The Dr. John Delony Show - Get Your Kids off Screens and Outside (With Ginny Yurich)
Episode Date: May 22, 2024In this episode, John talks with Ginny Yurich, founder of 1000 Hours Outside, about kids, technology and the importance of spending time outside. Offers From Today's Sponsors 10% off your first m...onth of therapy at BetterHelp! 3 free months of Hallow 25% off Thorne orders 20% off Organifi with code DELONY 30% off all Helix Sleep products Next Steps 📞 Ask John a question! Call 844-693-3291 or click here! 📚 Get Building a Non-Anxious Life 📝 Take the Anxiety Test 📚 Own Your Past, Change Your Future ❓ Questions for Humans Conversation Cards 💭 John's Free Guided Meditation Buy Ginny's book "Until The Streetlights Come On" Listen to the 1000 Hours Outside Podcast To check out the books that Ginny mentions (and hear interviews with the authors!) click here. Listen to More From Ramsey Network 🎙️ The Ramsey Show 🍸 Smart Money Happy Hour 💡 The Rachel Cruze Show 💸 The Ramsey Show Highlights 💰 George Kamel 💼 The Ken Coleman Show 📈 EntreLeadership Ramsey Solutions Privacy Policy https://www.ramseysolutions.com/company/policies/privacy-policy
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Coming up on the Dr. John Deloney Show.
It would have been madness for you and I to get a $1,000 computer to put in our pocket in middle school.
That's madness.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, so it's like what is driving that pressure?
I don't know.
I don't know when it's shifted.
But yeah, $1,000 thing.
Are you kidding me?
We had a computer growing up, and it had six gigabytes, and everybody got one.
Everyone got one gigabyte
what's going on what's going on this is john with the dr john deloney show i'm so grateful that you
have joined us today we talk about relationships kids parenting marriage dating whatever you got
going on in your life we're here to sit with you
and help you figure out what's the next right thing. If you want to be on this show, go to
johndeloney.com slash ask, A-S-K, and you're going to write out what's going on in your life, fill it
out, hit send, and it will go to Kelly, and she'll build the show, and hopefully she'll reach out to
you. We get jillions of letters all the time, and we get phone calls too. So go ahead and reach out if you want to be on.
And hopefully you can make it on the show.
Today we got a special guest.
We got a special guest.
Y'all have said, hey, we love interviews.
And so we have planned some more interviews throughout the year.
And we have an awesome guest today.
I was on her podcast.
Her name is Jenny Urich.
And she is the host of the Thousand Hours podcast.
And it's this movement to get people outside, get your kids outside. And so I was on her podcast
with a delightful time, and I invited her to come be on our show. We talk about education.
She's an avid homeschool fan, and I've been a public school guy forever.
Now I'm moving my kids to a different school setting.
We talk about it, and we disagree on some things, and I love it.
She's amazing.
And we talk about – Kelly, what else did we talk about on this episode?
We talked for so long.
I mean, it was awesome.
Yeah, we talked about – I mean, that's her whole thing is getting your kids outside,
how to do it without being overwhelmed.
Yes. How to slowly get your kids outside, you know, and to kind of thing is getting your kids outside. How to do it without being overwhelmed. Yes.
How to slowly get your kids outside, you know, and to kind of start that process.
We also talked about the hell that is being a woman in the modern world where you cannot win.
You should be doing this or you should be doing that.
You should be staying at home.
Why aren't you married yet?
Oh, my gosh.
Are you serious?
Your kids should be doing this.
Well, why aren't they doing that?
It's just chaos.
And she talks pretty openly and candidly about it.
She's been doing this for over 10 years,
one of the largest podcasts on the planet.
And I'm so grateful that she joined us.
Buckle up.
It's a fun conversation.
Get your pens ready because she references tons of books
and reading material, all ideas.
And note the things where you disagree with me,
note the things where you disagree with her, note the things where you disagree with her
and find somebody you can talk to this
about those things in your regular life.
It's a fun, fun conversation.
One of the greatest people on the planet,
one of the kindest people on the planet,
Jenny Urich and me having a great conversation.
Stay tuned.
I have been guilty of just dumping the reason
that we took play out of our kids' lives and we took going outside out of their lives.
I just started blaming devices 10, 15 years ago.
I worked at a university and they were a beta campus for iPhones and iPads.
And so we started handing them out to students saying it was going to change everything.
And it did, just in the wrong way.
But over the last maybe two years, I've begun to wonder if, yes, that's a caustic problem and I kind of blame him all the time.
But I wondered if there was something beneath that.
And it goes back to an article that a buddy of mine sent me.
He's a rancher in West Texas.
And it was from the UK.
And it said one of the hottest selling markets for iPads was to two-year-olds.
And the interview with the parent said, every other kid has them. And here was the quote, I don't want my kid to be the only
one. And that has haunted me, that idea of like being the only one, being the only one.
And then I wonder if sitting beneath this, I'm road testing this idea with you and you can say,
John, you're an idiot. Underneath it, when did kids start running our
homes or when did kids start being responsible for the emotional regulation of all the adults
in their lives? Right. I'd say it feels like that happened overnight and everything else,
all these, it would have been madness for you and I to get a thousand dollar computer to put in our
pocket in middle school. That's madness. Oh, yeah. And it's now a must.
And now it's a must.
It's a must.
Even though every parent knows, it's awful for them.
They all know.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So it's like, what is driving that pressure?
I don't know.
I don't know when it's shifted that the universe of our homes has to revolve around our kids.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And that we have just shirked that responsibility and just said, oh, well, they all have it.
So we're going to do it too.
I think it's tricky when your kid, it is tricky when your kid is the only one.
And maybe we all have those deep down feelings.
Those like insecurities of from our own childhoods, from our own experiences where we didn't want to be the only one.
You don't want to stand out, right?
We talk about like even just the way that people are formed, like in a tribe and you live and you don't want it. They say, you don't
want to be the one everyone's looking at. Like you don't want to be kicked out. So you don't want to
stand out. And so it's like, it's almost like we've taken that on ourselves, but it's, it's really
the kids thing. But yeah, a thousand dollar thing. Are you kidding me? We had a computer growing up
and it had six gigabytes and everybody got one. Everyone
got one gigabyte and you could not, it was like, if you like, you know, it was like you, you're in
the car and you like go an inch over your brothers, you know? And it was like, if you, I mean, if you
take up any extra of your gigabyte, you know, it's enroaching on someone else's. And so, yeah,
that has really changed. And, and it's interesting because parents seem to not be, a lot of parents
seem to not be drawing the line, draw the line for your kids. They can't. It's not good for them.
Yeah.
I just read the most gut-wrenching book called American Girls by Nancy Jo Sales and talking
about like the amount of pornography, the amount of all of these things that's happening
in schools with the classmates.
I used to be a teacher.
I did too, yeah.
And before the iPhone was even here, the kids were being intimate and videotaping on flip phones and sending it to the students.
The police were getting involved, and every parent was like, it's not my kid.
I was like, well, it's some of y'all's kid.
It's one of your kids, and this really matters.
Can you imagine being in seventh grade and having that pressure and having those images, and they're circling around your whole middle school?
It's a lot.
Parents have to take a stand.
How do they do that? You just don't have it. It's a lot. Parents have to take a stand. How do they do that?
You just don't have it.
It's more than that.
But see, I don't know if it is.
It's that.
And then here's what you have to do.
This is what I think.
When I was a kid,
my neighbor across the street
locked her kids out all summer long.
