We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - What’s Your FAMILY DRAMA Style? with Nedra Glover Tawwab (Best Of)
Episode Date: June 8, 2025We all want tools to navigate (and minimize!) family drama. Today, Nedra Glover Tawwab teaches us how we can create drama free families: How to speak up for yourself when it feels like ...going against the group; Why confrontation is often the kindest thing; When, exactly, we should bring up conflict & when to let it go; The most loving way a parent can respond to a child in pain. For more with Nedra Glover Tawwab, check out: Episode 124 How to Say No: Boundaries with Nedra Glover Tawwab. About Nedra: Nedra Glover Tawwab is the author of the New York Times bestsellers Drama Free and Set Boundaries, Find Peace. A licensed therapist and sought-after relationship expert, she has practiced relationship therapy for more than fifteen years. Tawwab has appeared as an expert on Red Table Talk, The Breakfast Club, Good Morning America, and CBS Morning Show to name a few. Her work has been highlighted in The New York Times, The Guardian, and Vice. Tawwab runs a popular Instagram account where she shares practices, tools, and reflections for mental health and relationships. She lives in Charlotte, North Carolina, with her family. TW: @NedraTawwab IG: @nedratawwab To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Discussion (0)
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How are the both of you?
I think the both of us are pretty good.
Yeah, we're like one kids in Berlin, another kid is hiking in the middle of somewhere.
So we both feel a little less tired.
We have misplaced our children.
Yeah, our children are like off and then we're like,
oh, they're great.
We're like, oh.
Little untethered.
That's good.
How about you?
My kids are at summer camp.
Nice.
And I will pick them up at five.
So, very not untethered.
Yeah.
I'm in the thick of it.
I love hearing about teenage and adult children.
It is something that certainly makes all of the day
to dayness like, oh, wow, there will be a time when I
don't see them every day and it'll be sad, but refreshing.
You know what?
I would say that that is true.
I used to be really scared of them getting older because
of all of the horror stories.
And then, I don't know, I just thought
it would be this separation.
You have them till the end of high school, and then that's it.
There's all those terrifying things in the internet that are like,
you have 18 summers, make the most of it.
All of this, you know, limiting scarcity.
I will say that as our kids have gotten older,
I think for every single one of them,
there has been a pocket, which has usually been around 15,
where I've sensed a distancing,
which has been scary every time,
because it feels like, oh, this time,
it's not gonna get better, this time,
it's not gonna get better, this time,
it's not gonna work.
And then that gap has closed later,
like a couple years later.
And then this beginning of this new kind of relationship
has started, which I feel closer to them now
than I did when they were teeny.
Yeah.
Hmm.
It's also scary too.
We're like three years away from our youngest being gone
and if they choose to go to college.
And one of the things that I feel a lot right now
is like, oh my gosh, I have to get to know myself again.
And like, I have to get to know Glennon again
in like this deeper way.
So I'm gonna start doing therapy
and give myself like a three year runway
to try to figure that shit out
because I feel a little bit nervous about myself.
Like, oh gosh, like I have oriented my whole life
around these little humans that...
That's so healthy.
Yeah, I mean, I don't know what's going to come up there, but...
The healthy part is you're thinking about it.
I think unfortunately, it's when it happens,
when the kids move on to whatever, when they're 18 or 19 or 20.
And we haven't even thought about that being a possibility or what that could look like,
that it becomes who am I, who is my partner, what is life.
Yeah.
And I think that's part of the, it's amazing that we just jumped into this right now, because
today, pod squad, we are going to talk about family drama.
What is it? Why does it affect us so deeply? How do we navigate it?
And it's funny because a lot of the things that family drama is about is actually about something else.
And this is a good example of it. Like, I'm so scared my kids are leaving. Is it about them?
Or is it about now I'm stuck with myself? Yeah, that's for sure. That's me.
Yeah. When you've built your identity around being a parent and being an uber and picking
up and dropping off and being an activities, and being a summer planner and all of these things,
it can be hard to consider what you might want to do with your time now.
