The Megyn Kelly Show - Raising "Outdoor" Kids, and Overcoming Toxic Achievement Culture, with Steven Rinella and Jennifer Wallace | Ep. 618
Episode Date: August 30, 2023Today's show is a deep dive on the challenges of parenting in our society today. First, Megyn Kelly is joined by Steven Rinella, author of "Catch a Crayfish, Count the Stars," to discuss the value of ...spending time with family outside, the importance of getting away from technology, the changes in how kids were raised in the 70s vs. today, ways to approach a bear encounter and what to do in a (very rare) bear attack, the decline in veganism but meat eaters getting targeted over climate change, supporting farmers and ranchers, reports the Biden administration has stopped funding hunting programs at schools, and more. Then Jennifer Wallace, author of "Never Enough," joins to discuss the difference in pressures kids face when it comes to achievement in school, how the way kids are raised has changed throughout the past few decades, where society pressure comes from today for kids and parents, how to overcome toxic achievement culture, mistakes many parents often make, connection over achievement, mental health effects of putting pressure on our kids, the need for parents to model balance for their children, and more.Rinella: https://www.themeateater.comWallace: https://www.amazon.com/Never-Enough-Achievement-Culture-Toxic/dp/0593191862Follow The Megyn Kelly Show on all social platforms: YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/MegynKellyTwitter: http://Twitter.com/MegynKellyShowInstagram: http://Instagram.com/MegynKellyShowFacebook: http://Facebook.com/MegynKellyShow Find out more information at: https://www.devilmaycaremedia.com/megynkellyshow
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Welcome to The Megyn Kelly Show, your home for open, honest, and provocative conversations.
Hey everyone, I'm Megyn Kelly. Welcome to The Megyn Kelly Show. Day two in the Sirius XM HQ,
and I have yet to see Howard Stern. I'm looking. I don't think he's here, but he has a beautiful studio.
I also have a nice little makeshift studio here, and I'm here with Mike Paco, who's like
the genius behind this show. If you call in, that's who you talk to, and we're never in
the same room at the same time. Good to see you, Paco.
Good to see you, too.
Abigail Fine in here as well. Okay, so we are here because I am at home in Connecticut
getting ready for school, and I'm sure a lot of you can relate.
There's so much to do, isn't there?
There's such a long list, and there's no one to pawn it off on.
You as the parents, you have to make the decisions.
Abigail Fine in helps me with a lot of it, but I'm just saying there's a lot.
So I'm dealing with it.
I'm sure all of you are dealing with it. And Godspeed.
In our second hour, speaking of parental responsibilities, an old friend of mine who's an award-winning journalist.
She's worked for 60 Minutes.
I knew her very well when we lived in New York.
Her name is Jenny Wallace, Jennifer Wallace.
And she's got one of the hottest books out on the market right now on parenting, on the meat grinder that we put our kids through and how, you know, it's causing
anxiety and depression, but how to work around it while still raising kids who have ambition,
kids who have life goals, kids who understand the value of hard work. How do you thread that needle?
Right. She took a deep, deep dive. And Jenny's interesting because she went to Harvard. She's
married to a guy who's extremely successful. And she found herself in the mix of, you know, these New York City private
schools, which is where we met her, you know, sort of getting on that train where you just,
you know, you pressure your kid and you want the A's and you want the high achievement and
little juniors got to be in all the extracurricular activities that everybody else is doing.
And then you realize, wait, what am I doing? What am I doing?
She had that aha moment.
She's written a whole book about it.
First, it was in an article in the Washington Post that went totally viral.
And she wrote a book afterward, which is well worth your time.
She's here in our second hour.
But before that, I am joined by someone who I find absolutely fascinating.
There's so much to go over with Stephen Rinella.
He is the meat eater from Michigan. Now, Stephen is the host of the long running television show,
Meat Eater, and he's one of the top podcast hosts in the country. And on that show,
he dives into the nuances of hunting and the art of wild game cooking. Now, I, as a recent city slicker, past 20 years of my life,
you'd think I wouldn't know anything about these things,
but I know a little.
And I got a lot of questions for Stephen,
who is the New York Times bestselling author
of count them 10 books,
including Outdoor Kids in an Inside World,
Getting Your Family Out of the House
and Radically Engaged with Nature.
And his latest, which is called Catch a Crayfish, Count the Stars,
Fun Projects, Skills, and Adventures for Outdoor Kids.
He's here to discuss how to get your kids to put down the technology
and embrace the great outdoors.
Steve, welcome to the show.
Hey, thank you, Megan. I appreciate it.
That was a very nice welcome from you.
Well, I really appreciate the way you live your life and the messaging behind it.
We split our time now, and we spend a fair amount of the year, I mean, for somebody who
doesn't live there permanently, out in Montana, which is, I know you live in Bozeman.
That's right.
Or as Abigail Finan calls it, Bozeman.
Bozeman.
She's taking a beating today. And so I love the great outdoors.
And as soon as you leave the city where I know you used to live too, and you go to a place like Montana, you are reminded of how critical it is to your wellbeing. So let's just start with that.
Just the overall importance for people who have gotten sucked into city life of removing oneself and reminding oneself what it's like to be under a big sky.
Well, to answer that, first I want to point out that I do live in Montana now, and I've spent quite a bit of time here.
But my kids were born through circumstances of work and relationships.
My kids were born in New York.
I saw that.
My two older kids were born in New York.
So I have some familiarity with that.
And that actually plays a big part in some of the writing I've done about getting kids involved in the outdoors.
That unique set of challenges in an urban environment.
But I was raised very much hunting, fishing, trapping.
We were in the outdoors all the time.
And I think I tried to explain, and people have a hard time
understanding where this would come from,
is it was so important to our lives when I was a kid
that I would get, honest to God, I would get a guilty conscience
if I wasn't spending enough
time outside. It was, it was sort of like pushed forward as that level of importance. I equate it
to how someone might feel bad about missing church. It was that, that I would feel bad to not
be outside. It was just regarded as so important in our lives. That's good.
So when I had kids, I had a lot of, I don't want to say anxiety because it
wasn't necessarily negative. I just had a very, I put a really high priority on getting my kids
engaged with nature. And I think that the difficulty of the environment we were in for a
few years really added to that because it wasn't easy and
I had to make it happen. Of course. I mean, I think we all went through that recently, but
the, the way we grew up, cause I think I read you were born in 74. Uh, so you grew up in the
seventies and eighties. Like I did. What did your parents say to you every time you went to them
and said, what can I do, mom? What can can i do the answer was always the same play outside go play outside and you know i was raised in syracuse new york for the
first 10 years which is like nine months out of the year there's three feet of snow outside but
still it's like get out there today it's very different it is like they don't even ask what
can i do they go right to the device. You have to interject
yourself into that relationship to say, get off of that thing and go play outside. So it's,
I mean, I think it's a bigger challenge for people in the city because you can't like in
New York, just say, go play outside. That's not going to happen for a six-year-old in Manhattan.
Good luck, have fun. But if you live in the suburbs, maybe you have a basketball court or maybe you have a lawn or a swing set.
It makes life easier. But that connection with the great outdoors actually is it's the opposite of depressing.
It's uplifting. I think it's good for your mental wellness, good for your physical wellness.
And if you go long enough without having you, even if you're not an outdoorsy person, bad things start to happen.
Oh, I think there's there's huge detriments to it. And I just want to touch on a handful of the things start to happen. Oh, I think there's huge detriments to it.
And I just want to touch on a handful of the things you said there.
When I was little, you're right.
It was always go outside.
In fact, if we got caught inside, you were probably going to get a chore list
because it was just – if they caught you watching TV or
something, my mom or dad was going to write down on a piece, on a legal pad, chores for you to do.
If I was outside, it was just regarded as I was up to something constructive and I would
find freedom and be left alone. That's brilliant.
In the city, it's different. You're right. And that's one of the things that, that nagged at me is I had to be a real driver to, to make it happen.
And you have to be an escort in a company, your kids at times. One of the things though,
that I picked up from my parents, um, before I say this, I'll point out that I find so many people my age who kind of,
who have sort of wholeheartedly rejected a lot of lessons that they might've learned from their
own parents. I threw out parts and I kept parts. And one of the parts I kept is my parents were
not afraid to exercise their role as authoritarians in the family. Meaning I don't put everything to
my kids as a question or I don't put everything to them as doing me a favor. I will just explicitly
say that this is what we're going to do. We're going outside. The reason I can get away with this
is they always feel better when we do so if i'm overcoming some amount
of resistance or inertia from them you know that hey we're going to go camping this weekend and
they had other plans or were hoping to go hang out at their friend's house you know where maybe
there's a red more ready available access to screens and i just say that this no this is what
we're doing me and mommy have made up our minds we're all going camping i know that we're going to come home and they're going to feel better than they would have
otherwise they're going to be exhausted at the end of the day they're going to sleep great they're
going to feel invigorated they're going to be in a good mood so i don't mind laying down the law
about how we're going to spend time because I know in the end they are at times quite
literally going to thank us for having made the plans that we made. Can I ask you as somebody who
doesn't do a lot of camping though it it's always been a life goal to actually do more we used to go
to um we on my microphone here okay we used to go to umkirk, we called it.
