The School of Greatness - 3 Keys to Becoming the Parent You Always Needed
Episode Date: May 16, 2025Leave an Amazon Rating or Review for my New York Times Bestselling book, Make Money Easy!What if raising kids isn't about fixing them, but understanding your own emotional patterns first? In this powe...rful mashup episode, three experts transform how we think about family dynamics. Dr. Becky Kennedy reveals why making happiness the goal of childhood creates anxious adults, Scott Galloway shares how fatherhood at 42 shifted his priorities from status-seeking to finding unexpected contentment, and family therapist Jerry Wise explains how breaking free from your family's emotional trance is the true path to healing. This conversation exposes how parenting becomes our greatest opportunity for personal growth - not by healing through our children, but by facing the triggers they inevitably expose.Dr. Becky’s book Good Inside: A Guide to Becoming the Parent You Want to BeScott’s book The Algebra of Wealth: A Simple Formula for Financial SecurityScott’s book The Algebra of Happiness: Notes on the Pursuit of Success, Love, and MeaningScott’s book The Four: The Hidden DNA of Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and GoogleJerry Wise Relationship Systems on YouTubeIn this episode you will learn:Why trying to understand your child's bad behavior is the foundation for effectively changing itHow making happiness the goal of childhood creates anxious adults unable to handle uncomfortable emotionsThe power of "connect before you correct" in creating resilient children who can regulate their emotionsWhy parents unconsciously wish their children will heal their wounds but discover children actually trigger unresolved issuesHow fatherhood shifts priorities from status-seeking to finding purpose beyond yourselfWhy breaking your family's emotional "trance" is essential to becoming a healthy adult and parentThe three phrases every parent needs when their child experiences disappointmentHow to recognize if you had narcissistic parents and the patterns you might be unconsciously repeatingFor more information go to https://www.lewishowes.com/1772For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960More SOG episodes we think you’ll love:Dr. Becky Kennedy – greatness.lnk.to/1586SCScott Galloway – greatness.lnk.to/1636SCJerry Wise – greatness.lnk.to/1747SC Get more from Lewis! Get my New York Times Bestselling book, Make Money Easy!Get The Greatness Mindset audiobook on SpotifyText Lewis AIYouTubeInstagramWebsiteTiktokFacebookX
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this episode on the School of Greatness.
How do we learn to make sure we raise good human beings without messing them up when we haven't been taught how to be good parents?
And to add to that question, is it possible to raise a child that is not traumatized in some way,
no matter how good we try to raise them?
Hmm. I haven't tried to answer all that.
You'll let me know which part of the question I lose as we go.
So what you started with just resonates with me so strongly,
and I think it really is the reason I, like, get out of bed every morning, right?
Parenting is the most important job in the world, and it is the hardest job, and it's
probably the job we'll have for the longest number of years, because everyone knows it's
more than 18 years.
And someone said to me, I'll never forget, it's the only job you care about on your deathbed.
Which I was like, okay, that's heavy, but I think that's, I mean, I wouldn't know yet, hopefully,
but I think that's true.
And it's also like the only job that falls under like
very difficult, very impactful, very ongoing,
that we literally get no training for, right?
And like, if my friend was a surgeon and called me and said,
I'm not doing surgery, right?
And I'm messing everything up and kind of messed up this person forever and I'm so bad.
And then I started poking around and it turned out she never went to med school or never
went to residency.
I'm pretty sure I would say to her, hey, like this is not that you're a bad surgeon.
Like that's not what this is.
You weren't adequately prepared and it's probably time to invest in resources. And I just want to say too, because I think it's important that if she said you weren't adequately prepared. And it's probably time to invest in resources.
And I just want to say too,
because I think it's important that if she said,
don't worry, I got all my tips on Instagram,
I'd say, okay, I mean, like, you might,
I want to do a little more in depth than that.
You know, I think you deserve a little better,
you know, than that.
And yet this is what parents are set up for.
When I've asked parents the number one
reason why they don't get the support they even think they need, the number one reason I get,
the number one reason I hear is I should be able to do this on my own. It's like a shame underneath.
Yeah, and there's a shame and I think there's a really strong societal message. As a
woman, I can say the maternal instinct is like a real thing that people think we should have,
which really is a way of saying parenting has kind of traditionally been a woman's job.
I think they're shifting around that. It's great. And it should just be something women have an
instinct to do, which is a really great setup for any parent when they're struggling to say, I guess
it's me.
And I think when we're struggling with anything, we have two paths.
And this is where I think we'll be talking about parenting, but you don't have kids.
I'm sure some of your listeners don't have kids.
This is in some ways about kids, in some ways 0% about kids and parenting.
When we're struggling, we can either say, what is wrong with me and it's my fault?
Or when we're struggling, we can say,
what resources and support do I need?
And there are two completely different paths.
One is activating and has hope
and has a likelihood of change,
and one is actually spiraling into an abyss
and a freeze state, right, of shame,
which makes it impossible to change.
And I think parents have typically said to themselves,
what's wrong with me?
Wow.
This should be easier.
You kind of also see on Instagram,
it looks like everyone else got their kid
to smile for a holiday card.
And you're like, that's not what happened to my kids, you know?
And you feel like it's your fault.
And then you don't talk about it.
And then you fake good.
And then the next person's like, well, that person
seems to be having a hard time.
And then honestly, we feel small.
You know, we don't get those resources. We don't feel empowered.
And it kind of happens generation after generation
until, until it's not supposed to be depressing.
This is so hopeful.
You know, what we see a good inside,
and we hear all the time from our members
is, I came here for my kid.
Like, that is not why I'm here now.
Like, I now ask for a raise.
I now can stand up to my partner when they're mad at me.
I now know that it's okay for me to go away for a weekend
with my college friends,
even when my partner and my kids are upset.
Like, have fair feelings.
Like, I can have empathy.
And I can still do the things I need to do for myself.
And that way I feel like what we're talking about,
there's a lot of stuff you talk about,
is actually just, I call it sturdy leadership.
And what's interesting to me is,
I feel like we have a lot of models
for sturdy leadership in the workplace.
Like there's a lot of thoughts now.
Like you can't really just yell at people
and expect them to get better at work.
And I even think that's like been modernized
on the sports field.
Like the best coaches, like kind of know you gotta connect
before you correct.
And what's kind of amazing and sad,
and yet we're there, I think, hopefully now,
is like parenting young kids is kind of the last place
to modernize where sturdy leadership kind of gets applied
and what it really looks like and how it benefits everyone.
But that's really what good insight is.
You know, it's interesting because I don't think
I've ever heard that connect before you correct.
And I just had a flashback to all the coaches that used to scream at me when I would drop
a football or miss a basketball shot or just mess something up or I wasn't paying attention
or whatever happened and just screaming at me, belittling me, you know, making me feel
less than in front of my peers, my teammates, and shaming me to try to get better.
And I remember just feeling like resentful and angry all the time, right?
And afraid.
Now, I would still work hard, but I didn't come from an emotionally good place.
So I didn't want that to happen again out of fear of shame, as opposed to someone actually
sitting down and connecting with me, where I did have great coaches also
who took the time to connect with me and ask me questions.
And why are you so angry?
Why are you reacting like this?
What's going on?
Why are you so frustrated?
Why did you foul that person that way?
Like, you know, what is going on?
I use sports analogies all the time.
And connect before you correct.
There's a lot of phrases I'll take credit for.
That one's not mine.
I actually can find, I don't know who said it first,
but it is beautiful and it gives you
an order of operations, right?
Where I think about this all the time,
like my kid is hitting their brother,
or my kid lied to my face about something
that was important, like I don't know
whether they studied for a test,
whatever the behavior is, right?
And I find out and I see them hitting
and I just kind of send them to their room
or I take away their iPad or something,
which I always say is like the worst thing.
Because when you're a parent, it really is like,
now I have to deal with taking away their iPad.
I don't even want to do that.
I like when they have iPad time.
Like nobody wins, like why did I do that?
But I think about a basketball coach
and I think about a kid who is missing layups all the time.
And I think about watching my kid's basketball coach,
if that's my kid.
And the coach is like, you go to your room
and you come back here when you can make a layup.
And I feel like all the parents would be like,
why would that even, what's the theory
of why that would be effective?