How you want to be in your friendships,
how you want to be in a partnership or pursue a partnership,
or maybe go to your own violin lessons.
Like, what is life like?
And, you know, unfortunately, sometimes that energy is put on the kids and it's
like, no, you need to call me. You need to be here. You need to.
And the more there's that pool, kids will back off. They're like, Whoa, wait,
wait, I want my life. I want my life.
Yes. That's exactly it.
Yeah. Children are like the greatest distraction for yourself.
They're like the greatest magnifier and also equally the same amount of distraction.
That's what I think.
Yeah, and I think for those of us that are lucky to get to a certain point in our life,
just aging is such a freaking beautiful privilege.
And many of us have never really had the time, the space, the cultural mandate
of producing and caretaking has been what we've done since we were adults. So we never
have had a minute to say, wait, who am I? What do I want? Free of the demands of caretaking.
And for women, this moment is like, wow,
what am I gonna do?
Like, who am I gonna be?
It's like a freaking beautiful.
It's hilarious because we're like,
we both have full-time jobs
and we have a lot going on in our professional life
and we're like really worrying about,
what are we gonna do?
So anyways.
We're here for Nedra to tell us what to do.
Yeah.
Family drama.
Nedra, who is our just beloved and really the world's beloved boundaries expert is back.
If you haven't listened to episode 124, how to say no boundaries with Nedra, please go
back and listen when you finish this.
Nedra Glover-Tawab is the author of the New York Times
bestsellers Drama Free and Set Boundaries Find Peace.
A licensed therapist and sought after relationship expert,
she shares practices, tools, and reflections
for mental health and relationships.
She lives in Charlotte, North Carolina with her family.
And what I can tell you about Nedra
that you can't see right now, but that you will hear,
is that she seems to have a calm, nervous system.
Which for me is the measure of,
if anybody is walking the walk that they're talking,
is when they come on, if they're any kind of like
emotional boundaries expert,
and they actually do have a calm, nervous system, I think, okay, I will have what she's having.
Nadja, your new book is about drama in the family and why it happens and what we can
actually do to minimize it or handle conflict or let it affect us less.
So the goal of this podcast is to give people actual understanding of why it's messing them
up so much because it does affect us so much more than friendship drama or anything else,
really.
And then to also give people some tools to deal with that kind of conflict.
But can you start off by telling us, here's my question.
You answered a lot of this in the book,
but as I was reading the beginning, I kept thinking,
what is the difference between family drama
and just family?
Are there families without drama?
Or is the drama part just inherent in these groups
where we just love each other so much
and we all have such limited tools?
Is just being in a family dramatic?
I would say the way in which we manage conflict differences, that's what creates the drama. In some families, there's a better handling of,
you know, us not having the same religious views
or us being from different income brackets
or my kids being homeschooled
and your kids going to private schools.
There's maybe a respect or a way that we can deal with that.
But when there's an unwillingness to manage conflict,
when there is constant confrontation,
we haven't figured out any tools to repair,
that's when the drama comes in.
Of course, in any relationship,
there's going to be some conflict,
but how we manage it is really important.
And actually, the conflict isn't unhealthy. It teaches us how to be it is really important. And actually the conflict isn't unhealthy.
It teaches us how to be in relationship with people.
When I have an argument with my partner,
hopefully we won't repeat the same argument
because there's been some level of understanding.
We know how to proceed in the future.
But when those things are not repaired properly,
that's when the drama ensues.
Mm-hmm.
So the three examples you just gave,
these are all differences.
Mm-hmm. Yeah.
So is conflict in family,
most of the conflict in family,
you hear about navigating differences.
And so is what's beneath it the resistance to
individuation? Like the idea that we all have to be the same?
Absolutely. I think, you know, if you come from a family with a
heavy pattern of addiction and a person is deciding to live a
life of sobriety, that is problematic because that's the
difference, right? It's like, oh my gosh, this person is not like us,
this isolates them, now I think they're judging me.
But yes, that's about differences.
And sometimes it's good, right?
It can be really inspiring, it can give us some ideas
around how we want to be,
but many times it can cause conflict,
it causes comparisons, jealousy,
and all sorts of resentments.
