'm going to give you two different examples. One is the workplace, you know, eventually these children go off to work. And I can't be the only one who's hearing the stories about young people at work being very, I'd say conscientious, but waiting for instructions. They've had so much instruction all the time that I've heard in so.
Starting point is 00:33:09 schools, the kids wait to like to fill out their name on a piece of paper. It's like, do I put my name on the left or the right? I've heard of schools where they say that a kid's, I hate lose, like pencil drops to the ground and they wait to be either for the teacher to come and pick it up or for them to be allowed to pick it up. They're so used to being programmed that they've sort of lost this get go, you know, what is it? Go get them spirit. And that's what we're hearing about at work too. You know, you have good workers, but you don't have the entrepreneurs. You don't have this amazing American spirit of like, let me try this or this sounds crazy, but. So in the workplace, you want kids who have grown up, you know, tinkering and trying things. When NASA had its generation
Starting point is 00:33:54 of, you know, boomers retire, and they had these new kids coming in, they were great on computers and great at, you know, problem sets. But if there was ever an Apollo 13, they didn't know what to do when things went off script. So you want people who are growing up a little more scrappy, a little more self-sufficient. One thing that's obvious is that when you do have kids back out in the neighborhood, I don't care if you have kids or not. I mean, my kids are old, but it's pretty sweet. You know, you see them out there, you hear some laughter, you hear some spats. It's just a neighborhood that comes back to life. And that's a lot more friendly and heartwarming than a neighborhood just completely tumbleweeds up and down the block because the kids are driven and then they're pulled into
Starting point is 00:34:40 the garage and then they insert themselves into the, you know, into the house and it's time for the reading log. So if only for, you know, just the joy of having a very vibrant culture as opposed to a very lockdown culture and for the parents who are just so bored driving their kids everywhere. You actually have influenced policy around giving kids freedom through let grow. In your talk, you mentioned a new law, the reasonable childhood independence law that makes it legal for parents to let their kids go places alone. What more do you think we need from government and from our communities to make this cultural shift happen? Oh, my. That's like, so the laws are great. And when I gave the talk, I think we had eight states had passed the reasonable childhood independence law,
Starting point is 00:35:27 which says that neglect is when you put your kid in obvious and serious danger, not anytime you take your eyes off them. And it's great for the free-range parents who want their kids to, you know, be wandering around and on their bikes like stranger things. But it's also great for parents living in poverty. You know, if a mom is working two jobs and her kid comes home with the old-fashioned latchkey, that's not because she's a neglectful mom. It's because she's a mom who realizes like, look, my eight-year-old can get herself a glass of milk or almond milk now, I guess. And that's, and I can save on a babysitter. So that shouldn't be considered. neglect either. So since the talk, the law has been passed in three more states, Georgia, Florida,
Starting point is 00:36:12 and Missouri. And now it's being considered in eight more states. And maybe someday there will be federal legislation that says the same thing, which is that, you know, we don't want, the laws right now say, if you see something, say something. And too many people don't know, like, what am I supposed to say and see? And it's like they see a kid outside. Sometimes they'll call 911 because they're just so used to seeing kids outside again. So if the 911 operator can say, is the kid okay, yeah, they're fine. They're playing in the park or whatever. That should be the end of things. It should not go from there to any kind of investigation. So that's a great law. And hopefully it will be passed in all 50 states pretty darn soon. But more generally, I think we have to do this grace thing
Starting point is 00:36:56 where we see kids outside and we don't think like, where's the mom? And we don't think, somebody once wrote and said, well, so if your child is on a skateboard and they fall down in front of my house, I have to help them. And it's like, yeah, you do. If you see them, if you have a Band-Aid, you know, you have a phone, you do have to help them. And I don't think of that as babysitting. I don't think of that as like some horrible mom who thrust her entire responsibility on you. I think of that as being part of a community. You're at the park, you know, a kid needs a Band-Aid. you give them a band-aid, not because it's an imposition, but because it's nice. You know, you're nice, and it's nice to be nice to a kid.