Forget, like, what is my, you think my kid is now
going to their room and Googling how to make a better shot?
Like, yes, you might have to pull the kid out of the game,
but you probably want to say, hey, like, this is not your game right now.
I believe in you.
And like, we're going to get in the gym tomorrow and
get to the bottom of this and figure this out.
And if that was my kid's coach, I just don't know if the parents would say,
that coach is really condoning bad behavior.
They're really encouraging.
That coach is making it seem like it's okay to mislead.
It's like, it doesn't make any sense,
but we actually have a system of doing that to our kids
over and over.
And then we wonder why so many teens and adults
feel so awful about themselves.
Well, when you reflect back to a kid
that they're a bad kid, during the stage they're forming their identity,
that will stick with them for a while.
And it's hard for them to kind of unwire that, I guess, right?
And believe that they're actually good.
And totally possible.
Like, to me, if, like, there's one thing I ever want someone
to take from anything I say is, it's never too late.
It is never too late.
Repair is amazing.
It is never too late.
The parent who's listening now is like, oh, no,
I guess I messed up my kid forever.
You did not.
By the way, I sometimes say bad things to my kids, too.
We're human.
But to me, it's the starting point of right.
My kid is good inside.
That's why everything we do is called that.
And to me, that idea isn't just a phrase that sounds nice.
To me, it's actually a core principle
that is very different from a punishment or fear-based approach, which is if I believe That idea isn't just a phrase that sounds nice. To me, it's actually a core principle
that is very different from a punishment
or fear-based approach, which is,
if I believe my kid is good inside,
and I always find visuals helpful,
so I look at one hand and I'm like, this is my kid,
this is who they are, that's their identity,
and they are good inside.
And then I look at my other hand very far away
and say, this is their behavior, this is what they did.
And I would agree with a lot of parents telling me like,
oh, they lied to your face, I would agree.
Like, not great behavior.
They hit their sister, definitely not great behavior.
But those things are different
and it's really important with your hands
to keep them separate
because you could then look at one hand and say,
I have a good kid who hit their sister.
And the only reason we wanna punish
and come down so harshly on our kids
is because those hands collapse.
It's because I see the bad behavior
and I don't even realize it's so fast in my brain,
but immediately I assume I'm a bad kid.
That is my kid.
That is my kid.
It's collapsed.
And to me, I mean, good inside is more things,
but everything else flows from the foundation
of actually separating behavior from identity,
which I think you get this, but not everyone does.
So it's important to name that doesn't mean condoning the behavior.
Like trying to understand behavior we think means approving of behavior, but trying to
understand why my kid is missing a layup.
I don't think anyone thinks means that I think it's cool that my kid can't make a layup.
They're different, but that separation is the foundation
for everything.
What would you say are the three biggest mistakes
of modern parenting today?
Is it okay?
I don't, for some reason, the reason mistakes
that when I think about it feels very like shame inducing.
So, and it feels like final.
So like what are the three things that I wanna,
like myths or things I'd shift? Yeah like what are the three things that I wanna, like myths or things I'd shift?
Yeah, what are the three things that you think parents
could do differently today
to have a better connection with their children?
I think that would be number one.
Number one is that trying to understand
your kids' bad behavior is the foundation
for effectively changing their behavior.
So understanding it first.
You can only change what you understand.
What if you don't understand it?
That's a great thing to acknowledge.
I don't understand why you're doing this.
That's exactly right.
Stop doing it, right?
And if a parent said to me, I'd be like,
Louis, that is so beautiful,
we know exactly where to start.
And this goes back to not having the skills.
Why would you understand a kid's behavior?
It's very complicated.
And so it would be like a surgeon saying,
I don't understand how to do this surgery,
like and I'd be like, yeah of course,
well you don't go to medical school,
like let's get you into medical school,
like there are places where you can do that,
like really, so we have to understand before we intervene.
Right, I think that's like a principle of everything.
So we might have to learn, research, ask questions,
get you know, feedback from other people, whatever might be, right?
100%, there might be experts,
it might be the right community,
there's courses we can take,
there's so many resources right now.
Good insight, you know.
There's the book, we do a million workshops, right?
The reason I do workshops is because I was like,
I have this private practice
where I see a very limited group of people
and I was like, honestly, at the end of the day,
I kind of have some version of the same like
10 to 15 sessions all day long.
They're always about the same topics, right?
Slightly different story, but same core things.
I was like, I would like to democratize access to that.
So that's what my workshops are.
They're just the things that would come up
in private practice, but to more people.
So there's so many resources.
That's number one.
Okay.
Number two is that our job is not to make our kid happy.
That is so important and so counter-cultural.
Why is our job not to make our kids happy?
Because when we focus on making our kids happy,
we actually start to make them fearful and less tolerant
of all of the other emotions
that will inevitably be part of their
life into adulthood. And so when our kid says, I'm gonna make this up, like, um, the
only one in my class who can't read, it's like the most painful moment of the
parent year. Oh, I feel my kid's pain, right? And maybe, let's just say it's true. They
really might be.
We have the urge to say,
everyone reads at their own pace,
but you're amazing at soccer,
but you're so good at math.
I want to make them happy.
All that does for my kid,
because during childhood,
kids are not just learning about a situation with a parent.
They're taking interactions and they're making generalizations,
not for one moment, but patterns about what emotions are safe,
what emotions can I deal with, what can I tolerate,
and what emotions, as soon as I feel them,
do I need to turn off right away?
And so when a kid says, I'm the only one who can't read,
they're sure that when our kid is an adult, they probably won't say that,
but they'll probably say, I'm the only one who,
whatever it is, didn't get a job yet,
I'm the only one of my friends who didn't buy their own
house, right, whatever it is,
we're always gonna feel that way.
And so when we make our kid happy,
what we actually say to them is,
I am just as scared
of this emotion you're feeling as you are.
And so then what they do.
I don't want to deal with this emotion.
I'm terrified. I want to run away from it.
I want to do anything but this.
And so what a kid's circuit is, I feel, let's say it's this,
I feel less than, or I feel jealous, I feel sad,
I feel disappointed.
And what gets layered next to that in the circuit
is my parents' fear, my parents' avoidance.
Those things get put together.
The irony is when you make happiness a goal of childhood,
you actually set a kid up for an adulthood of anxiety
because they have a range of emotions
that they've encoded as wrong and fearful.
And to me, anxiety actually isn't a feeling,
it's the experience of wanting to run away from a feeling.
And if you-
Avoiding it, yeah.
It is, and you can't really run away
from a feeling inside your body.
That's what anxiety is.
You're like, wait, this is not gonna win.
And so to me, the idea of we wanna help kids
become resilient, resilience over happiness.
And resilience comes from being able to tolerate
and sit with the widest range of emotions,
not constrict ourselves.
I interviewed a brain surgeon on here.
He was also a neuroscientist, a PhD in neuroscience,
but also had done 1,000 brain surgeries.
And I said, what's the number one skill
you wish every human being can learn to be better humans?
And he said, emotional regulation.
Like from doing 1,000 brain surgeries
and studying neuroscience, the mind,
he was like, emotional regulation
will support us in being healthier, happier human
beings.
And it goes back to what you're saying,
which is learning how to navigate all of the emotions
and be with them and feel uncomfortable and sad
and know how to manage them, not avoid, run away,
be distracted by them, right?
That's right.
Because, like, when I, you know, I always joke,
when I was in private practice, I saw a lot of, you know,
20-year-olds, 30-year-olds, 40-year-olds,
and not one of them came to my practice saying,
Dr. Becky, like, I had the best parents,
and, you know, those emotions other people feel,
like, jealous and sad and, like, those hard things, I got rid of them.
My parents got rid of them, I've never felt them again.
Like that's never, that obviously has never happened
but what happened over and over,
even though no one said it,
but their stories and behavior really exemplified it
was I am now 23, I'm now 45 and I'm literally no better able to regulate frustration and disappointment and sadness
than I was when I was a toddler.
Wow.
But the stakes are higher.
Way higher as an adult.
Way higher.
So emotion regulation, that is the goal of childhood.
I mean, that's the goal of adult, too, by the way.
Right?
It's still the goal.
We're all working on it.
You've been called the millennial parenting whisperer,
is that right? I think Time Magazine wrote that one You've been called like the millennial parenting whisperer, is that right?