What do you hear from people the most?
When people are reporting to you, here's my particular family drama, here's my brand,
my family's brand of drama, meaning, first of all, how do you define drama in a family?
And then secondly,
what are the brands of drama that you hear the most often?
Drama is high chaos and conflict that has not or cannot be resolved. The brand of drama that I hear
the most, I would say it's between the child and parent. Now I'm seeing a lot of adult children wanting to live a more autonomous
life. And as we started talking about, those parents haven't learned to develop their own
sense of self outside of parenting. And so they want their voice to be very huge in these
adults' life. And maybe my parents' generation, they respected
that more. Now we're dealing with new people where they're like, hey, I'm doing whatever
I want to do. We're in a new generation where people want a different type of parenting.
Parenting in maybe the 60s or 70s, if your parent did anything, you know, it
was like, Oh, my dad was gone all the time, but he needed to work now. It is neglect.
You know, so at that time it was like, he just worked two jobs. That's what he needed
to do with his family. But now we have a different label for it because people identify, wow,
while that was happening, although we needed the income, no one ever talked to
me about my feelings. When I started my cycle, I was just given a pat. When I had these different
life experiences, I didn't have anyone there. And so now we have higher needs, which is not a bad
thing, but it certainly shapes the way that people expect to be parented in their
adulthood.
So I'm seeing a lot of conflict there with differences.
That's so interesting.
It's interesting to see some parents so resistant to allowing their children to show up in the
world in the way that they want, not in totally bad ways.
I'm not seeing a lot of people do anything ridiculous.
It's like, I want to go to Mexico for Thanksgiving.
And there are these like family conversations and conflicts and I'm going to cut you off.
You don't want to come here with your grandmother.
How dare you go?
I'm like, forgoing to Mexico?
Yeah.
Isn't it fascinating though, because it makes me feel as if there's a category of family
drama that's just about true dysfunction and not being able to communicate correctly.
But isn't there a category of family drama that is based on culture moving on and having
different values than the previous generation. That it makes inherent conflict that actually it
plays out as an individual who wants to go to Mexico and a mother who can't let
go. But what it's representing is this cultural value of true to thine own self
being the cultural value. Whereas last generation's culture value was like
wait, togetherness, family, the collective. And so there really isn't a writer being the cultural value, whereas last generation's culture value was like,
wait, togetherness, family, the collective.
And so there really isn't a right or wrong.
It's just the inevitable conflict that comes up
as culture shifts values.
And so every generation has a different right and wrong.
Yeah, I would say so.
I was born in the eighties and I think about all of the things that weren't necessarily around
or acceptable when I had children in the later 2000s.
So many things had changed.
You can't use baby powder with kids anymore.
They have to be in the car seat until they're 20.
Just all of these new things.
And it's like, I don't even remember a car seat,
but it's mind blowing to me.
My kids will have a recollection
of a car seat in their childhood.
And there are so many other things that have changed.
The way that people may or may not attend church.
The way people may or may not want to celebrate their holidays
with family or with friends or by themselves.
All of these things have shifted.
Within families, we're like, no, this is the only way to do it.
If you do anything else, it's a rejection of us.
If you don't allow this person to borrow all of your things or do all of this stuff,
it's like you're rejecting us as a people.
And it's really, I just want to decide who I am.
I just want to create my own life
and that might look a little different
and I still love you.
But with that, we have so many new ways to be connected.
Do you remember long distance calling like in the 90s?
It was such a thing.
Oh, but it's like, hurry up, get on the phone.
They're long distance.
Yes, yes.
$5 a minute, $5 a minute.
I remember traveling to Ghana and I had calling cards.
Cards, the worst.
Yes, calling cards.
You had to put in like a 14 digit number so you could get in the call through.
But now we can be connected to people so easily.
So has that made up for some of the, you know, disconnection that we had over those years?
Like we had to be connected, you know, in that sort of way.
But now I could just pick up the phone and call people.
There's so many different ways.