It was Lake Ontario in New York State when I was growing up.
And we would go to this little cabin and we would stay in this cabin, which you probably don't consider camping.
But we considered camping for two weeks a year we'd go.
And ever since, I've wanted to get back to something like that.
But I don't, like, what do you do?
Like, if you go camping with your family for a weekend, what do you guys do during the day?
Walk me through a typical day.
Oh, well, again, there's a couple things to say here.
When we first had kids, we would tent camp, but it got too hard.
We have three young kids.
We caved and did something I thought I would never do.
And we bought a camper, a camper trailer.
And that has just changed everything.
It makes it so easy to go.
Everything's loaded up and ready to go.
We spend so much more time out than we would otherwise.
So that was a compromise.
We're really into, we like to do a lot of exploring.
We do a lot of fishing.
In the fall months, to do a lot of exploring we do a lot of fishing um in the fall months we hunt a lot uh so this time of year we we fish we look for mushrooms we hang out we shoot 22s
um just whatever you know we play games we play a lot of uh scrabble and banana grams whatever we
just get away and the place we like to go there's's no cell service. So I'll use a Garmin inReach in case there's an emergency, but we like it because
there's zero cell service where we go. Another thing we did, and this is a luxury that not
everyone can afford, but some years ago we purchased a small inholding in the mountains,
an inholding in the national forest.
And that's kind of our hangout spot. What's that? I don't know what that is.
It literally is a shack in Alaska on the coast in Southeast Alaska that I bought many years ago.
And so we hang out there. And again, no cell service. It's just quiet. But if we didn't have
those places and sometimes we go
other places, we just make plans. And they're usually centered around for us looking for
berries, looking for mushrooms, fishing, hunting, playing, sitting in hammocks, making s'mores.
We do a wide variety of things. It's just very close time. It's very tight knit family time.
And we're not always going to have this. You know,
our oldest kid's 13. Like this is going to change soon, but I like to maximize it now.
I'm in the same boat as you are. Oldest is 13, about to be 14. And absolutely love the camping
experiences I've had though. The glamping is not bad either. I'm not going to lie. It's not terrible to have the
guide who's going to like put the tent up for you and make the breakfast though. I, I, I know you're
more of a, you know, old school camper as is Abigail Finan. She was raised on her dad's back
when she was a baby climbing up the mountain. She's gotten safety vests and headlamps for all
of the Kelly Brunt family. Oh, that's great.
But all of it, like getting outside, it does make you feel better.
And the family connection time with no cell service, so much the better.
But the other piece of it for you is the hunting.
Now, this is where I can't relate.
I've never killed any sort of animal, you know, for sport or for food.
And I confess, I am one of those squeamish people who's
like, oh, it's a sweet deer. Oh, no, he's like a little doe-eyed deer. But I get it. It's not
that I object to anybody else doing it. I just couldn't do it myself. So talk to me about how
that gets ingrained in you. And because I know, I've heard you say like to other people, I guarantee
you, I know more
about deer and care more about deer than the average person. And it's not just about deer,
but like, how did you get into hunting and how do you pass that on? Yeah. Uh, I'll start out by
saying, uh, no, no apology necessary on, on not hunting. Uh, you know, I, if someone's not
interested in it and doesn't engage in it, um, I never tell them that that's
something that they need to do. It's a huge part of my life, but I don't think it's the only way to
find happiness and develop like a deep connection with nature. It's a, it's a thing that some of us
are drawn to and some are not drawn to. Uh, it was a huge part of life growing up. I began hunting well before
I remember. My dad fought in World War II. And when he came home, he was immediately,
he just came home as an avid hunter. There was one time a quote from someone who'd said like of that generation how could you teach an entire generation of young men to shoot and camp
and not expect them to become hunters or something to that effect right so
that was just the environment i was raised in and we lived in western michigan and we did a lot of
stuff around food i mean we hunted and fished because we loved it and we did a lot of stuff around food.
I mean, we hunted and fished because we loved it, and it was fun,
and it engaged you with the outdoors.
But it was also, you know, we had a lot of fish fries and ate a lot of deer meat,
and it was just ingrained.
It was very important that I introduce my kids to it both for them and for me.
And I think this is a thing that people often overlook.
I got my kids into the outdoors.
In some respects, I did it because for selfish reasons.
That's where I like to be, okay?
And if I want to demonstrate to my kids a level of enthusiasm,
a level of expertise, a level of passion, it would make sense that i would do it in an arena
where i feel those things the same way that a parent who's really into sports is going to
introduce their kid to sports because that enthusiasm becomes infectious right so i i did
it because i love it but also i did it for them as well because i think there's really valuable
lessons to be learned there.
I like my kids.
I like it that they have a pretty raw edge to them.
They're very compassionate toward animals.
Just recently, I mentioned my camper.
We had a mouse infestation in our camper.
They caught one in a live trap and kept it as a pet because they were mad at me that I was going to set a kill trap.
At the same time, they're quite comfortable hunting.
Last night, we had antelope that we hunted.
We had stingray that we spearfished for.
So they can live in these two places of being very compassionate caregivers to a wide array of pets that they own.
They tame mice.
They hunt deer.
They hunt grouse.
If you introduce it at a young age, none of this is confusing to them. It's they have complicated relationships with wildlife. And it doesn't cause any whiplash for them to jump back and forth between caregiver and harvest. It's all part of this continuum with them. I have so many thoughts on this. I see it more like I realize, you know, there's a whole food industry that would provide me with meat to eat if the, you know, Steve's were not out there.
But I do kind of see hunters as like a few good men.
Like, you want me on that wall.
You need me on that wall.
Who else is going to do it?
You?
You, Lieutenant Weinberg.
That's me.
Like, I need the guys like you out there because I don't think I'm capable of killing my own food. But when we go to Montana, I know a ton of guys just like you who they're out there. They'll kill a bison or they'll kill an elk and then we'll eat it. And that to me seems okay. Like man has been hunting and killing his own food since the dawn of time.
It's a natural process. Um, but I feel more like Jim Brewer who I just saw do a standup in Atlantic
city last weekend where he was talking about how he got brought out to hunt and he got brought out
to fish. And he's the guy in the fishing boat who, when he pulls in the trout is like, I'm sorry,
I'm sorry. The fish is looking at him. him um but I love that you're getting your kids
into I feel for your wife you married a city slicker I think I can't imagine her with the
kids who want to keep the mouse well no she well it's a little more complicated that she grew up
we didn't know each other there but she grew up in Michigan uh not too terribly far from where I
grew up we actually met later in the first time I ever
came to New York is when I sold my first book to Miramax and she had just started working there
so I came there and had a meeting where I met my editor and and she was in that meeting so
we knew each other for some time, but we have a common background
in Michigan. She spent 12 years in New York. But no, she does it like you. She doesn't
personally, you know, she doesn't hunt. She loves to fish. She loves that our kids do it because
she likes our kids to be self-sufficient and she likes them to be competent in a variety of environments right she wants them to feel a level of competency in a city new york
seattle wherever and she wants them to feel competency in a swamp or on a mountain so she
applauds it and even when we found out we were gonna to have our daughter, she was adamant that there be no different treatment for our daughter, Rosemary, than there was for her older brother.
Which is a somewhat novel concept in hunting families, because hunting families, my own included, tend to be that it's males that do the hunting. And so we're subverting that
with this generation that I'm engaged with now.
Did your wife think at all, like maybe instead of the mouse, you get a dog,
like a cat, even a hamster might be preferable.
We have a dog. We have all kinds of pets, actually.
But the mouse, I'll point out that the mouse was not allowed to come in the house.
He had to live outside.
Yes.
Okay.
And the current two mice ago chewed a hole through the thing and got away.
Then they took their live trap out and caught another one.
And that one jumped out of their hands and got away. Then they took their live trap out and caught another one. And that one jumped out of their hands and got away. So now they're this weekend planning on
resupplying on pet mice. And my boy just got a lecture from his pediatrician
about virus and typhus and what. That's where my mind would go too.
He brushed it off and said that he was going to give his mouth a bath, which I think he thought would take care of some of the infectious disease issues.
See, even your ability to laugh about that and be sort of like, you know, it's whatever.
Like, I think as a city slicker wife, I'd be like, no, that's a real thing.
Typhus, we can't get it.
Put the mouse down.
Don't touch it.
None of all of us are going to get sick.
That's the difference.
You know what?
With my kids,
man,
me too.
I always ask myself, is this really going to be the thing I die from?
You know?
And I just have a feeling I'll die from heart disease,
you know,
or cancer down the road.
Like I just can't picture a scenario in which I die.
And the coroner is says, has he been playing with pet mice?
