The Jefferson Fisher Podcast - Dr. Becky: How to Stay Patient When You’re Triggered
Episode Date: October 14, 2025This one’s for the parents—or anyone raising little humans. I sit down with Dr. Becky Kennedy, clinical psychologist and bestselling author of Good Inside, to unpack what’s really behind kids’... “bad behavior.” We talk about the mindset shift every parent needs, the three words that can calm any meltdown, and how to hold firm boundaries without losing connection. If you’ve ever thought, “Why won’t my kid just listen?” — this conversation will change the way you see those moments forever. Thank you to our sponsors: Cozy Earth. Upgrade Your Every Day. Get 40% off at cozyearth.com/jefferson or use code JEFFERSON at check out. Masa Chips. Get 25% off at https://www.masachips.com/pages/jefferson Momentous. Visit https://www.livemomentous.com/ and use code JEFFERSON for 35% off your first order. BetterHelp. Click https://betterhelp.com/jeffersonfisher for a discount on your first month of therapy. Order my new book, The Next Conversation, or listen to the full audiobook today. Like what you hear? Don’t forget to subscribe and leave a 5-star review! Suggest a topic or ask a question for me to answer on the show! Want a FREE communication tip each week? Click here to join my newsletter. Join My School of Communication Watch my podcast on YouTube Follow me on Instagram Follow me on TikTok Follow me on LinkedIn Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This episode is for the parents, or really anybody who's responsible for little ones.
I've brought you the one, the only, Dr. Becky.
You know her as Dr. Becky Kennedy.
She's a clinical psychologist, best-selling author of the book Good Inside and founder of the parenting platform Good Inside, which I can promise you, my wife, and we both are members of the app.
She is the millennial parenting whisper.
Dr. Becky, thank you so much for coming on.
I have actually, truly, been very much looking forward to that.
I know we both are guests often on people's podcasts and some easy thing to say,
but I feel like obviously we've been friends for a while, and I'm so excited to do this.
Yeah, me too.
You and I have known each other probably, what, over a year at least now?
Has it been?
Yeah, probably two, I'd say.
Time flies when you're old, you know, like us.
Yeah, like us.
Yeah, it's, I feel like it's zoomed by.
It really has been able to support you through all the changes that you,
You have, and you've certainly been there for me with all the things that we have going on.
Be able to talk to you finally, face-to-face, even virtually, is a true pleasure.
So thank you very much for coming on the podcast, and I'm excited for all the things I'm about to ask you.
I have a lot.
So one of the things that you have, and I think it's in your book, because I know I have it underline,
is that when you realize that misbehavior in kids is a skill.
and not a character issue, things begin to change.
I know I'm paraphrasing here.
Yeah.
And I, that to me, now you know, for anybody listening, I have two kids, ages seven and five.
How old are years, Becky?
13, 10, and 7.
Yeah, okay.
You got, you're in a different way.
Okay, we each have at least a seven-year-old and you're on a different scale than me.
So when I read that, when I read that immediately was like, man, that was powerful because I know with my daughter that happened this morning, Dr. Becky, this morning, my son having a great just, he's got bedhead, you know, his hair is everywhere, and he's just eaten his cereal, and my daughter is just like a tornado, just anybody who's in her vicinity, she is going to wreck their morning.
just kind of how it feels sometimes. It's like if you're just in the vicinity, you know you're
going to get it. But when you put, have that line that misbehavior is a skill, not a character
flaw. Tell me what that means to you because I, I love it. Yeah. So I think, I don't know exactly
how I said it in the book, but I think the way I'd say it now is two ways because we all feel like
need different language. Depends on what hits us is, you know, as soon as you start seeing your
kids' bad behavior as a sign of what they need and not as a sign of who they are, everything
changes.
But another thing, which is what you're saying is, can you say that again?
Can you say that again, please?
As soon as you see your kids' bad behavior as a sign of what they need, not as a sign of
who they are, everything changes.
And I think another very practical way of saying that is that kids acting out where it comes
from, it's a skill deficit, not a behavior.
your deficit. So the misbehavior itself, like, I don't know if it's so skilled. It's not a skill
to hit someone or say, I hate you or, you know, a lot of your parents face. But in all those moments,
we tend to very quickly assume, my kid's a bad kid. We tend to collapse a bad thing or a bad
behavior into a bad person. And we do that so fast without realizing it. And then we all act
based on that framework versus wait. And I have, I have a good kid.
they did a have I have a good kid having a hard time and this is a sign that my kid has some
skill deficit there is not a character deficit we just tend to walk down a very different path
after that I I so much relate to that I in my communication stuff and of course anybody who's
listening we they listen for the communication tips and we're going to talk about the practical
stuff is that we do the same thing with our words
you say nice things to someone instantly you're a nice person you hear somebody say mean things
instantly that's a mean person or they say funny things you're like it's a funny person and i hear
that in relation to our kids our kids misbehave they're a bad kid um you know a kid says something
they say thank you or yes sir no ma'am or whatever it's a very polite kid uh and so it's so easy how
we hear one little snippet and we yeah apply that whole label to third
whole identity.
