The Mindset Mentor - How to Heal and Build Stronger Relationships
Episode Date: August 28, 2025Do you know the skill that can make or break your closest relationships? In this episode, I share how the process of “repair” can transform disconnection into deeper trust and love. Whether it’s... with your child, partner, or anyone you care about, I walk you through what repair is, why it matters, and the simple steps to practice it. The Mindset Mentor™ podcast is designed for anyone desiring motivation, direction, and focus in life. Past guests of The Mindset Mentor include: - Tony Robbins - Matthew McConaughey - Jay Shetty - Andrew Huberman - Lewis Howes - Gregg Braden - Rich Roll - Dr. Steven Gundry
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Welcome to today's episode of the Mindset Mentor podcast.
I'm your host, Rob Dial.
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And if you're out there and you love this podcast, do me a huge favor.
Text one person today, this podcast and say, hey, I think you should listen to it.
It would allow us to obviously help more people, but also try to heal the world in our little tiny way that we can.
and that's all I'm really here to do.
So if you do that, I would greatly appreciate it.
Today, I'm going to talk to you about what I consider probably maybe one of the top
skills that you can have in relationships to heal the relationships that you have,
but also build stronger relationships as well because we all have meaningful relationships.
We have children or partners or friends or parents or family members that we have relationships
worth. And these relationships are really what makes our lives meaningful. And like one of the things
that I love is when I watch something like a sports game, like the Olympics, for instance, when I watch
the Olympics and somebody wins gold, almost always the very first thing that they look for is they look
in the crowd and try to find their family and try to find someone that they love because it makes it
so much more meaningful to be able to celebrate with someone that you love. That's what makes life amazing.
and one of the most powerful tools that we have to maintain and strengthen bonds is this process
that's called repair. So I got this process from clinical psychologist named Dr. Becky Kennedy.
And I'm going to talk about the importance of repair. And I'll tell you what it is. And I'm going to
give you an example specifically around parents to children. But you can listen to this and go,
oh, I could use this in my relationship with my wife and with my brother. This should really be used in all
relationships. So let me give you an example and we'll break it down. You know, let's say it's
Monday night. You've had a long day at work. You're in your kitchen. You're exhausted. You're
overwhelmed. And you're making dinner. You're trying your best. You're trying to keep it together,
right? And your child walks in. They see the dinner that you've prepared and they start complaining
about the dinner. And that's like the end for you. You're already on edge. This was just basically
the tipping point. This is the straw that broke the camel's back. And so,
You snap, you yell at your child, and then your child starts to cry, and then runs to the room,
slams the door, and now they're in the room by themselves.
What do you feel after that?
You usually feel guilty.
You usually feel regret.
You start blaming yourself for being a crappy parent.
You wonder if you have screwed your children up more than you can actually help them, and it's like,
it's irreparable at this point.
I've just screwed my child up.
Like this scenario is all too common for parents.
And this happens in every single close relationship that we have as well.
We say something that we don't mean.
We disconnect from the other person.
And something happens.
And in that moment of, you know, rage or anger or whatever it is, causes disconnection
between two people.
And so no matter how skilled you are or well-intentioned you are as a parent, mistakes
in moments of disconnection are inevitable.
It's just part of being a human.
There is no perfect human.
but the important part of what we're going to cover today is it's not the mistakes that define your
relationship it's how you handle mistakes afterwards everybody makes mistakes how you handle and change
and speak about the mistake afterwards is the most important part of it and this is where the
concept of repair comes in now i'm not talking about apologizing we'll talk about that in a little
while I'm talking about this idea of repair. So what is repair? Repair is the process of revisiting the
moment of disconnection, which is what most people don't want to do. They usually want to act like it
didn't happen, leave it in the past, brush it under the rug, but it's the moment of going,
we're going to revisit this moment of disconnection. I'm going to take responsibility for my
behavior, and I'm going to acknowledge my behavior in the impact that it had on the other person.
And so a simple apology usually is just like, I want to shut down a conversation, just be done with this, right? And it's usually something like, hey, listen, honey, I'm sorry. I yelled at you. Can we move on? You know, I'll let you have ice cream for dessert. That's an apology. That doesn't fix anything. It just closes the door. A good repair opens the door to further connection and understanding between you and the other person that you're in this relationship with. Because,
A relationship is just two people learning how to relate to each other.
And the stronger that we can create our bond and get our relating to be better, our relationship
becomes better.
And so this idea of repair has the acknowledgement that there has been a moment of disconnection.
We're not going to run from it.
We're going to talk about it.
And I'm going to try to repair the situation for what I did.