It's just like, I just don't take, there's a lot of things I don't take seriously. I think people
are not, especially when it comes to the outdoors, I think people have a really hard time with risk
assessment. They're not good at risk assessment and they're not good at understanding statistics and probability
when it comes to how we're going to get our injured. The amount of people I hear from that
are worried about mountain lions and black bears, um, which are a non-issue, it's a non-threat.
Uh, it's just, it's, I'd like, I'd say it's maddening, but that seems a little intolerant,
but people are a little high strung about risk, I think.
Mike, I understand what you're saying, but having a place in Montana, you know, as you well know, they have the grizzlies too.
And I know you've had.
Yeah, that's a different animal.
Different animal.
Yeah, you've had some close encounters.
And I'll just tell you, because I want to show some videotape of one of your close encounters from your show. But when I got to Montana, they said to us, don't, because there have been grizzlies right outside of where we have our cabin.
And they said, don't go for a walk unless you bring the bear spray.
So I'm like, okay.
And then they show you how to use the bear spray.
And the lesson we got went as follows.
You have to wait to spray the bear spray until it's within like 10
feet of you and you got to spray it at the at the ground where the bear's nose is um so basically
you will wind up in the bear's jaws uh but your goal is to incapacitate him i think 10 feet that's
a lot of restraint yeah and then they said then they no, if it's a black bear, you want to make yourself big
and try to be scary. Like, Oh, he'll be afraid of you and he'll leave. Okay. But if it's a brown
bear, don't do that at all. Be quiet, be still. And whatever you do, don't run. But there's one
complicating factor, which is sometimes the black bears are brown. We're'm like, what the fuck is that?
We're all dead.
We're dead.
Well, the grizzly has the hump.
Well, what if I can't see the hump?
What if he's coming at me from a different angle?
This is a lot to put stock in when it comes to your life and your children's life.
So I'm like, okay, I got my bear spray.
But then he told me the bit about 10 feet
and then don't run and don't scream.
Don't let your kids scream.
I'm like, we're all dead.
And what I've learned after having been out there for eight years is you need a gun. That is the only thing that will
protect you from a charging grizzly bear. Am I wrong? Yeah, you're, you're probably,
you're right and you're wrong. Um, let me tell you a quick story about this just to kind of set it up.
Like people make all kinds of plans, right?
And they got all these things they're going to do and not do.
And when this stuff happens, it happens so fast.
First off, the odds of it happening are so small,
but then when it happens, it happens so fast.
All these rehearsed plans unravel.
I was in, I was on a fog neck island in alaska one time we had an
elk carcass that we had hung up in a tree and we'd gone back to retrieve it
and a big brown bear you know brown bears and grizzly bears are
you know taxonomically the same animal um came in really hard on us and my buddy janice had his bear spray on his belt
and he had his pistol sitting on his backpack next to him so he's got bear spraying a pistol
he deliberately set the pistol there for fear of a bear trying to claim this elk carcass
and when this bear came in you know what he did he didn't grab the pepper spray
he didn't grab the pistol he grabbed his trekking pole and swung it like a baseball bat and smoked
that bear across the muzzle oh um which turned the bear janice is a brave man oh yeah but point
being here's this whole plan, pepper spray, pistol.
And then in that moment, when everything in your brain comes undone, the thing he thought to do was swing a trekking pole.
Right.
So it's just that I hear so many people always debating what they're going to do and not do.
And I'm a little bit incredulous having been in a couple of these situations.
I wind up being a little bit incredulous having been in a couple of these situations i wind up being
a little bit incredulous about the rehearsal process yeah yeah same you know but a way to
look at it like i think a general way to look at it is when you if you read a lot about black bear
attacks black bear attacks are often predatory meaning they're very very rare um most people
in america live within a couple hours drive of a black bear.
You know, we got, they're all over.
They don't really mess with people.
But if they do, it's predatory.
And grizzlies do that as well.
Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait.
Before you, what do you mean it's predatory?
Oh, like when you read about the rare black bear attacks.
So in the whole country, maybe, you know, you have a black bear attack or two black
bear attacks. So in the whole country, maybe, you know, you have a black bear attack or two black bear attacks every year. When a black bear attacks a person, it's generally understood that it's acting as a predator, meaning it's trying to secure food. It's attacking you the same way it would attack a deer fawn, right? It's trying to get food.
Why don't I feel better? What makes grizzly bears a different kind of animal is that they have a response to fear, which is aggressive.
So a black bear's tendency is, there's different critters.
Like a black bear's tendency when it's spooked is to run.
A grizzly bear sometimes, when it gets startled, the switch goes in its head.
It might run or it might try to jump on and neutralize that threat.
So that's why you have so many more grizzly attacks than black bear attacks relative to population.
It's because they have this habit, this strategy of countering risk by attacking the thing that scared it.
So so many of the attacks we have with grizzly bears,
it'll neutralize the threat and then leave and not try to eat the body.
And when you do that, when you have a grizzly bear,
a victim get killed by a grizzly bear, they're not, they haven't been eaten.
They're called a defensive attack.
Yes.
Right.
And nowadays, even now with, you know,
grizzly bears are federally listed in the lower 48. If there isn't a defensive attack on a person,
there's a good chance they're not even going to kill that bear. If it's a predatory attack,
they'll kill, the wildlife officials will kill the bear. If it's a defensive attack,
that bear will now, oftentimes they let the bear walk
um there was a somewhat astounding to me but that's that's policy right now yeah because
they're so few of them we saw what we didn't see but we were there in montana when uh this guy got
attacked i think like you uh he you didn't get attacked but he found himself in between the mama bear and her cubs, the grizzly.
And it wasn't even his fault.
He was riding his bike.
And unbeknownst to him, the mama had gotten separated from the cubs, which were on the other side of the road.
And him just riding his bike by was perceived as enough of a threat that she came for him.
And indeed, she did cause some serious damage to the guy, but she didn't kill him.
He lived.
And this brings me-
I remember that incident.
And it was funny because we had,
not funny, that's the wrong word.
There was a fatality up in the Northwest part of the state
where a guy, the best they could reconstruct it,
a mountain biker actually hit the bear on a trail
and it killed him.
But again, we're kind of doing a thing
that you and i right
now i love this subject right we're scared right now doing a thing that i think is a little bit
problematic where we're putting so much emphasis on a thing that's so unlikely to occur well you're
helping me work out my fears in the same way rob o'neill helped me work out my fears of sharks in
the ocean as he's a navy seal of course work out my fears of sharks in the ocean.
He's a Navy SEAL, of course, and said, have you gone swimming in the ocean?
I said, yes.
He goes, then you've gone swimming with sharks.
They're everywhere.
They don't attack you.
Get over it.
You're helping me with my grizzly bear problem right now.
I just learned the other day, in some states, including this state,
drowning is the lead cause of death for kids up until the age of 14.
Oh, my gosh.
So we'll talk a lot about bears, right?
But do we talk a lot about drowning?
Yeah.
You know, hypothermia, dying of exposure. You're much more likely to die of exposure than you're likely to die from a wild animal attack.
But that's not fun to talk about.
So, again, it brings up this idea of how people deal with risk and threat in the outdoors
is they kind of get off on the wrong trail
because there's these things that occupy a lot of psychological space for us.
And big predators occupy psychological space. Um, I like to spear
fish. You're much more likely when spear fishing to, to have a shallow water blackout and drown.
But where does your mind spend its time? Your mind spends its time on sharks.
Or, you know, I've, I've gone fly fishing quite a few times out there in montana and um
caught a big snake one time that was freaky now i didn't need to see that
yeah it happened last summer and uh of course everybody's like you didn't catch a snake i'm
like i know what a snake looks like it is long it is black and it is swirly on the end of my life
you know i cast it so weird yeah and it
went into like a rocky area and there it was the first time it had even occurred to me that there
were snakes in there i had my waders on which i didn't need because it was warm and i'm just a
paranoid person but i'm becoming less paranoid by the minute thanks to you steve um less by by the
minute before we leave the subject of the bears i do do want to show this clip of you on the meat eater getting charged by a mama grizzly in a crazy clip.
It's not one.
You got that bear spray?
Hey, mom.
Yeah.
Hey, mom.
Hey, mom. Hey mom. Hey mom. Hey mom. Hey mom. Hey mom.
Okay. What's happening there? Why, why? Hey mom. Hey mom.
Uh, that's my buddy Cal. Hey mom, because it was a sow with cubs uh and in that situation we knew that for quite some time she was coming down we were going up a valley and
she was coming down the valley and she was we had already registered that she was pissed they'll
cock their ears back and clack
their jaw you could hear him sometimes you'll hear him clacking their jaw um so we knew he was coming
and we're just yelling at it like the the thing there that you want to do is if you're in a group
you cluster up make a lot of noise look big look like something that shouldn't be messed with look like something that's not going
to back down um and then my buddy shot he's just shooting in front of the bear to try to
shooting in front of the bear to try to spook it away i've actually done that other times where
when they're having one coming in and shot in front of it and just surprising how little it um even deterred it but what what you
have there is you would call that uh you know you call it a false charge because it wasn't an
actual charge and the thing that could happen is if you're jumpy people that get too excited
like excitable people will sometimes feeling as though they're acting in self-defense.