I think Time Magazine wrote that one.
Time Magazine called you the millennial parenting whisperer.
I've had Cesar Millan, who's the dog whisperer on, and you know, people come in to say, hey,
how do you fix my dog?
And he fixes humans, essentially.
He teaches humans how to lead themselves better.
And it sounds like parents come to you and say, how do I fix my kid? And you're coming to them and saying,
well, you need to learn how to be a better leader
and heal and reprogram yourself
and learn how to regulate your emotions
so you can manage these situations.
Would that be accurate?
That is completely accurate.
And I think, you know, I doubled down on that
and say, I think when we have kids,
we have this unconscious wish that they're going to heal us.
Oh, and they trigger us.
Oh, that's what happens when you have kids.
So I say it again.
We have an unconscious wish that our kids will heal us.
And in reality, our kids trigger us.
Why do we think our kids will heal us?
Because I think in general, we all have the wish that something in the external
world, something we can gaze out at,
will finally give us the comfort and the sense of safety
and security that we've always been yearning for.
And part of adulthood, I think, involves learning to gaze in,
not from a place of it's my fault,
but from a place of actually, like, I have the power,
and it's hard, but I have the power to do that myself.
Wow.
Oh my gosh. OK, so. Want to get to the third thing? Yes, because have the power to do that myself. Wow. Oh my gosh.
Okay, so.
Wanna get to the third thing?
Yes, let's get to the third thing.
The third thing I want parents to know,
and like to me this is,
I should have said it's the first thing.
I messed up my order.
It's all good.
Okay, so I saved the best for last.
It's all good.
Start over.
But the second thing was resilience over happiness.
Yes.
And I wanna ask you, before you get to the third thing,
how do we raise resilient children?
Okay, then this is, I'm excited, I'm excited.
We can put the third thing out there.
We'll leave everyone with a cliffhanger.
What's the third thing?
If this one's important, that one's even more important.
Okay, so I think first of all, again,
and we have to understand before we intervene.
So how do we build resilience? Well, what is resilience, right? And we have to understand before we intervene. So how do we build resilience?
Well, what is resilience, right? And we have to really understand that. And I think that
resilience really is our ability to tolerate hard things. And the word tolerate is important
because we all think it's the ability to like get through it. The getting through happens when it
happens. And the truth is the longer you can tolerate something, not something toxic, that is
so not what I'm talking about, or abusive, but the longer you can tolerate something
hard, the success is going to find itself and it's going to be more likely because you
were able to stay in the hard place.
Can you give me an example of what this would be like for a parent in a child situation?
Sure. I can give you two different examples very concretely. Right? So this is something
I teach to a lot of parents in one of my favorite, my frustration tolerance workshop, which is
relevant for school, for everything.
So let's say, and let's say a three year old
is doing a puzzle.
I can't do it, you do it for me, you do it for me.
This is a good example, right?
And as a parent, I get it, you got it.
You're like, this is the last thing I wanna do.
Tired, I wanna relax.
I was gonna have a nice night with my kid, I get it.
But I'm really driven by impact.
And so like, I actually get this like sick joy
when my kid is on the verge of a meltdown.
Really?
Yes, especially when I've been working a lot.
Cause I'm like, if I'm gonna spend 20 minutes
with my kid, like I'm gonna make it count.
And like, it's nice if I'm there for a pleasant 20 minutes,
of course, but if I wanna have impact,
I like literally can picture my impact on him.
So you're like hoping when you come home
that you're having a breakdown
of that temper tantrum.
I mean, not like once.
That's when it's gonna be a big breakthrough, right?
But in a way, I think that's a really important reframe.
Especially if you're a parent who travels a lot
or you're not around a lot, to be like,
wait, like I can have impact.
It's not easy, it's certainly not convenient.
That's the one word parents need to know.
Having kids is not fun or convenient in most situations.
It's not at all.
And this is like your Super Bowl right now.
I guess this is your opportunity.
Wow.
Because my kid and how I respond to the puzzle
is not gonna remember anything about the puzzle.
Their body, not from that one time, but from patterns,
their nervous system,
is going to be developing expectations around
what can I do when things get hard?
What can I get away with, right?
Or yeah, and what should I expect?
What is my self-talk?
A parent's words become a child's self-talk. A parent's words become a child's self-talk.
A parent's words become a child's self-talk, wow.
Yes.
So what your parents say to you over and over again
is what you say to yourself.
Especially when paired with an emotional situation.
So when I'm frustrated, did I have someone come,
and I always say like frustration is now like super bright.
Do I expect someone to come and turn off the light?
No frustration.
Or do I expect someone to come and like,
by the way they're present with me, they dim the light.
So it's just not so blinding.
That's emotion regulation.
Interesting.
Like that's the best it gets.
There are drugs that will do that better for you,
but they have, you know, that's not what we recommend for people long-term.
Like, when we're talking about true emotion regulation,
we're talking about a dimmer.
Because it's impossible to deal with something
when it's a 10 out of 10.
Even 9 out of 10 is really hard.
Once you get to an 8 or a 7, it's not pleasant,
it's not convenient, but you start to be able to tolerate it.
And from there, you can, you know,
get maybe to a 6 or a 5.
That's the goal for our kids.
So I'll model this.
My kid is freaking out about the puzzle.
Now, to be clear, are there some times
that I'd be like, I'm giving myself permission
to do the puzzle because I can't deal with this?
Of course, I'm a normal human.
Everybody has to give that permission themselves.
And...
Wait, so Dr. Beg, you're not a perfect parent?
Like zero. No, no, no.
Everyone listen to what I'm saying.
Don't think like I actually do this all the time.
You're not. Every day you come home
and not after a long day, you're just like, okay, what do you need Everyone listen to what I'm saying. Don't think like I actually do this all the time. Every day you come home and after a long day,
you're just like, okay, what do you need right now?
And you're stressed out.
Okay, I'm gonna do this puzzle with you.
And that will eventually get to point three.
And I wouldn't wish Dr. Becky as the real parent
on any kid.
It's just like, you learn the most,
I'm sure you too in life.
You learn the most from people who struggle in repair.
Of course.
Right, so, but here's this like moment
and I can go through an older kid example too
because it's not as obvious, but like my kid is frustrated.
My kid's gonna be frustrated for the rest of their life
in higher stakes situations.
They're gonna be given something from a boss,
be like, I don't know how to do this.
And like, I actually don't, first of all,
I definitely don't want my kid, when they're 25,
to call me and be like, can you do my project for me?
I definitely don't want that.
I don't want them to be indignant,
how could this person have,
I want them to have some type of weight. I don't know what to be indignant. How could this person have, I want them to have some type of weight.
I don't know what I'm gonna do, but I have a feeling
I can just think this through or get a little further.
So that's what I want there.
That is not unrelated to the pattern of how I interact now.
So I could say, here's the piece.
Once in a while I do that.
Not great for long-term resilience.
So here's what I might do, okay?
And I'm gonna, my kid is starting to have a tantrum,
and even he's saying, do the piece, I can't do it.
Sweetie, sweetie.
This is so hard.
This is so hard.
And I have real kids,
it's not like they are gonna say to me,
oh, that's so helpful to hear.
No, it's not gonna happen.
They're gonna still freaking out.
But their reaction is different than the power
of my intervention.
Also two separate things.
I might say this, I might say, oh, so many pieces.
I don't know where it goes.
Does it go here?
Does it go here?
Does it go here?
And if my kid is like, do it for me.
I really, and I've said this to my kid,
I said, listen, sweetie, I'm not gonna do it for you.
Here's why.
I know you're capable of figuring this out.
And the best feeling in the world
is the feeling you get when you think you can't do something
and then you wait a little bit
and you see that you can do a little bit more
and I'm not gonna take that feeling away from you.
And so I'll take a deep breath with you,
we can take a break, but I know you can do this.
Okay, and when I hear people be like, does that work?
Yes, I mean, doesn't that work for adults?
Imagine you're having a hard time at your job
and you're saying to your manager,
you do this one, if they're like, listen, I'm not,
because I know you're capable.
And it's okay if it takes some time,
it's okay if you take a break,
I can be here to kind of think about,
where could that piece go?
Oh, is that an edge?
Oh, edge is in the middle.
Probably not in the puzzle.
Where do?
Oh, you're right.