I was like, that mom, wow.
She's on to something.
You know, I was like,
when I was younger,
I was like, what's she doing?
Like, what is she doing all day?
And then I became a mom. I was like, that's was younger, I was like, what's she doing? Like, what is she doing all day?
And then I became a mom.
I was like, that's the most brilliant mom I've ever met.
And she had four kids and all summer long,
they were out in the neighborhood.
I don't even know if they ate.
I mean, they were just roaming.
They're healthy kids, they're healthy adults now.
And everyone wanted to go outside because everyone was out there.
And so then I became a mom and no one's outside.
There's a man named Mike Lanza
who wrote a book called Playborhood.
And he talks about how the most enticing thing outside is not your trampoline.
It's not your amazing rainbow recreation play structure. It's other kids.
Other kids.
And they're not out there. And so as a mom, I've had to put in the work, which is I've got to call up at least one other family or maybe two or maybe five, and we have to plan it. We're all going to
be outside at the same time. And the kids always want to go then. And I used to be annoyed, John. I was like, this is annoying. I wish I was that
mom from the nineties. I could just shoot my kids out. But what would I have done? Clean baseboards?
This has actually really enhanced my life too. But getting outside, I think as parents,
we're inundated with technology just as much as our kids are. So when I'm putting in the effort
to get our kids outside in community,
everyone wants to go.
And even the mom's lives are enhanced too.
Our life just doesn't trickle away.
And I think for me, the idea,
I've got two kids, one's 14 and one's eight.
The idea that I've got to call somebody
and set this up every time.
At this point, it's kind of like me wishing
gas would be a dollar a gallon.
This is not, this is not,
that's not the world we're in. And so if I want my kids to have a healthy life, it's kind of like me wishing gas would be a dollar a gallon. It's just not. It's just not. That's not the world we're in.
Yeah.
And so if I want my kids to have a healthy life, it's up to me.
It is.
And I think you made a point that's super not cool or popular to talk about.
We talk about how these phones are destroying our kids, how these screens are messing with our kids.
Yeah.
They're messing with us too.
And we're not impervious to this, right?
Yeah.
And so it's cool to tell kids don't smoke.
It's not good for us this, right? And so it's cool to tell kids don't smoke. It's not good for us either. Right. And at some point we all have to just say, all right,
enough's enough's enough's enough. But I wonder if it's just fear. Like I had to explain to my
mom while I was inside back in the old days. Like, what are you, why are you here? That was
the odd thing instead of where are you going. I think there's confusion too.
I think that no one really knew what happened.
It was like we were outside and then all of a sudden no one's outside.
And because no one's outside, someone just said the other day,
when everyone was outside, it was normal for kids to be outside.
Now people may go adulthood and not see a childhood outside.
And then all of a sudden they see an eight-year-old out there and they're like, something's wrong.
Something's wrong.
I'm going to call.
And so then it just becomes this endless cycle. But society
used to be set up in a way, probably
not on purpose, but it was set up in a way that
preserved childhood because
the television wasn't on all the time.
I remember as a kid, it was like
cartoons ended at noon on Saturday morning.
And I wanted there to
be more TV. I desperately...
Sundays is only WWF.
I don't want to watch that. But I wanted to want to watch it. Right. Because I think there's, you know, like even Michael, he talks about,
we have this bent toward laziness, right? Like we just want to be comfortable and lazy and
we just want to sit there and, and if it's not available, it's not available. Well, now it's
available. I mean, to the moon and back, right? I mean, there is a content you could consume for
the rest of your life in a million lifetimes. Yeah, a million lifetimes over. So it is, I think, a tall order
for the parents to step in and take on, I have to help be the shaper of the life. The society used
to do it for me. We all used to do it together. That's right. And now it's very individual. It
is on my shoulders that I say no to the iPad, that I get these groups of
people together and we go do things and we run out of time for screens. That's what I say.
Our best days are not the days where I'm like, no, no, no, no, you can't do it. My best days
are like, oh, it's bedtime and we ran out of time because we had a really full day.
But what I've learned, John, is that I used to hold a little bit of resentment toward that.
Like I used to wish, I wish I was back in the day when society had to do it
and I didn't have to.
But what I realized is that my life is really full
because of it.
And my life has completely changed
because I've had to be the one that takes that on.
And there's this incredible quote in a book
by Kim John Payne,
where he says,
when you rescue your kid's childhood,
he says, day by day, remarkably, inevitably, you rescue yourself back. Yeah, you get your kid's childhood, he says day by day, remarkably, inevitably,
you rescue yourself back.
Yeah, you get your life back.
It's powerful.
Yeah.
I had completely lost that.
I had a book signing in Dallas
and two of the neighborhood moms
that I got in trouble with when I was a kid
and they had license to get me in trouble
because that's the way it worked, right?
Everyone's moms could get every kid in trouble.
They showed up to the book signing because we're all still dating, right?
Yeah.
We're everybody still together and that's gone now.
It's gone.
Well, because you formed relationships through experience.
So I think a lot of this just has to do with confusion.
It just doesn't exist anymore.
And our moms and our grandmas didn't have to parent this way.
They didn't have to be this way. They didn't have
to be involved. We don't have a picture. We don't have a model for what it looks like. So we're
making it up as we go. So what happened, and that is really my story. My story was when we had our
first son, I had no idea what to do with him. I didn't know how to fill the days. And that can be
a really long day. It was a mom at home. If you've got a spouse that works out of the home and that's
how ours was, it's 10 hours. I'm like, what am I supposed to do with this baby for 10 hours? And I really had no idea.
And so we enrolled in all these programs, John, and it was expensive. I want to throw that out.
I had like a little pile of money set over for my working days. I was like, well, I can sign up for
the mom and me, whatever, music, this. And I mean, that money ran out real fast. And I was drowning
because I didn't know how to fill the time. And there wasn't really an example of that because things are shifting toward the screens and toward inside.
And so I really was running ragged.
I actually did not like being a mom for many years.
I felt like every day I was failing.
And I had come from a life, I think that before that often you end up doing what you're already good at.
You're like, I'm naturally good at this.
I'm going to do this.'m gonna do this i'm gonna do that and then all of a sudden i was in this life where i was failing every day this this baby is crying this baby isn't happy i don't know what to do it's
up in the baby's up in the night and and i just felt i was really in a dark spot and we had a
couple kids in a row and then i had one day that changed my life a girlfriend of mine i was doing
mops i mean i'm doing all these different programs, right? And like signing up, trying to make the day go by.
And I show up at this mops and a friend of mine, she says, Charlotte, mate.
She's like, this is one sentence.
Sometimes one sentence can change your life.
Ken Coleman's got that book, One Question.
I love that book because, you know, sometimes you can be in the worst spot and it could change today.
Maybe it's going to change today.
And that's how it was for me.
She comes to this mops. We happen to be at a table, right? This is God's providence. This is,
I mean, this is what happened in my life. One thing. And she said, Charlotte Mason says kids
should be outside for four to six hours a day whenever the weather is tolerable. I never heard
of Charlotte Mason. Have you? Yeah. She's 18. Yeah. I never, I never heard of her. I didn't
know she was from the 1800s. And my friend I didn't know she was from the 1800s.
And my friend didn't tell me she was from the 1800s.
Right?
Or I would have been like, whatever.
I'm not paying any attention.
But I thought this is an absurd idea.
Who spends four to six hours doing one thing?
Right?
And so she asked me if I would try it.
And I desperately wanted friends.
A young mom.