That's exactly it.
And look, I mean, we could talk about this in parenting and communication.
We could talk about this in like a world global scale and, you know, how quickly we are
to judge.
It's happening everywhere.
But, you know, behavior, the thing about it is it's visible.
Like, literally, you can see behavior.
You see a kid hit.
You see your daughter who's a tornado or your son who's a tornado.
And when your kid says, you know, you're the worst parent in the world, I hate you.
You never do anything fun for me right after you, like, took off work and took them to an amusement
park and all you did was ask them to like change their pajamas that's like provoke this whole moment you're
like we're just talking about the pajamas i just bought you right yeah um what happened our brain just takes
what's visible behavior and it collapses it into identity which is always inherently invisible
lives inside someone and then we just start asking the wrong questions and we start intervening in
ways that just deepens the problem right because our initial framework whether you see behavior as a
character deficit or a skill deficit determines everything you do next. And often people say,
well, what do I do? What do I say? And give me a new strategy. Nothing's working. If nothing's
working with your kid, what I would say is actually you don't need a new strategy. You don't need a new
script. You definitely don't need me to like tell you something to parrot. It's not going to feel like
you anyway. Probably the framework with which you see the situation, that's the thing that's not
working. And so we have to start with a framework shift, which is kind of like saying the road you're
on, it's just a bad unproductive road. So like nothing along that road that's an unproductive road
is going to help. We need to slow down and switch roads. And once we understand a new road
and there's a part of you that says, oh, maybe that is what's going on for my kid. Now we can get
concrete and think about strategies or different scripts or things to say. But it's actually about
switching the road first.
When you say road, is that like the mindset when you're saying like that is that,
is that related or is it?
I think so, yeah.
I mean, to me, yeah, mindset, road, like I guess, you know, whatever visual makes sense.
But yes, your mindset is the thing you tell yourself.
It's your interpretation of what's happening.
And so again, I know I'm a concrete person too.
Because we tend to see what's visible behavior and assume we know everything about the person,
What's actually happening, interpretation-wise, is something I call the least generous interpretation.
We all tend to default to that LGI, like you see your kid, I don't know, jump on the couch, and you say very kindly, Bobby, Bobby, I'm going to need to stop jumping on the couch.
You're right near that glass table.
I don't want you to crack your head open, whatever we say.
And it depends on your kid and their temperament, but I have at least one kid like Bobby, let's just say that.
And that kid would look at me.
smile and continue jumping on the couch, but this time harder.
And what we do is this LGI, least generous interpretation.
My kid's a sociopath.
My kid's a sociopath.
That's it.
My kid's a sociopath.
They're going to be in jail.
They're disrespectful.
And then everything that follows after Jefferson, right, it's nothing to do with my kid
jumping in the couch.
Everything that happens after is only because that interpretation in my mind, that least
generous interpretation.
What do you do if you think your kid's a sociopath?
You punish them.
You make a random empty threat.
you have no intention of keeping, but just feel good to, like, yell out in the moment.
And we just end up getting more incendiary with our kid versus MGI, most generous interpretation.
And this is really powerful with any relationship, just saying, like, what is the most generous
interpretation of why my kid would continue jumping on the couch or jump doubly as hard after I said to stop?
And there's no right answer, but in that example, again, which is a framework, a thought, a road, whatever you want to call it, maybe I'd say, well, I do know this kid. All kids crave autonomy. This kid of mine, that's basically an orienting principle. It's kind of like Bobby thinks if I'm not in charge, I'm nobody, and this is almost an existential threat to have to listen to my parent. And also, I don't know, he had a bad day. Someone made fun of him at school. And so he's really looking for a moment to feel, you know, extra in power. Once I have that
interpretation, it doesn't make the jumping okay. That's what I would say. Oh, so it's okay that they
jumped after you said. No, no, it's not about okay. It's just about being effective. But now I might
say, oh, well, he's clearly not able to make a good decision. I know Bobby. I should just go over there
and say, if you're not off the couch by the time I get there, sweetie, I will take you off the
couch because it's just unsafe to jump near the glass table. And now of a sudden, I'm acting
in a way where I'm on the same team as my kid. And I'm actually protecting my kid and helping my kid
versus seeing him and kind of treating him like he's my mortal enemy.
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In my experience, it's very easy to when I see, maybe my son's acting out, my mind out of that fear of every parent wanting their kid to be the best as they can be, a wonderful human, a good citizen.
And we see that one instance, we see that one instance of their character, and I can in my mind see, you know, them at 30 years old making all the terrible decisions.
And all of a sudden, I'm blaming myself for who I, in my mind.
I am, like you said, giving the least generous interpretation of their behavior and now going, okay, well, now they're on the path to doing terrible things instead of just seeing that one little instance of, no, he just wanted a, you know, he wanted an extra piece of gum.
You know, like, of just understanding that they're not getting what they want.
And instead of just looking at that one little instance, I am projecting out a fear that is most likely never going to actually evolve.
Yeah.