Edges go on the outside.
Look at you.
My kid experiences the win and what their body learns is when I get frustrated, I don't
look for the answer for someone to take that away from me and give me immediate success.
By the way, if we really wanna get into it,
if we wanna know what entitlement is,
entitlement is the accumulated experience
of feeling frustrated
and then having someone else give you immediate success.
That's what it is.
It's not-
Without you having to do it.
And I'll never forget seeing this family of 16 year olds
who was horrified.
Their kid had a full on tantrum at 16
because they weren't flying first class.
And they were like, every parent's nightmare.
And they're like, how do we get them to tell a kid,
the most well-meaning parents?
But this was a kid every time something didn't go his way.
And I think money makes this more complicated
because you can buy kind of your way out of kids' frustration.
You can.
So it's almost hard to resist that if that's an option.
But every time, it was like frustration, success.
Frustration, a new option.
Frustration, I figured it out
because someone else does something for me.
Well, when you finally get to the point at 16,
if that's your circuit, and then you're frustrated
because something surprising,
it's not really about first class,
your body actually is like WTF.
I literally was not built to tolerate this.
And then it ends up looking awful,
but really it's really vulnerable, right?
Super vulnerable.
Super vulnerable.
So I wanna give you one more example of resilience.
There's three lines I think every parent needs to know.
And I honestly have, can almost reframe that saying,
I think every person in a relationship needs to know,
whether you're in a romantic relationship,
a work relationship, it's the same stuff.
Because another resilience building moment I can imagine
is kind of like what I said to you earlier.
Let's say your kid's a little older.
I'm the only kid who doesn't know how to read chapter books
or I'm the only one of my friends
who didn't get into honors math.
So teenagers.
Yeah, let's say that.
I'm the only kid who didn't get into honors math.
I tried to pull across to you.
My friends made it.
And I didn't make it, yeah.
Everyone, me included, okay, my first instinct
is to, quote, make my kid feel better.
Oh, you're gonna make it next year,
or you made varsity soccer and none of them made soccer,
right, whatever the thing is.
Or we say, you're gonna see it's not a big deal.
Okay, so here's the image, I'm big on images.
Now this is gonna matter in 20 years,
or whatever year you're in.
We say, right?
The truth is we kinda say it because we're uncomfortable,
and we're just kinda making a kid a pawn in our game.
But if you picture your kid on a bench,
and if you picture them kind of in a garden,
that's what I like to see.
That's like the parable for life, the garden.
And there's a bench.
And essentially when your kid says,
I'm the only one who didn't make the lacrosse team,
let's say they're sitting on the bench of, what is it?
Disappointment, or maybe it's embarrassment, or both, or feeling surprised and let down. I don't know, it's something like that. That's the bench of, what is it, disappointment or maybe it's embarrassment or both or feeling
surprised and let down.
I don't know, it's something like that.
That's the bench.
And as parents, we tend to have two instincts when our kid is on the bench, kind of some
type of distress.
We either want to tell them that their bench is in their bench.
That's not a big deal.
Even though they're like, but I'm-
But that's how I feel.
But I'm on it.
Yeah.
Or we kind of see a sunnier bench and we're like, just come with me.
Right?
But like, you're the best at, you know, at soccer.
And so we're like, right?
And both of those reduce resilience.
Because resilience is kind of like your ability in that garden of life to like whatever bench you find yourself on you're able to sit in it. Not drown in
it, but sit in it. Like because when you're there you inevitably will be like
you're not terrified it. You're not spending all your energy like running
away from a bench. Like if you saw that you'd be like dude like what just just a
bench you know. And so how do we help our kid feel like essentially like it's
okay to be them no matter what bench they're on?
Or it's really, it's okay to be you even when you don't make
the lacrosse team, because that's really the essence.
That's the core thing that resilience is about.
So how long should they sit on that bench of emotion?
Great, so to me these three lines will play that out.
So to me, as soon as your kid says something distressing
to you, we have those two urges, we have to recognize them,
we're not bad people, I always say hi to them.
Hello, urge to make it better.
And here to me is the first line every parent needs
in their toolbox.
I'm so glad you're talking to me about this.
To the child, say that to the child right away.
When they're stressed out, when they're angry,
upset, shameful, any unsettling emotion
that you don't enjoy yourself,
say back to them, I'm so glad
you're telling me this right now. That's right, I'm so glad you're telling me this right now.
That's right, I'm so glad we're talking about this.
Because, and again, if we think about it in an adult context,
if I was like, I'm so mad at my husband,
he never, whatever it is, he never is home for bedtime,
and he forgot the one thing I said,
and if I was like, hey, you're never doing anything
around the house, and I am really frustrated,
if he said to me, you know what, Becky,
well, you're upset,
but I'm so glad you're telling me about this.
You know relationships, I'd be like,
I think we're good now.
I don't even know what was I upset about.
Because someone's really saying to you when they say that,
is this feeling in you that you're feeling is real.
And I still wanna be in a relationship with you when you're feeling that way.
Yeah, I still love and accept you.
That's right. And so our kids need to absorb from us from a resilience perspective.
My parent can tolerate this part of me before I learn to tolerate this part of me.
For me, the thing that really sort of pulled the finger out of the dike if you will or
broke the seal was kids.
Really?
Yeah, 100%.
How old were you when you had your first kid?
I started late, I was 42.
Yeah, I'm 41 and I'm starting the process of, you know.
You're just getting on it?
Getting started with thinking about when in the next year or two.
There's no perfect time.
Let me, I'm very good at running other people's lives. Just do it. Just do it. Getting started with thinking about when in the next year or two. There's no perfect time. Let me, I'm very good at running other people's lives. Just do it. Just do it. It's really tough
in the first few years. There's just no good, there's never a good time to have kids is what
I've found. What was the biggest thing you learned about yourself after having kids?
And what was the biggest thing you learned about money after having kids? Well, it's sort of relaxing
the biggest thing you learned about money after having kids? Well, it's sort of relaxing to, I mean, up until the point I had kids, my general thought
every day was how can I be more awesome and be around more awesome people and experiences?
And I want more money.
All right?
That was a big focus of mine.
I didn't grow up with a lot of money.
I was very focused on economic security.
I didn't want to change the world.
I didn't have any desire to be a good person.
I don't want to be a bad person. I wanted a lot of money. It was very focused on economic security. I didn't want to change the world, I didn't have any desire to be a good person, I don't want to be a bad
person, I wanted a lot of money. It was really important to me and growing up in
a household that was financially strained kind of created those embers or
that fire. What did I learn about myself having kids? It's
relaxing to all of a sudden not be thinking about yourself.
It's so much cathartic. Because on this is Friday, on Fridays when I was single, it was like,
how can I hang out with more fabulous people? How can I meet more people where I can make
more money? How can I be at a cooler place? How can I be at a cooler place with hotter
people making more money? And it was just sort of never enough.
That was like conscious or unconscious thinking?
Just lizard brain just and we're a competitive species. The reason that we're all smarter,
stronger, faster than our ancestors is we're competitive. Some of it's built into us,
some of it is healthy. When you have kids, it's like I'm not worried about how fabulous the place
I'm having brunch on Sunday is and who's going to be there. It's like, okay, I know I'm going to soccer practice.
And the first few years it's tough because I'm a selfish person and that
didn't foot well to being a new father.
And also I think there's a bit of a myth that having kids like, you know,
bright lights and angels singing. I really didn't enjoy having babies.
I thought babies were awful. And I'm like, what is everyone? Everyone's lying.
This is awful. Wow. And I'm like, what is everyone? Everyone's lying. This is awful.
Wow.
And then about two or three,
when they start recognizing you,
they become less awful.
And then it kind of flips and they actually become fun.
Yeah.
And then before you know it,
it's just sort of, for the first time in your life,
you care about something other than you, or for me, more.
And that's cathartic and wonderful.
And it gives you a sense of purpose
that once you're gone, maybe if you've treated this child better than you were treated and you
provided surplus love, it kind of checks an instinctual box. And there's, I've never felt
sated across anything. You said off mic before I got here, oh, you're everywhere. I'm like pissed
off I'm not more everywhere. So, I've never been sated and something's broken in me, fine.
The only time I ever feel satisfied,
there's a few moments they happen randomly.
I'll be on the couch watching
Premier League football or something.
