The School of Greatness - Family Therapist: The #1 Sign You Were Raised by Narcissistic Parents

Episode Date: March 19, 2025

I'm going on tour! Come see The School of Greatness LIVE in person!Get my new book Make Money Easy here!Most of us unknowingly live under what family therapy expert Jerry Wise calls "the family trance..." – a powerful force that shapes our identity without our awareness. After 45 years helping thousands break free from dysfunctional family patterns, Jerry reveals how our adult struggles often stem from inherited emotional programming that creates a "malignant normalcy" within us. Through our conversation, he shares the revolutionary concept of self-differentiation – the courageous process of separating your true self from your family's expectations while remaining emotionally connected. When Jerry states "whatever issues I leave unresolved, who gets to resolve them? My children," I realized this might be the most transformative conversation we've had about breaking generational patterns. His profound insight that "it's never too late to have a happy childhood" offers hope to anyone trapped in cycles of criticism, people-pleasing, or emotional reactivity that originated in their family system.Get Jerry’s Free 84-Minute 'Self-Differentiation' TrainingGet more from Jerry on YouTubeIn this episode you will learn:Why criticizing yourself harshly is often your "family self" talking, not your authentic voiceHow to identify if you had narcissistic parents and what that means for your adult relationshipsThe three levels of resistance you'll face when changing family dynamics and how to overcome themWhy trying to change your parents is futile, but changing yourself transforms the entire systemThe difference between setting outer boundaries and the crucial inner boundaries needed for healingHow the "fantasy" of finally getting parental approval keeps many adults emotionally stuckWhy it's never too late to have a happy childhood through self-parenting and inner child workThe three core elements needed for lasting change: self-awareness, self-regulation, and self-differentiationFor more information go to https://www.lewishowes.com/1747For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960More SOG episodes we think you’ll love:Gabby Bernstein – greatness.lnk.to/1714SCJason Wilson  – greatness.lnk.to/1725SCMel Robbins – greatness.lnk.to/1710SC Get more from Lewis! Pre-order my new book Make Money EasyGet The Greatness Mindset audiobook on SpotifyText Lewis AIYouTubeInstagramWebsiteTiktokFacebookX

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Starting point is 00:00:00 There are two big things happening at one time that I've never done before. I'm going on a book tour for my new book, Make Money Easy, and I'm doing a podcast tour at the same time. It is going to be big, and I'm going to seven cities in 10 days. Get your friends, get your family,
Starting point is 00:00:18 bring everyone you know to these cities. I'm coming to Austin, Texas, New York, Boston. We're going to Nashville. Then we're going to Los Angeles, San Diego, and San Francisco. Make sure to get your tickets right now. Go to lewishouse.com slash tour. Again, bring everyone you know if you're looking to create more financial freedom and abundance to your life, and you want to see massive guests live on the School of Greatness show. Get your tickets. I can't wait to see you there.
Starting point is 00:00:47 People will always ask me, am I a narcissist? And I'll go, do you ever feel guilty? A narcissist is not going to feel that guilty. What have they done wrong? They're always right. Why would they apologize? You made them do it,
Starting point is 00:01:04 or they did it for your good. Jerry is a life and relationship counselor. For 40 years he has been a professional in psychotherapy and family therapy and now in life coaching. Please everyone welcome Jerry Wise. So many people grow up under the family trance. They don't understand the dysfunction of their family because it's been normalized. Here I am criticizing myself and cutting myself down internally and hating myself.
Starting point is 00:01:36 And many will go, don't look at any of that. Let's just try to be nicer to yourself versus wait a minute. Let's get mom and dad out of here. It's never too late to have a happy childhood. So let's start now. What are the warning signs then that show up in adult children of narcissistic parents?
Starting point is 00:01:57 Let's then take a look at that. Welcome back everyone to the School of Greatness. Very excited about our guest today. We have the inspiring Jerry Wise in the house and a quick bio about Jerry. He's the leading expert in healing from family and relationship dysfunction through self differentiation. You've been doing this work for over 45 years
Starting point is 00:02:22 as a therapist and a coach. And you've helped thousands of people worldwide break free from dysfunctional family patterns and discover their true selves. And this could possibly be one of the most powerful conversations we have here. I'm not just saying that, even though we've done this show for 12 years,
Starting point is 00:02:39 because in my mind, we've talked a lot about narcissism and relationships and narcissism, but we haven't covered if you have experienced life with a narcissistic parent and the clear signs of if your parents were narcissistic or on the spectrum in any ways and how that impacts you for everything in your life.
Starting point is 00:03:03 And so I'm curious if we could start, Jerry, with 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, 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
Starting point is 00:03:31 because it's been normalized. 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 want to have. And so when I think about helping people see, and really that's what my work is about,
Starting point is 00:04:08 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 are some universals that go along with that. But when you say a 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.
Starting point is 00:04:48 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.
Starting point is 00:05:14 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 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. But a parent can be a narcissistic parent. They can abuse you, they can criticize you, but they'll never go. Oh that my bad
Starting point is 00:06:07 That was I want to apologize do that. Why would they apologize? You made them do it you made them do it or they Did it? For your good. Mm-hmm. 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 they-
Starting point is 00:06:39 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.
Starting point is 00:07:20 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.
Starting point is 00:07:40 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. Wow. The origin family. The origin family.
Starting point is 00:08:07 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. And if we don't break the trance of the family, the origin family of ours, if we don't break that trance,
Starting point is 00:08:24 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, well, hold on just a second. Let me ask you, but what you're doing is the same theme
Starting point is 00:08:45 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 unhealthy, rather than a class A unhealthy person, and you feel superior over them because you're over here. You haven't broken the cycle. You're living the pendulum life. Yeah, I'm not screaming at my partner like my parents did. But I'm controlling.
Starting point is 00:09:19 But I'm being controlling, and I still may be self-absorbed or judgmental, 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, I thought this was just normal because it's the only thing I knew. How many families did we grow up in?