And I think that particular thing where we see this moment that's hard with our kid and we fast forward 30 years in our life, the reason that's a big problem is because we respond today with all the feelings we would have for the next 30 years versus just like, oh, wait.
a four-year-old, right? And I think it's helpful to give things names. Like, I call that, and I try to,
I catch myself all the time. Just because I can talk about this doesn't mean I can, you know,
doesn't mean I can do it. So I'm like, oh, I'm doing the fast forward error. That's just what I call
fast forwarder. Like, I'm fast forwarding the worst, least generous scenario. And then if I
use that to respond, I'm going to respond with so much anger. And I'm almost responding,
me and you, Jefferson, both, like, we're almost responding just to prove to ourselves,
we're a good parent. Like, we're not actually giving our kid again what they need. And so the
flip side that I find very helpful is when your kid acts out, the truth is, they're always younger
today than they will be in the future. I know that sounds like a really silly thing to say, but it's
helpful to me. And what that means is the stakes are always lower today. Whether your kid hits at
age four, you know, I don't know, says I hate you at age eight, cheats on a test at age 13. All of those
are lower stakes than when your kid is 18, 25, and 30. And so the good news, right, I think
there's a book called The Good News About Bad Behavior, but really the good news about that
is, oh, wait, I can actually help Mike Hill build a skill. They are clearly missing today
before 30 years from now. And then the moment that, yes, of course, is a hard parenting moment,
becomes like this really high-impact parenting moment where you can actually help your kid
become more resilient today and years from now. Yeah, absolutely. I want to ask you a question
on this is a person this is for me this is a personal yeah let's do it there's there's nobody
listening no one's listening no one's listening just us so my my wife and I with our two kids
is we encourage argument at the house it's not that we go oh yeah argue it's that when they when they do
argue which is often about anything yeah you know he's touching me when he's not he's near my space
when he's not, he has that toy that I haven't, I don't even remember it's existed for six years
and all of a sudden, you know, he has it, is we allow the argument to happen. So we say, as long as you're
not named Colin, as long as you're not hitting, and as long as you're not kind of bragging that,
look what I got kind of behavior, we allow them to talk because it's like, nope, y'all talk it out.
That's usually our phrase, y'all work it out.
Y'all work it out because we want to teach them these skills now versus waiting until later.
I want to know, since I have you on the clock here with me, what do you think about that?
I mean, I love it, right?
And I think what you're saying, big picture, and then we'll just come back for the sibling rivalry and sibling conflict stuff is I'm parenting for the long run.
Like that's what I always say at good inside.
We're very long-term greedy.
Like, okay, when our kids are 30, they're going to be in a relationship with
people they love and in moments they really don't get along with they want something that a person
has they're jealous they're angry they're disappointed like those skills managing anger um communicating
in a respectful way even when you're angry as someone that you want to continue being in a
relationship with nobody gives those skills at 30 like no one's like you're 30 here's as you know
here's communication skills you're 25 here now you know how to manage jealousy like these when parents say
to me well what age will my kids stop arguing at what age will my kids stop arguing at what age will my
kids stop freaking out about small things. What I say is, like, again, what would you say if someone
said at what age will your kid learn how to swim? Like, there's no, I don't know, like, what are you
doing with the years? Not until they get in the water, you know? Yeah, like, well, have they learned
how to swim? Are they level one? Are they level two? No one just, like, gets it at an age. We have
age wrong, right? Development, like, and skill building doesn't just unfold. So what you're saying is,
how can I set my kids up to know that, first of all, there are limits. There are certain things that are
never allowed in respectful relationships. And there are other things that are allowed. And honestly,
you need time and skills and practice to get better at those things. That doesn't just happen with
age. And so what you're saying feels perfectly in line with that overall philosophy, right? It's also
why I'm guessing you're not going to tie your kid shoes until they're 18 and then expect them to
do it at age 18. So I think the other thing around that that I think about a lot in this kind of age
of overfunctioning for our kids.
It's just, what jobs do I want to keep having for my kids over the years and what jobs
do I want to work my way out of?
And is my behavior as a parent consistent with that?
So, like, my kids when they're older, like, if they're, I don't know, they get fired
from a job or they have a breakup.
Like, I will always be happy if they're like, hey, can I talk this out with you?
Like being there for them in hard moments, always happy to have that job.
Like, water bottle rememberer?
Nope.
Nope.
Yeah, where your shoes are?
Yeah.
Yeah, picking up the towel, calling the doctor for your own appointment,
checking in, ordering at a restaurant, and deciding who's right or how to move forward in an argument.
Like, I think what happens is we often, in the moment with our kids, when they're arguing,
the quickest easiest thing to do is something like, fine, you get the red cup today
and you get the red cup tomorrow.
Because in the moment, they're like, fine.
But then we shouldn't be surprised when our kids are like, you know, instead of four and seven,
now all of a sudden they're like 13 and 16
and they're fighting about who gets the car
in the car first, something that seems,
and we're like, why do you guys keep coming to me?
Well, I have locked in this pattern.