My kids, my boys will roll in.
They sit down and they automatically
throw their legs over mine.
The dogs come in, they jump on us, and I'm like, okay, this is it.
I can't imagine more kids, I can't imagine more dogs, just like this is it.
It's the only time I ever feel that way.
Only time.
And I'm an atheist, I think a lot about the end.
And I believe that I'll look into my son's eyes and know our relationship is coming to an end.
I do not believe there's an afterlife but I also know I'm going to just feel more comfort. Like I
actually did something. I checked a really big cosmic box because I've tried to be and I am,
you know, I try to be a great father. I'm not, but I know I'm a good father. What did I learn or what
did I feel? The first thought I had is I need more money.
The US becomes more like itself every day.
It is a loving, kind place for people with money.
It's a rapacious, violent place for people without money.
Low income homes, the kids have higher resting blood pressure
than the kids in middle or upper income homes.
It's a, this is a violent, ugly place for poor people and for the kids in middle or upper income homes. This is a violent ugly place for poor people
and for the kids and one in five kids live in a household that is food insecure.
So I didn't have these romantic visions of self-worth and happiness when my first son
came marching out of my girlfriend. I was like, I need more money.
Do you feel like when you- That sounds awful.
I mean, it's not awful.
Do you feel like it's,
I think it's your instinct saying,
okay, this is gonna be more of an expense.
It's gonna take more time.
I've got to invest in this.
How do I go find more resources to support
and provide for this family that I'm building?
Yeah.
When you, do you think something unlocks in men
when they have a child that support them
in becoming more financially abundant?
100%.
I always made enough money to have the perception of wealth.
You know, I was made, I'm talented and I'm hardworking.
I always made enough money to have a nice place to live,
nice clothes, had the same bards for the holidays.
But once I had a kid, and it was kind of a strange time in my life economically
as referenced before,
I'm like, okay, it's no longer about me.
And there's no faking it when you have kids.
When you're young and you're single,
you can crash on a friend's couch.
You can move to Houston and do crazy work on a whatever,
an oil platform or what have you and make a bunch of money.
Once you have dogs and kids,
there's just certain expenses and responsibilities you have.
And I do think it's important,
I'm writing a book on masculinity now,
I think a decent place to start for a man
is to take economic responsibility for your household.
And sometimes that means getting out of the way
of your partner who's better at this whole money thing
and being more supportive of her career.
That's also part of taking economic responsibility.
It's about having honest conversations with your partner about what economic weight class you expect to be in and who's
responsible for it and what's your approach to spending. Young people almost never have those
conversations. So, but I think that, you know, that stuff is incredibly important and what I say to
young people is they can can have it all they just
can't have it all at once. I made huge trade-offs when I was younger and even
in your age. I didn't see my kids much before the age of five because I got
very motivated but having kids really focused me on doubling down or really
knuckling down, bearing down, whatever the term is so I could have economic security because I felt a very healthy sense of obligation to be a provider and a protector.
I think that's a good thing.
I think men should feel that way.
And I embraced that and I said, okay, I'm going to stop drinking as much.
I'm going to drink less.
I'm going to get very focused on work.
I'm going to be smarter.
I'm going to very focused on work. I'm gonna be smarter. I'm gonna start saving money.
I moved to Florida to avoid, to lower my burn
so we could start saving more money.
And then the typhoon-like winds
of an unprecedented bull market
just literally launched me into space.
Really?
But if I hadn't had some of that maturity
that I think was forced on me by having a kid,
I wouldn't have recognized the same prosperity. So for me it was very, very focusing.
Interesting. So you feel like for most men that you've connected with who have kids,
they get focused when they have a kid on their career or their finances or saving or investing
and they just get a little bit smarter on that?
I mean a lot of it is, a lot of it is specific or individual and the key
question is what's your relationship as it relates to kids what's the
relationship you have with a partner? So I have a very competent partner who
makes good money and has really thoughtful like I'm the spender she's
much more frugal yeah she was born in Poland so she was you know waiting in
line for fish when she was a kid so she, if we were up to her we'd have just Krugerrands
buried in the backyard and maybe take a huge risk and buy like Deutsche bonds.
I'm the more risk-aggressive one. I'm the one that likes to spend. I'm more the
YOLO. The best households are households that bring together and both of those
things are good. A mix of personality traits. But having a competent partner who can help you
with the kids and the immense responsibilities
you can partner with around not only the family,
partner with romantically, partner with financially,
I think that's important.
So I wouldn't just tell everyone have kids.
What I would suggest is if you got a great partner and a lot of a lot of people specifically women are deciding now that they
Don't need a partner and I think that's actually quite liberating good for them
But do they have people in their life that can help because it's a lot. It's a lot of work. It's a lot of financial responsibility
But I would tell almost anyone that is making a decent living on up that having kids is
incredibly rewarding.
Incredibly rewarding.
And for me, it was focusing.
Yes.
We're talking about the Algebra of Wealth, a simple formula for financial security.
On page 49 in your book, you say that the most important economic decision you'll make in your life
is not what you major in, where you work, what stock you buy or where you live. It's
who you partner with. And when someone is wanting to choose the right partner, a lot
of people, my past was choosing based on chemical bonding, sexual attraction, chemical bonding,
feeling good, and not really asking
those courageous questions about the future, about financial decisions, about how do you
spending saving all these different things.
What would you say are three questions that young people should be asking each other when
they're entering a relationship to see if the potential for a healthy and happy long-term relationship is even possible
knowing that money challenges cite for 37% of the problems in divorce is around money
challenges.
Yeah, well, you sort of got to one of the answers.
So the first is, and young people are very good at asking this question
over and over, is sex and affection. That basically says I choose you. It's really important.
And young people are very good at determining whether that works or not. The second is values.
Weird stuff like where do you expect to be living in five years? My ex-wife expected
to be or wanted to be living very close to her parents ex-wife expected to be or wanted
to be living very close to her parents.
I had not considered that.
I did not think about that.
Do you want to live in a city?
What's your approach to religion?
There's just a lot of questions around values.
And then the third one you referenced
at PPM, people talk about is money.
70% of divorce filings are filed by women.
We have a tendency to stereotype women
as being these doughy victims that have no agency.
And men is like dopey predators, right?
It's Marge Simpson, incredibly high character,
never makes a mistake, and it's Homer Simpson
who is an idiot, but deep down an okay guy.
And the whole, all life is Homer coming over as idiocy while
Marge is just this incredibly high character person and I can statistically
prove that there's a lot of good women and there's a lot of good men and
there's some bad women and some bad men but women I believe and we don't like to
talk about this openly and honestly value economic security more in a mate
than men do. 75% of women say that
economic viability is a key criteria in a mate. For men it's only 25%.
Wanting the woman to make money or have security.
Or that it's important.
Ah.
In the relationship.
Yeah, in some women are much more attracted to a man because of his financial security
than a man would be to a woman because of her financial security. And then it gets speed ball in online dating,
which is where everyone is meeting now.
And the problem is that people don't give each other
enough chance, especially quite frankly, women who,
if you talk to married couples, 75% of them will say
that initially one was less attracted
or interested in the other.
And it's almost always that the woman was less attracted to the man.
Women have a much finer filter than men because the downside of sex is much greater for women
and they have a much stronger instinct to find someone who can protect their young and so
they are much choosier than men.
So guys are driven by aesthetics initially online but they're less choosy.
Oh, she looks cute or she looks nice or
she looks like she works out. Swipe right, swipe right, swipe right. Women are
choosier. In addition we have this unfortunate trend in society where young
men are falling further faster than in any time in history and women generally
speaking meet socioeconomically horizontally and up. I'm sorry. Women
meet horizontally and up socioeconomically, men horizontally and down.
And the pool of men horizontal and up is shrinking.
Meanwhile, and this is wonderful, no group of people has ascended faster globally than
women.
There are more women seeking tertiary education now than men globally.
And when you look at some nations don't like women going to college, that's a remarkable stat.
The number of women elected to parliament globally,
you know, the elected body has doubled in the last 30 years.
There are more women, single women in the US now
that own homes than single men.
There's going to be potentially nearly two
to one female to male college grads in the next five years.
And by the way, we don't want to do anything that gets in the way of that.
That's amazing.