Starting point is 00:09:46 Yeah, right? And it wasn't as bad as that family, so I got to be grateful for this. Yeah, 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.
Starting point is 00:10:01 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 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.
Starting point is 00:10:43 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.
Starting point is 00:11:03 I didn't say other people. I said, you. Oh, well, yeah, I can be pretty nasty to me. You know, you stupid, da, da, da, da, da. 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,
Starting point is 00:11:29 that's why I use the term, the problem is, 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 sort of narcissists can definitely hate themselves. Because they've been judged and criticized and emotionally hurt so many different ways. Shamed. So this is what they're doing out here.
Starting point is 00:12:03 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.
Starting point is 00:12:31 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.
Starting point is 00:12:57 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? So we'd be thinking about how do I get myself to be self differentiated from my parents and my family?
Starting point is 00:13:23 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.
Starting point is 00:13:44 Every question has the answer in it. Every question that someone asks, the answer is in their question. And so you were asking about, so do I separate myself from my family? Do I, you know, and certainly if someone, if families are abusive and toxic and have no interest in changing, well, then we have
Starting point is 00:14:06 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 emotionally separate. Right. It doesn't solve the problem.
Starting point is 00:14:43 It doesn't solve the problem. Right, right, right. But I don't want you there being abused and being taken. And 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
Starting point is 00:15:13 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 isn't what self care is about. Self focus is healthy. We've grown up with no self focus
Starting point is 00:15:53 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, you know, 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
Starting point is 00:16:26 Then what you said will drive me crazy And then I'll try to overcompensate or compenetrate or whatever. Yeah, I'll try to I'll 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 da da da versus. Okay. I see that's how you feel. I don't feel that way about me, but it's okay if you do.
Starting point is 00:16:57 I mean, you have the 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. Why don't you call me more? You're not doing this more or whatever our fantasies We're still children. I
Starting point is 00:17:22 Want the parent to love me. I want them to accept me. 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.
Starting point is 00:17:46 Really? Oh, they just go... 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.
Starting point is 00:18:13 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 it's a fantasy. It is a fantasy. It is a fantasy.
Starting point is 00:18:27 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, I'm trying to have a happy childhood, but every time I go back at Christmas time
Starting point is 00:18:48 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
Starting point is 00:19:09 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?
Starting point is 00:19:26 That's the goal. Adults don't need a parent. But some people live with their parents till 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.
Starting point is 00:19:50 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?
Starting point is 00:20:13 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 gonna come true because it's been going on for 35 years. And I doubt if your parents are gonna just one day go,
Starting point is 00:20:35 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,
Starting point is 00:20:52 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,
Starting point is 00:21:27 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, 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, they could say, I'm sorry. They can 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.
Starting point is 00:22:15 Whatever they did is now yours to fix, not theirs to fix. Even if they do apologize, it still made that the problem. You'll have to fix it still. Exactly. How does that fix it? Right. 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. Really? 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.
Starting point is 00:22:49 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. Sure, sure. You know, I gotta, but generally I'm talking about this emotional stuff. You know what's interesting that you say that?
Starting point is 00:23:04 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 are here 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
Starting point is 00:23:24 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 you know 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.
Starting point is 00:23:52 Bad things have upsides, bad 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 there's 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 going to dive deeper and start
Starting point is 00:24:30 working on myself and start unpacking things from childhood and start really reflecting on these things. And I went to workshops and all the therapy, coaching, all the different things. And it 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.
Starting point is 00:24:54 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 inspired to. And there came 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-differentiate from that wound where I was like, do I need to confront this person? And I don't even know where the person is.
Starting point is 00:25:23 I don't know where the person is or if they're alive or not. But I was like, what's that gotta do for me? I got to a point where I was like, I don't need to, and I'm at peace with it. But what should I do about 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.
Starting point is 00:25:43 And no matter what this person would say, it's not gonna help me. What would be the positive outcome of that? Yeah. 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,
Starting point is 00:26:02 try to find them and confront them. Unless it's a family member that you want to talk about something. Or right, some ongoing relationship or something. Right. This is something interesting you said, it's never too late to have a happy childhood. If we had a horrible childhood and we're in our 20s, 30s, 40s, 50s, and we just think, man, my childhood was miserable, it was challenging.
Starting point is 00:26:25 I don't have many good memories. How can you have a good childhood as an adult if all you had is bad memories as a child? Great question. When do you stop being a child? When you become a parent, when you grow up, when you remove yourself from the parents? When do you stop having a child inside you?
Starting point is 00:26:49 Never. Hmm. So you start your childhood now by you becoming the parent to yourself, parenting, reparenting. And now I'm going to ask myself, what would you like to go do to play? Because just like with a tree, a tree starts out with a little branch and it grows up to be a big tree, but the little tree hasn't gone away. I mean, it's still in there. It's still a part of the growth. And we're the same way. It's called our inner child. And the inner child, we have all the rest of our lives.
Starting point is 00:27:26 And many people actually, because of their family of origin, abused their inner child because that's what happened when they grew up. And so they parent themselves the way their parents parented them. Wow. And that's the whole story of connectedness. Parents parent you, you parent you, and that we continue on. And you parent your kids.
Starting point is 00:27:56 And then you parent your kids and then adjust. So if you can get your insides straightened out, generations will be grateful to you. And I literally mean generations because it probably took about five generations to get to here, this dysfunctional, probably five to get here. You can change the world if you change you.
Starting point is 00:28:23 And even now I still work on my self-differentiation. I have a 39-year-old son. And I do that because I want to have as good a relationship as I can have with him. Because whatever issues I leave unresolved for me, who gets to resolve them? Him. Wow.
Starting point is 00:28:49 I saw a clip of an interview online of someone, a really successful billionaire entrepreneur, probably in his 70s, and he said the key to success in life was having adult children that still want to hang out with you, not because of your money or your success. But because you're a good guy. Yeah, exactly. Good person.