One kid gets upset at the other.
They both come to me.
I am the arbiter of who is right,
which not only locks yourself into a role you don't want,
but also reflects back to your kid,
something that we don't realize we're reflecting back,
which is I don't think the two of you
are capable of solving your own problems,
which is why I continue to do it for you.
And so not only are we having a job we don't want
and depriving our kid of their right
to kind of build those skills,
which they'll need for the rest of our life,
we're also kind of saying to our kid
that we don't think they're capable of doing something,
which is why we, which again,
none of those are things we actually want,
but our behavior ends up communicating it.
So I love what you're saying.
There's rules, there's guidelines,
there's limits, and then there's space to figure.
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Yeah.
And, well, one, I'm personally, selfishly grateful you approve because if you didn't,
we'd be changing some stuff.
If I didn't, you just have to lie to my face.
For sure.
Absolutely.
second of all is I want to one highlight for everybody listening here all right
Dr. Becky has an online platform called Good Inside and this is my plug for it because we
use it we love it all right we use it all the time the books fantastic really love the
membership in the community because that's where you get to go deeper so and how many
people do you have in it now um we're getting up there you know North
of, I think, 90,000, something like that.
And I think the thing I'm proudest of, which really, though, is, I think we're at, it's like
110 countries.
So it's just like, it's really, it's amazing how different we are, but how we all struggle
with so many the same things.
Oh, my goodness.
Yeah, there's going to be so many Dr. Becky taught kids out there.
I'll do the same thing.
Let me tell you some things that, for the people listening right now, I want to make sure
that they walk away with some very practical tools in terms of behavior.
in terms of kids retaliating, in terms of defensiveness.
There's something that we like to use here that we got from you,
and that is, I see you need help.
So you use that phrase when it's somebody is struggling,
we need you to go, hey, I need you go upstairs and go get your shoes on, please.
Nothing happens.
All right, I've already said it once.
I need you go get on, go get on your shoes.
And then if it's, we got, I see you need help.
Let me go with you to go.
And like, it is.
That's when it's, it's kind of like the one, two, three.
Like, my son, I can go one, two.
By the time I'm at two, he's gone.
He's a trail of dust, all right?
Yeah.
My daughter, she will say three for you.
You know what I mean?
Like, she has no problem being in your face.
That's right.
Yeah, she's what you would call in your community knows this, a D.FK.
Yes.
And so I will love you to talk.
Yeah, I want you to talk about that for a second.
Oh, I mean, there's so many things in what you just said.
So first of all,
Just I'll start with listening and then I'll go to deeply filling kids because they're definitely a little bit different.
They're like my passion project within the passion project of Good Inside.
Listening is probably, I think, one of the most common, it's one of the most common struggles we have, even though we don't tend to name it in our head.
But you actually need your kid to listen like a million times a day, right?
If you think about all the moments that are hard with your kid is probably a transition, either transition to the table, transition to putting on your shoes, transition out of the house, transition to ending screen time, transition to bedtime.
Like there's a million transitions.
And in all those moments, you need your kid to live.
listen. And we all tend to say the same thing. Me too when I'm complaining to my friends.
My kid doesn't listen. My kid doesn't listen. They don't respect me. I was never like this.
My parents, we all say the same thing. But I think the reframe not really matters and inherently
then changes our strategy is that when we say my kid doesn't listen, we really mean something
very different. Because you and I, Jefferson, even your daughter, if you're like, come to the
table and you can, I don't know, watch an iPad for, you know, three hours and have an ice cream
Sunday, my guess is she wouldn't even, she would not count. She'd be like right there.
and so really we mean what happens when I ask my kid to do something I want them to do and they don't inherently want to do
which just begs the question well what do I do in my life when someone I love asked me to do something I don't want to do
but they want me to do and it's nuanced it has to do a little bit with the moment and how they ask
but probably even more than that it has to do with stuff outside the moment and how our relationship feels
and how listened to and seen, I feel in general in that relationship.
And then for kids, I have to do with other stuff, too.
They can't really hold on to multi-step directions.
They prioritize the moment more than the future, like stuff with their immature brain.
But going to your daughter, there are these kids.
Yes, I call them deeply feeling kids.
And this all happened kind of my approach for these kids because I had my second kid.
And before I had my second, I really, really thought I knew what I was doing.
Like, I was giving a lot of advice to people.
And they say, like, it doesn't work.
And, you know, to their face, I was nice.
I was like, well, let's try other things.
And in my head, I was like, I think you're, I think you're doing it wrong, you know, judging, judging silently.
And then I had my second kid, and I was like, oh, my goodness, I know what I'm doing.
And I'm not doing it, quote, wrong.
This is the same thing I did with my son, but how is it that I do the same thing?
And yeah, they are not people pleasing.
So when you're like, kind of, I'm going to be disappointed or I'm going to take away your dessert, they're like, I don't even like dessert.
And you're like, oh, shoot, I just lost all my power.
Right. And they have big expressions.
And these kids, I think the key thing to know about them is that they really have a lot of shame next to their vulnerable feelings.