But what we also have to acknowledge is that if we don't figure out a way to produce more
economically and emotionally viable young men, we're going to have a lack of household
formation because regardless of the Hallmark Channel movie you see, women generally speaking
aren't interested in men who aren't socially or excuse me,
aren't socioeconomically at the same level or superior to them.
Interesting.
Oh, there's all kinds.
When the woman starts making or the wife in the relationship starts making more money
than the man, the guy is three times more likely to be on erectile dysfunction drugs.
Really?
And a lot of that is his own issue, his own weird sense of masculinity and his own
insecurity. But again, those 70% of divorce filings filed by women, and we never want to have an
honest conversation about this, right? Because anything that in any way might portray one sex
as not being our vision of how the sex is portrayed in media means you're anti-women. I don't think
that's true at all. 70% of those divorce filings and the number one source of that divorce filing, there's really three things. He has
an emotional breakdown, he loses his business or some story declares bankruptcy.
That's the biggest cause for women wanting to file for a divorce.
When he's no longer a viable provider.
Wow.
People think it's values or infidelity, it's not. it's almost always related to money. Money creates kind of opportunistic infection.
It's sort of like, there's just more likely,
and most anger, most households coming apart,
financial stress usually is creating the context of anger
and disappointment.
It's the underlying issue behind why someone's resentful
or angry or stressed or overwhelmed.
It lowers the immunity system of everybody around the household.
Wow.
So when a woman is with a man that makes less than them,
can they truly be sexually turned on and feel emotionally safe as well?
I think so. But the data shows it's not as easy.
It got guys can find and partner with, guys have no trouble
being attracted to a woman who is not financially secure. Now some men are you
know like that, I'm making huge reductive generalizations here but there's some
data around this. Women, if you're on Tinder and you're a guy who's making $80,000 and is 5'9", I'm sorry,
making $130,000 and you're 5'9", you're as attractive to a woman as a guy who's 6'2",
making $80,000.
So it's about $10,000 per inch.
So everyone talks about height.
Your ability to signal, women are attractive generally speaking, the research shows to men based on three reasons.
The third is kindness.
They don't want someone who's going to be a good person.
They're impressed by men who are good to their parents and kind and go out of their way to
help people and there's no reciprocal expectation.
The second is intelligence.
Because the smarter you are the more likely are to
make good decisions and protect your family's offspring and by the way the
fastest way to communicate intelligence is humor. I've always said if you can
make a woman laugh you can kiss her. Wow. And then the most important thing though
to women and people don't like to admit this is the man's ability to signal
future resources. It's not even he
has to be rich now but he has to have his act together such that he looks like
he will be a decent provider. And the number of people, the number of men we're
producing that qualify in this category is shrinking as women get, it's the
high heels effect. Just as 50% of women say they won't date a man shorter than
them, I bet it's 80%.
They're just not as drawn to men who are smaller than them because it's very instinctual.
I need someone who will protect my young.
Metaphorically, women are getting taller every day.
They're killing it.
Financially, education, intelligence, opportunities, resources.
Women are killing it and it's amazing. We shouldn't do anything
that gets in the way of that. The question is, how do we lift up men? Who wants more
economically and emotionally viable men? Women. Why are men not doing as well in today's
society? And why are, versus women continue to thrive, which is a great thing, but why
aren't men thriving equally or at the same pace?
So I'm parroting Richard Reeves' great work
of boys to men.
There's a lot of reasons.
Biologically, men mature later.
Their prefrontal cortex is literally 18 to 24 months
behind the girls.
So two seniors applying to college,
a boy and a girl, 17 year old boy and girl.
Essentially the girl is competing against a 15 year old.
Oh my gosh.
So think about school.
What are the behaviors we promote in school?
Be organized, be a pleaser, sit still.
Basically education is set up for girls.
I couldn't do it.
And there's a lot of shame when boys, you know, just...
Man, it's so challenging.
My 13-year-old, the idea of my 13-year-old sitting in still for an hour and a half and
listening to French verbs, I think it's literally torture for him.
You also, so they're biologically inferior, they're also emotionally and mentally less
strong.
While boys are physically stronger, they're emotionally and mentally much weaker.
So we have the second most single-family households in America
As any country in the world, we're second to Sweden. Well, and when we say single-family home, single-parent home, 92% of the time
It's it's it's a mom
What's interesting is the girl in that household has similar outcomes college attainment
Self-harm they seem to be doing just fine with just a single mother.
A boy falls off the tracks. The moment he loses a male role model, he becomes much more likely to
be incarcerated, addicted, or kill himself. It's also a really, really scary stat. Two 15-year-olds
sexually molested, a boy and a girl. The boy is 10 times more likely to kill himself later in life.
That's not to say either crime is any less heinous, but what it ends up is that boys are emotionally
and mentally much weaker than girls. And the single point of failure is when
they lose a role model, a male role model. And there is an entire generation of men
that dad's gone. 70 to 90 percent of people in schools are women. There's an entire generation of men, the dads gone, 70 to 90% of people in schools are women.
There's more female per capita fighter pilots than male kindergarten teachers.
Wow.
There's just very few men in primary education.
So you have a whole generation of boys who are growing up with absolutely no contact
with men.
And so when I think about what it means to be masculine, you take care of your stuff,
you're together, you have a plan, you're kind, you have surplus value.
You begin to take care of your family, you're a protector, you're a provider, you start
to contribute to your community.
I think the ultimate expression of masculinity, it's more a call for action, is for a man
to get involved in the life of a kid
that's not his.
And there's especially a huge need for young boys.
And my mom was always really good at this.
Her boyfriend stayed in my life.
I had a guy across the hall come over one day
and introduced himself to my mom.
And then the next weekend he came over and said,
would your son like to learn how to horseback ride?
And I used to go out to a ranch in Calabasas with this guy
for the better part of two years every other weekend,
and he taught me how to ride a horse.
And he talked to me about stuff.
And the thing is, you don't have to be a baller.
You just have to be a guy trying to live a virtuous life.
And quite frankly, Michael Jackson and Catholic Church
have screwed it up for these men
because there's an air of suspicion
when a young man wants
or a man wants to get involved in a boy's life.
There's a feeling, well, what's wrong with him?
And here's the thing, 99.9% of men have a feeling of paternal and fraternal love.
And sometimes they don't have a place to give it yet.
And what I would urge all men to do is there's an enormous cadre of young boys who need men in their life
and aren't getting it.
What are the clear signs that you could start reflecting
and asking yourself if one of your parents
were narcissistic in any way?
One of the things, certainly certainly that I found is that so many people
grow up under the family trance.
And so the family trance, they don't understand the dysfunction of their family
because it's been normalized.
And I've used the term malignant normalcy.
And I've used the term malignant normalcy. Because then if I grew up abused and I'm in an abusive relationship,
I've normalized the abuse as not something I like, but
I will accept or it's kind of normal.
But that's a malignant normalcy.
That's not a normalcy you wanna have.
And so when people, when I think about
helping people see, and really that's what my work is about, is to help people see outside the box
and to see in a broader way so much of all the dynamics that are going on within the family.
And if you have a narcissistic family, or there's all kinds of other dysfunctional families too,
there's some universals that go along with that.
But when you say narcissistic family, I think when you start to recognize, hey,
they've always been controlling, they lack empathy. They are guilt and shame.
They could be abusive, but they don't have to be abusive to be narcissistic. They love
you and they have a plan for your life. And I say love with air quotes. We used to say
that in religious circles, God loves you and he has a plan for your
life. Well, the narcissist loves you and they have a plan for your life and you better follow it.
Wow. Or else.
Or else. And the narcissist will be very self-absorbed. Everything is basically about
them. It always comes back to them. That's the whole focus. And if you have parents who have some of those types
of traits, there are other traits, but some of those,
people will always ask me, am I a narcissist?
And I'll go, do you ever feel guilty?
Oh yeah, all the time.
Then you're not.
You're just dysfunctional.
You're just dysfunctional.
No, right.
A narcissist is not gonna feel that guilt. Then you're not. You're just dysfunctional. You're just dysfunctional. No, right.
A narcissist is not going to feel that guilt.
They don't feel...
What have they done wrong?
They're always right.
So that why would I feel guilt about anything or shame?
So if you felt that, you're probably less likely to be a narcissist.
If you...