Starting point is 00:29:12 Yeah. And that's why, right, it's not about this is my property as the kids. They're not my property. And I would like to have a relationship where now whenever when I hug Andrew I can give him a kiss on the on the neck and I even ask him I told him if you don't want me to do that I won't you're an adult yeah I don't want to embarrass you he said my friends just think it's fabulous they wish their dad would do that right right and so because I felt that's what I wanted to do but I give think it's fabulous. They wish their dad would do that. Right, right.
Starting point is 00:29:45 And so, because I felt that's what I wanted to do. But I give him permission to be healed. I mean, I'm not gonna do something you don't want me to do. Wow. What I'm hearing you say is that the key, the key to setting up your family legacy to have the best or the healthiest lives they can have is to start by healing the child within you. Healing the child within you
Starting point is 00:30:09 and self differentiating the adult within you. So we have both those works. Okay, let's break down both of those. Going on. What would be the, and healing the child within you is not an overnight thing. What would be the keys to, whether someone says,
Starting point is 00:30:31 ah, I don't need to work on my inner child. That seems like baloney or just it's not, ah, it's not for me. I do a lot of my own work already. I don't need to dive deeper into this stuff. It seems like whatever. But if they were like, ah, let me listen to this and just see what he's talking about.
Starting point is 00:30:44 What would be the first three keys or steps to addressing how to heal the inner child within us? Well, and if they would say, I don't need to work on my inner child, I would say, now you've already told me what you don't know. Because if you don't understand that or work that way, you're going to be blinded, which is your right. I mean, I live like how you want live.
Starting point is 00:31:14 You don't have to do any inner child work. I'm just telling you the way human beings function, you know, and that while it is a construct or a metaphor, you metaphor, the inner child, it is that, but it truly is a part. We are biological. We are biological creatures. And so we have that part of us. I'm never not the seventh grader.
Starting point is 00:31:42 I'm never not the third grader. I'm never not the third grader. I'm never not the 50-year-old. I'm all of those. And so, but particularly in childhood is where we get a lot of that programming going on that carries over to older ages. And so when we think about, would you know if your inner child wanted you to do something? And if you don't know, do you think that could be problematic? Probably, yeah. And many people will go, I don't think I want to work on inner child stuff.
Starting point is 00:32:17 That's all psychological mumbo jumbo. Okay, well, then that's fine. You don't have to. go mumbo jumbo. Okay, well then that's fine. You don't have to. However, when you are hyper critical of yourself and very down on yourself, who are you down on? The adult self? The inner child? Probably more likely the inner child. Because you're going to act like your parents to the child. Man. That's just what we do. And so knowing that can be helpful because if you become
Starting point is 00:32:57 a collaborator with your inner child, it stabilizes you. If you're not, then you're always fighting yourself in business, in success, in money, in jobs, in marriages, in relationships. You're always going to be fighting yourself. And if we talk long enough, I'll prove that to you. You know, I would prove that to you. How that's what's happening. So when we are in conflict with ourselves or hypercritical of ourselves, whether it be our adult or inner child self, how is that hurting us or helping us? The thing is, first of all, I might say you're not being your true self.
Starting point is 00:33:48 You're being a pseudo self to yourself. You're being the family super self to yourself. When you're acting that way. When you're acting that way. Interesting. That's not you, but you think it's you. And I'm going, it really isn't. You're bringing the family trance. Trance, wifi, super self we call it
Starting point is 00:34:07 because all the family connects to this big super self that's all enmeshed emotionally. And we even know biologically, there's a way to describe it. And that you're now not, you're not, when somebody's going, well, and I'm fine with being hypercritical of myself. I'm not gonna look at my inner child, but every time I hear you being self-critical in a negative way towards yourself,
Starting point is 00:34:33 I'm going, why are you not being yourself? Cause would yourself do that? And they'd probably go, well, no, I wouldn't. Then where is that coming from? You know, well, it's just what I've always done. Oh, well, now we're going to all what's always been done. Okay, my point. What's always been done doesn't mean it's the best way that you can live your life.
Starting point is 00:35:01 Exactly. And all of us have negative parts of all those things. But I want to have fewer, less. I want to have less of a pseudo-self, less of a non-real self that's me. And all that hypercriticalness is being the family self. That's your family self. And I'm going, you want to be successful by being your family self? And you've tell me how bad that all was. You're doing it. You're repeating it right now.
Starting point is 00:35:32 Yeah, you may not be doing this to others, but you're doing it to you. Right, right. Yeah, I don't do that to other people. Okay, do you ever do it to you? Oh, well, yeah, that's how I'm successful because I'm so critical of myself. Yeah, it helps me be driven.
Starting point is 00:35:46 It helps me be driven and like, that doesn't sound like an authentic self. What do you think it is, if our inner child was able to speak authentically, 100% of the time, and say what our inner child truly wants and desires and they had a voice What would our inner child be saying all the time? I'm always so happy That I am loved now I'm always at peace Because I'm not in conflict
Starting point is 00:36:23 now I'm I'm not in conflict now. I'm always looking forward to new adventures now because it's life as it should be. And those kind of statements, if you're talking about the inner child talking, and thank you so much for getting the family out of you. Interesting.
Starting point is 00:36:48 And that we can just be us. We can just be a real us. How does someone learn how to get the family out of them, the family dysfunction out of them, while also being a part of the family. I want to learn to remain connected, which is what we call kind of emotionally connected. And I am going to be myself. Yes, which I think a lot of people struggle with,
Starting point is 00:37:19 with their parents or family. And when somebody says, so I'm gonna tell you something, I want you to go home and tell your family or your parents this holiday or whenever you're going to see them. How would you feel about doing that? Like you want to change the date of when you get together for Christmas or when you, how comfortable do we feel going and telling them that and this is your preference? Oh my gosh, that's going to be a mess. And this can be a president of a company who runs people all the time,
Starting point is 00:37:49 but he's gonna go home and tell mom and dad, I don't wanna do Christmas at the same time we've always done it. Oh my, you're gonna, that's why we so become children when we go home. Interesting. We just, and many people will say that. When I get home, I just feel like I'm back.