So without shame, kids can allow their vulnerability to be seen.
You're like, oh, you're having a hard time.
You need help.
And inside, they're kind of like, I do need help.
That feels really good to hear.
Right.
Now, some deeply feeling kids, because of that shame, when you try to help in the moments they need you,
most, they can explode. They say things that feel totally out of proportion. I hate you. You're
the worst. Get out. You'll never understand me. You don't even want me in this family. And you're
like, I literally just am trying to get into gymnastics class. Like, how did this become about
wanting you in this family? Like it gets dark and deep. And I think we then misunderstand those
kids further by taking it personally, saying, oh, you're being so dramatic. Why can't you be like
your brother? You make everything hard, which almost confirms their worst fear. See, I am too much and
too different for this family in the first place and kind of we're off to the races. And I think for
those kids, I just want parents listening, you know, because there's so much more, there's so much
more I want to say about that that I can't get in the podcast is just, you're not making it up,
but these kids really are more explosive. They are more challenging. Traditional parenting things
to help other kids actually don't help these kids. Like, again, you're not like crazy. Like I hope
you're just like, oh my goodness, okay, it's not just me. And you're so not alone. You're not the
only one with kids like this. Jefferson and I both have kids like this. And honestly, in our, yeah,
in our goodness side program, it's one of the most popular programs because I think it's,
you know, a place where, again, not only you get help, but you can connect with other parents
and with our coaches really understand those kids. So you're not crazy and you're not alone.
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I told my son, this is what he does now.
He loves Legos.
I was like, all right, man, come on, we need to stop what we're doing and get those shoes on.
We've got to go pick up a friend.
And he just goes, no, thank you.
No, no, thank you, dad.
Like, that's his big thing.
Anytime I ask him to do, hey, I need you to go take a bath.
No, thank you.
Like, that is his, and he means it.
means he's, ah, thanks, damn, no thanks. So what do you do? I usually laugh. I usually laugh. I say,
well, that is very polite. We need to go. If we do it anyways, like, okay. But I do give him a little bit
of bonus points. But he's, he, he's very much like me. She's very much like my wife and like
they, we just, the way our brains operate. So to hear them argue, we might look at each other and
go, that sounds, that's a little too close to home. Like we can hear them.
the way they operate, but it's fun to see the little personalities. So I'm curious,
what have you found to be in all of your research, all the things you do for your good inside
community as well as your book? What are some of the most helpful scripts that you have not only used
personally, but you find that most people go, hey, this is really some stuff that works.
Yeah. I think so I'm going to start with what I think is the foundation. I think when we're
looking for like the most helpful scripts or what to say,
honestly, the most important thing is how you talk to yourself. I will definitely give scripts
for what to say to your kid, but they won't even come to mind to use any parent who's like,
but I memorize them. In the moment, I just scream at my kid. What that tells me is we're so
triggered in the situation or we're looking at the situation again, through a set of glasses
that's just such a kind of me against you. My kid is the enemy moment that, of course,
when we're in that mindset, we literally don't have access to the things that we learned in a
different way. So step one for a script to me is actually how we talk to ourselves. So number one,
just this idea of most generous interpretation really helps. And another way of saying that is
just, I have a good kid who's having a hard time. I promise you in any hard moment with your kid,
instead of thinking about what to say to them, if you say to yourself, I have a good kid who's
having a hard time. And yes, another version of that is, I am a good parent who is having a hard time.
That is true. You are doing something very powerful and that you are literally separating identity of a good kid from behavior, which is whatever they're doing that indicates they're having a hard time. Because when a kid is hitting, when a kid says I hate you, when a kid lies to your face, when a kid has a meltdown, you know, at the exact moment that you're with your extended family and you're trying to kind of show off what an amazing family you have. Like all that means is your kid is having a hard time. They're not doing something to you. They are struggling. So that phrase, I have a good kid having a hard time, is a very.
very simple way of holding this duality and kind of separating identity and behavior.
So that to me is the number one script.
Okay.
Then what actually else is really, really helpful?
To me, three words are probably, I think there are three words that I would wish every
single parent to say to their kid, like almost every day.
And I'll say them.
No one really is to write them down because it's three words.
I'm probably going to write them down as soon as we end this.
Just, I believe you.
Oh.
Okay.
And in almost every hard moment with our kids, they are really just looking to be believed.
I mean, probably in every hard moment between two adults, someone's looking to be believed
because our feelings are just so different from other hard moments or hard things that happen.
Like, if you run and trip and skin your knee and you're like, ouch, right?
That, like, really hurts.
Like, someone saw you fall.
You see blood.
Like, you see the scrape.
It is so obvious externally what happened, right?
It's so obvious what's real.
Feelings are unlike anything else in that they course through our body in such a visceral, intense way.
Like, anyone listening, me and you, Jefferson, like, I'm sure we have moments where you can remember, like, the way your heart felt, what your stomach felt, like, the way your whole body felt, what was going on in your mind.
And like, it is more intense than the blood from skinning your knee.
But, like, it's not observable to you or someone else.