You'll hear of people shooting bears.
They think they're shooting them in self-defense.
And again, it's an ESA species, endangered species listed.
It shouldn't be.
It should not be by any measure, but it remains a ESA species.
And they'll shoot it in self-defense but then on an investigation it'll be determined that
they were being a little jumpy and that bear hadn't gotten close enough yet to be a real threat
and sometimes you'll hear people get getting prosecuted for that so um in that case i had
a visual i had a line that i in mind, I had a line 15 feet out.
And if that bear hit that line, I was going to shoot the bear.
But thankfully didn't.
And had we done that, that would have, you know, could have been a legal issue.
Jeez.
That was in British Columbia.
And they're not an ESA.
They're not a Canadian. They're not, they don't have that
level of protection, even though it's a different country and they don't have an ESA. They're,
they don't have that level of protection in that particular area.
Last time we went whitewater rafting out there, you know, you always go with a guide,
or at least we always go with a guide. And he said, if in case you see a bear,
form a circle immediately and make sure your guide is in the middle of it.
Pretty good advice for the guide.
All right, stand by.
We'll squeeze in a quick break.
And more with Steve straight ahead. So, Steve, the Biden administration now is blocking, it's blocking funding for hunting courses at elementary and secondary schools nationwide or schools that have an archery program.
The administration doesn't deny it.
They say, hey, that's part of our bipartisan Safer Communities Act, which was passed in the wake of mass shootings which is a very very different
problem um not that hunting is a problem at all but now they're trying to stop kids you know it's
like they don't understand how kids live in rural america and how they're raised um they think they
put a gun in your hand and teach you how to kill a deer or a bow and arrow and somehow you're going
to turn into the next school shooter. What do you make of this?
You know, I followed this story a fair bit.
It's one of those ones that kind of swirls around and generates a level of uncertainty. I invite people to go do, you know, their own research on this.
But my understanding of the issue is that this issue took root when they were looking into ways to use some federal funding that would have given teachers firearms training.
And for some reason, I definitely don't agree with it.
But for some reason, that wound up being blocked. And then as that, as that ruling or got interpreted down
the road, it occurred to folks that that, that that ruling had blocked those fundings for being
used in any sort of school program training. I've heard from people who understand the issue a lot better than I do that this is
something that could be easily fixed and that these funds, which it's not even clear how
broadly these funds had been used. They're not tracked well in that level. So I don't think it's
that we have a lot of instances where programs that were getting federal funding
have been put to rest or stopped. But it's been explained to me by some people who have a level
of subject matter expertise that it would be an easily fixed thing and might not get a lot of
resistance. So hopefully, I mean, if people contact their lawmakers and let them know that they'd like to have this cleaned up and taken care of, I do hope that it's something that could get resolved quite easily down the road.
That it will be.
But yeah, it caused a lot of it caused a lot of hand wringing, rightfully so.
But but I think that it's more of a it seems more of a somewhat complex legal issue than a
targeted attack in this case, in this particular case. You not only hunt, which many in this
country would say, oh, that's bad. You're not allowed to hunt. You shouldn't use the guns.
But you eat red meat. You have a show called Meat Eater, for God's sake.
What about the planet, Steve?
We've been told by the New York Times as recently as what?
It was July that eating meat is hurting the planet.
And the new sort of Gen Zers, I mean, I have seen a million clips of them saying the way we're going to save the environment is to obviously stop eating meat.
That's a given.
That's number one.
So what do you make of this push by some on the young side and the New York Times to stop eating meat?
Well, I think in that case, what they're talking about in that case is agricultural production.
So, you know, in my house, we eat wild game.
So it's just a completely it's just a different system
it's a completely different system i'll point out that uh it's not a lifestyle that everyone
could participate if they wanted to they certainly don't want to um in new jersey california less
than one percent of the population chooses to hunt so we're not at risk of doing this. But
if every American went out and killed a deer tomorrow, I think that we would have a deficit
of about 250 million deer. So it's not a lifestyle that everyone's going to engage in,
and they don't want to engage in it. I'm a firm supporter of agriculture. If you look at, in my view,
as an environmentalist, when I look at the landscape, I think that farms and ranches
provide a lot better wildlife habitat than do subdivisions and shopping malls. So in my opinion, a great
environmental play is to support farmers and ranchers and support ways for them to be able to
keep land in production and that to warrant the ownership of land and the stewardship of land, because what happens when you take away the ability, the economic ability to keep land in agricultural production generally isn't good for the land.
So I don't see this as a as an issue if it somehow came to it i'm not a vigilante but if it somehow
came to it in some dystopian future in which it was forbidden that i eat deer meat and there was
plenty of deer on the landscape uh i don't i i don't believe i would change my habits
so there's a lot of noise about it all the time, but I just
feel that it's one of those things that just sits outside of my personal reality. And if a neighbor
chooses to be vegan, I don't think any differently about them. The numbers of vegans are going down.
I'll let them eat what they want and I'll eat what I want. The number of vegans is going way down. I think it's under 1% now on a national basis.
Oh, is it really?
Yeah, so far fewer vegans out there than there are meat eaters.
Let's talk about-
I didn't know it was going down.
I'm somehow happy to hear it's going down, but I don't view vegans as like a, really I don't view them as a threat if it's just a personal choice.
Literally no one does.
Literally nobody sees a vegan as a threat.
Okay.
That's funny.
You're right.
You got to give us some tips now for those of us who have not been as active as you have in instilling love of the outdoors in our kids.
Like, what are some fun things we can do with our kids to sort of start getting this love going,
short of, you know, buying a tent and writer named E.O. Wilson.
Biophilia is this idea that humans have an innate desire to connect with other life forms. I think that it's absolutely true when applied to kids.
When my kids were very, very young, I mean, before they could walk,
I would make a habit of getting them in situations where they're like with creatures.
We would just go out and roll rotten logs over and roll rocks over to find the the beetles and grubs and
worms that were there or we take a little net little beach seine or a dip net and go to shorelines
and creeks and ponds anywhere anywhere anyone lives close to this stuff that is if they once
they learn to look for it and we just find things find things, aquatic insects, crayfish, and I'd put
them in their hands and I'd teach them that it's nothing to be afraid of. There's nothing gross
in nature. There's nothing icky in nature. It's beauty. These things are beautiful to behold.
They're beautiful and to engage with. And that was probably looking
back on it. One of the most effective and constructive things that I did as a parent
was teaching from early on to rule out this idea of grossness,
that the slimy, icky stuff is actually beautiful. And that I realize now that created in my kids a desire to go toward nature instead of be repulsed and pulled back from nature.
I'm just lamenting the fact that no one did that for me.
I wish somebody had done that.
Perhaps I would not feel that all that stuff is
so disgustingly icky. I like you. I've read that you always fancied yourself a cowboy. I always
wanted to be a cowgirl growing up. It was my number one dream in life. Got the Olin Mills
picture of me in my never not worn cowgirl outfit. You can't see it in the picture, but I had my, my guns on the side of my little
outfit. And I know you were the same. Um, I guess it's too late. Maybe it's too late.
Am I going to have to put the icky things in my own hand at this age, even though my kids
were already 13 and there's you look at young Steve. So cute with it. Is a horse is it I can't tell from the oh yeah yeah it was we were on a uh my
older my older brother was an outfitter and uh he was a elk guide in Colorado and so that was out
riding around with him when I was a little kid so fun yeah so anyway what you're telling me is I'm
gonna need to get dirty I think so you know I think so's, like I said, I've, I've been a parent for
13 years and, and we've done a lot. You know, I've put my kids through quite a bit. I've made
them uncomfortable a lot. I've taken them a lot of places. They've had a lot of experiences
dealing with risk and dealing with fear and that time that we spent
just you know it sounds so funny and like like i like i'm just saying it to to make a point
but but it's true that time we spent with worms and grubs and bugs and crayfish created in them
such a um such an eagerness to explore and experience nature.
And the other tip, like if I was going to give just to reiterate what I made earlier,
if you're a parent, don't be shy about exercising the authority you have in the household.
We do not, we're going camping this weekend.
We did not ask if they want to go.
We're going. We didn't make it
a family conversation. We know that that's best. We're in charge. That's what we're going to do.
And we're never, it's just on Friday night, that's where we're going. And I know that it
will happen. And I know that it's valuable that we go do it. And I know they'll be glad we went and did it. So don't be shy about making a plan and sticking with it and not having to eat something.
What about people like me who don't have this life experience?
Like, I'd feel better if you could come with us.
Are you ever on the East Coast?
I'll take you guys camping anytime.
I promise.
Maybe Abby will just come.
I feel like Abby, Abby, could you just do it with us?
You can do it.