Starting point is 00:38:08 Back in junior high or I'm back in, my parents treat me this way and, you know, here I am the president of GM or whatever. They're still babying me. They're still babying me and think I'm an idiot. And it bothers them. And I would help them learn for it not to bother them. That's them, they're not you.
Starting point is 00:38:32 Enmeshment is I am you and you are me. Non-enmeshment is you are you and I am me. I am not you and you are not me. And we can have a relationship and that's a healthy relationship. Because this is not a healthy relationship. This is not a healthy relationship. This is a healthy relationship.
Starting point is 00:38:56 And you need space, you need distance and space to have closeness. Interesting. This you can to have closeness. Interesting. This, you can't have closeness. You're over close. This is over distant, probably because you're over close and you can't have closeness. That's so interesting you say this, Jerry, because for those that are listening and not watching and not able to see the hand gestures, you had your hands together enmeshed versus far apart
Starting point is 00:39:29 and then closer together but not touching. It's interesting because I left home at 13. And I begged my parents to send me away to a private boarding school that was about seven hours away. Begged them for a summer, and they did not want me to leave. But there were... I knew my parents loved me, but I didn't feel emotionally safe in the house
Starting point is 00:39:51 because of their relationship. Right. Right. My father was there for me. My mother was there for me at different times, but they weren't there for each other. My, you know, again, I was sexually abused by a man that I didn't know when I was 5. It wasn't anyone in the family, thankfully.
Starting point is 00:40:07 And then my brother went to prison when I was eight for four and a half years, my older brother, 11 years older. So that was just a challenging season of life that the family dynamic faced. And my parents just weren't, they shouldn't have been married essentially. They were just not happy in their marriage.
Starting point is 00:40:23 They did their best, they tried, but they weren't, they eventually got divorced when I was a teenager. And I do say, parents are doing the best they can. 100%. With the paradigm they have been given. From their origin and everything else. From their origin and everything else. But I'm not excusing them for many bad behavior.
Starting point is 00:40:41 100%. 100%. But as a 12 and a half year old, I wanted out. They gave me out of here. I want to be around better environment, better friends, better everything. And I went from enmeshed to as far away as I could be. And over the years, I've had to relearn how to get closer, over the years, I've had to relearn how to get closer, but not too far, but not enmeshed, but closer, because I would go months without talking. And I felt safe being alone,
Starting point is 00:41:14 because I felt unsafe being enmeshed. And again, I knew my parents loved me, and they showed up for me, and they went to my games, and they did the best they could. Right, they did, right. But it was just like with the life experience I had, I didn't know how to navigate the emotional unsafety that I felt from their lack of love with each other
Starting point is 00:41:34 and the chaos it felt like it was having. So it was years of unlearning, of healing, of all these different things to self differentiate from my childhood and from certain people in my family so that I could love myself and love them for who they are. We have to accept them for who they are. And also the other thing is, this is what I will also tell people,
Starting point is 00:42:01 if you accepted your parents just the way they are, what relationship would you like to have with them? But you have to accept, well, I'd get along better if they would do- They changed. Yeah, yeah. They are exactly who they are and they're not going to change. What relationship do you want to have? Do you know you can do that in marital work too? Really? Your wife or husband's not going to change.
Starting point is 00:42:28 What relationship do you want to have with him? Well, we're here so that that changes. You know, oh, so you came here to work with me to change him. Oh, well, that's the least I know now what our goal is and what you were planning on. Yeah, the impossible goal. The impossible goal. And you're gonna find me to be a very inadequate coach
Starting point is 00:42:53 and he's gonna fail and it's gonna be a mess. So instead of trying to change our parent or change our spouse for what we don't like about them, what should we be trying to do instead to create a healthier relationship with them? What if you were to, mom sits down or dad sits down or whatever and they're at the table and you have coffee and go, you know, what was it like when you grew up?
Starting point is 00:43:24 What was it like in your family? What did you like about it and what did you not like about it? I'm being a researcher. Now, I've just changed emotional location with them. I'm no longer the little child who they're going to. Now, they may say, oh, wow, we don't want to talk about any of that. Okay, well, I just wanted to ask. I'm not going to make them do it, but I'm now an adult and treating them as an adult.
Starting point is 00:43:58 Hey, what was it like during the war? My parents would be older, and what was it like going through the depression and those kind of things? Because I've changed my emotional location, I'm no longer this little boy, and they're these parents that are, now they have to talk to me like an adult
Starting point is 00:44:23 because I'm asking an adult thing and I'm asking something about them. And that I've changed something that will change the dynamic. And there are many other ways to change the dynamic too, to learn how to, you know, even if it's a, well, I remember my own example of I was a pastor for many years and I had, my father died. It fell on me to give the, now who's going to give the
Starting point is 00:44:55 family prayer at the meal? Well, it's going to be, I'm the youngest, but I was the only one who was in religious circles in that way. So it has to be me. And mom assumed it would be me. I didn't want to do it. Really? Even though you were in the practice? I'm not the family's pastor. I'm Jerry.
Starting point is 00:45:18 You're the youngest. I'm the youngest. Why am I? Because everyone just wanted it taken away from them. So I told mom several times before the meal, I don't wish to do this. That's not my preference. And she just ignore it.
Starting point is 00:45:39 Oh, no. Just do it anyway. Just do it anyway and blah, blah, blah, blah. Mom, and several times to prepare, because I know it's change. So when we got to the time, we're all standing there all around the table, she looks at me and goes,
Starting point is 00:45:55 and, and, what did you do? Jerry, would you like to? Did you give in? And what I said, this is one of my major steps of self-differentiation. Mom, we had discussed this several times. And one of my preferences is this is not what I wanted to do. Ooh, rough on the feathers over here.
Starting point is 00:46:15 So I just wanted to share that and then shut up. And then everyone's waiting to eat, the food is out. Everybody's going, we don't do that in our family. So you started to break the cycle a little bit and create a shift. Well, our family was never the same. Really? Never the same.