That it's very confusing.
And it's really confusing for a kid, right?
And so I often think that validating feelings, which I should say,
is widely misunderstood as agreeing with feelings or as letting your kid's feelings be in the driver's seat,
neither of which good inside stands for.
validating feelings is essentially like saying to a kid
I believe that what you are experiencing
is real inside of you like when you say to a kid
and I'll go examples I believe you
this is going to get real existential
but I feel like what you're saying to them
is you are real
which is kind of the thing we're all fighting to feel
in our worst moments and when we don't feel it
we really escalate our behavior
just so someone will hopefully believe us
and then they usually invalidate us more,
and we're in an awful direction.
So a bunch of examples.
Like, even that, like, okay, time to go, you know, do bath.
No, I'm playing with my Legos.
Oh, I believe you.
I believe you.
You really want to stay with your Legos, any of it, right?
The worst day at school.
Oh, why?
What happened?
The worst day at school.
The whole day was horrible because I had to go second on the slide.
Okay, now you and I are like, like, really?
And this is where we do the fast forwarder.
Oh, my God, am I going to have that kind of kid?
who can't even tolerate one moment.
I'm not going to have that, right?
If you actually just say, oh, I believe you.
And then you're like, zip it.
Zip it and count to 692 in your head before you say anything else.
I promise you your kid will deescalate.
And you're not setting bad habits because you know what helps a kid when they're an adult,
take a small moment and stay calm instead of making it into their whole day.
It's their ability to believe themselves.
I believe myself.
this thing really is hard.
Once you do that and something inside your own body,
you generally can move on.
Like, it doesn't spiral
because it's not looking for the thing it needs,
which is just belief and acceptance.
So I believe you when your kid is having trouble leaving the house,
when they don't want to take a bath,
when they tell you how that horrible day,
when they tell you you're the only parent who,
whatever it is that they fill in the blank,
and you're like, I have four best friends in this town
and I know they're stricter than it, whatever it is.
When you say, I believe you,
you're not being so literal.
that's not even how they take it in.
What you're actually saying to them
is I believe that the things you feel are real.
And that is the basis of regulation,
resilience, and confidence.
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That's so good.
So good.
I love that.
The phrase, I want to say that we got it.
I feel like everything we've done we got from you with their kids is that's a bummer.
Like so I'll have my son or daughter, they'll complain about something.
don't want to go do it. And I go, I know, that's a bummer. Like, just that right there,
it's like, oh, okay, it's like, they get it out right then. Now they don't really complain about
it anymore. But as long as I'm like, yeah, that's a bummer, I agree. My daughter's really
quick to go, this is the worst day ever. And I'm like, I know, it's a bummer.
Bummer. And that's a version. This is what I love when parents tell me. Like, to me, I believe you,
they're literally words I say. But there's so many extensions that whether you're new Jefferson or
someone else, you're like, this is my version. Like, for me,
my version of that's a bummer that feels very much me I'm like oh that stinks yeah that stinks
all my friends are in the same class next year and I don't oh that stinks right and then I think
what that speaks to also and why it's so powerful to have it as a period versus like adding a solution
after is feelings in general right feelings are looking for support not solutions and when they
don't get support they will if you think about feelings is like a living thing in your body they
We'll get bigger and bigger and go to more and more dramatic ways to get support.
And a lot of us, we approach our kids' feelings with solutions, right?
Where, oh, take a bath, they hate baths, oh, it's not that bad.
I'll give you a light show.
I'll do this.
Hey, there are kids without running water.
All of that is true.
Usually just doesn't help in the moment because they're all solutions.
There's solutions to move through the feeling more quickly.
Or they're almost solutions, like we say to our kid, it's like a solution to not feel the feeling.
even though in a weird way, it's like, well, my kid's already feeling the feeling.
It's hard to not do something that's already happened, right?
So if you just remind yourself, this is looking for a support, not a solution,
you're going to say, that's a bummer.
Oh, that stinks.
This is your least favorite part of the day.
I get that.
I believe you.
They're actually kind of all, quote, script versions of, again, the same principle coming to life.
Same vibe.
Same vibe.
Same thing.
Yeah.
And your, the feelings want to be supported, not solved kind of thing.
It's, it's, the reason why I like, that's a bummer, is because I'm not telling her that she should not feel that way.
I'm not trying to argue with her of like, the worst day.
What are you talking about?
I just bought you this.
We just got this.
I just had like all the, I just got you a snow cone that had ice cream in it.
Like, we never do that.
Like the, so what are you talking about?
Instead of that, instead of that, which does nothing, it's just the, I know, it's a bummer, right?
Yeah.
Okay, well, that's, that right there is, please, yeah, that's what we're here for, yeah.
Great. You really wish, and I'll show some examples of how you could fill that in, but that's the starting script.
You really wish, and I'll tell you also the long-term impact. So let's say, I don't know, when my kids were younger, this is one of my kids, I can't even tell you the number of mornings. He's like, I want an ice cream Sunday for breakfast.