She can do it all. She's been doing it since she was a kid like you and your kids. I feel like Abby, Abby, could you just do it with us? You can do it. She can do it all.
She's been doing it since she was a kid like you and your kids.
This is so fascinating, Stephen.
It's a good reminder.
It's a good reminder just to sort of nurture that strain that's in, I believe it's biologically
baked into all of us to connect with nature.
I believe that it is.
I believe that it is.
And that makes me happy to think about.
Well, thank you for spending your life trying to remind us of that lesson
through your books, your TV show, your show.
It's like, it's a huge success.
Everything you touch turns to gold
and you can get his cookbook too.
So once you catch that game,
Steve will actually show you how to cook it up
in a tasty way.
So nice to meet you.
Thanks for coming on.
Hey, thank you.
It was great to talk about this stuff.
I appreciate it.
All right, and don't forget,
the new book is called Catch a Crayfish, Count the Stars. Sounds like a lovely way to spend a Saturday,
does it not? And by the way, Steve's also said many times, you can pitch a tent in your backyard.
You know, you don't actually have to go anywhere. Maybe for people like me who are just taking baby
steps into it, that's the safest way to start until I get back together with Abigail, who's,
we both live in Connecticut now. so you can bring the girls.
We can do it all together.
And remember, folks,
you can find The Megyn Kelly Show
live on SiriusXM Triumph Channel,
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and the full video show and clips
by subscribing to our YouTube channel.
That's youtube.com slash Megyn Kelly.
If you prefer an audio podcast,
follow, download on apple spotify pandora
stitcher or wherever you get your podcasts for free my next guest is here to share her work
surrounding a hugely important topic for parents toxic achievement culture she gives us an inside
look at what's happening to our kids today,
who are under intense pressure from all corners to achieve, be a success, be a winner,
not just in school, but in extracurricular activities, and even now in social media,
and how this is vastly, vastly impacting their mental health. Her tips and tricks for parents
to confront these
challenges, hugely important for everyone to digest, happens to be a friend of mine as well.
Her name is Jennifer Wallace. She's an award-winning journalist, and she details all of
this in her new book, Never Enough, when achievement culture becomes toxic and what we can do about it.
Jenny, so great to see you. Thanks for coming on and welcome to the show.
Oh, I'm so happy to be here.
It's nice to see you too, Megan.
I want to start with this.
I remember, because our boys were at the same school together,
and our girls were too, I mean, my daughter and yours.
But I remember seeing you because you have a,
your eldest child is a boy who's older than our little guys.
And, well, and then than our friends
who are our sons who are friends and your boy was sort of the pointy end of the spear going like up
into the more competitive grades while our other boys were in the younger grades and i remember you
saying one morning about like the amount of homework they were being given or the schedules
that they were looking at that year geez it's not as if they're facing some sort of a national depression crisis. Like you were you're already noticing this six, seven year, eight years
ago. So when I heard you wrote this book, I'm like, she came by this very honestly. I know you've been
paying attention to this. And you like I am in the midst, you and I both are in the midst of this
toxic culture. But it's not just people who've got a little dough or who are in the New York City privates.
Some middle class families are dealing with upper middle class.
Society's doing this to our kids.
So just outline the scope of the issue for us.
You are absolutely right.
I do come by this honestly.
I've been noticing since my kids were little and my oldest one is now going into his senior year of high school.
But I have been noticing over the years how different my childhood, my child's childhood was from my own.
So, you know, I've been noticing how my weekends were, you know, fractured.
My husband was going in one direction.
I was going in another direction.
Homework felt so much heavier. Was he going into advanced math? Was he not going into advanced
math? What would that mean for him, for his high school career, for college, his life in the future?
So my parents, when I was growing up, I don't think they were sleepless or overthinking, you know, the classes I took,
the activities they signed me up for. And so I have been wondering all these years why my
children's childhood is so different from my own. And so for the last four years, I've been digging
into it. Okay. But how could your parents not have been overly involved when you wound up at Harvard?
My parents paid absolutely no attention to me and I wound up at Syracuse, which makes sense to me. My parents. So here's,
okay, here's what I would say is the difference. For my parents, achievement was important,
but it was just one facet of my life. Just as important was my sleep, my extracurricular
activities, my relationship with my family, my extended family,
my relationship with my friends. So achievement mattered, but it didn't define me and it didn't
define my childhood the way it does so many kids today. How did this happen to us? Because I think
every parent out there listening knows exactly what we're talking about. We talk about this
toxic culture of achievement.
How did we get here?
How did we get from our childhoods, which were normal and we played outside and we didn't
have parents who's like every thought was of our academic achievement to today?
Yeah.
So when I was growing up and we're about the same age in the 70s and early 80s, life was
generally more affordable.
Housing was more affordable. Health care was more more affordable. Housing was more affordable. Healthcare was more
affordable. Higher education was more affordable. Food was more affordable. There was slack in the
system. Parents could be relatively assured that even with some setbacks, even with mistakes and
bad grades, that a child could generally replicate their upbringing, if not do even better. I mean,
the American dream, right, has always been to do better than your parents. But parents today face
a different economic reality. We are seeing the first generation that is not doing as well as
their parents. We are feeling the deep inequity that's been ushered in over the last several decades, the crush of the
middle class, the hyper-competition that's been ushered in with globalization.
And we are absorbing these macroeconomic forces, and in the words of researchers, becoming
social conduits, meaning we are passing these anxiety and fears onto our kids, not to hurt them, but in the hopes
that we can prepare them for a competitive and uncertain future. I mean, think about it.
The jobs that will be available to our boys when they graduate college, we don't know what half of
those jobs are. And now AI is on the scene. And is that going to take, you know, what is that going to do to careers? So parents are facing very uncertain times. This is not to say parents
should be let off the hook and anything goes. This is just to say it's time to stop pointing
the finger, blaming parents, personalizing this achievement pressure, and instead take a minute
to step back and look at
it in the larger context. These pressures are bigger than any one family, any one school,
any one community. You write about the principle of scarcity, and we are biologically programmed
to recognize scarcity and work against it, work to protect ourselves and our children against it.
And that's baked into what you just said,
as well as, let's face it, the available college spots for these high-achieving kids or what you
hope will be a high-achieving kid, not just at the top, top 10 or the Ivy Leagues, but just
the whole first and even large portions of the second tier are near impossible to get into.
And we know it in a way that it wasn't even 20, 25 years ago. Let's also talk about, you know, how expensive public
schools are, education in general. And so many of the parents that I interviewed for this book were
solidly middle class and they were stressed. They wanted their kids to get scholarships
so that they could afford college for their kids. So we're not even talking about,
like you said, Harvard, Yale.
We're not even talking about the top 20 to 30 schools. We're talking about helping our kids get an education, being able to afford it.
There's a lot of stress around that today.
But I mean, just to put people's minds at ease,
your child's not getting into Harvard, Yale or Princeton.
They're not getting it.
OK, just know that going.
Stop ruining their childhoods. They're not getting it. OK, just know that going. Stop ruining their childhoods. They're not getting in like you go through the numbers. It's not and it's
not just those three. They're not getting into any of the top tier. Just accept it now and stop
ruining your kids upbringing. And you know what I say to my kids, my son, who's, you know, applying
to college now this year, I said to him, do your best, go for it, but know that it's kind of a
lottery at this point. I mean, this is not an indictment of who you are. And I hope that that
brings a little bit of ease to the situation. Also the idea as Frank Bruni wrote in his book,
where you go is not who you'll be. So I think having those conversations with our kids,
talking about just the numbers, it's a lottery. I mean, and I was not willing and my husband was not willing to live our family life to get our kids into Harvard, which is now what, a 3% every other, I mean, they're all 3%, 4%, 5%. It's just the odds of your child getting into one of these schools. And at what cost?
You want to ruin year zero through 18 so that they can then go and face incredible anxiety and
pressure from 18 to 22? Why? I know that I may be the exception, Jenny, but I love to remind people I did go to Syracuse.
Then I went to Albany Law School, which to be charitable to Albany is a middling law school.
It's definitely like third tier at best.
And I didn't even go to the communications program at Syracuse, which is a great school.
I went poli sci, which is fine.
But I'm just saying, and I guarantee you, I make more money than virtually anybody in
my town.
It's possible.
You can get ahead.
You can have a great life.
You can have a great marriage.
If money's your goal, if success, you can do it by going to a middling school.
It's just, I think, much more relates to, number one, I was a happy child.
I had a family that loved me and made me feel whole. And number two, I spent time thinking, what personality traits do I have that will align
with the potential professions in front of me?
So I chose wisely.
That was the most important.
Those two things were the two most important things.
You write about this in the book, about how you want your kid to have a successful life, whether it's financial or, you know, friendships and so on.
Spend time loving on them.
Spend time reinforcing that you see them as a whole person, not just as their GPA.
Exactly right. As you point out with your upbringing, there's a social psychologist
at Brown, Gregory Elliott, and he just says so many wise things. And one of the things he wrote
was what gets in early gets in deep. And that to me was so profound. And so I wanted to make sure
that achievement was not going to get into the way of my connection
with my kids.