Starting point is 00:46:34 Well, you lose a parent, you're gonna, I mean, it's never the same. Right. But that someone would say no. Wow. And so mom went ahead and gave, and then it was shared around and nobody asked me. But then I could say,
Starting point is 00:46:50 hey, I'd be happy to do that today if you'd like me to do it. Because now I'm doing it because I'm choosing it or want to, but it's not here's your role, you do this role, Jerry, and be happy. So your mom, did she get upset with you when you didn't do this? Did she give you a stare?
Starting point is 00:47:08 Oh, yes. She gave me a look like, you don't, we don't do that. But then you said, I'm going to clear my boundary. It was just to state my position, and then the hardest thing to do was to stay quiet. And not apologize. And not say anybody from this moment.
Starting point is 00:47:30 Wow, interesting. That's self-differentiation in the family. Wow. Because I'm changing my dynamic in the family. I would have said, oh, no, it's going to be OK. Or, OK, I'll do it today. But I don't want anybody to feel bad. How don't know how old were you at this time do you remember roughly probably in my 20s oh wow okay and you were the youngest of and I was
Starting point is 00:47:54 the youngest of three Wow well and then I thought my brother's not gonna like this my nobody's gonna like this cuz and look she's just lost her husband oh man we lost her dad. And now I'm- Because you're being a little brat. You know what I'm saying? Because I'm being a little brat. All the role thing that's going to come out.
Starting point is 00:48:11 And I'm going, but I can't care about that. Wow. That I'm not their little brat. They can think of me as a little brat. Yeah. They are not me. I am not them. Wow. I'm as a little brat. They are not me. I am not them. Wow.
Starting point is 00:48:26 I'm not a little brat. I have a purpose to, because mom always used to guilt me into singing, because I did professional music and I sang and I did things like that and went to music school and Lord knows what. And so she, oh, Jerry, you have to sing for everybody. I don't, what? Sometimes maybe you do, sometimes you don't, right? Sometimes I don't. And I'm not here to be the monkey on a, you know,
Starting point is 00:48:56 you know, okay, Jerry now perform. Yeah. And I never could say no. It was so hard. Really? Oh, it was just. When did you, did you finally say no or no? Well, to the family prayer was the beginning of... And then you started to stand for yourself.
Starting point is 00:49:10 Then I'm going, this is the new Jerry. Boundaries. And I'm not gonna get reactive. I'm not gonna be mad that Mom didn't listen to me before we got there and that she would rescue me from this moment by not asking me, because I knew she wasn't gonna rescue me from this moment by not asking me, because I knew she wasn't going to rescue me from this moment.
Starting point is 00:49:27 But I don't need to be mad at her. She just had her plan. I have mine. Wow. So it sounds like what I'm hearing you say is you can't expect to change your parents. You can't expect to change your spouse or your partner. But you can change the dynamic you have with your parents
Starting point is 00:49:44 or your spouse. Exactly. And when you can change the dynamic you have with your parents or your spouse. Exactly. And when you start to do that, you're self-differentiating from a dynamic that once was into a new dynamic. And they can't stop that dynamic change. They might throw a fuss. They could throw a fuss. They might scream. They might scream. Silent treatment. Well, we also have three levels of resistance. What are those? That if you go through those three levels of resistance, you'll come out at a higher level. First level is, Jerry, why are you saying no?
Starting point is 00:50:19 You won't do this. Second stage of resistance is, Jerry, no, you need to be doing this and I'll be upset if you don't. Third, do this or else. Oh. And if you can say self-differentiated through all three levels, you'll start here,
Starting point is 00:50:43 go up the levels and end up here in the family. Not here, but here. Because they can't control my dynamic of the family. They can yell and scream and do all that, but this family is now different because I'm different. And I'm different. Let's go. And I'm still connected. Right.
Starting point is 00:51:07 If I'm not connected, then you don't have the power. The emphasis is not there. But if I'm still connected, they... And you could become a scapegoat. You could become... I mean, that's one of the... Then we'll make you the scapegoat. And you can go, that's fine if you need to do that and I'm gonna continue to be me and I can love you. And if that's what you need to do, then we have to be patient at that time. And now they have to decide, do we want to lose him or do we not?
Starting point is 00:51:50 decide, do we want to lose him or do we not? The burden's on them now, not on me. Can we change to accept him? We change to accept him. And that's their choice. They get to decide that well. Here's an interesting question for you. As someone who has worked with individuals and family, dysfunctional families for 45 plus years, coaching, therapy, all these different things, helping them heal and self-differentiate. I hope to be a parent one day, and for those watching or listening who are parents, what's the best way they can set up their family to be as healthy as possible for their
Starting point is 00:52:27 children to thrive and also love and accept each other and have a healthy family dynamic? Or if someone's got some older kids and they realize, oh, maybe I've done some stuff. And many have. I have, too. And they're in their teens now. How can I start to change the family dynamic so that my kids feel empowered to be themselves within the family as well? And what I tell everybody, I understand that.
Starting point is 00:52:53 And that's an excellent goal. And in fact, it's never too late. People even say, well, I'm 70 now, how can I? So, aren't you still a biological human being? I mean, you still are a cell in this whole world of a universe we have. So you're still functioning in that so you can change. Now, some people can't change because of very real limitations. And I understand, even some narcissists, they're so broken because of that, but you can change. And what we want to do is focus on whatever you want for your kids, you must obtain for yourself.
Starting point is 00:53:42 So it's not what you teach them, it's what you be to them. That's much more powerful than anything you say. Can you give us some examples? Well, people was, now you need to, you ought not do that, you ought not do that. But the thing is, if I am mature, if I am less reactive, if I am more calm, if I am more thoughtful, if I am able to see a more clear view of how all the system works in
Starting point is 00:54:20 my relationships, that comes through because of the connectedness. And that's the more powerful dynamic than all the book reading you do about how you tell people, as a marriage and family therapist, people are always asking me about parental advice. And there's good advice out there. You can read tons of books on parental advice. But the thing is, if the envelope is bad, then the message in it is gonna have a good message in a bad envelope. I'm talking about changing the envelope.