So instead of looking at like the moment of disconnection as a failure, it's really starting
to see that moment of disconnection.
as an opportunity, because this repair allows us to transform the disconnection into a moment
of deeper understanding and connection between the two of you. I mean, you've probably had this
before, where you get into an argument with your significant other, and then you guys don't talk
about it, and it doesn't feel like anything gets resolved. But then you get into an argument
with your significant other, and both of you come back later on, and you're like, hey, let's talk about
this. Here's what I was thinking. This is what you were thinking, and you start to actually go back and
forth without being angry and you actually repair the situation in some sort of way and now after that
you feel like you have a deeper connection with that person and so when you don't repair before like
let me talk about like I guess you guess we'll say before diving into what repair is and how to do it
and in the step-by-step process it's it's important to understand what happens when we don't repair
so if we start with the scenario that we we had there's the moment of disconnection your child starts
screaming, crying, runs to the room. Your child at this moment is now alone in their room,
feeling overwhelmed, feeling distressed, and this is the important part. Without repairing the
situation, your child is left to make sense of the situation on their own. And if they think to
themselves, okay, this is what happened, I said this, mom yelled at me, you know what, that was my
fault. And so what happens in this case is oftentimes children resort to self-blame as a coping mechanism.
So if you don't go in and repair, you're actually not stepping in and helping their child create a good
identity. And usually what happens, they start creating a bad identity from this. Because children lack the
emotional tools and the maturity to process these types of situations. And when they do, they might internalize
these moments thinking, you know, hey, there's something wrong with me. I screwed that up. I'm a bad
person. Mom worked really hard. And then she was cooking. And then I came in and said something
disrespectful. And now I'm a bad person. And they create this identity of I'm a bad person.
I did something wrong. I made my mom mad. Whatever it might be. Because children don't really have
the tools, the emotional tools to process these types of situations. And let's be real.
Like most adults lack emotional tools to process stuff like this.
You know, so then the child thinks there's something wrong with me.
I'm unlovable.
I make bad things happen.
Nobody loves me.
I'm alone in this world.
I can only trust myself.
Like, I don't know about you, but that's not the internalization that I want my child to have.
That's not the identity that I want my child to build from a break in disconnection from me and the child.
and the internalization most times carries into adulthood leading to issues like anxiety and depression
and in a really deep sense of worthlessness and being somebody who's been coaching people for over 20
years now I see like if I have had many conversations I'm like take me back to your childhood
and tell me about something that holds a lot of energy like something that was a big moment in
your life that holds a lot of energy it's almost always the child seeing something
thing that they did wrong in blaming themselves from it and creating an entire identity around
it. And then now I'm talking to the adult 30 years later and they haven't overcome it in the
past 30 years because they're so deeply rooted in that identity. And so this is really important
because these stories of self-blame that children create in these moments can shape their
entire self-identity, how they relate to others as they grow and who they become later on.
So if we're smart, we want to step in and actually heal this situation because these narratives can
become the core fears that many adults struggle with, the fear that I'm unlovable or the fear of
being fundamentally flawed or the fear of not having connection or not being lovable or not
being worthy. And so here's the key. Repair is not just about fixing the momentary fight or
disconnection. It's about changing the story that that person tells themselves. It's about changing the
story that your child tells themselves in that moment. Ensuring that the new story that we put in there
is one of safety. It's of connection. It's of self-worth. And it's of love. Because every child
builds their beliefs about themselves in that moment. And then it's going to keep happening throughout
their life. And so when you look at repair, it changes the story for the child. It changes the
narrative. And really what you're going to be doing is you're going to be taking the blame off of the
child because then you blowing up at your child, it's not your child's fault. You are the one that
were triggered. You might think it's their fault. Sorry, buddy, it was your fault. You need to actually
be the parent and grow up and say, you know what, this was my fault. If you yell at your spouse,
it's not your spouse's fault. It's your fault. You're the one who got triggered. And so when you
engage in repair, you do more than just patch up like this momentary issue. What you do is you help
rewrite the child's narrative in this situation or the other person's narrative in that event as
well. This is the reason why therapy can be so effective for people is because when people go to therapy,
it's about revisiting these painful memories within a safe therapeutic relationship. And in these
moments, we can change the stories in the meaning that we give the stories. And we can also just
change our identity of who we think we are because we change that story of what happened. So you're
kind of doing therapy after the event with your kid. You know, so later on that they,
they don't have to go to therapy as an adult because of you, right? So that's what you're doing.
So let's actually go through a step by step process. It's actually quite easy for effective repair.
Okay, step number one, before you go and you repair with the other person, you know, your spouse or in this case, your child, in this example, before you go repair with your child, before you can offer any other person compassion and understanding, you need to extend those exact same qualities to yourself.