I feel like I am connected with you if I could could just zoom, like do I need to see you? There's so many technological advances
that have made it more possible to maintain relationships in a different way. And I think
sometimes, you know, those things are not necessarily accounted for how things used
to be and how things are now. Like you have generations now where they're like,
I don't want to answer my phone when people call,
just text me.
Yeah.
Even like our kids,
their relationship with those technologies and devices
are very different than ours.
So they're like, I don't know what you're talking about.
Our kids in Berlin, he's like, this is fine.
No problem.
We're like over here, sad.
Oh, we miss him.
And he's like, no, we're connected as ever.
Yeah.
Yeah.
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Samsung Vision AI televisions at Samsung.com. I think about it a lot in terms of women. I'm in recovery right now for a lot of eating things,
and we look at what we know now in our culture about diet culture and about how to treat little
girls and their bodies. And then we feel very upset about our parents
and how they handled the same things in very different ways.
And we think, how could they have?
How could they have?
And then I think about my kid, who's 20, they're older.
And I think about when he was a baby and little,
I used to put him all over social media, Nadja.
Like they were little small children, all the time,
five times a day, look how cute they are.
Now the consciousness that they have about like
their own agency and parents who put their kids,
it just wasn't a part of the consciousness 20 years ago.
But I know it, I know they're already doing it.
They're going to be like, how could you have?
And I'm going to have to say the same thing
my parents are saying to me.
I loved you so much and I did not have the consciousness
that we have now.
If it were now I would have made different decisions
and I'm so sorry.
But that is a how could you,
that is actually culturally explained in some ways.
Right?
It's interesting, like we can't forgive our families
for some of the how could you moments,
but we know that we're probably actively creating those
how could you moments for our own children.
It feels backwards.
Yeah.
Yeah, but I think about what could make that
a healthier experience is when a parent can own that
because I hear some owning in that.
Yes, I did do that.
And my apologies for what I did not know.
The dysfunction comes in where the parent says,
you can't say that to me. I did what I wanted not know. The dysfunction comes in where the parent says, you can't say that to me.
I did what I wanted to do.
Or, you know, like all of these other things,
like how dare you have an issue with me putting you online?
Like all of those sorts of things are the reasons
that families have conflict.
Because when a parent comes to you and they're apologetic
and they're able to hear you,
that's a very different
experience than a parent saying, you're just making up stuff. That's not how it was, or
this was what I meant to do and hey, you have to deal with it. But when you can honor and
respect a sibling, a child, or anyone else in your family, it makes for more of a restorative experience
when having conversations.
But we really get trapped in that how,
I did the best I could, or I didn't mean to do it.
And so we get into over-explaining ourselves,
or not wanting to be accountable.
One really positive thing I'm noticing now with younger folks is there
is this desire for accountability. And it's something that maybe our parents have a really
hard challenge with. Was just saying, yes, that happened that way. I did that because it's so hard to see yourself as a harmful and also loving
person. Because we will do harm as humans accidentally all the time. And when we can
acknowledge that, what we're gaining is respect.
Yes. Yes. It's like they fear they're going to lose respect by admitting it.
It's like parental fragility. It's like a little bit like white fragility. It's like, I can't look at that because that will ruin my identity as a good parent.
Is that what you see? Because there's a million different versions of family drama.
Is accountability a cultural thing? Is the older generation like,
what the hell are you talking about? Because they had an authoritarian model for parenting.
Yeah, I think accountability is a thing.
When people want accountability
and you refuse to give it to them
or refuse to accept their reality,
it deteriorates the relationship
because then it's a lack of trust.
Yes.
They can't trust that you will even change moving forward
because you haven't acknowledged what happened in the past.
So to move forward,
that acknowledgement piece is really big.
With couples, I'm seeing a lot of conflict
with their parents when they start to have children.
Because that's when the boundaries are coming out and they're like, hey, people who raised
me, here are these things.
I want to be different with my children.
And how do I know this?
You raised me.
So yes, you can babysit, but here's the page of things that we're doing differently here.
Yeah.
The kind of, like the hurt feelings my mom has felt over that.