Starting point is 00:55:00 Then you put the good message in, it's all different. And so many just go, well, I'm gonna give them this envelope. But you're living like crap. You hate yourself and you're telling them you need to love yourself. You need to, bad envelope, right message. Let's get good envelope. I'm not gonna tell you to love yourself.
Starting point is 00:55:25 I'm going to love myself. Mm-hmm. Yeah, you need the messenger to be in alignment with the message. Exactly. Now, so it sounds like step one, if you want to be a great parent, start reparenting yourself and healing the inner child. Step two, learn self-differentiation from your own family as well. Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:55:46 But self-differentiation, it starts with like these small courageous steps it sounds like. It doesn't have to be, I'm going to explode the family dynamic overnight, but it's like, mom wants me to do this, and she's been wanting to do it my whole life, and I've always done it, and I'm not going to do it anymore. Dad wants me to do this, and I'm going to say, hey, that doesn't work for me anymore. Whatever it is, it's the small resistances. And then what I found is as you are self-aware, becoming self-regulated and becoming self-differentiated,
Starting point is 00:56:23 those are kind of the three, aware, regulated, differentiated. As you're doing those three, and we can learn how to do those three, that it is better for it to take longer and be right and actually effective than to then go quick fix or shorter and you go over and come back to the same spot. The other weird thing about change and again I that's kind of been my whole thing all my life is how do I change and then as a profession how do I change other people or help them change or whether I'm changing them or whatever, how does change work?
Starting point is 00:57:09 Change also, many people go, well, that can take a while. It also can take two seconds and you're never the same. Now, why is that? That's a change. People will tell me that all the time, that I've never been the same. Now, why is that? That's a change. People will tell me that all the time, that I've never been the same since that. Well, that's a pretty quick change. Yeah, I decided. That's a pretty quick awareness that you had. So there's the long work, and then along the
Starting point is 00:57:37 work, along the way, you'll have these moments of just, I'm just so different. You know, and I think that's really a cool part of the work that I help people with. And yeah, cause one of the challenges I felt like I lived with, and I think a lot of people probably lived with them, they had dysfunctional families is trying to keep the peace. It's trying to not upset mom or upset dad
Starting point is 00:58:05 or upset your sibling. That's like, do what you need to in your role to keep the peace. That's why we have roles. Roles is to make the family continue to operate in its dysfunctional way. But don't we need roles too? In like relationships, aren't there supposed to be roles
Starting point is 00:58:24 in like how to support one another or agreements or... But that's not a role. That's a self. My self and my values and my belief, I'm going to support you. Gotcha. And that's not a role I'm playing. That's my genuine beliefs. So we're playing a role. What are we doing? being a suit pseudo self a role is a pseudo self Golden child is a pseudo self problem child problem child is a pseudo self I'm not saying they really didn't come out of a family where that was Emphasized I'm not saying it didn't really happen, but I think once you realize, you know that's not you.
Starting point is 00:59:08 You know that's not you. I know that's the way you've lived and that's what everybody's always said, but it's really not who you are. And so with roles, I think of roles as being a pseudo self. What we want to do is to be our authentic selves. Not a pseudo self. Not a pseudo self.
Starting point is 00:59:32 Oh, I know you were saying you were to please. We're gonna please, that's a pseudo self. And why am I Mr. Pleaser? Which I was, absolutely was. Codependent Mr. Pleaser. Oh my gosh, it was, codependent, Mr. Pleaser. Oh my gosh, it was just... Why is that? To seek approval?
Starting point is 00:59:49 Is it to survival? Certainly, well, and I think when you say seek approval, I don't know, I used to teach codependency, have codependency groups, and so I know all the symptoms of codependency and all of that. However, at the bottom line of it is, it's the family's chronic anxiety, which you're not aware of, that pushes you to then go, oh, I need to get approval or I need to be pleasing.
Starting point is 01:00:21 So we need to reduce the chronic anxiety so you're not doing the pleasing part. How do you reduce the chronic anxiety of a family dynamic? First of all you want you have to recognize it. You have to recognize what's underneath your pleasing, your withdrawing, your overcompensating, you're hyper-functioning, you're under-functioning. Under-functioning comes because of anxiety. All of these come because of chronic anxiety. Anxiety is a bedrock of life.
Starting point is 01:01:00 That's how life got started. We have a brain that functions that way too. But we don't want to function out of our old brain. We want to function out of our new brain. All of this stuff has to do with our old brain. It's the old brain. And so you feel like you're in a room with a tiger. Well, why do you feel like you're in a room with a tiger when there's no tiger there?
Starting point is 01:01:27 Because a million years ago, you needed that. You needed that anxiety to save yourself. Now we have the experience of it, but it's not there. And so we have to learn to operate with our brain better. Wow. And so I think, whatever I, and I didn't realize this, oh, being like a mascot, I was also a mascot. And so I would get nervous. You've had many lives, Jerry.
Starting point is 01:01:56 I would get nervous. And in a group, or in a therapy group, or a supervision group, or whatever we do, and if it was tension, what would I break it with? A joke, or whatever we do. And if it was tension, what would I break it with? A joke or making fun. And I was serving a function with that. You're playing a role. I'm playing a role, but it was my anxiety.
Starting point is 01:02:16 I wasn't managing. I can't deal with your tension. So I'm going to be funny. If I begin to learn, well, I need to let them have their tension. Why do I need to rescue them from this tension with my humor? And also, it doesn't get us anywhere. I mean, I can, and there's a time to reduce tension. There's, and I've done that certainly legitimately, But whatever we do, over function or under function comes out of the anxiety that we're, that we're not, most of what's happening with you, you haven't learned to understand why it happens.