And I think what you pointed out were two really strong things.
So one is your home was a place where you felt valued unconditionally.
And what did that do?
That made you reach for things.
You weren't likely afraid of setbacks because it was not an indictment of your worth.
This was just part of the course. And the other thing you talk about is knowing your strengths.
And I write about that a lot in the book that this is another great quote that I got from Rick
Weisbord, who's at Making Caring Common up in Boston. And he says, the self becomes stronger less by being praised than by being known.
A lot of the kids that I knew that I interviewed for this book said praise by their parents was
just another source of pressure. And what Rick Weisberg was telling me was that the self becomes
stronger when we're known for who we are deep at our core, away from
our achievements.
What are our strengths?
Are we tenacious?
Do we have a great sense of humor?
Do we have a really strong work ethic?
These are things that we can see about our kids and we can foster.
And those are the very things actually that are going to lead to their success and help
them to overcome any setbacks. So I think your two points were very astute.
I laughed about it many times. My parents would always say like,
you don't really seem that special so far, but we're open-minded to specialness if it should
present itself. And that was fine with me. I was like, great. Okay, perfect. They used to insult
my looks. They didn't say you're ugly. They just said she's going to be with us for a long time
i wasn't offended jenny i didn't care i'm like oh i love my mom and dad great there we're going to
be together we're the opposite of all that today like junior can do no wrong juniors brilliant
juniors gorgeous juniors and like all this messaging, we want, you know, positivity, I guess, but
we may be inadvertently setting them up for a standard that is unattainable.
I think that's exactly right. And I think, like you said, I think knowing our kids for who they
are makes them feel so valued. It gives them like a protective shield against setbacks. And, you know,
a lot of kids are really crumbling under setbacks today. Now, you also, you have a lot of great
quotes in the book. And one of them is, though, about the negative voice. So you do have to be
careful with criticism on the kids, especially when it comes to academics and achievement.
And this is one I highlighted, when you criticize a child,
they don't necessarily stop loving you, psychologists say. They stop loving themselves.
Oh my God, that's such a good one. I know. So how do we get around it, right? Because as parents, we do have to set standards. That's how our kids know that we're invested in them, that we love them.
And so what the psychologist I interviewed talked about was being very clear about separating the deed from the doer. So what does that mean? That means your son comes home with a bad grade on his
math test and you knew he was goofing off this week and not putting any effort.
And so you might say, I'm curious, you know, instead of getting furious, get curious. You
know, I wonder why you got that grade. What do you think it is? Why are you disappointed by it?
What could you do better next time? So instead of saying to them, you're so lazy or whatever,
whatever a tired parent might say, just out of frustration in the moment, to separate the deed from the doer. It's saying to our kid, you are not the failure.
How you studied for that test wasn't the greatest, but you're still great. Does that make sense?
Yeah, it does. I mean, we need to pay attention to this because we've talked many times on the
show about sort of these things that don't set a child up for success in
life, whether it's an alcoholic parent or divorce, you know, these terrible risks that happen to
young children. This is one of them. You went back and looked at this. I think this is from
the first chapter of the book that like high achievers, if you went to a high achieving sort
of high school or had an upbringing that was
focused on high achievement, that's now a risk factor for later consequences in life, including
alcoholism, addiction, anxiety, depression. That's right. I wrote about this in 2019. It's
in many ways the basis of the book. Two national policy reports, the Robert Wood
Johnson Foundation and the National Academies of Sciences. These are two very credible
reports that our government uses to make policy. And they named these kids attending what
researchers call high achieving schools. Those are, as you said, public and private schools
all around the country, not just on the coasts. Researchers saw this everywhere.
It was the excessive pressure to achieve that was putting them at risk, meaning that they were
two to six times more likely to suffer from clinical levels of anxiety, depression,
substance abuse disorder than the average American teen. And it doesn't mean that it's
just during these high school years that they are at risk. What the researchers have done was they
followed these kids over time and they saw that the patterns of coping, the patterns of thinking that what gets in early gets in deep, stayed with these kids through college and into their 30s.
These kids in their early 30s were more likely to say they suffered from substance abuse disorder than their peers who attended less competitive schools. And yet, one of the most interesting things
of the book to me was you pointed out,
I think it was also a Pew study,
that they went and surveyed people,
I think it was 10 years after they graduated
from various colleges, state universities,
also the Ivies, and what did they find?
Yeah, that's exactly right.
So it was Gallup and Purdue,
and they conducted the largest study. There was also, Megan, a few study there in and early 30s. And they looked at
well-being, connection. Did they feel a sense of belonging in their community? Did they enjoy
career success? Did they find meaning in their work? And what the researchers found was that
it didn't matter if the school was public, private, highly ranked or not highly ranked, it hardly mattered at all.
What mattered though was the experience that that student had on campus. Did they have a professor
who made learning fun, who knew them individually, who encouraged them to pursue their interests? Did they have a multi-semester internship or project
where they were able to use what they were learning and add value in that way? Were they
involved in extracurricular activities on campus? And did they feel that sense of belonging on
campus? In other words, did they feel like they matter on that campus? Did they feel valued?
And did they feel like they were adding value?
Those were the critical ingredients.
Fit over rank.
Did the child have a good fit at school?
And so with my senior, we talk about fit and how important fit is over rank.
We don't even talk about ranks, to be honest.
We don't bring in, and I won't name the magazine that does the rankings, which I also rip apart a bit in the
book. Evil. No one should be looking at that. It is. I mean, I have to say, if there's a bad guy,
that's one of the bad guys. I mean, they are really exploiting parents' fears, students' fears.
I get into how those rankings are put together, and they are, let's just say, misleading at
best.
You know, something like 22% of their rankings of a college are how many kids graduate.
Yes, that makes sense, right?
You want to be able to have a school where
the students graduate. But when you're looking at a school like Penn State, whose mission is to
graduate as many kids, as many students as possible, they are taking in people from all
different socioeconomic groups, all different backgrounds, first-gen students. So they aren't
actually going to have more of a dropout rate than maybe a Harvard
or a Yale, which is picking the creme de la creme. So anyway, there are lots of other reasons why
these rankings don't work. But the most important, I think, to explain for your child is that rank
has a really negligible effect, and we should be looking at fit. And I actually made my son read
that section before we went to go look at colleges. Well, and the other thing people need to remember
is when you look past high school and college, those fade into the background very quickly
once you're out. It's only that first year or two out of college that people are even really
asking you about your college education or where you went to school. What will matter for the rest of your life is your EQ and your sense of self and your ability
to interact with other people well and project a sense of confidence and ease. You got to work on
that stuff. You better be working on that stuff. That's way more important net net than the name
of the school your kid winds up at.
That's exactly right. I mean, when I look and I point out with to my children,
some of my most successful friends, and I mean successful both socially with their families and their friends, but also career wise, they went to schools that I can't even pronounce. One of them
was in Ohio. It was a small liberal arts school. She recently passed away, but she was one of my very most successful friends.
And it had nothing to do with the brand name of her school.
But she did fit on that campus.
She had internships that were valuable to her.
She felt valued on that campus.
And she had the most extraordinary social skills.
Like you said, that's success.
You write about, and you're not blaming parents in this book.
It's a very honest, you talk about your own parenting mistakes and getting drawn into
this cauldron too.
But you do write about what's making parents do this.
And in part, it's this need for status.
And you write about how to our brains, status matters. And it doesn't
just have to be the college our kids go to. It could be your son scoring the winning soccer goal.
We get these dopamine hits and you have to be mindful of that so that you don't get your
dopamine hit off of your kids' A's and your kids' college. That's exactly right. I was so fascinated to
find out that because we are wired for status, when we feel a status dissent, we get this
neurochemical negative cocktail that actually causes some pain in the brain. And what we do
sometimes if we're unaware
is that we will do things that are not ultimately to our advantage in order to just squash that
feeling like yelling at a coach or calling up a teacher and screaming at them for the grade your
kid got. That's not helpful. And while we might be wired for status, we're not victims of it.
We can be aware of it. We can say to, we're not victims of it. We can be aware of it.
We can say to ourselves, that's my status talking.
And we can give ourselves the space to really have control over how we act on those primal
impulses.
One of the examples I use in the book is a researcher from Michigan describes it as the
burning bagel principle.
So when our kid doesn't get into Michigan and we see
that rejection letter, it feels like a fire alarm is going off in our heads. That was something that
was given to us by evolution because we are wired for a negativity bias. When we were out unhoused,
if something bad was happening in our environment, it could have meant life or death.
But that Michigan letter does not mean life or death. It's just a bagel burning. It doesn't
mean the house is on fire. When that fire alarm is going off, just think about the bagel burning.
And you think about the pressures that these kids are under today.
I mean, this is something to worry about, even if it's not you.
Even if you read Jenny's book, even if you're like me, like Syracuse is fine, you know,
relax.