She's like, like I didn't know, like, I don't know what I'm doing.
I raised seven children and I'm like, yeah, well, you got to follow and respect their
reasons and guidelines for the way that they want to do it.
My family's kind of drama,
I think is like a step before what we're talking about
in terms of any kind of conflict.
My family's kind of drama is complete brushing everything
under the rug and not even engaging in the conflict.
So I feel like I'm being gaslit my whole life.
Like it's just the way things are,
the way my family does things.
But then when things happen, nobody talks about anything.
How does that affect people?
Because that's a different kind of family drama.
It's like a refusal to have any drama drama.
Yeah, but there's drama,
just it's this pot that's boiling, bubbling over the top.
The unnoticing is its own drama, right?
Because it does create this questioning experience.
Like, did this really happen?
Am I the only person who sees this?
And when you're in a family and they're trying to convince you of a different reality, it is gas lighting.
Oh, it's not that bad or, you know, you should feel this way about it. This person is having
a hard time. They didn't mean it that way. And all of those things could be true. And also it hurt.
They had a really bad day at work. And then they came and yelled at me. That's all I'm saying.
I didn't say they didn't have a bad day. I'm and then they came and yelled at me. That's all I'm saying. I didn't say they didn't have a bad day.
I'm just saying they did something harmful to me.
And that's the part of it I don't like.
I think when we have addiction in families,
this covering up is a really big thing.
There are some family members who will acknowledge it,
and there are others who will really just, I don't know what you're talking about. It's like,
but you're not noticing any behavior. You're not noticing like things missing and that
creates conflict. And sometimes not even with the person who is maybe creating some of it,
it's with the other family members,
because now they're arguing about what the issue is.
So that refusal to see an issue is really problematic.
And we have to step outside of that protective barrier
that we try to have around people
and honor what someone is saying.
And it's hard for me, I think in my family dynamic,
there were seven children, two parents.
And I think a lot about how different I felt
from the rest of them.
I don't know if it's because I took an observer role,
being the youngest or whatever,
but there is this weird,
interesting dynamic too, that if you do feel like you're the X factor, however you want to
describe that, it feels like it's this dynamic that it's them versus me. And I bet a lot of
listeners feel that way. And so it feels like, you know, they're always like, well, this is how you
are. This is just your problem. How does somebody in that position
try to engage with conflict?
How do you get the courage to speak up for yourself
when you feel like you're going against the whole clan?
Well, Abby, as a fellow baby,
there's a lot of observing that you can do
as the youngest member in your family.
And so you have the ability to see your siblings
like do certain things and you're able to start,
okay, so when they do that, then this,
and then, oh, don't say this to mom,
because if you say it this way,
like it's a really privileged position sometimes,
but I do think the drawback is it makes you a bit different
from people sometimes, because you have this level
of awareness that they didn't have the opportunity to have.
So how do we connect with people when you may know something and they may not yet know
it?
Yes.
Okay.
Say more.
How do we do that?
Yeah.
We just yell at them repeatedly that you're right.
We just keep saying it louder and louder.
I think that's where the meeting people where they are comes in.
You have a level of understanding that they have not been privileged to
understand because they're in it. But you're like, I've been watching this,
I've been watching this play out for years and this is what I know.
And I have this information that you may come across as like, Oh my gosh,
like your perspective is so different. It is.
I'm in a different position in the family,
just like the oldest is in a different position
in the family, just like the middle children
are in a different position.
Just like if your parents get a divorce and you know,
like all of these things change our roles in family
and what we're able to see. And sometimes we don't
have to improve situations by telling people who they are and what we think. It's just
allowing them to be themselves. That can be harder for some of us because what is really
comfortable is when people are just like us. If everybody liked to watch the same TV show,
we all like to have the same thing for dinner,
we all like to go to the same places,
that would just be wonderful.
That's not very likely, especially in a family of seven.
Right?
What's going to happen is,
I'm gonna be over here doing my thing.
And sometimes people should come over there with me.
And then sometimes I may go over here with you.
We need to figure out what this looks like.