It's just like not one of our breakfast options on the usual, except for birthdays when my kids can choose anything they want.
And meanwhile, just so, you know, it's not like we have some, like, super healthy house.
Like, my kids have basically sugary waffles that just feel more breakfast to me than ice cream sundaes.
But ice cream sunda just feels like a little much.
You know, I want an ice cream Sunday.
I'm on ice cream Sunday.
Oh, all my friends get ice cream Sundays.
Obviously, it's not true.
Right.
And I would say to him, right, in addition to holding the boundary, because that's the other thing about good inside that I just want to make sure it gets in here.
Like, we are equally about validating feelings, which we're talking about as we are about holding boundaries.
This is where we've overcorrected as a world.
we've gone from kids' feelings not mattering
to kids' feelings
dictating our decisions.
I would say both extremes are equally bad for children
where what's in the middle is I can see my kids' feelings as real
and I can still know I'm the pilot of the plane.
Like, you know, just because the passenger is freaking out
doesn't mean I need to freak out
or I need to change directions, right?
So, okay, so I was not giving ice cream
Sundays for breakfast.
And one of the lines I'd say here and there
is just like, oh, you really wish you could have ice cream.
I get it, you really wish.
Yeah.
I remember the morning
that he came out to me
and the first thing he said was
I really wish I could have an ice cream sandwich for breakfast
when you use the language of wishing
and don't use it like a million times a day
but when your kid again you're walking by the toy store
and you say no and then you just pop in this like
oh you really wish we could go there
when you use it enough there will be a day
for the first time instead of your kids saying
I hate you or having a meltdown
they say to you, I really wish blank.
And the thing about that language
that is so much more powerful than we might know,
but now you know it, so it's planted in your head,
is as soon as you wish something as a human,
you know it's not happening.
You've accepted reality.
Anytime you have a wish, right?
Like it's, so when your kid is able to verbalize a wish,
they are regulating their disappointment
in not being able to have something.
And it will transfer.
So it started showing up more places.
We have to leave the park.
Oh, Mom, really?
I wish we could stay longer.
And I remember, I was like, hold on a second.
You used to have a meltdown.
And it's interesting.
You might have whined now, but you don't go from not melting down to overnight saying,
it is true.
We have been here for an hour and a half.
Thank you for giving me this time.
It's time to leave the park.
No, that's not like an overnight change.
And what's in between melting down and gratitude is actually this idea of wishing.
And so when you use the language of wish with your children,
and you wish you could have a sleepover tonight.
You wish you could watch TV.
You wish we could have ice cream.
You wish you could stay at the park.
You will notice a day when they use it for you.
And I promise you when that happens,
that is just a massive kind of regulation achievement.
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And now, back to the episode.
We had been really big on using our breath and teaching, first, our son of, you know,
when you're getting really worked up, because he's our big feeler.
He feels everybody's emotions.
So he doesn't want to, he won't do something if sister doesn't get it because he feels
like she's going to be disappointed. He feels everybody's emotions. Daughter feels nobody's emotions,
cares about nobody's emotions. And so it's such a fun dynamic. But to your point, he was upstairs
one time. She's getting really worked up about something. And we just hear, take a breath. Like that,
he was from upstairs telling her to take a breath, shouting, shouting down at her. And we're like,
okay, well, that's, he's not wrong. But let's, let's talk.
about it a different way. Hearing your kids, the point is, your kids really do absorb it.
They really do what you pour into them. They might may not show up right away, but over time,
it really does. And just to double click on that, it does not show up right away. Like just when I say
to my son, look, by the time I get over the couch, if you're not off the couch, sweetie, I will pick
you up and put you on the ground because it's not safe to jump near the glass table, which by the way,
I would say like A plus parenting intervention, if you're doing it, right? A plus.
My children have never set to me, like when I get over to the couch, like, you're right, it's time to get off.
Or you know what? You're such a sturdy parent. I appreciate you protecting me when I'm not able.
No, they scream. They cry. When I say you really wish, it's not like the next day, they say, I do wish.
Thank you for explaining to me that way.
Like I think because we don't, and we haven't been educated, that's why. We haven't really gotten a good education as parents in parenting and child development at all.
they just are like, hope you have a car seat, which we should have at the hospital.
But that's it, as if a car seat's going to, like, teach us all the things about parenting.
I think we have a better understanding of how long it takes a kid to learn how to swim than we do,
how long it takes a kid to learn how to regulate their emotions.
And while swimming, for sure, is, like, a very important life skill.
I would say regulating your emotions is an even more important life skill.
And I don't know about you, but people say they're like, how long until my kid doesn't have tantrums?
and like, okay, Dr. Becky, whether it's, yeah, your app
or this therapist I'm seeing, whatever it is.
It's a lot of money.
Actually, it gets a drink.
We spent a lot of us, I'm looking like I'm telling a secret,
spend a lot of money on our kids swim lessons.
And we tolerate them not swimming for a long time.
And the reason we do that is because we understand the arc.
We understand a first couple swim lessons.
My kid's not swimming in the deep end.
They're not even swimming.