And I know a lot of people come up to me that are grandparents.
And you've got grandparents that listen to your shows.
And they're confused. They're like, how do I help my daughter?
How do I help my daughter-in-law? You know, how do I help them with the grandkids? And they,
you know, they seem really lost. And so she says it's four to six hours. Will you do it with me?
And I was like, Oh, this is a bad idea. I mean, what are they going to do? I'm like,
they're like crying at the library program. That's 45 minutes. And I feel like, you know, I'm, I'm
losing my mind a little bit, you know, but I agreed to
do it. And I tell people it was the best day of my life because it was the first good day I had
as a mom. I had not had a good day. Just sunshine. Yeah. And they just played. And I didn't know that
they would do that, John. They just played. And what I have learned over the past decade plus
is that when we let our kids play outside, and this is not like you have to set up a scavenger
hunt. This is like the mom kind of that shut the door. But now we go, right? We go because we're trying to collect
community and we're there. A lot of times we go. And so I'm there and I get to have a full
conversation with a friend, you know, sitting under the sun and the kids played. But when they
play outside, it helps them develop their cognition. And we're talking about their eyes and all these, their bone structure.
Every time they jump and land, it's building their bone structure.
Katie Bowman, she's this biomechanist.
She says osteoporosis is a childhood disease that shows up in adulthood.
So we're talking about their bone structure.
We're talking about their social skills.
How do you learn how to interact and compromise and negotiate and be creative
when you're inside doing
worksheets and doing seat work?
Even the video games.
The video games used to be a communal thing.
You go over to your buddy's house, right?
And everybody's sitting around and playing their Nintendo.
And you're talking and you're having food. Now it's all through the screen.
You don't see any
social... I mean, there's nothing.
Emotionally, there's nothing emotionally. There's so much
respite out there. And for whoever families are listening, I know my podcast is probably so much
years. People have different faith backgrounds, but there is spiritual growth out there as well.
And you can find principles of living and it does so much for kids and we don't have to
orchestrate it all. It's like the pressure's off a little bit.
This show is sponsored by BetterHelp. October is the season for wearing costumes. And if you
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in social settings. We do this around our own families. We even do this with ourselves. I have
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Therapy is a place where you can learn to accept all the parts of yourself,
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Costumes and masks should be for Halloween parties,
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your first month that's better help h-e-l-p.com slash deloney i feel like we've created an ecosystem
that no mom can win.
If you're working, you show, oh, you're not staying home with your kids?
Yeah.
And if you're home with your kids, it's like, wow, like 80 years of hard work, you're just going to throw it away and not go get a job, right?
And if you're at home, you're surrounded by your home should look like this and run like this and function like this.
And then if you're at work, just it's madness. What do you say to the mom
that's sitting at home trying to figure this out? I'm a firm believer. And again, I get myself in
trouble here. I don't think moms were designed to do motherhood alone. And they're designed to be
with surrounded by people. The same as men are designed to be around people. And a lot of the after effects
that people struggle with
is sitting at home
and screaming kid,
alone, all by yourself,
no one to call, right?
Or you call your mom
and she just kind of
rolls her eyes at you
and you call your buddies
and they're,
it's just this alone, right?
What do you tell a mom
who's trying to figure out
which way is left
and which way is up or down,
feeling like I cannot win? It's so hard. It's so hard. There's a phenomenal book called
Haunt Gather Parent by Michaeline Duclef. And she has gone around the world and she works for NPR.
So she's gone around the world and did this special project when she had a child of seeing
how other cultures parent. And one of the things she wrote in her book was that in so many cultures, no one is alone with a crying baby. Can you even imagine? It's interesting when you talk about the
village or the other people. And I think really the most important people to have around you,
if you're pulling your hair with parenting, is not a bunch of other adults. It's not like a bunch
of aunts and uncles. It's other kids. It's other kids because they occupy each other. And so what I say to the mom who is drowning, because I was the mom who's drowning, I'm really only here because I failed.
Right.
I'm not here because I'm super outdoorsy or super athletic.
You know, I brought in my go-ruck, but I mean, it's like 10 pounds in it, you know, so whatever.
Okay.
But, you know, it's not like that's not, I was like a math teacher.
You know, I play piano. That is at the core of the things that I love. But I do love, it's not like that's not, I was like a math teacher. You know, I play piano.
That is at the core of the things that I love.
But I do love people and I love community.
I've always loved working with kids.
And so it just becomes this thing of all I did was try it once.
Johnny, it was a one day thing.
It was a one sentence changed my life and trying it one time.
So to the mom who's overwhelmed, I would say, hey, can you take your dinner outside tonight?
Is it warm enough? You take that meal and just, can you go sit? Do you have a little balcony
on your apartment? Can you go down? No matter where you live, and people bring that up a lot,
like I'm in the city, I'm in the country, there's pros and cons to all of it, right? If you're in
the city, it's walkable. And that's what Dan Buettner says, right? We talked to him, the Blue
Zones guy. He's like, really one of the best things you can do for your health is live in an
area that's walkable. Get out. Go to the local parks.
If you live in the suburbs, maybe there's neighbor kids, and you can go play.
If you're in the country, you got all that land.
There's no one to play with.
So there's pros and cons to wherever you're at.
But can you take your meal outside?
Can you take a game outside?
And what happens when you go outside is that that full-spectrum sunlight, there's over 100 body systems that are dependent on bright days and dark nights. That's how our bodies are. Can you walk to school? One of the most important
things you could do, and Katie Bowman, I talked about her earlier, she says, look, if you can't
walk to school, can you walk part of the way? If you go into the library, can you just not drive
the whole way? Can you stop a little early and walk? Can you play some games? Can you go on a
short hike and invite one other family
and bring some really fun snacks?
And you try and you incorporate it in
because you realize, I think, in one period of time
that this is really the answer to a lot.
We keep talking about kids,
but we have to have that thing
that our mutual friend Michael Easter talks about,
which is we got to be committed to doing things even friend Michael Easter talks about, which is we got
to be committed to doing things even in their heart.
Well, sure.
Yes.
Yes, it's hot.
I know it's hot.
Yeah.
Or yes, it's cold.
Yep, it is.
Yeah.
And everybody's going to be okay.
How are these kids going to develop grit?
I mean, the other thing about parenting, and I think what we're trying to solve, we're
trying to solve the screen issue.
I mean, that is the biggest issue in families and households today is dealing with the screens.
But we're also trying to prepare our kids, right?
And I think this is sometimes also where that change has come in.
It's like the colleges seem like they're more prestigious.
Like, we're just worried.
The world is changing so fast.
And Neil Postman, he's written some phenomenal books.
He was like this tech optimist, but he said change changed.
And he wrote that in the 80s.
Like the velocity of change has changed.
And so we're preparing our kids for jobs that don't exist.
That's what we know.
And so how do you-
Our job that we do did not exist when I was in college.
What is this?
It didn't exist.
No.
It didn't exist.
This building didn't exist.
Yeah, exactly.
Oh, here I sit with Dr. John.
Well, on a podcast.
And there are questions for humans.
I mean, like, I mean, what?
But none of this existed.
There's no podcast, there's no YouTube.
It wasn't a thing, right?
Yeah, and how do you prepare your kids for that?
They have to be flexible and they have to have grit.
They have to know how to take risks.
And there is a woman, Dr. Jean Twenge, and I love her name,
but she's a leading generational change expert.