Just like you would do, you know,
remove family from it in a classroom,
in a friend group setting, in a workplace.
We figure out how to make it work.
Like we figure out how to be in relationships with people.
But in families, what we don't want to do is figure it out.
We want them to get on our page.
We're like, okay, the way that this situation improves
is if you become more like me.
Just be like me and we would just be happy.
Yeah. I mean, it's interesting
because you say in the book that family is like a classroom.
Like there may be two or three people in a classroom
that we really connect with,
but not everybody in the class
is gonna be invited to our birthday party.
But the thing, Nadra, is that family is like,
everyone has to be invited to the birthday party, right?
What do we do when we do feel like everyone needs to be
invited to the birthday party and we are with people who are
saying things that are hurting us?
Cause I'm sure that's what you hear a lot,
the put downs or the-
Teasing, yeah.
Right, like what, how do we handle that?
Does everyone in the family have to be invited
to our birthday party or is that a choice we make?
Is that a way that we try to keep down conflict
by being uncomfortable with that person's presence?
So how do people know whether their family ranks in the dysfunctional slash drama situation?
How do you, as a therapist, divide people between, you're just a human being who's
living among human beings, and that causes some inevitable conflict.
You over here are in a drama-filled dysfunctional family and we need to find ways to extricate or handle that.
What are some symptoms for people to know,
oh, I'm in the drama?
Frequency and intensity.
How often is this happening?
Is this a one-off with your sister-in-law,
or is it every time you see your sister-in-law? Or is it every time you see your sister-in-law?
Is it a small situation or is it a big blow up?
How often is it happening and how intense? How severe is it?
What is the offense?
Is it something that you can cure with saying,
hey, yes, I'm not eating a ton of food,
but I also don't want that to be an experience
where you feel the need to comment on my weight
because I didn't eat a lot of food.
Do they receive that or don't they receive that?
Does that lead to having a big blow up?
Does, you know, this other person get in it?
Like, what's happening in the family?
Sometimes there is this thing that happens in families
that is very normal, but also unhealthy, and it's gossip.
Yes.
Family gossiping is very harmful.
And it's also very normal to get on the phone
with maybe a sibling or a cousin or whoever and say,
oh my gosh, did you see that person
when they brought their son over?
Oh my gosh.
It's not very helpful.
It's just not like, hey, I saw Riley.
It's like, no, did you see his face?
He's really in puberty.
You know, it's like, why are we doing this?
And, you know, it doesn't stop there.
It becomes like this spread of calling other people, bringing other people into it, and
being very hurtful toward the people that we love.
Mm-hmm.
Are you crushing your bills?
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Okay.
I need to understand why this is so difficult.
This is so hard for me to even think about.
I have a loyalty.
I have a loyalty, I have a nostalgia,
I have like a primal DNA tie to these people.
And I don't understand why it's so hard for me
to set a boundary or talk about the drama
rather than just continue to like keep the party line
with the family and to keep sweeping everything
under the rug.
Why is this so hard to deal with
or deal with family drama?
It's a good question.
Cause we can do it with friends.
We can do it with everyone.
Because little Abby is activated.
Okay.
And that big, grown voice
has not had the opportunity to come out
because you're still thinking about
who you used to be, what used to happen.
You're gonna get in trouble.
You can't say this to that person
because instead of saying,
you know, this is my life and this is an issue, and I have the
ability to express my challenge with what's going on in this relationship.
But with family, the relationship started before you were you.
And I don't know if you come from one of those families where people love to remind you of
little you, right?
You were this, you were that.
And then, yeah.
And now when grown you has to say something, it's like little you is saying it to us.
It's like, whoa, how does little Abby say that to me?
It's like, oh, I'm an adult now.
This is big Abby, not little Abby speaking.
And so we have to claim that space in our adulthood
of being a mature person who can speak up
in our relationships, regardless of the history,
regardless of the family tie,
because when we do not, it builds the resentment.
It builds a lot of issues in that relationship.
And naturally we start to pull back.
We start to have animosity.
We start to maybe talk about these situations
with other people.