It's society that's doing it to them.
It's the school that's doing it.
It's their peers.
And I know you did something extraordinary where you, I think you got a researcher at
Harvard to help you and surveyed thousands of parents and asked, you know, how all this is affecting them and whether they're falling prey to this. And correct me if researching this book, I wanted to make sure
that this wasn't just an issue that was being felt on the coast. I wanted to know,
is this achievement pressure being felt everywhere? So I enlisted this researcher at Harvard,
and we created this survey to get to the anxieties that parents might be feeling today.
And the researcher said to me, okay, we need a sample size of a thousand in order
to see patterns. But within a few days, over 6,500 parents around the country had filled it out,
including parents in Alaska, who I interviewed for the book. And what you said, it was 83%
of parents reported that other parents in their community judge them by judge parents by their
children's academic success.
I also, I have a couple I pulled out for you.
Um, okay.
I asked parents on a, on a, how much they agreed or disagreed with this statement.
I feel responsible for my children's achievement and success.
75% of parents agreed with that statement.
But then you also look at this number. I asked them how much they agreed or disagreed with the
statement. I wish today's childhood was less stressful for my kids. 87% of parents agreed
with that statement. So parents feel caught. We feel caught. We want to enjoy our kids.
We want to enjoy these short 18 years. They certainly feel short once you start sleeping
through the night. And we want to have those feelings. We want to enjoy our kids. We want to
build these kind of connections, by the way, that will last a lifetime. I mean, think about what the relationship you are building with your
child as an adolescent and a teen is setting the blueprint for your future with your child.
Do you want your child? Do you want a relationship in the long term? If you do,
then you really need to focus on that connection, connection over achievement.
Connection with that. Right. So where you write about how
is something as simple as making your child feel like you are excited to see him or her when they
enter the room, writing about how it's treat them like it's a new puppy at least once a day when
you see your kid, little thing and physical touch like affection. That's right. Affection.
So, you know, it's a lot of parents said to me, well, my teen doesn't want me to be affectionate with them anymore.
And I said, I understand that.
So I said, let me give you advice that I got from a couple of other parents.
One mother gives her teenage daughter manicures so that she can rub the hand with lotion.
She can sort of have that affection.
Another mother I spoke to talked about how she gives her sons, you know, helps him with his
acne. She gives them facials so that, you know, she can touch them. There are ways,
there are creative ways we can be affectionate with our kids. And our teens actually do crave
that. Being affectionate with our kids helps to regulate them. It's a stress response. I think about this a lot because think about, you know,
you in your marriage, right? How often you and your husband hug or hold hands or just sit next
to each other on the couch and sort of, you know, cuddle a little bit. That is great. I mean,
that stuff's important to your well-being. It's an endorphin. And we give that to our children nonstop when they're babies and they're toddlers. And then they get to be able to walk and we do it a little less. And then as they just start aging, it just becomes less and less. But, you know, you can, like we go to church every Sunday. I always have my arms around my kids or we hold hands and they let me do. Because listen, at this point, adolescents especially, they don't have
boyfriends. They don't have girlfriends. They only have us. They're not holding hands with their
brothers and sister. So it's like, I think they need it. And you can get away with it. They'll
let you put your arm around their back or hold their hand here or there, probably less so when
they're 17, 18. But so far, I'm getting away with it. I'm still getting away with it. Not as much
with my 17-year-old. But I will say, great advice I got from a researcher who studies teens
was, and I asked her this when my oldest was becoming a teenager. I said, I'm reading all
this stuff about teenagers and like, oh my God, they're going to separate from me. And do they
really turn overnight against you? And she said, no, that's a myth. She said, teenagers are, yes, they are programmed to
be pulling away to building their own individual selves, but it does not mean the parent should be
pulling away too. So the way we've gotten around this in our home, my husband, who you know, Megan,
he now issues NOFAs and OFAs. NOFAs are non-optional family activities. So once a week
we issue a NOFA and he knocks on the bedroom door and he's like, it's a NOFA time. And the NOFA time
could be a family movie. It could be, you know, they're really into chess right now. I don't know
all these teenagers and adolescents are super into chess right now or a board game
or make baking cookies. But he creates these nofas. And so that's a way of sort of knocking
on that door, even when the teens might be trying to separate. Doesn't mean we should be separating
too. OK, the husband, Peter Wallace, is hilarious. He's got this big, important job, but he takes the
time to do things like this. During
the pandemic, we were all at the same school. And of course, that March and April and May,
none of us knew what was going to happen. Are we going to go back to school? How long is this thing?
And he took the time to create a fake letter on April Fool's Day. Do you remember this?
Telling all the kids that because they'd been out for the month of March or half of it,
the school had decided they were all going to have to go to summer school to make up the time.
He put it on like the fake school letterhead and then was kind enough to reach out to the
other parents and say, I'm doing this to my kids. If you want me to give it to you, here it is.
We still talk about it to this day, Jenny. It was amazing.
Oh my God. I totally forgot about that.
I have to pull that letter out.
That's funny.
It was legit.
And it gave us a lot of laughs after the initial tears that came when they saw the fake bad news.
All right.
Stand by.
On that note, we'll take a quick break.
We'll come back.
Much, much more to discuss.
I find this discussion absolutely fascinating.
And Jenny's got a lot of additional helpful tips for parents out there struggling.
Jenny, when I was living in New York, they used to have these massive parental seminars for all
the parents of kids who are in the independent school system, which is a nice way of saying
private schools. And I went to one of them and they had a couple of students from basically every private school in New York. I mean, these are the most privileged kids in the
United States. And one of them, it was a kid who I think he was maybe a sophomore in high school.
He had this crazy blonde hair and he laid it on the line. And I remember him saying,
you parents want to know why your kids are so fucked up? He was like, it's because we have to
get straight A's. We have to join 10 clubs. We have to be the captain of three sports in order
to get into the school you went to. And he said, that's why we're boozing on the weekends. We're
sneaking alcohol into our parties and we're getting stoned whenever you're not looking at us.
I remember being like, holy shit. Oh my God. Okay, got it. Copy and Roger.
He was honest, right?
Because all that pressure that we put on them comes at the expense of their mental health
and it will come back to haunt them.
And to the point we were making earlier, for what?
So they can get into an IV?
A, they're not getting in.
Only 3% of the population is getting in.
You talk about how if you just looked at,
what was it, the state of Connecticut, if you took all the valedictorians, you know what I'm going for here?
I do. It was a college night that I attended for the book. And it was, you know, if you take all
the valedictorians and salutatorians and you add them together from all the 14,000 schools around, you can fill up the first 10, 20 schools,
top schools.
So in other words, it's a lottery.
It's essentially it's a lottery is what they were saying.
So like just the number one and number two in the states of Connecticut could take up
all the spots in all the IVs.
So I mean, your kid can be perfect 4.0, captain of the football, all the teams, all of it.
And still the odds are he or she's not getting in.
So just accept that now.
And this is the Pew thing that you, it's from chapter five that I loved reading now from
the book.
Pew Research conducted a study to explore this very issue, this belief that just a few
colleges are good.
Researchers compared life outcomes between graduates who had attended large public universities and those who had attended the more expensive private schools.
Surprisingly, they found no statistical difference in the outcomes.
The majority of each group reported about the same levels of personal satisfaction with their family life, with their economic well-being, with their job. So what did you do? You stressed out
your kid. You drove him to booze and to drugs and God knows what else so he could get into a school
he's not going to get into. And for what? If you would just let him have a nice, normal childhood,
he would have wound up with the same level of economic well-being, satisfaction with his job and with his family life is that parents, because of this economic uncertainty
that we talked about, not knowing what the future is going to be for our kids in terms of careers,
what career is available to them, parents are betting big that early childhood success
that leads to a, quote, good college in their eyes will act as a safety vest, a kind of life preserver in a sea of uncertainty that
this college brand name will keep them afloat no matter what in the future. But as you pointed out
and what I saw on the ground and what decades of research show is that that safety vest that we're
hoping will protect our kid is actually working like a lead vest
and drowning too many of the kids it's trying to protect.
What you were talking about with the drinking, oh, I can't tell you how many seniors and
college students told me about how the excessive pressure to achieve led them to drink to black
out on the weekends. This was the only
way they could shut down their overprotective minds. And so the parents of, you know, in the
book, I sort of lay out the secrets of the healthy strivers that I met because I wanted to know,
how could I raise a healthy striver? And what those children reported, those students reported that their
parents, instead of pushing them, actually sometimes created guardrails and put limits
on how many extracurricular activities they could take, how many APs they could take,
because those parents saw it as their job to teach their kids while they are living in their home,
how to build a life that the kid will not have to escape from with drugs and alcohol.
They saw their life as the balance keepers of their kids.
You picked up on a point we've talked about on the show before with Dr. Leonard Sachs,
the family dinner, the family time together, like the kids who feel connected and valued for who they are, just time around the dinner table.