But a parent can be a narcissistic parent and they don't
they can abuse you, they can criticize you, they can.
But they'll never go, oh, that my bad.
Now that was what I apologize to do that.
Why would they apologize?
You made them do it.
You made them do it.
Or they did it for your good.
So why would I ever need to say, I'm sorry?
There's no need to say I'm sorry.
What's the worst thing a parent could do then
to their kids over and over again
that will almost surely make them dysfunctional as an adult?
Is it never apologizing to them when, you know, they...
That's too symptomatic. That's too superficial. The thing that's going to make them more dysfunctional
as an adult is to not break their own cycle from their own past, bringing that cycle to their current nuclear family, and not knowing
it.
So bringing the generational trauma onward.
And the generational programming, and the generational emotional Wi-Fi that's been going
on and they just bring that right into here, that's going to mess them up more than ever.
Now, does abuse and narcissistic meanness,
do all those things affect the kid? Of course it does.
Screaming and all this stuff, yeah.
Exactly. Of course it's going to.
But it's not the screaming that's the underlying problem.
That's a symptom of something.
That's a symptom of how the family has been dysfunctional and toxic.
And it can come out in different ways, narcissism, alcoholism, abuse, workaholism, sex addiction.
It can come out in gambling and all kinds of symptomatic ways. But underneath all of that is an enmeshment to a family whose trance has never been broken.
Wow. The origin family.
The origin family. It's never been broken. And now you're just living it out.
Only John's living it out that way. Mary's living it out that way.
But that's the underlying important kind of thing.
And if we don't break the trance of the family, the origin family of ours, if we don't break
that trance, then we're just going to relive that pattern in our adult relationships as
well.
In some way.
And it may not even look like the way mom and dad did it, but the pattern's still there.
So people will go, well, I'm not like my parents.
Oh, hold on just a second.
Let me ask you, but what you're doing is the same theme
and it has origins in your family of origin.
You may have chosen the opposite,
but 180 degrees from unhealthy is unhealthy.
So people will go, oh, well I'm all the way over here.
Oh, now you're just a class B unhaven healthy,
right, and a class A unhealthy person.
And you feel superior over them because you're over here.
Right.
You haven't broken the cycle.
You're living the pendulum life.
Yeah, I'm not screaming at my partner.
I'm not screaming at my partner like they did.. I'm not screaming at my partner like they did.
But I'm controlling.
But I'm being controlling, and I still may be self-absorbed or judgmental or any number
of other kinds of things.
Interesting.
Here's the real question then.
If we start to think about, oh, maybe my parents had some narcissistic tendencies, and I'm starting to think about it, and I'm starting to evaluate my childhood and realize, oh, maybe my parents had some narcissistic tendencies,
and I'm starting to think about it,
and I'm starting to evaluate my childhood and realize,
oh, I thought this was just normal
because this is the only thing I knew.
How many families did we grow up in?
Yeah, right?
And it wasn't as bad as that family,
so I gotta be grateful for this.
And we should.
And my parents were loving at times, and they gave us,
and they were doing the best they could,
so that I can't think of them as narcissistic
But we start to internalize that what are the warning signs then that show up in adult children of narcissistic parents?
Let's
Then take a look at that
Mom and dad or whoever was narcissistic
hypercritical and judgmental
Now I then grew up and say I'm not gonna be like that narcissistic, hypercritical and judgmental.
Now, I then grow up and say, I'm not going to be like that, but
what am I to myself?
Hypercritical and judgmental.
So an adult child of a narcissistic family often will have
unbounded guilt, shame, criticalness, hypercriticalness, very hard on themselves.
So they just take the voice from here and just live it inside themselves.
Really?
Everything is that way.
People go, oh, well, they screamed all the time.
So many times I've said, so how many times have you internally screamed at yourself?
I don't scream at other people.
I didn't say other people.
I said, you.
Well, yeah, I can be pretty nasty to me.
You know, you stupid, dah, dah, dah, dah, dah.
And I said, you're just reliving this only in a different way.
And so it's all embryonic in the family.
So everything is happening out here.
The problem, and that's what I think, that's why I use the term,
the solution is not near the problem.
Also, the problem may not be near the symptom.
Here I am criticizing myself and cutting myself down
internally and hating myself, and narcissists,
adult children of narcissists can definitely hate themselves
because they've been judged and criticized
and emotionally hurt
so many different ways, shamed. And so this is what they're doing out here.
And they're now doing this as adults to themselves internally and going, well, what's the solution?
And many will go, don't look at any of that. Let's just try to be nicer to yourself, which is not
bad advice, but it's superficial advice. And it may not hold. And then you'll try it and
then give it up. And you'll try it and give it up. Versus, wait a minute, let's get mom
and dad out of you. Wow. That's what we want to do. And do you recognize that's not you?
When you are criticizing yourself that way,
you're gonna be under the hypnosis and the trance
that this is me doing it to me.
And I go, let me give you some good news.
It's not you doing it to you. It's your family
still doing it to you through you. There's a difference and that's a huge difference.
And so as adult children, what should we be thinking about if we felt like we had a dysfunctional
childhood? Should we be thinking about how do I get myself
to be self-differentiated from my parents and my family?
How do I block my family completely?
How do I heal the past?
Like, what should we be thinking about
as we come into awareness as adult children
of dysfunctional childhoods or narcissistic parents?
And I think it's a great question.
But your question also has within it a certain paradigm,
as all questions do.
Every question has the answer in it.
Every question that someone asks,
the answer is in their question.
And so you are asking about, so do I separate myself
from my family?
Do I, you know? And and certainly if someone, if families are abusive and
toxic and have no interest in changing, well then we have to look at some no
contact or we may need to go that far.
But self differentiation, what I tend to think when someone has a family that's
narcissistic, does the person that
I'm working with or talking to or the adult child of the narcissist need greater self-differentiation,
which is an emotional state and a maturity state, or do they need to physically separate?
If you physically separate, you still need to physically separate? If you physically separate,
you still need to emotionally separate.
Right, it doesn't solve the problem.
It doesn't solve the problem.
Now, but I don't want you there being abused,
you know, and being taken,
and you know, there's common sense to this as well.
But self-differentiation is the,
do you have the maturity and respect for yourself
that if you had grown up in a healthy family,
this is the way you'd be?
That's self-differentiation.
And people go, well, how can I do that?
I didn't grow up in a healthy family.
It's never too late to have a happy childhood.
Really?
So let's start now.
Wow.
And are you going to take care of yourself or are you not?
And adult children or narcissists
don't know how to take care of themselves.
They've never even been told that's a good thing to do.
Many of them would say, well, my church or my whatever
teaches me I should not do that because that's selfish.
And I go, no, no, that's not what they're teaching or
I don't know they may be teaching that's certainly possible, but that's not what that that isn't what self-care is about
Self-focus is healthy
We've grown up with no self-focus and only focused on the others in the family now
We want to do self-focus and only focused on the others in the family. Now we wanna do self-focus, which means inner boundaries.
Where when you say, well, Jerry, you're such a bad son,
and I just think you're worthless.
And inside I go, so what? And?
Because you are you and I am me.
If we are too enmeshed, then what you said will drive me crazy.
And then I'll try to overcompensate or approval or whatever.
I'll try to be reactive.
I'll get mad.
I'll say, well, that's what you've always treated me
Why don't you stop treating me that way?
You've always been this way and that is that versus
Okay, I
See, that's how you feel. I don't feel that way about me. Mm-hmm, but it's okay if you do
Me you have a right to feel that way about me if you want.
I don't care.
I hope it helps you out.
I don't know.
Why is it so hard as adult children
to break the family trance, though,
of conditioning from parents' guilting,
or you need to come visit me more,
or why don't you call me more, or you're not doing this more,
or whatever?
Our fantasies.
We're still children.
I want the parent to love me.
I want them to accept me.
I want them to take care of my needs.
I've always wanted a parent who would care.
And I'm not ready to give up that fantasy.
Oh, man. And if I could help someone give up those fantasies,
they'll grow like nobody's business.
Mm, really.
Oh, they just go, shoo.
It's the fantasy that holds us back.
That's part of it, yes.
The trance and what we've learned is normal.
And then there's the fantasy of, when you don't get it growing up,
then you will always be looking for it.