Starting point is 01:03:01 You're just living your life as you should. But if I started helping you understand the underlying anxiety, you go, oh, I think you're right. That is, that was my anxiety. Oh, that was my anxiety. That, and it's the chronic anxiety from over here at the family that we inherit that anxiety
Starting point is 01:03:24 and we inherit that level of self-differentiation. So if they're twos on a 10 scale, what do you think we're going to be? Two. Right. In self-differentiation. In self-differentiation, not as, I'm not talking morally, spiritually. And so we want to work on raising that number while staying connected. And then my fourness
Starting point is 01:03:49 helps them become two and a quarter. Right, right, barely. You're not even, yeah, barely change. Barely. Maybe they shift the role a little bit. And I'm not even trying to change them. That's not even my, but because we are connected,
Starting point is 01:04:03 it's going to have an impact. Yeah, it's interesting He's talked about inheriting the family enmesh mint Until we are self aware learn to self regulate and self differentiate. We're gonna inherit this family dynamic this dysfunction It sounds like here's a scary question Can you inherit? Narcissism from a parent if you have a narcissistic parent? Well, that's a science question. And we don't know the cause of narcissism.
Starting point is 01:04:32 Certainly we can say a narcissistic parent who is abusive and can create a narcissist. But there are so many layers of things going on from genetics to how the body affects with environment and effects in their environment to parenting to family dynamics to trans or intergenerational stuff that comes to biochemistry to and and we don't have one good thing go this causes narcissism and there are so many people that just say, a narcissism is caused by a narcissist.
Starting point is 01:05:12 That has not been my experience. Now, can narcissists have narcissists? Yes, of course they can have narcissists, but you're just painting a simplified view of it. And I don't think that's accurate because there's so many dynamics that can affect someone being a narcissist. Why is someone BPD or bipolar or why is someone,
Starting point is 01:05:35 you know, there's just, we're a complicated organism. And so I think it, and I don't think there's any one study that says this is what it, that would be probably irresponsible because that's not what the science. With all of your work as a therapist, a family therapist, and a family dysfunctional dynamics that you've experienced and studied and supported for the last 45 years, if you were to design a narcissistic kid to grow up and be narcissistic, what would be the elements? Not that you would do this, but if you're like, hey, if you do these things and this and this and this, you might create a narcissist.
Starting point is 01:06:15 Well, there's some classic thing we think about. No boundaries, overindulging. Do whatever you want. Spo. Get whatever you want. Spoiling, whatever you want. Maybe throw in some abuse. I think those would be some good kind of things. No consequences. No consequences.
Starting point is 01:06:40 Also, many times shaming is a part of that soup that goes in there. But again, it's already baked into the cake in the families. It was passed down already. It was passed down already. It's already passed down. And so those would be some things I would not want to do with my child. Sure. That they do need a sense of self,
Starting point is 01:07:10 but not a sense of self-absorption. Mm. I think one that I wanna ask you is, how can someone with narcissistic parents set healthy boundaries as an adult where they stay connected to their parent but they're not enmeshed with that parent anymore. And they don't play the role that they've been playing for a long time. The way we do that is by inner boundaries.
Starting point is 01:07:41 Inner boundaries first? Inner boundaries first versus external boundaries. Inner boundaries first? Inner boundaries first versus external boundaries. Because if you build your inner boundaries first, you'll be able to hold to your outer boundaries. If you don't, those are just, they're not going to work. You're not going to hold them. So inner boundaries, when I think of inner boundaries, I think of learning to detach, learning to de-enmesh, learning to I am not you, you are not me.
Starting point is 01:08:13 And so if I want to maintain those boundaries, you have to learn to not care. Wow, that's tough. And the caring part is the dysfunctional part. And it doesn't sound weird me saying caring parts the dysfunctional part, but it is. It absolutely is the dysfunctional part. But these are your parents. They've given you so much. They've supported you your whole life.
Starting point is 01:08:37 Tell them thank you for that. Right. Then you don't owe them anything else. When do we stop owing our parents? When do we? I guess 18. I don't know. Is that what you're saying?
Starting point is 01:08:50 Is that the age? I don't know. Well, I don't think we do. Do we ever owe them anything? No. That's the thing I was just saying. That's what I'm saying. We never owe them anything.
Starting point is 01:08:58 I didn't choose to get born. They had a child, and they chose. Right. That was their choice. And the law says they have to take care of me and raise me and I didn't. But it seems like there's this unspoken agreement or expectation that the child is supposed to take care of the... Look at all I've done for you. I've done for you. And I would say, I can't tell you how much I have appreciated that.
Starting point is 01:09:25 I can't tell you how much I have appreciated that. And they would say, But you owe me your life for Adam? No. Or you owe me to do this for me. Or you owe me to do more for me. Yeah. Now you need to take care of me because I took care of you.
Starting point is 01:09:35 Right. And the thing is, me taking care of you has to do with my values, my morals, and my choices. Oh. And that I have no trouble doing that. However, it depends on what kind of relationship we're going to have. And if our relationship is only an evil one, then probably other means need to be worked out for your taking being taken
Starting point is 01:10:07 care of. Wow, yeah. Because I'm not going to completely blow up my life and my emotional inner peace. I can live without family. I can't live without inner peace. Mm. Otherwise, you're just continuing the cycle of enmeshment, generational trauma, and you're showing the next generation how to treat each other.
Starting point is 01:10:34 And on a billboard, yes. Gosh, but it just seems so hard for people, because they're like, well, this is how it's always been. And I would never say it's not hard. And I never look at people and go, oh, well, that should just be easy. And many times, people say, oh, well, you just make it's not hard. And I never look at people who go, oh, well, that should just be easy. And many times people say, oh, well, you just make it sound so easy.
Starting point is 01:10:48 This was hard thought easy. This wasn't easy for me. This, there wasn't, no, no. And I'm not suggesting you should just be there without any struggle. However, I'm trying to give you a framework with which to work with if you didn't have to take care of your parents, would you?
Starting point is 01:11:15 Or if they are narcissistic parents, which, and I'm for kids taking care of their parents. I'm not anti-family or anti-... I want families to be together. I want them to love each other. But if you have two malignant narcissists, now what kind of caregiving relationship do you want to have with them?