And the time around the dinner table should not be, what'd you get on that math test? What did
all your friends get? What did everybody, right? It should be, how are you? Wouldn't it be fun to
do this? Remember that trip we took here? You know, the actual connection with your family,
feeling valued by that core, whatever number it is, is another insulating factor.
Yeah, absolutely.
I mean, and I don't know that it has to be a family dinner, but it has to be intentional,
insistent time together as a family.
Challenge Success, which is a great nonprofit in California affiliated with Stanford, talks
about how children and teens, and I would argue
adults, need something every day, this ingredient, playtime, downtime, and family time. So when you
look at your kids' schedules, are you leaving time? Are you insisting that they have playtime,
downtime, family time? The parents of the healthy strivers insisted on it,
and they held their kids accountable. Right, because you don't want to completely abandon
all parental responsibility of modeling and valuing, yes, hard work and being determined
and holding yourself to a high standard. It's just threading the needle between like to do that
between this overachievement culture and raising a loser, right? That's the magical, that's the
magic spot. That's the sweet spot. That's what you're trying to work toward. And it's a lot
bigger than parents think it is. That sweet spot is a lot bigger. And what I will tell you, what
really shakes out in the research is that the best place a parent can put their energy if they want to raise a successful child and who doesn't.
This book, just to be clear, is not anti-achievement or anti-ambition.
I enjoy achievement.
I value it.
I get joy from it.
And I want my kids to get joy from it too.
So this is not anti-achievement.
But it is helping your kids
understand the bigger picture, understanding that achievement is a slice of a good, successful life.
One of the things you touch on is, for lack of a better word, modeling. You talk about how
overly involved moms and dads are now versus when we were kids. I mean, the numbers were actually
really stunning. It was like dads are something like three times more involved than they were
a few decades ago. Moms are at least double and 71% of moms are working now too. So that's why
moms are completely stressed out. Well, that matters. It matters for two reasons, at least.
It matters for, well, I'll give three give three number one the health of your marriage which does matter to your family's happiness and your kids family happiness
number two your own well-being of course this is in no particular order and number three if your
child sees only a stressed out mom or dad with no social connections who makes no time for him or herself, they're learning that.
Exactly right. I will tell you the most surprising thing I learned in researching this book,
and it stopped me in my tracks and it made me rethink a lot of my life, the most surprising thing I learned was that the number one intervention
for any child in distress is to make sure the primary caregivers, those are most often the
mother and father, to make sure their wellbeing, their support system, their relationships are
intact because a child's resilience rests on the resilience of the
adults in their lives.
And adult resilience rests on the depth and support of their relationships.
So we are sold a bill of goods by the multi-billion dollar wellness industry that says to us,
download this meditation app, buy this bubble bath, buy this candle. Those are all great
things for reducing stress. Who doesn't like a nice scented candle? But that's not going to give
you the resilience you need to act as the first responder to your kids' struggles. So what does
this mean? It means that parents, yes, we are overstretched,
but we need to find time in our calendars. Research finds it just requires one hour a week
of intentional time to connect with a friend or two outside of our home. Our homes are,
you know, our marriages are, according to the data, already overstretched. We
are sort of performing as these one-person villages in our home. And so we really need to
find one or two people in our life that we can be vulnerable to, that we could be felt as valued,
that we could be seen unconditionally for who we are at our core, and that we could be
that person for someone else. It doesn't take a lot of time, just intentional time. And in the
parents that I visited in these competitive communities, it wasn't that they didn't have
friends. They had friends. It was that they rarely had time and bandwidth to invest in those friendships so that those friends could be sources of support when that adult needed it.
So the biggest takeaway, right, is to you don't need a lot of friends, just one or two people that you can be vulnerable to.
That is what bolsters resilience.
In the time we have left, can you tell two stories?
The first one is about someone you interviewed, and the second one is about you and Caroline,
your daughter. But this story in the book was heartbreaking about this woman you sat with
who made you the tea, who looked at you mother to mother with a warning about the way she had done
it. And you are incorporating this advice into your own parenting.
And I loved the story about Caroline when she was worried about the test.
So can you touch on this?
So this was one of my early interviews.
And I was sitting with this woman who talked about how when her child was in middle school,
up until high school, she thought her role as a mother was to be that warm source of support. She didn't spend so much time worrying about her kid's achievement. Her
kid was in the honors track, but then he started hitting high school and the mothers at the school
and the fathers would be asking her and emailing her, what are you doing to enrich your son? How
are the summers being spent? Are you signing up for this academic camp? Are you doing this Russian math on Saturdays?
And she said she just totally lost the plot in her parenting, and she started to get overcome
by this social contagion of anxiety.
And it really damaged her relationship with her child.
Her child, his senior year, stopped going to school, couldn't get out of bed.
With intense therapy and with
medication, he was able to graduate. But this anxiety really stayed with him for several years
into his 20s. And I said to her, I leaned in to comfort her. I said, I understand. We parents,
we feel judged by how we parent if we're not doing everything we can for our kids. And she warned me, she looked at
me and she said, I have so many regrets. And I shuddered because my son was about to enter high
school. And I thought, I have so much to learn here. And I'm just so grateful that these parents
opened up to me and changed my parenting and just the stories were extraordinary. But the Caroline story quickly.
So she was in eighth grade and her friends were, there was this social contagion in her school
over grades and something that she really hadn't been talking about until it started coming up at
the lunchroom table. And she came home one night when the grades were about to post and she said,
mom, I'm really scared. And I said, well, what are you scared about?
And she said, I'm just afraid I'm not going to get all A's.
And I said, honey, your worth does not equal your grades.
Like I will love you no matter what.
And if this report card doesn't reflect the hard work that I've seen you put in,
we'll figure it out together, please.
And she just kept going on and on and on.
And I spotted this yellow sticker, these like the post-its next to her.
And I wrote on it, your worth does not equal your grades. And I spotted this yellow sticker, these like the post-its next to her. And I wrote on it,
your worth does not equal your grades. And I handed it to her and it stays on her laptop.
It's now like dog-eared and wrinkled up, but she keeps that sticky as a reminder because we have
to constantly remind our kids in the environments we are raising them in that they are enough just as they are.
My gosh, it's such a good reminder. I do feel like I'm up against it. I mean,
maybe I shouldn't be living in Connecticut. Maybe we shouldn't have been in New York City privates.
I think about, I don't like, but I think about sometimes Jon Stewart because
when he left The Daily Show and he had gobs of money from doing that show,
he moved to upstate, a little bit upstate of New York, New York City, about an hour north on a goat farm.
And they're going to, I think, I read once, to a public school up there where the pressure cooker is probably not as bad as it is where I am or where I know you are.
And so I do wonder, do you feel like we can win this battle being in the heart of it, right? Like being right in the belly of the beast where you're surrounded by the most competitive people on earth and the most highly achieving people on earth. And so even if you take your foot off that gas, you know, it's there like that. Everyone else is driving the Maseratis at 200 miles an hour around your kid.
So yes, I do believe it because I saw it in action all over the country and I see it in
New York City. I see it in Connecticut. The way to do it is to make home a haven from the pressure.
Our kids are getting it from every direction. Home needs to be a place for them to recover, where their sense of self-worth is never in
question.
And as parents, we need to buffer against those messages as much as we can.
Our kids know we want them to achieve.
They need to know more importantly that we love them unconditionally, and they need to
feel that love as unconditional.
And you've also said they like play games with
your kids that that checks the box of parental time and playing with your children and let them
lose. Yes, that teach them that there's such a thing as healthy competition, that, you know,
beating somebody isn't a bad thing. It's not being unkind. It's how we act when we win that is the separator between you know being a good person
and being a bad sport jenny it's so good to see you thank you for writing this book and for coming
on it's i'm not surprised at all like i said that you wrote it you've been interested in it a long
time and now you're going to help a lot of people a lot of kids all the best thank you so much megan
all right don't forget guys the name of the book is Never Enough, the aptly named Never Enough,
When Achievement Culture Becomes Toxic and What We Can Do About It.
It's available now.
I downloaded the audio books.
I love getting my books via audio.
Jenny reads it.
She does a great job and is a fascinating person.
Hopefully, you've already learned some of these lessons, but don't work out any of this stuff
on your kids and don't let other parents goad you into ruining your own child's childhood,
right? It's not that hard. It doesn't matter. Honestly, I look it up all the time. I'm not
hiring people from Harvard and Yale and these Ivies anymore. I'm only going to hire people
from the third tier schools. Really, you can't work for me unless you went to a third tier school.
That's it. More employers like me need to say that so we can start removing
the outside pressures from these kids. I'll give you a great job. I'll pay you well if I think
you're going to work hard and you're going to do well. But if you went to Harvard, forget it.
You're out. Yeah. Did Lauren go to Harvard? Lauren, you're fired. No, just kidding. Just kidding. Oh, USC. Yeah, she's fine.
We'll talk more tomorrow.
Thanks for listening to The Megyn Kelly Show. No BS, no agenda, and no fear.