You know, self-repair requires you separating your identity, which is who you are, from your
behavior, which is what you did. Because, you know, it's about acknowledging that while you may
not have been proud of your behavior, that behavior does not define you. Because most people will go,
oh, my God, you know, here's the behavior. Oh, my God, this happened. I yelled at my kid. I'm a
terrible parent. I just screwed them up forever. I'm a terrible parent. Well, now you took a
behavior and put it on top of an identity, which is I'm a terrible parent. No, no, no. You're still
a good person. You're a good parent. You're just as simply a parent who had a hard time. And so it's
not about letting yourself off the hook. It's really about holding yourself accountable in a way
that's constructive and not destructive. So when you repair with yourself first, you're in a position
to be calm and to be clear-headed and to be capable of engaging in a meaningful repair with
your child in this situation. So that's step number one, repair with yourself. Step number two,
once you've grounded yourself, it's time to reach out to your child. There's no one size fits
off for repair, but there's some key elements that you can use that will really kind of guide you.
First thing, name what happened. Acknowledge the event or the behavior that caused this
disconnection, this rupture between you and the other person. When you do that, it shows your child
that you're aware of the event and you're aware of what went wrong.
Then what you want to do is you want to take responsibility.
Own up to your actions without placing blame on your child.
This is really crucial for modeling accountability.
There's so many adults in this world that don't model accountability.
They don't take any accountability.
And the reason why is because they never saw accountability in their childhood.
Right.
And so what you do is you take accountability for it.
And then what you do last to state what you.
you'll do differently next time. Right? So it's like number one, the first thing you want to do,
name what happened. Number two, you take responsibility for what happened. And number three,
you state what you will do differently next time. This shows your child that you're committed to
change into growth. And so an example might be something like this. Say it's the next day. Hey, honey,
can I come talk to about what happened last night? Listen, like, I keep thinking about what happened last night
and I just want to tell you, I'm really sorry that I yelled at you. Like, I'm really sorry. And
that must have been really scary for you. And I want to tell you that what happened last
night, my yelling was not your fault. Like for me, I'm working on staying calm, even when I'm
frustrated. Basically what I'm saying was it's not that it wasn't, it wasn't your fault. It was my
fault. And it's not saying that the children can just step all over you if that's what you're
thinking. Really what it's doing is it's showing how to take accountability. And guess what
usually happens when you take accountability. Children will also start taking accountability as well,
right? Children learn through you and what you do. And so the next time they screw up, they're going to
start telling how to take accountability for their actions versus blaming somebody else, which is what,
you know, children are usually modeling their parents when they start blaming somebody else.
And so this like 15 second simple intervention can have a profound impact on your child in who they
become because it's not only helps clear things up and clear up any feelings.
of self-blame that your child might have created in that moment, but it also strengthens
their sense of safety and trust in this relationship with you. And I just want to tell you
because I see over and over and over again these little tiny events that have happened in
somebody's life. You know, these events where a child was just not standing up straight and
their parent yelled at them and then they said, sit up straight or do something different
or stop being so a lot and that one moment changes their entire life and their entire perception
of themselves from childhood into adulthood. And now they're 40 years old and I'm trying to talk
them through something that happened when they were nine years old. You don't want that to be
a relationship with your child. You don't want to be a relationship with anybody. And so really
what it comes down to is if we're the adult in this relationship with a child, we need to be the
adult. We need to take the, it doesn't say, hey, what you did was fine and you can step over me.
It's saying, I'm taking accountability for how I acted. And so we, we're not. We need to take the, we
you look at the long-term impact of repair, repairing with your child or any relationship
sets the stage for a healthy relationship patterns into adulthood. And so an adult who's
experienced, if you were to see an adult that has experienced consistent repair as a child,
they are less likely to spiral into self-blame when things go wrong, and they're more likely
to develop secure attachment styles with their partners instead of being anxious attachment
or avoid an attachment, and they'll also be better equipped to take responsibility for their own
behavior because they've seen you take responsibility for your behavior. They learned that skill from
you. And so the power of repair lies in its ability to change the narrative behind the event that
happened, both yours, because you repair it with yourself first, and then the other person that you
love. It's about moving beyond guilt and shape or trying to brush it under the rug, and it's
try to move towards a place of understanding and growth and connection between you.
Like this is the core of deep connection right here.
So next time a fight occurs in your relationship, remember, it's not the end of the story.
It's really an opportunity for growth because with repair, you have the power to rewrite a new story
and move into a loving chapter with more love and more connection with that other person.
So that's what I got for today's episode.
If you love this episode, please share it on your Instagram stories.
tag me in at Rob Diald Jr. R-O-B-D-I-L-J-R. And if you want to learn more about coaching with me
outside of this podcast, I do have some courses and programs, which are step-by-step to help you
grow into the person that you want to become versus being, you know, sporadic episodes like these
podcasts can be. If you want to learn more about it, go to coachwithrob.com. Once again,
coach with rob.com. And with that, I'm going to leave you the same way. I leave you every single
episode. Make it your mission to make somebody else's day better. I appreciate you. And I hope that
you have an amazing day.