And if we want to be in those relationships,
we have to do the work of repairing them.
And that's going to be having some of these adult conversations
that make you a little bit uncomfortable.
Yeah, I'm hearing two things in there.
One, the reason why it feels like I can do a lot of hard things,
but talking to my mom or dad about changing patterns is not one of them.
Like, I'd rather die.
Like, it feels primal inside of you.
Like, I would rather die than do that thing.
Is that because that's attachment?
Like, little Abby, not rocking the boat was the way you survived.
Because your family is your safety on the earth. So it's reminding ourselves as adults,
oh, but now we can survive without the caretaking of this.
So it's okay to say things
that maybe weren't okay when we were little.
And it's the reminder of what Nnedra's saying
about it being the kind thing to do.
We don't confront our families kindly,
even though we love them.
We confront them kindly because we love them
and we want to continue the relationship.
Yeah, I just also think it will be heartbreaking
to have some of these conversations with my mom and dad
about, I don't know if it's even my experience
or but just like what I'm seeing.
I don't want to come off as a person who's judging them
or being so critical. It's just, I don't want to come off as a person who's judging them or being so critical. It's just, I don't know.
I think this is what I was taught to not question them.
And that is like what is, I think I'm feeling so like I'm going to be in trouble.
So that's why it's hard too, because you're fighting something in yourself.
Family stuff is in you.
It's like the calls coming from inside the house.
That's the little you though, that I'm going to get in you. It's like the call's coming from inside the house. That's the little you though.
The, I'm gonna get in trouble.
I wonder what have they done to make you feel safe
in the relationship to be able to talk about difficult things.
And I bet it's some of what both of you
are doing with your children.
Because my kids are seven and nine
and they're very clear with stuff.
It hurts my feelings, but I always say,
I want you to be honest with me.
I will deal with being mad.
I'll deal with being upset,
but I want you to be able to say
whatever it is you need to say to me.
I love that.
That's not exactly the message that we've got.
The older generation passed down.
No.
Right?
No.
Is it ever just too late?
Therapy is a big thing for our generation.
My parents did not. My parents were both teachers.
They were working their asses off.
Nobody was going to therapy.
So we all have all this therapy
that then we're bringing to our parents with these conversations,
is it always a good idea to point out patterns
that we think are unhealthy with our parents?
Or sometimes is it just work we need to do on our own?
Sometimes it is work that we need to do on our own,
particularly when we have a parent who's expressed
the lack of desire to change.
Just because you want something different doesn't mean that the other person wants the same thing.
It can be very scary to change. It can be something that you don't even know how to get started.
You may have your own things that you need to go to therapy for,
but you're not ready to take that path,
all sorts of things.
So a lot of the changing is really on us.
Even if you have that conversation,
sometimes the takeaway is not,
okay, now this person will change everything.
It's just, I said the hard thing and they're aware.
Yeah.
I just need you to be aware.
It's not even that you have to do these things differently,
but if I start to do things differently with you,
you're aware of why.
Yes, and that does shift everything
when we approach things differently.
So how do we know when we should bring it up?
Like, how do we know when we should bring up conflict
with someone or when the mature thing to do is refrain from that?
And work on ourselves.
Because sometimes confrontation is healing to the family drama and sometimes it's just
contributing to the family drama. So how do we know the difference? When do you as a therapist
say, okay, in this scenario, it's the right time to say something?
Well, the first thing is, have you ever brought it up before?
Are they aware of it?
If it's something they're aware of, you don't need to bring it up a tenth time.
You will have some people who are like, I keep saying it to them and it's like, okay,
that is a sign they're not listening.
Don't say it anymore.
Saying it an eighth time is not going to be the magic number.
Just stop.
They're not listening.
But then you have other folks who haven't said anything and they've just been sitting
with this stuff.
So I would say at least speaking up once.
And then from there, allowing them to have some time to sit with it or even an opportunity
to make some changes if that's what you're requesting.
I have clients sometimes write a letter to their parents or sibling or whoever.
At the end of writing this letter, you can decide if this is something you want to keep
or if this is something you want to share.