And she was talking about kids are coming to college
and they can't even make simple decisions without texting their parents. So when kids go outside
and when they have space, even if it's inside, they got space where there's time. They have to
draw from their own inner resources and they have to figure out what's my next step. And when we
constantly are putting kids in an environment that is adult directed. That's harder. Number one,
I stepped into Utah one time for kindergarten. Every four minutes, it was like a new activity.
It was all adult directed. How do you do that for 13 years, plus extracurriculars, plus homework,
all these things that we're loading into childhood, and then say, go off into this
world that's rapidly changing? It's a reminder that every time I step in to save my child from something other than
death, I'm looking them in the eye and saying, I don't trust you and you're not enough yet.
Right?
That's good.
Well, we have to be able to pass off the baton.
I've got to be able to hang to you.
This is a two-person thing, right?
Like we have to learn how to trust.
And I think it's meant to be little by little over time, I'm passing off the baton to
you. Otherwise, if they've never done it, we both hit adulthood. That's right. And we're both freaked
out. When you go to college, I can't breathe. So then I have to call you all the time. I pass that
on to you and you're carrying that and your studies. Yeah. So, okay. So there's this really
cool guy, Christopher Chin. He is an adventure photographer. He's got a master class. And it's phenomenally interesting.
So he's like out with his camera, skiing down, you know, these huge, and he's taking photos, right?
So this is his whole job.
And he's just got this huge following and really cool things.
And in his master class, he gave a calculation for risk, which I thought was super interesting, as I like math.
So I'm like, oh, this is good.
It's a calculation.
He said risk is a combination of how dangerous is it with how likely is it to happen?
I was like, that's kind of life-changing.
So I was thinking about it in terms of, okay, would I let a small child play near a body of water unattended?
No.
Because how dangerous is that?
Incredibly.
How likely is it that something's going to happen?
100%.
Right?
Okay.
But I'm like, could I let a three-year-old crawl up onto a fallen tree?
How dangerous is it?
Not very.
How likely is something going to happen?
Sure, they're going to fall off.
I mean, that's what they do.
They're going to have a bruise.
They're going to have a scrape.
They're going to cry.
You're going to have to console them.
But it's in those moments where they're starting to learn how to trust their body.
It's riskier in the long run to not know how to take risks. And so I think that
that calculation helped me because I'm going to step in if it's catastrophic. You're up on the
roof and you're four. Okay. Maybe not. Right. But in smaller situations, I think that we can step
back and trust them and know that we're growing in that process too. That's a scary proposition. It's hard.
Yeah.
So going back to moms.
Yeah.
You're in your house, listen to this.
You have two or three under three, right?
Yeah, that's what we had.
Oh, that's what y'all had?
Yeah.
People call the show and I'm just astounded.
Yeah.
They'll often say, they'll call with the presenting issue,
like, you know, my intimacy died in my marriage
or we're running out of money or whatever. And then we'll get to, well, often say they'll call with the presenting issue like you know my intimacy died my marriage or
we're running out of money whatever and then we'll get to well i've got three kids under the age of
four i'll just be like just stop stop like yeah but we have hope for you right we have hope for
you there's so much hope yes okay so that person's alone yeah he's got nobody yeah okay so you're
gonna find something you're gonna find if you're not you're gonna try and find somebody you may
not be able to it's like you gotta find somebody you have to find you really going to find somebody. You're going to try and find somebody. You may not be able to. It's life or death.
You've got to find somebody.
You have to find, you really have to find a spot.
I would say that's the most important.
So we would go to these spots when our kids were that little
because they could run and you don't want to be near a road.
So we would go to these spots that were a little more tucked back
or a playground maybe that was fenced in, right?
So your kid's not going to run from you.
If you could find one friend, just one, or maybe you're going to find them there.
Maybe, right?
You're going to find them there.
People know.
People are talking about getting outside, so they know.
It's going to be easier to find someone, I think at this point, that shares that value.
And you're going to say, look, I'm going to bring a blanket.
I'm going to bring some food.
I'm going to bring a lot of water so that we have what we need.
And we're going to stay.
And I think that's the key.
We have siphoned things off into these little chunks.
And so then we're running ragged.
I mean, I remember, John, it would be like 11 a.m.
And I had gone taking the kids to the library program.
I love the library.
Okay, library program's great.
But in order to get three small children to the library, they're all nursing.
They're all in diapers.
They're all throwing up.
You know, they're spitting up. You have to change them. You have to carry, you know, I mean, talk
about rucking. Everyone's in those little buckets. You have to buckle everyone in. They're crying.
Nobody wants to be in the car. You got to get to the library. You got to get out your huge stroller.
You've got your bag. It's full of books. You have your diaper bag. It's got all those things. And
you got to try and get them through the parking lot without getting their fingers pinched in the
doors. And then you get to the, you get to the room and they don't really want to be there. So they're crying. They're not
paying attention. You're trying to nurse the baby. You know, they're, they're getting into stuff.
And then I tell people I wouldn't even drink water because I was like, what if I had to go
to the bathroom? Like, what would I do? Like truly, what would I, how would I even manage that?
And so, and I would go home and it will be so early in the morning. And I would think I have
so much of this day left, I'm exhausted. So the change to doing something for a longer period of time, there's a bigger payoff, right? You're going to put in probably the same amount of effort to get your kids outside, but you still have to take all this stuff, but then you're there and you get to have that blood pressure drop and so there's a woman, a phenomenal book it's called Balanced and Barefoot by Angela Hanscom
she's a pediatric occupational therapist
so she's been on the front line of seeing
like kids are really struggling in a lot of ways
we're talking about mental health, sure, but they're struggling
in a lot of ways with different
tactile things and
and a lot of the things that she says is
the outdoors will help with a lot of that
but she talks about, you know, the kids
and being outside.
And I just think that we have to expand the time
because she says it can take kids up to 45 minutes
to develop a play scheme.
You gotta wait through it.
Who's in charge?
Who's the boss?
What game?
Yeah, what are we gonna do?
Are we gonna play princess?
Are we gonna play knights?
Whatever it is.
She's like, you have to wait through that period.
So the kids are gonna fuss.
They may fuss.
You might go out and in 20 minutes be like, oh, this is not going well.
He's got to wait it out. Give it that 45 minute mark. And if they haven't done it much,
it might take a little bit longer. Dr. Nicholas Cardaris, he wrote Glow Kids and Digital Madness,
phenomenal books, just phenomenal. He says he's got kids that come in his office now that are
three years old, don't know how to play with blocks. They don't know how to stack them up
and knock them down. So if you've not been playing a lot,
it might take your kids a little bit longer.
So they're going to come up
and they're going to say,
this is boring, mom.
I don't want to be here.
And I'm into the love and logic stuff.
It's like you respond empathetically
without being emotionally charged.
And I would just say,
and now my kids don't do this.
See, it does change in time.
Like they learn how to draw off.
Kim John Payne says the best babysitter is your kid's imagination. Long-term, right? Long-term,
that's what you want. You want a kid that can occupy themselves because they love life and
they have things that they want to do. But in the short term, you're just going to have to say
things like, it's okay to be bored. That's all right. I trust you'll find something to do.
And you just say it on a loop. And then eventually they're bored of hearing you say that same thing
and off they go to find something to do.
And it really does work.
It's transformed my home in a pretty profound way.
I read this really cool thing in a book called Opt Out Family,
which isn't out yet,
but it might be out by the time this is out,
by Erin Lackner.
And she wrote a book also called Chasing Slow,
which is such a good preface.
We have to chase this.