I want you to come to me and we work out,
me helping you to stop looking for it.
Stop looking for what? A beautiful childhood or whatever?
Beautiful childhood. My parents love me. They need to treat me right, maybe someday they'll
accept me, maybe that it's not it's a fantasy, it is a fantasy.
And fantasies mess up adulthood.
Goals don't mess up adulthood, but fantasies do.
And emotional fantasies.
Sure, sure.
And there's creativity in fantasies and things,
but this fantasy of I'm going to have a happy childhood. I'm trying to have a happy childhood,
but every time I go back at Christmas time or the holiday time, it always ends up being a mess.
They just judge me or never go to the end. And they judge me and they do the same thing. I try
to be nicer and I bring more food or I bring the kids or
whatever they're trying to do to get this so that their parents will one day go, you are okay.
So what should adult children stop trying to do with their parents?
Stop needing them as parents?
Really?
When does parenting end?
Good question. I don't know.
18?
Is it supposed to end though? At 18 for...
I hope. Aren't you going to be an adult?
That's the goal.
Adults don't need a parent.
But some people live with their parents until they're 30 or...
Adults may wish or want to have mothers and fathers.
I'm not saying break up your whole
family because you turned 18. I'm talking about parenting. Parenting is parent to child,
not parent to adult. Of course there are exceptions. Of course there are people with disabilities.
I understand there's all kinds of variations.
But generally, if I tell people, I go,
and what do you need your parent to do?
Well, I need them to treat me right.
And I'm going, why do you need to treat them?
Why do you need them to treat you better?
Why?
Well, I'll never be happy if I... There you are. You've just hooked together. You'll
never be happy unless this fantasy comes true. And I can already tell you it's not going
to come true because it's been going on for 35 years. And I doubt if your parents are
going to just one day go, you know, could miracles happen? Of course, miracles can happen.
But I'm not in the miracle business. So that if they do, they do. It's interesting because the
people watching and listening right now, if you're listening, if you're watching this right now,
I want you to leave a comment below and say, if you had a happy, like if your parents loved you supported you approved of you most
of the time comment below happy childhood if you feel like your parent
you could never get the approval of your parents they were never satisfied with
you they're always judging and critical of you type in challenging childhood in
the comments below and I'm curious what is the pro and con of having a healthy
relationship with your parents versus an unhealthy relationship with your parents wanting them
to approve and love you as adults?
Right. Well, that's because then your self won't develop.
You are living a pseudo self waiting on them to give you a self by them going,
you're wonderful and we love you. And the thing is, the same is true with if parents have caused trauma.
Once you become an adult, they can no longer fix
that for you. Ever. They, they could say, I'm sorry, they
could say, they can be remorseful, but I keep telling
clients or coaching people that I tell you, they can't fix it.
This is now yours to fix. Whatever they did is now yours to fix, not theirs to fix.
Even if they do apologize, it still made that solid rub.
You don't have to fix it still.
Exactly.
How does that fix it?
And so they always go back, I'm going to confront them and tell them, and you're just going
to get caught up in the system even deeper.
You're going to go down in the quicksand even more if you
go do that. And I always tell people the time to confront people is when you don't need to.
If you need to, you're probably out of sync. Really? Yeah. So not that we can't confront some
people. I gotta confront if they're not giving me my coffee and you know I gotta but generally I'm talking about this emotional stuff. You know what's
interesting that you say that I was sexually abused when I was five by a man
that I didn't know and I've talked about it openly on this show many times but
for those that hear the first time it was something that haunted me for 25
years. For 25 years I held onto it, I felt shame,
I felt sadness, I felt anger, rage,
all these different things.
And it was a movie that played in my mind
over and over again for 25 years.
And it drove me, without even knowing it,
unconsciously to protect myself, to defend myself, to...
Not trust?
Yeah, not trust.
If someone's trying to take advantage of me,
I'm gonna get big and strong
and all these different things.
And I need to be right and I need to win.
And in some ways it helped me accomplish certain goals
but left me feeling very empty as well.
Bad things have upsides, bad things have downsides.
Good things have upsides, good things have downsides. Good things have upsides, good things have downsides.
All. But sorry to interrupt.
And I got to a point when I was 30, so 25 years later, where it was too much. It was
too much and it all kind of came out, right? It came out at one point after about a year of just breakdowns continuing to happen where it forced me
to look within and stop blaming everyone else of like why is these things
happening in my life? And it got to a point where I said okay I'm actually
gonna dive deeper and start working on myself and start unpacking things from
childhood and start really reflecting on these things.
And I went to workshops, all the therapy,
coaching, all the different things.
And I got to a point where I finally opened up
and talked about it in a safe environment.
And then I started talking about it
and letting my family know, some of my friends,
and started talking about it publicly.
And I don't think everyone should talk
about their stuff publicly, but I had a platform I felt the need to, I felt pulled to, I felt like inspired to. And
there came to a point where maybe it was a couple years after I started to process and
heal that journey and self-regulate the memory and self-d that wound where I was like do I need to
confront this person and I don't even know where the person is I don't know
where the person is or if they're alive or not but I was like I what's I gonna do
for me I got your point where I was like I don't need to and I'm at peace with it
but what should I do about yeah that yeah but I didn't feel like I need to
confront this to like finish the job of my healing.
I was like, this is my work to do.
And no matter what this person would say,
it's not gonna help me.
What would be the positive outcome of that?
Yeah.
I'd not, you can if you want,
but I'm just trying to think what's the utility of it?
If it provides some something, okay.
But I don't know that I would go through all the,
try to find them and confront them.
And unless it's a family member
that you wanna talk about something.
Right, some ongoing relationship or something.
Right.
Jerry, this has been powerful.
And I want people to follow you over on YouTube
slash Jerry Wise and everywhere else,
jerrywiseselationshipsystems.com. I want people to follow you over on YouTube slash Jerry Wise and everywhere else.
Jerry Wise Relationship Systems dot com.
You got a free training on your site as well,
where people can go through more of your systems and your processes for
understanding how to navigate dysfunctional family relationships,
how to start healing, how to start becoming more self-aware,
self-regulated, differentiated, all these different things. I want people to go to your website and check this out.
You're all over social media as well.
Again, Jerry Wise.
And you've got just a wealth of information on how to navigate probably one of the most
challenging things, which is family dynamics and the dynamic you have with your inner child
and self. And so I want to acknowledge you for the decades of service you've had towards understanding, researching,
and helping human beings find more peace and harmony in their relationships.
Because, like you said, I think the most important thing in the world is the family units and having families be healthy and happy and individualistic as well within a family so they can be
authentic and not a pseudo self. So I want to acknowledge you for the work, the
journey, and the commitment you have to helping families heal in a world where
it seems like there's a lot of stress and chaos in families. And there's two final questions I have for you.
This one is a hypothetical question I ask everyone at the end of our conversations.
It's called the three truths.
So imagine you get to live as long as you want, Jerry,
but it's the last day in the future for you.
And you get to accomplish everything you want and see the people in your life flourish
and everything else all comes true.
But on the last day for you,
you have to take all of your work with you.
So this conversation is gone,
all the content you've ever put out there,
no one has access to your content anymore.
But on the last day,
you get to leave behind three final lessons
and we would have access to this information. What would be those three
lessons to the world or three truths? Remember that you can't solve the
problem using the thinking and emotional dynamics that have caused it. So you cannot break out of the box by using everything you know in the box.
Two, family is everything, whether you believe it or not.
That truth is not going to change.
You can resist it, you can do whatever you want with it.
But because of who you are and as a human being, You can resist it, you can do whatever you want with it, but
because of who you are and as a human being and
growing up in that social unit that has mental and
emotional dynamics that go on the rest of your life.
So family is everything.
Thirdly, calmness. the rest of your life. So family is everything.
Thirdly, calmness is everything.
If you want to be less enmeshed, stay more calm because reactivity will only make you
enmesh more.
So if you're being reactive, you're probably enmeshing more, you're not de-enmeshing.
I didn't say be a doormat, I didn't say be a,
but calmness is everything.
And if you are calm, you can think,
you can regulate your emotions better,
you can regulate your thoughts better,
and you can see things more clearly.
I hope you enjoyed today's episode and it inspired you on your journey towards greatness.
Make sure to check out the show notes in the description for a full rundown of today's episode
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