Starting point is 00:37:37 You hope that somebody's nice to your kid or to you when you're older and you fall down. And so I think just giving everybody the benefit of the doubt, as opposed to thinking the worst about them that, you know, any guy at the park is a predator, any kid at the park alone is, you know, somebody who's neglected by a terrible parent. like just giving people the benefit of the doubt is just a great way to live it makes your life more fun it makes you see the world in a better way and and it actually you know weirdly enough there was a study done of people who tell their kids you know the world's dog eat dog place and don't be a patsy and everybody's going to try to take advantage of you versus you know most people are decent and you can
Starting point is 00:38:19 trust and defaults to trust and somehow they studied these two different groups of kids for years into their middle age and they found that the ones the parents who raised the kids saying like everybody's bad beware you know don't let your guard down we're doing it out of love they thought that they were protecting their kids but in fact those kids in middle age had worse relationships worse health and less professional success so i'm not exactly sure why but you might as well default to trust well it's i mean it's i i think so interesting to think about the the role that communities are playing in all of this. And we have a question from Amy S who talks about a four and a six-year-old children she has and how she lets her children roam outside of
Starting point is 00:39:07 her home and often, you know, gets reactions from neighbors. And soon would like to see them go to the park two blocks away by themselves. And her question is, whether you have thoughts on how a strategy, a good strategy for a safe solo crosswalk, especially, for kids on scooters, but I guess this is a question both for how parents can help their kids cross safely, but also what can communities implement to make this a better experience for everyone? Yeah, well, first of all, I mean, cars have existed for a long time, and boy, in kindergarten, we were taught, you know, the school felt it incumbent upon itself to teach, look left, look right, look left again. I have no idea why. We had to look left, and we had to look left, and we were
Starting point is 00:39:55 right and left again. I just look left and right and go. But I would teach them that because Mrs. Tixinski taught me that and so far I'm alive. Crosswalks are good if you can convince a neighborhood to put one in. I guess you talk to your city council or whatever you have there. But you can't let perfect be the enemy of the good, I guess, which is that if you have two kids together and they're holding hands and they're both looking left, right, left, and there's no cars coming. They're listening for it and they're looking for it. They're humans. They can cross the street. One thing that Let Grow has done is that if you go to our site, letgrow.org, I wish I had it with me, but we have a little card. This isn't it. And it says kids can carry it with them and it's the Let Grow license. It says,
Starting point is 00:40:44 I am not lost or neglected. My parents know I'm out here. If you don't believe me, you know, you can call my mom and here's her mother. Our old more aggressive card used to say, call my lawyer, which is a little much. But anyways, it just says, and it says, I know I can talk to, I can talk to people. I can't go off with anyone. I'm talking to you. And I'm grateful that you care that I'm safe. And that's why you're talking to me. So it sort of flips the person from like, where's your mom to thank you for caring. This is the whole point. You're an adult in the neighborhood. You're worried for me. That's what I assume of most adults. in the neighborhood, that they're looking out for me, as opposed to, you know, they want to
Starting point is 00:41:24 throw my mom in jail. So, and the other thing is going back to trying to create some, some kind of collective thing either via the school or you put the notes in everybody's mailbox, let's have free play Fridays, and then all the kids get used to coming to the park and looking both ways, and the parents get used to it too. It is, cars are my least favorite thing. I'm terrified of cars, but I live in a world where there are cars. And so, you know, when you've taught your kid and you've watched them a couple times, you know, very, you know, like step back because there's a car block away and they want to wait for it to get all the way across the street. And you see that they're conscientious. I'd say by age five, you can start trusting them. Hmm. I love the
Starting point is 00:42:10 idea of the cards that it feels like it's such a smart, easy way to help this process for everyone. Right. And they're free. They're free. You just download it. It's free. Well, you know, there's so many challenges that we're facing in this time, you know, connected to technology. The world is just changing so so rapidly. What gives you hope that we can raise a generation of more confident, independent kids despite all the things going on in the world? Well, I think the fact that people are recognizing, I mean, really, the fact that we're talking here, I mean, I've been trying to get a TED talk for 17 years. Here it is. Year 17 and legitimacy shines on this message. That gives me a lot of hope.