The reason that we have a goal, we have a goal to get outside because it's hard.
It's hard to set that time aside.
It's hard not to fill with other things.
But she talked about in this book, this idea of watermelon versus candy.
She's like, if I put out a bowl of watermelon after dinner, my kids are clamoring for it.
I mean, everyone, you know, on a hot summer day and you bring out a bowl of watermelon, you just slice it, it's cold out of the fridge.
You know, kids, she goes, but if I put out a bowl of candy, every single time, my kids are going to choose the candy over the watermelon.
And so the premise was, and I actually thought this was so freeing.
It was like, give kids time when the only option is the watermelon.
So that they don't have to be, they're having to choose.
They're having to use those resources to choose
and they can't, neither can we.
The game can be.
And I don't think it's fair to always
have them be the ones that you choose for them.
That's what my parents did.
Long before any of these podcasts existed,
we had a limit of the amount of shows that we could watch.
And that was freeing.
Because when you can't do it, you're free to open
up your world to all the other things that are out there that are fascinating and interesting.
And so it's a gift we give our kids. Like boredom, this came out, John Payne, he wrote a book called
Beyond Winning. It's about youth sports culture, which is a phenomenal, it's a phenomenal book,
one of my favorite I've ever read. He wrote it with Luis Fernandez-Yosa. And there's a statement
in there that says, and I think this is big, and maybe
circles all the way back to the beginning.
When your kids are bored, you have not
failed.
I think we need that reminder.
We always feel like we're failing.
We're losers. Our kids aren't happy.
Put that on your fridge. When your kids are bored,
you have not failed.
My favorite piece of parenting advice I've ever
heard in my life comes from Jack Black
and it just said don't make a happy kid happier
like he saw his kid
outside in the mud with a stick or something
and he's like I'm Jack Black
and he said I ended up six hours later
with a kid who was over sugared
over stimulated because I took him to this
we had to drive through this
he said my kid was having the time of his life
sitting in the mud playing playing with a stick.
And what I should have done is got down there with him.
And we would have had an enormous day, right?
Can we talk about, you know, people I know calling your show all the time and we're sitting here at Ramsey.
And it's like childhood could be a very expensive proposition.
It's insane.
Here's a stat for you.
It's from a book called Smart Moves by Dr. Carla Hanford.
Dr. Carla Hanford is in her 80s, but she says this, elderly people who dance regularly have a 76% less chance of
developing dementia. That's a pretty high stat. And so the point is, is that when we move our
bodies in complex ways, which kids innately do when they're outside, right? They try.
That was one of the things I noticed right away. As soon as we started getting outside, I was like, this is just for me.
I feel better. I feel more present. I feel less ragged. And I think that if I'm a better mother,
our house will run better. But I noticed immediately, John, like our kids were thriving.
They're eating better. They're sleeping better. They're getting along better. They're playing
better inside. We haven't had to go for a doctor's appointment for any acute, like, I mean,
and we've been doing, I've got a lot of kids a lot of kids. We've been doing this for a decade. It's helping their lymphatic system. So I started to notice right away, but they're always like, look at me, mom, look at me.
And they're climbing up a little bit higher. They're getting up over the fence. They want
me to watch. So complex movements enhance and protect the neural wiring in the brain. That's what I want. I want my kid
for the world that's coming to have a quick and adaptable brain. And you do it with other people.
Yes. And then they're learning social skills and they're scaffolding up and scaffolding down. If
you have a child that has developmental delays and you're able to go outside in a group of mixed age,
Dr. Peter Gray says mixed age is where it's at. Like this is, or if you go outside, then your
child, maybe they're super athletic. And so they can go off with the older kids, or maybe your
child is a little bit developmentally delayed and there's friends there and kids, you know,
kids grow at all different rates. You don't know that this kid is seven and that you don't know
that just by looking at them. So they find playmates. And I think that's a beautiful thing
too. If you have a group of friends and everyone's, you've got toddlers through teens,
that's a good situation to be in.
I keep thinking of, as you're talking,
I keep thinking of the, okay, but what about,
but what about?
Yeah.
And the thing that popped up was,
okay, what about the mean kid?
There's always a mean kid.
And I remember a buddy of mine who's a therapist,
who's just a brilliant therapist.
He said this 20 years ago.
He said, the way we're handling bullying is going to bite us hard.
And I said, what do you mean?
And he said, we're trying to do away with bullies, which is good.
But we've stopped teaching kids how to deal with and respond when they're bullied.
And we're robbing them.
And I was like, okay, whatever dude.
And that has come home to roost.
As you have a group of kids that you get shut down.
I worked with college kids for 20 years.
They can't handle a C.
They don't have the cognitive wiring for a C.
They implode, right?
They turn to ash.
They don't have the cognitive wiring for a bad breakup.
They don't have the cognitive wiring for,
mom's not there to answer that question.
I don't know where to get my tire fixed.
I don't know what to...
When they end up in the dean of students, right?
I mean, it's not their fault.
And this is a change. It did not used to be this way.
It happened overnight.
They're losing the resolve.
There's a phenomenal, a phenomenal
book, John, about bullying. It's called
Emotionally Resilient Teens and Tweens by that
Kim John Payne.
And I read it in preparation for a talk. And at that stage in life, we didn't need the information.
And then all of a sudden we did. Sometimes it happens like that. I was actually really surprised by the premise of the book. He goes through every different type of bullying in story
form and has someone who's been through it kind of talk about how they made it through.
Because he says, some kids get bullied and some kids don't.
Like, what's really going on?
But the premise of the book, he said, was to strengthen the family base camp.
To be a safe harbor that your kid can come home to.
And then you teach them to stand in their own power.
That's the premise of the book.
But a kid can only stand in their own power if they're anchored to something bigger than themselves.
That's it.
But you know what I thought, John?
I thought, this is a little bit too simplistic.
And I think kind of a lot of these things that we talk about, we discount maybe because
they sound too simple.
Always.
Like, well, I can just go sit at a park and my kid is going to grow.
My kid is going to grow into the person they need to be.
And I'm sitting at a park and I'm maybe sitting over the side reading your book.
You know, that gives you a time to read your books.
And, you know, if your kids are old enough and you're away from the road and it's safe, you've got a little bit of time to invest in yourself.
You could do a little workout over on this side, whatever it is.
You all of a sudden have bought yourself time and it feels almost lazy.
It almost feels too simple.
It feels irresponsible.
But how are kids going to adapt if they don't ever get those opportunities when they're kids?
And that's what we're seeing.
And man, then we'll move on from this topic. I think it's important to note that if I am a
stay-at-home parent or if I'm a just flying in from work parent, that tension and that angst
and that frustration and that boredom and that I feel like I'm not producing, right? I feel lazy.
Our kids absorb that and they blame themselves
and they try to solve that and they can't carry that, right?
They can't, their job isn't to make sure we're all okay.
That's our job, right?
And if something, I love watching the arc of it all,
like in diet and nutrition and in mental health,
all of it is arcing towards often the simpler the better.
It doesn't have to be so hard. I'm going to tell you a story.
Our oldest is 15. He just got
his first internship. Paid internship.
He's super into video stuff. I mean, he would
love this. His cameras and that's what he's interested
in. And we've tried different things and
I mean, he just loves that. That's his bent.
And he gets his internship and
fills out an application and does all the things.
Do you know they didn't ask him what age he learned how to read?
No.
It wasn't on there.
He learned it when he was seven in the second grade.
I mean, that's way, he played his whole childhood.
He just played second grade.