Starting point is 01:11:40 You have to decide because you're your own agent. I mean, it can't be based on whatever they say doer, then you're back to being a pseudo self. And you're acting like a child. And you're acting like a child, and there's a parent. And they're in control, they're pressuring you, judging you, whatever. And they'll be leading you around by the nose
Starting point is 01:11:59 if they're bad narcissistic parents. Wow. So it's that, because you're gonna have to live with your choices, they have to live with theirs. And in fact, they've made maybe bad choices for the last many decades. Is it your time now to make up for that? How do you make up for their bad choices over 10?
Starting point is 01:12:23 You can't. Decades and decades. I don't know how to do that. Does that mean, and I took care of my mother. Everybody's got to decide for themselves. And also I knew if I was going to do that, I needed inner boundaries. For yourself. Yeah, yeah. I had to have inner boundaries if I was going to do that, that it just wasn't going to matter.
Starting point is 01:12:45 And, you know, well, why don't you come visit me more at the nursing home? She was, she mentally was there, all that just physically couldn't do it. And I would visit her on a regular basis, but it was never enough. Really? Never enough.
Starting point is 01:12:59 Even if it went every day for months, it was still never enough. It would never be enough. But you have to create inner boundaries first. And I have to decide, how much do I want to visit her? Right, not because she's guilting me. Not because of guilting and shaming. And so I'm going, so if I don't, what does she think about me? I'm being a bad son.
Starting point is 01:13:17 And you have to stop caring about that. And well, I could even not care about it by totally accepting it. Wow. Hey, mom, I know this is not what you would like. And I know you think I'm being a bad son because I'm not doing what Stan and Janice are doing with their mother down the hallway, who is in my class, you know, whatever.
Starting point is 01:13:41 And they they could visit every day. And but they had a different relationship with their mom than I had with my mom. So it's a different family. You know, they want to visit every day. That's wonderful. And so I'm okay with being the bad son. And you're just as you've accepted that your mother's perception of you was you were not good enough or not being the good son. And you learn to accept her perspective or perception of you was you were not good enough or not being the good son.
Starting point is 01:14:05 And you learned to accept her perspective or perception of you. You didn't have to agree with it. I don't have to agree. I didn't agree with it at all. Yeah. But and the same is true with tug of war. When you have a tug of war, if I accept it, I can drop the rope. And I just dropped the rope with mom.
Starting point is 01:14:25 I'm the bad son. It's such a shame that God gave you a bad son life. I mean, I think it's terrible. He shows up every week for you. He shows up every week to visit you and he won't do it any more often than that. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And I just can't imagine how awful that is.
Starting point is 01:14:41 Yeah, such a tough life, yeah. Sorry. But what if she keeps shaming you and making you wrong constantly? So you would like me to visit you less? Yeah. Is that what you're asking? Isn't it interesting?
Starting point is 01:14:54 The more you appreciate anyone, whether it's a parent, child, sibling, relationship, whatever, the more you appreciate someone, typically that relationship appreciates in value. It grows in value because it feels appreciated. When you shame, belittle, make wrong, it diminishes in value. It diminishes.
Starting point is 01:15:13 Right? It's like, you don't want to be around that anymore. Right? Or you don't feel good when you are around it. You're regretting having to show up. You're like resistant to it. Well, and actually if you use a cancer model, all of this narcissism, criticism,
Starting point is 01:15:33 negative and dysfunctional stuff that's coming, is a metastasis of the emotional cancer. It metastasizes and you're supposed to come join this. Well, I don't want to join this. I don't want to be a part of this and I'm not going to be and that I'm not gonna call you cancer. I mean I don't need I don't need not to disrespect or be mean to people but I need to recognize what's going on. And that, because all of this is all pseudo self. That's cancerous, that can just gobble me right up. And no, we're going to keep this at bay.
Starting point is 01:16:21 That's powerful. And you can hold on to your pseudo self of being a narcissist or a mean person or an unloving parent or you can, that's, you're free to do that. And I've just put a block there when I've said you're free to do that. And I'm over here. Self differentiation. That's powerful. Jerry, this has been powerful and I want people to follow you over on YouTube, slash Jerry
Starting point is 01:16:49 Wise and everywhere else, jerrywiserelationshipsystems.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
Starting point is 01:17:20 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 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
Starting point is 01:17:55 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.
Starting point is 01:18:22 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.
Starting point is 01:18:42 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
Starting point is 01:19:03 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, 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 is everything.
Starting point is 01:19:58 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. So I have, and I have a video on calmness is everything, but it's just so critical. That's beautiful. For a family systems perspective.
Starting point is 01:20:39 Beautiful. And final question, Jerry, what's your definition of greatness? Oh, I think greatness would be finding the true and authentic you. I mean, that's that I don't care how much money you make. I don't care how many, you know, companies you own. I don't, you know, I've got wealthy clients. I've got poor clients. What are you giving to yourself? Because that will make the world greater if you do that.
Starting point is 01:21:13 And that's what I always felt is that the more I can be more self-differentiated, caring myself, aware of myself, I would be able to love differently, give differently, express myself differently in a way that is world enriching rather than world detracting. Very wise. Thanks so much for being here. Appreciate it. Thank you, Louis. I've really enjoyed it very much. Powerful. I have a brand new book called Make Money Easy. And if you're looking to create more financial freedom in your life, you want abundance in
Starting point is 01:21:51 your life, and you want to stop making money hard in your life, but you want to make it easier, you want to make it flow, you want to feel abundant, then make sure to go to makemoneyeasybook.com right now and get yourself a copy. I really think this is going to help you transform your relationship with money this moment moving forward. We have some big guests and content coming up. Make sure you're following and stay tuned to the next episode on the School of Greatness. as well as ad free listening, then make sure to subscribe to our greatness plus channel exclusively on Apple podcasts. Share this with a friend on social media and leave us a review on Apple podcasts as well. Let me know what you enjoyed about this episode in that review. I really love hearing feedback from you and it helps us figure out how we can support and serve you moving
Starting point is 01:23:00 forward. And I want to remind you of no one has told you lately that you are loved, you are worthy, and you matter. And now it's time to go out there and do something great.

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