Starting point is 00:42:53 I mean, the fact that, you know, Ted invited me to speak and then here I am again today is that for a couple of years at the beginning of when I was starting my blog, the free range kids blog, I was voted by some organization the most controversial blogger in America or maybe mommy blogger. And, you know, I got this nickname, America's worst mom. And I think that people are coming to see that, like, there's something to, you know, trusting your kids to do more on their own that is, it's not crazy. It's actually organic. It's what they were, that's why they want to explore. That's why they go from crawling to walking. They want to, you know, they want to do more. They want to take on the world. And that when we step back, Lecrow's slogan is when adults step
Starting point is 00:43:36 back, kids step up. And so that gives me hope. And TikTok, for God's sake, if it's a trend on TikTok, must be really important. Well, Lenore, we are out of time, and I feel like we could talk for so much longer about this. I have to say, people always say that to me, and I think they're saying like, my God, she just doesn't stop. How am I going to get her to stop? I'll say, oh, we could talk, but we got to say goodbye. So I understand. Truly, we didn't hit on all of my questions.
Starting point is 00:44:04 We didn't hit on all the member questions. Thank you to the members for submitting your questions. I'm sorry if we didn't get to yours. And thank you so much, Lenore, for taking the time to chat with us. This has been great. And we're excited to see more of you in the TEDTEP space. Oh, my God. I'm excited too.
Starting point is 00:44:20 And thank you, Whitney, and thank you, Ted. That was Lenore Scenezy in conversation with Whitney Pennington Rogers for a TED membership event in 2025. If you're curious about Ted's curation, find out more at TED.com slash curation guidelines. And that's it for today. Ted Talks Daily is part of the TED Audio Collective. This episode was produced and edited by our team, Martha Estefanos, Oliver Friedman, Brian Green, Lucy Little, and Tonzika Sangmar Nivong.
Starting point is 00:44:54 This episode was mixed by Christopher Faisi Bogan. Additional support from Emma Tobner and Daniela Balareso. I'm Elise Hugh. I'll be back tomorrow with a fresh idea for your feed. Thanks for listening. from the podcast Side Hustle Pro. I'm always looking for ways to keep my kids entertained without screens. And the Yoto Mini has been a total lifesaver. My kids are obsessed.
Starting point is 00:45:25 Yoto is a screen-free audio player where kids just pop in a card and listen. Hours of stories, music, podcasts, and more. And no screens or ads. With hundreds of options for ages zero to 12, it's the perfect gift they'll go back to again and again. Check it out at Yotoplay.com, Y-O-T-O-P-L-A-Y-L-L-A-Y. at medcan we know that life's greatest moments are built on a foundation of good health from the big milestones to the quiet winds that's why our annual health assessment offers a physician-led
Starting point is 00:45:56 full-body checkup that provides a clear picture of your health today and may uncover early signs of conditions like heart disease and cancer the healthier you means more moments to cherish take control of your well-being and book an assessment today medcan live well for life visit medcan.com to get started. Need an escape from the city that actually feels like an escape? Just an hour from the GTA, Waterloo Region offers something truly unexpected. We're talking eerie corn maces tucked behind farm gates, hidden garden patios where the cocktails taste like stories, and indie festivals popping up in places you'd never expect.
Starting point is 00:46:34 One minute, you're walking through an advanced tech hub. The next? A harvest ho-down with goats, alpacas, and a mechanical bowl. And yeah, both feel right. Waterloo Region is where Old World Charm meets new service. school energy. Canada's largest October Fest celebration, interactive light festivals, craft cider sips, vintage shops, and maybe even a horse-drawn buggy cruising past your latte stop. This fall, don't just go somewhere. Go somewhere unexpected. Stay curious.
Starting point is 00:47:00 Explore Waterloo region. Plan your trip at staycurious.cairious.ca.ca.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.