I mean, that's like remarkably late in today's, and it didn't matter long-term.
So I think a lot of these things that we feel like matter so much, maybe they don't.
And maybe there's another really good book by Linda Flanagan called Take Back the Game,
where she's also talking about youth sports culture.
And here's what she says.
She says, how are we presenting adulthood?
Right.
Are we presenting adulthood that all we do is sit on the sidelines?
Every single game we come and just sit.
And yell and scream?
Yeah, that's all we do.
That's all adulthood is.
She's like, no, cultivate your life.
Like have relationships.
Miss some stuff.
Go to the championship, but miss some stuff
because you're out there living a life.
You're not sitting.
She's like on the sidelines in the fetid expanse.
I mean, it's a funny book.
She talks about all this stuff.
And it's like, oh, I think that there's validity in that.
And also there's people that wrote in
that said in retrospect, we lost all of those Saturdays.
I don't remember specifically any of those soccer games.
But in our family, I remember the hikes we've been on.
You remember because it's all sensory.
All those sensory things contribute to development and memories.
So when you do the same thing over and over again,
Mike Recker talks about this in a book called The Fun Habit.
When you do the same thing over and over again,
your brain encodes it as one memory.
So every single Saturday, it's the same thing.
You go to the same field, you play the same soccer,
you know, it's mostly the same.
Your brain, your whole childhood,
that's kind of one memory.
It's one thing.
Baseball.
Yeah.
But if you do a bunch of different things
and you go a bunch of different places and you go to a couple of different parks, you go to the zoo, those make your life feel more full because they're new memories.
Yeah.
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Here's our options now. Unschooling, homeschooling, private schooling, public schooling,
any number of those schoolings, getting mad and moving schooling um requesting changes in in district because this
one teacher was mean to my kids she doesn't ever stop doesn't ever stop um and we're in the process
of moving kids from one situation to another situation and here's a couple things i'm noticing
and i'm i'm putting my bias out there i worked at universities forever and i was a high school
and elementary school teacher before that.
My wife's a lifelong teacher.
Both of us are public school people to the death
and now we're transitioning out.
And so I'm losing some of my identity, right?
Yeah, sure.
Kind of like I talked a lot of trash as an 18 year old
and I got a peanut allergy kid.
It's a very similar thing.
I ran my mouth a lot and now here we are.
Here's a couple of things I'm noticing.
One is, so a cool thing to
talk about is nobody needs to go to college anymore college waste of time is stupid you
shouldn't go you should go get a trade totally i worked in colleges thousands and thousands of
students should not have been there they should have been borrowing that kind of money they should
have been at a different place etc yeah and i don't know on the flip side, any, zero, and I'm sure they'll fill up the comments.
I don't know any person or family of means that is not sending their kid to college.
I know of, it's only when I started touring private schools that I thought,
oh, this is where everybody, this is where people who know something that I don't know
are sending their kids.
And then I saw the other side,
which are people who are brilliant savant people
pulling them out and just saying,
we're homeschooling.
I'm not doing this anymore.
And so we have some people
that are way smarter than me in our life
that have just said, I'm opting out
and this is how we're gonna do it.
Yeah.
And I guess for the first time, I'm looking at my two kids and they're saying dad
what do i do what do we do yeah and i'm saying i don't know right when i was a kid there was just
a school a neighborhood school that's what you went to and now there's so many options and so
many ways to in some situations leverage your soul you can borrow your soul to send your kids to x y
and z place.
Or you can opt out. And you've probably, like me, have seen some amazing,
just transcendent homeschool situations. And some that you're like, oh no, oh no.
It feels like it's all over the place. And so on the one hand, I can't keep doing with my kids where they are right now. Yeah. And I don't know what the next step is.
Okay.
I have two thoughts.
First of all, what an amazing thing that you're modeling to your kids.
Right.
And I want to throw that out there.
Yeah, yeah.
Because whether you homeschool or you hybrid school or you public school, when you make a change,
I think that is one of the most powerful things that you can ever do in a family because our lives are not static.
And here you sit in a situation that you never could have imagined.
And I think so often kids are siphoned off from real life.
Yes.
And they don't have the opportunity to say, what does an adult do when they're stuck?
Someday your kids are going to get older and they're going to be like, there was a time when my dad didn't know what to do.
And he told us.
And so it's normal.
He told us.
It's very normal that I don't know what to do.
I think we embrace those things. I think those are really good things. I think that no decision that you make is final. Our lives are very fluid and people, they come in and out of all
sorts of situations. So the only way to know is to try. So I do think that there's something to be
said about trying something and saying that didn't really fit. And also what an amazing thing of modeling. My favorite quote, and I have read a lot of books,
I really like to read and I've gotten a chance to talk to so many authors, but this guy's dead,
so I haven't gotten a chance to talk to him. His name is John Holt and he wrote a book called
Learning All the Time. The subtitle is pretty fascinating. It's how young children learn to
read, write, do math and investigate the world without being taught. So a lot of information out there that says the pressure's off.
This pressure that we feel that's heaped on our shoulders, we maybe can just throw away. Kids
grow. And the quote he says is, when children are living fully and energetically and happily,
they are learning a lot, even if we don't always know what it is.
And I think that's the trade-off, right?
It's like, as a parent,
I would love to be able to check every box.
I would love to read a book with my kids
and be like, you know what?
They learned these 400 vocabulary words.
But this concept of living energetically
and happily and fully,
they're learning, they're growing.
And so we aim to live a full life today. Can I live? And that's going to
look different in every situation. You got a single parent, right? Do what you can with the
time you have. Everyone who's listening has a different situation. What time do you have?
And in that time, can you live fully and energetically and happily with your family?
And I believe that that sets you up for tomorrow.
I'm going to give today all I've got.
And I'm going to give today all I've got in a way that prioritizes what I value, right?
So it's like, it's faith.
It's my kids.
It's my family.
It's my husband.
It's my friendships.
It's my community.
And then comes the work.
And it's my husband, it's my friendships, it's my community, and then comes the work. And it's worked. That means we have to collectively say no about some things, just some things.
Yeah, I think the things that everyone says you have to have in order for your kids to be
successful, do they really? John Taylor Gatto wrote a book. He says that it only takes kids
about 50 to 100 contact hours to learn functional literacy so to
learn to the point where they could learn anything to play their gibson guitar to get in their rock
band to become a chemist to whatever it is that they love i mean our kids come into the world
with things that they love you know by the time they're seven or eight and i just talked to this
chef nathan lippy he grew up eating sticks, but he was interested in cooking.
And so he spent a lot of time like watching early Martha Stewart.
He went through all these names.
I hadn't even heard of them all.
And he said, when I was eight years old, he said, my mom was gone and I just had time
in the kitchen.
And he's like, I wanted to make homemade pasta.
And he's like, I'm just going to do it.
He said, I've seen it, you know, and he gets out the flour and the egg and he makes the
well.
He told me and he does it.
And he had leftover queso in the fridge from something else and he makes raviolis and he's
eight. I mean, he's in the third grade, right? And he makes the ravioli and he rolls out the dough
and he does the fork around the sides and he boils them. He's home by himself, you know,
maybe there's another job, but his mom wasn't there. He boils the water, he parboils. I mean,
that's what he says. He's eight. He knows how to parboil. He puts them in the garlic and the
butter. And anyways, he says, mom walked home and it was a disaster. The kitchen is a disaster, right? He's eight years old. He's
making homemade pasta. And she was kind of like, whoa. And then he said, I sat down, she sat down
to eat it. And he said, the way that she looked at me changed my life. My mom's look, because she
was like, this is incredible. I've never had pasta so good. How did you do this?