Maybe they don't even bring their head in the water, right?
But we have an understanding.
actually yeah right we have an understanding of how it goes and so we're like this is an investment
and it's going to pay off and i don't expect it to pay off now and i know it will eventually some
kids swim in a short time some kids take a while same thing for regulating their emotions some kids
even the short time is still years till it shows up deeply feeling kids they're like the kids who
take a long time to swim doesn't mean they're going to be worse swimmers but it does take them
Correct. Yeah, or even more so. When is my kid going to stop having tantrums? Well, are you keeping them from getting in the pool, you know? Like, are you, right? Are you stopping the very kind of behavior that you want to hear and that you want to see and that you want to demonstrate for them? Oh, no, no, no, no, don't. You can't get in the pool. You can't learn this. No, stay out. How else are they supposed to learn to regulate and to learn to communicate? And just to go further. And this is why, like, when people say to me, but are you about punishments and sending your kids to their room?
And when I have it's like, no, not really.
It doesn't mean I don't do it here and there.
I mean, I'm a human.
Everyone once in a while,
I yell is like, go to your room, no dessert tonight,
or whatever we do.
Mostly just because we feel desperate, you know, in that moment.
But in swimming, let's take a kid who doesn't know how to swim,
and they're in the pool.
And you're like with your kid in the pool.
And other kids their age are swimming.
I don't know one parent, Jefferson, who sees you in the pool.
And it's like, Jefferson, your son still can't swim
and you're just going to be with him.
Like, I think you're reinforcing.
You're basically telling him it's so,
that he's the only kid who swim.
Oh, you're spending extra time with him in the pool tomorrow.
Oh, Mike, oh, my.
You should send him to his room
and just tell him to learn how to swim
and come out when he can swim like other kids.
You'd be like, you are the type of person
I shouldn't be friends with.
Like, that's a weird thing.
Like, it's crazy making.
It doesn't make any sense.
And so it's not that like zero part of me is soft.
I actually just think, again,
if bad behavior is a skill deficit,
not a character deficit, nobody has ever learned new skills by being sent away to their room.
Like, you actually need to learn them and you need to practice them, which is, yeah, what we're kind of all about.
Dr. Wright, this is fantastic.
I have been wanting to have this time with you to be able to share it with our community and audience,
and it's just been fantastic.
It did not disappoint.
I know you have the busiest schedule.
And also, your kid's book is awesome.
Oh, thank you.
We read it as a family probably when it, not too long after it came out.
So it's a book all about hitting and with the fire truck.
So I give everybody the title of it again.
It's called That's My Truck.
So that's my truck.
And can I say one really, really quick?
Please.
The thing I just want every parent to know, okay, it is so easy to hear all this stuff and be like, oh, that's it.
I just, I messed up my kid forever.
I never said, I believe you.
I think I messed them.
I've messed them up first.
whatever, I've been sitting in the room.
Truly, the thing I believe more than anything else about good insight is, I mean this,
is that we're experts in imperfect parenting, like repair, knowing how to go back,
knowing how to go back to a moment that felt bad in repair is like kind of the ultimate
parenting strategy to get good at, which means you can't even get good at the ultimate strategy
if you don't mess up in kind of an ongoing way.
And so there's no perfection here.
I definitely don't do all the stuff I'm talking about with you with my own kids all the time.
But what I do try to say in the back of my head is, okay, it's not too late.
I can repair and move forward from there.
And so I just want to make sure
everyone leaves knowing that.
Absolutely.
I want to make sure before we wrap up,
where can they find you?
How can they find Good Inside, Dr. Beggie?
We make it pretty easy.
We call everything basically the same thing.
So you can go to Goodinside.com.
And from there, you can find out about,
you know, our children's book and adult book,
the email we send out weekly,
our free email of my podcast.
And yes, our app-based membership, everything.
It's just all at goodinside.com.
And I also just love, you know, on DM on Instagram, Dr. Becky, at Good Inside, it's all one thing.
Like, sending me a note, like, oh, I like this part of the podcast, right, questions about this.
Like, I really still do check that and really do monitor it and love to hear from real people.
And so please, please reach out.
And I can attest she's just as nice as she sounds.
I promise she's fantastic.
Dr. Becky, thank you so much for your time.
I always wrap up our episode in really three short little snippets, as is kind of my
thing. This is what I've learned. I want to make sure that you agree. Number one, when you feel
misbehavior, you get misbehavior from your kid. That is a skill deficit. It is not a
character deficit. Number two is anytime you need to reshift as a parent, it's that mindset or
road, as you talked about, just a decision to take a different road. And that is, I am a good
parent having a hard time or I have a good kid having a hard time. And number three, if there are
three words that we can instill in every parent right now today. It's for them to use the
phrase, I believe you. And if they use it, magical, things can happen in the relationship
between them and their children. That's really great wrap-up. Amazing, no notes. Okay, awesome. Okay,
awesome. Very cool. Well, thank you so much for having me and for coming on and we'll be in touch.
Thanks, Dr. Becky. Thanks, Jefferson.