And he said, I want that feeling for the rest of my life.
And he was eight.
And I think so often, so John Taylor Gatto says 50 hours.
Well, we put a lot of childhood toward academics,
like 15,000 hours.
And we're raising whole kids.
Towards a test score.
Yes.
And if you're raising toward a test score, that test score doesn't even matter. If you're raising whole kids. Towards a test score. Yes. And if you're raising
toward a test score, that test score doesn't even matter. If you're teaching for a test,
there's healthy cones written a ton about that. It's not about the test. It's unethical, I think.
I think we're destroying human beings. Yeah. So I think that we have to, it's a philosophical,
it really is a philosophical, what is education? And I would argue that Chef Nathan Lippe got a
good one. And it came from himself.
It didn't come from his mom who was making fish sticks.
It came from inside of him and living in a place that allowed him to make a mess of the kitchen.
That gave him the time and whatever.
I asked him, I was like, what did your mom do?
And he was like, I mean, she really didn't do anything.
She just allowed for it.
And there was a time and space for it.
So my advice is, look at your life.
Are there things you could cut that are not life-giving to you and your family?
And whatever the time that you have, maybe you have 50 minutes a day.
Maybe you have hours.
Maybe you're a stay-at-home mom and you've got toddlers.
You've got all the time in the world.
And when you're in that toddler stage as a mom, you're so ready.
Like you're so ready for them to be potty trained.
You're so ready to be out of that stage.
But we know when you leave that stage, your life gets so busy.
You're not necessarily the driver in that seat anymore.
You know, you've got your kids and their interests and you're kind of go, go, go.
This is actually really a beautiful special time when you've got your kids and their interests and you're kind of go, go, go. This is actually really a beautiful, special time when you got your kids home. The unending, this open time is a gift. And if you
can take that and figure out in that time, where does our family thrive? How do we live fully and
energetically? Because this is what I would say. What's one of the biggest changes that's happened
in the past 20 30 years there are hardly
any kids that are living happily and energetically and fully yeah if it really truly only took 50 to
100 hours and obviously every child is different if you've got a child that sucks you know we're
not we're not going across the board but i want to tell you this we've got five kids so when you
have five kids you can experiment a little bit you know so like for the first ones i was super
nervous and we do home education.
But you know, like I said, everyone has their own amount of time that they have that they can play around with. And this book says a kid can learn to read, write and do math on their own. And I was
like, okay, all right. I can see my kid investigate the world. I can see my kids learn how to count,
right? I was like, could a kid really, really learn how to read without being taught? My other
kids, I use this book. It's called Teach Your Child How to Read in 100 Easy Lessons. So it wasn't that hard. It cost me $20. It worked
for all my kids. This was a good investment. And they all were reading. They went from being
illiterate to reading chapter books in a couple months. But for my youngest daughter, John, I was
like, I really wonder about this. And they say that the kids at the right age and stage, right?
Not when they're four. Maybe, maybe, maybe they're three, maybe they're 12. They want to read because they see
everyone else doing it. And they're like, that's intriguing to me. And I want to try that.
And so they ask the questions that they need to ask in order to understand it. But that's what
they did when they were babies, right? They learn from mastery. Did you teach your kids how to crawl?
No. No, but they learn from mastery. And then they went on to something harder. And so our youngest daughter is seven years old and I did not teach her how to read and she can read
anything. She reads Bear and Stain Bear. She reads them out loud. And it was because she was like,
well, what? You know, we've talked about letters and you read to them and then they start to get
interested. And here's this letter that starts your name. My wife had a great party trick.
It's cheating because she has a PhD in literacy.
Oh, and she might hate this.
Maybe she's going to hate this.
No, I don't know anything about it.
We agreed long ago in grad school to not discuss what each other's research was.
But she had a great party trick where she taught our son and our daughter.
But I remember it specifically with our son.
She got those little magnet letters on the bathtub.
Yeah. And she taught them the letters on the bathtub. Yeah.
And she taught them the letters like they were animal sounds.
And so like any 18-month-old could, like, what's a lion say?
Or what's a cow say?
But she would put up, what's a bee say?
And he'd go, blah.
And he was 18 months, couldn't speak yet.
He wasn't fully speaking.
And he was sitting in the back seat and someone had given him a blanket
and it had his name embroidered on it.
And we're driving and he goes,
hunk.
Oh, and he's reading.
We have good little hunting.
We have good little hunting.
And she's like, no, he's not.
But it was the first seed of literacy.
I think that that is, that's the point, right?
That it might not be quite as hard
as we make it out to be.
And there are kids that struggle with reading.
And there's all sorts of different situations there.
What works for one is not going to work for the other.
But the point is that kids are naturally designed to grow and want to grow.
And sometimes we turn that off.
I also think that growth is often.
I remember, and I've told this story often, but I was doing a practicum with a psychologist and we were working with a really troubled kid.
And as we left that room to go into another room, I said, what are you supposed to say to a kid to help him respect women?
That kid is six and he was saying some wild things.
And he looked at me and goes, you can tell a kid whatever you want, but they're just going to watch you.
And I was like, oh, that hurts, man. So if, if a kid grows up in a house and mom and dad are always reading, um, yeah, my son was, has, was typing the other morning
in the, before school. And I was like, get off that screen. What are you doing? You know how
I feel about that? What are you doing? And he's like, I'm working on my novel, dad. And I was
like, oh, cause two of your parents are writers, right?
I mean, it's what he sees.
It's what he knows.
It's all he knows.
And he's like, oh, I guess that's what humans do every morning, right?
And it's like, no, actually.
And what a thing, though.
I mean, that's what's interesting, too.
It's like I feel like we have siphoned off family where it's like, okay, there is a genetic component there.
And maybe like Chef Nathan Lippe, his mom's making fish sticks
and that kind of came on the inside.
But in other situations,
sometimes that is,
your kid already maybe has that bent
or they've seen you do it.
And so what a blessing for that kid
to be able to fall in the footsteps of someone else.
I think that my biggest message is one of hope
that we can do less and gain more.
Yeah, that's it.
That's it.
And I think the things,
when I was talking about, we have to give stuff up,
we often think of,
yeah, you may not be able to afford the new Suburban.
If you want to do some of these things,
drive an old minivan,
drive an old camera,
you're going to be fine.
Kids are going to be fine.
But I think,
I love that Chef Lippy,
because that picture in my head is
that mom gave up this perfect picture of a clean kitchen.
Yeah.
For the sake of her kid. She mom gave up this perfect picture of a clean kitchen. Yeah. For the sake of her kid.
She also gave up like a little bit of, like other parents would be like, you're a bad
mom.
Yeah.
You let your child boil water and you weren't there.
That's right.
Yeah, yeah.
She gave up that too.
She gave up a lot, right?
Yeah.
Give up a lot.
Yeah.
You give up control.
And I think that is the trade off.
It's like, we can't know.
That's why I love that quote so much. They're growing even if we don't always know what it is. And I think that's the point of
it is that if we can learn to let go of that sort of perfections and the worry, I mean, this is what
your whole thing is about, right? Building it up. It's like, well, what's my kid going to do?
I'm like, my mother could have never been like when I was seven years old and worried about sports
and extracurriculars, never been like someday my daughter's going to be sitting across from Dr. John Deloney.
I mean, my mother could have never predicted that, right?
I don't think my parents could have predicted I'd graduate high school.
Right.
Well, sure.
And so we don't know what path they're going to take.
But if they can come at today in a way that really gives today what it's worth without having to worry about tomorrow.
Tomorrow does take care of itself.
And I think the pressure is off for parents. And I think that you have to have a little bit
of practice in it. So you have to try it. Maybe you try it if your kids are in public school,
maybe you try it. It's like you go pick them up from school and instead of going straight home,
you stay at the playground for 45 minutes. Go to the park, yeah.
Stay there for 45 minutes and ask a couple other parents if they'll stay too and bring some snacks
that the kids really like and give everybody a time to wind down. And once you see it, I think that's
what we've lost. We've lost the seeing it. We don't see it anymore. And I had to, even with my
own kids and reading all these books and having like a baseline knowledge, I think this is the
right way. I had to see it. I had to see, like, can my daughter really learn how to read? She
learned how to write, same thing. And she was motivated by different situations.
Once you see it, then you gain that foundation under you,
and you take that with you for the rest of your life.
Let's just assume there's two parents in a home,
and I know that for, I guess, the majority now of families in the country,
that's not the case.
Now, let's do it across the board.
You've got families. You've got somebody
sitting by themselves.
In my head, this
is an exercise that you get out of
your house and go somewhere
and you just
swipe your calendar clean
and instead of saying, okay, we have to do this.
We have to do this. We have to do this.
I got to buy this. I got to buy this.
Swipe it all clean and see
what do we want our house to feel like when we walk in do this, we have to do this, we have to do this, we have to do this, I got to buy this, I got to buy this. Swipe it all clean and see, what do we want our
house to feel like when we walk in? What do we want this thing to be? And let's rebuild
it that way. Right now, for the next year, you got to keep going to your job, right?
You got to keep going to public school or you got to keep, we're going to keep homeschooling
until we, whatever your thing is. But reverse engineer it that way does that sound right
yeah i don't know i think i think it's like you you start with what time do i have and where am
i putting what time do i have that i have the option to make a decision about it because we
all have so much time you got to work you got to you have these you have to shop you maybe you have
to go to therapy appointments like whatever it is, maybe you're taking care of an elderly relative.
Maybe you're in a spot where you're physically not doing super well.
But we all have a certain amount of time that we're the boss of, that we have the say-so.
And so the advice is to, as much as you can, not give that to the screens.
Not give it to swiping, not give it to something
that's going to give you one memory.
You're never going to remember.
I'll be like, hey, John, what were you looking at on Instagram three weeks ago?
This whole, this life changing, I don't know.
No, nothing.
Right.
Nothing.
Just in the vacuum, the vortex.
Yes, and so you're like, I am going to go do and be embodied.
I love that.
That's what Jonathan Haidt talks about.
His new book is The Anxious Generation. be and be embodied. I love that. That's what Jonathan Haidt talks about. His new book is The Ancient Generation. He talks about embodied and it's almost wild that we have
to even have, I was like, these sentences, but we have to be saying them to people. Can we be
embodied? Can we go have an experience where we're there, we're with people, we're doing something?
And that may be taking a walk around the block by yourself and waving at neighbors. I tell you what,
there's nothing, you wave and someone smiles at you. I mean, that really
changes how you feel on the inside. It's very powerful. And so I'm going to take the time
where I can make the decision, however much that is or however little that is. I'm going
to say, I'm going to fill it with what I want to fill it with first and leave the left over
time for screens, not the other way around.
That's exactly right. And for anyone listening, I the other way around. That's exactly right.
And for anyone listening,
I think in my house,
it's Friday nights,
there's pizza and a movie or something.
So good.
And then Saturday morning,
they get,
it's almost like you mentioned. Yes, it is.
I didn't realize I did that.
No, you have created it
like how it used to be
and I think that makes sense.
Saturday morning, yeah.
There is time for screens
because then you can be the yes parent.
Yes.
So that's what we did.
Like when our kids were little, I want to watch a cartoon.
Sure, on Saturday morning.
Just turn it back to the 90s where society protected childhood by the way that it was structured.
Can we take that and recreate it in our homes?
Which means that screens are limited and that there's friends to play with.
And the bigger thing for me, I think underneath those things that you're
mentioning is I get, me and my wife get to breathe and we get emotionally regulated parents, which
has a cascading effect on our kids' nervous. It has a cascading effect on every part of their
lives. We all go inside the house and I want my home to be a place that my wife, that me,
that my kids, when they think of it,
they can't wait to get there.
Because it's a, right?
Yeah.
Yeah, and I think that if you're in a spot,
I mean, we were in a spot
where it's hard to get babysitters
and you got a lot of little kids,
they cry, they're clingy,
your marriage is struggling
because you're not being able to connect.
And this is a very common thing, right?
You're both running.
I felt like nature, time in nature was,
I felt like mother nature was like nature was, I felt like mother
nature was like having another mother, both for my kids. It's someone else to keep your kids
occupied and for me, right? And then I've got a little bit of time to connect with Josh. You know,
we get to have a conversation because we're on a hike. He's in there. You know, we're on a hike
and the kids are playing with whatever. They're playing with sticks.
And so we get to have a conversation. We get to connect. So if you're in a spot where you're alone,
you have no family around to help, maybe you don't have the finances, but you can still connect as a
family and you can connect with your spouse. Because when you go out, if your kids are occupied,
you got a chance to just sit around and have a conversation and connect. And I think
it changes family life. You just did it. Just
yeah. It's just a exhale. Jenny, you're awesome. Thank you for coming to hang out with us. Thanks
for having me. And wear that. My Deloney shirt. Deloney shirt probably. Everywhere. I will. I
will. Thanks for having me. Awesome. Hey, what's up? Deloney here. I am just super excited to
announce I'm hitting the road with my buddy
Dave Ramsey this spring on a brand new tour. Just us two. And we're putting a new twist on this
thing. We're going to talk about money. We're going to talk about relationships. And we're
going to tell stories y'all have never heard before. It's going to be an incredible fun
night. But every night is going to be totally different because you, the audience, are going
to help choose what we talk about. You heard that right. It's going to be totally different because you, the audience are going to help choose what we talk about.
You heard that right.
It's going to be like no event you've ever been to.
We're kicking it off in Louisville on April 21st, 2025.
And then we're going to Durham, Atlanta, Phoenix, Fort Worth,
and then Kansas city.
You're going to laugh.
You're going to learn.
And if we do our jobs, right, you're going to change your life.
Get your tickets for the Money in Relationships Tour
today at ramsaysolutions.com slash tour.
All right, that was my conversation
with my friend Jenny Urich.
Went all over the place and I hope you enjoyed it.
I hope you found some places where you were nodding.
You're like, yes, yes, I'm not crazy.
And I hope you found some places where you're like,
I don't buy that or I need to dig into that further.
She referenced about a jillion books,
about a jillion books.
She's like a walking library.
I wish my brain was as smart and as fast as hers.
We have linked to her book page.
She has a show notes page on her website
where it has all the books that she references,
all the authors, all this stuff.
You can go check it out. And we link to that in the show notes
if anybody's interested in any of the additional books.
At the end of the day, get your kids outside.
You go outside.
Put your phones down.
Put them down.
Put them down.
Go outside.
Experience this incredible, amazing world out there
that is very, very real, unlike things on the internets.
I love you guys.
I'm so grateful that you joined us.
We will see you soon.
Stay in school, don't do drugs, and go outside.
Love you.