If you want to share it,
that person has a choice to respond or not.
Look at all these choices.
So you can keep it to yourself or you can share it.
Sometimes just being honest with yourself is enough.
Yes.
And there are other times where it's like,
oh no, they have to have this.
So I think getting it out in and of itself is its own kind of magic.
And then step two could be taking it to this person.
But if you know that people are not in a space to change,
it can be harmful to take some information to them
or to address some things.
It can be a re-injuring of sorts.
It can be a gaslighting situation.
It can be a situation where now you're really unraveling
because they've denied this stuff or something
like that. So we really have to be clear about our people because there is no one way to
manage this.
Yeah, I got into a conflict with a brother a couple of years ago. There's alcoholism
involved and I have decided there's no way I'll be able to repair anything unless he's ready
for any kind of repair.
And so I said my piece then and I will hopefully be able to circle back around with him, but
I'm waiting for him to get healthier for that time.
I don't know if that's right or wrong, but that's kind of the way that I've thought about
it.
I think that so many people think of the reason to work on family drama is to fix the relationship
or to change the relationship.
But to me, the reason to focus so much on the family drama
is because of the call inside the house thing.
It's because as children of a particular family,
it's baked into us.
And so we work on the family drama
so that we don't pass it down to the next.
It's not all about going back
and fixing a thing between the two of them.
It's working it out inside of you
so you don't go forward with it.
Mm-hmm. Yeah.
So the letter works either way.
The letter works whether you give it or not.
Yeah, because there is an acknowledgement
of what can be done differently. The letter works whether you give it or not. Yeah, because there is an acknowledgement
of what can be done differently.
A lot of things that I see parents improving on
is a correction of what they didn't have.
When you see all of this emotional neglect,
now we have parents who are like,
how are you feeling?
What are you doing?
Do you have your feeling word?
What's going on?
Use it.
Come on.
Okay, you're upset.
All right.
I'm going to let you be.
So there's this movement of allowing kids to feel, allowing kids to be upset, not shutting
down the tantrum.
And it's as a result of not being able to feel, being told if you know, if you're crying to stop it.
And so that's a very healthy thing that many of us did not have.
And so yes, just acknowledging some of that stuff is a path to correction.
And it can be scary to be in a family with people who won't acknowledge that because
that means that we're repeating the pattern. When you're in a relationship with someone who,
you know, like you said, who has some alcoholism going on,
it can be a really hard thing to watch.
And you were saying, I don't know if it's right or wrong.
And I think about...
ugh, the sadness that one has to endure
to watch a person deteriorate.
Especially a family member that you also have memories of
and you have, you know, at some point had a connection to,
to watch that can be a level of pain
that might be intolerable for you.
So stepping away from the relationship
is the healthiest thing.
Because I can't even see it.
You know, I can't even watch this.
Like it's heartbreaking.
And so whether it's right or wrong, it's healthy.
Yeah.
You were talking about the moment of repair
and I've been looking into a lot of
things in churches lately. And I was reading this account from a person who had reported
abuse to the leadership of the church. And what she said again and again is, when I reported
the abuse, the way that the elders, the people in charge, non-reacted and gaslit and refused responsibility was more traumatic
to me than the first abuse.
And that just feels so similar.
It feels like, oh my God, if we could just do anything, it could be, let's just look
at that moment of repair.
It's not even what has happened all the time. Our posture and our reaction
when people come to us and say, whether they're our children or whoever, you hurt me. And
what is the best posture, response, approach that you've seen a family unit have
when pain has been brought to the forefront?
This is a great question.
When people say hard things about us,
what typically happens when a person rejects it
is they don't believe in duality. If a person or if I do something
bad, it means I or this person is completely bad. Everything else I know about them, I
have to discard it because now they're bad. And so the only way for me to live in this relationship
is to deny what is being said because I can't believe this.
And continue, I cannot believe this
and continue in the relationship.
So I have to say it didn't happen that way.
Perhaps you got something wrong. Like I have to say it didn't happen that way. Perhaps you got something wrong.
Like I have to say all of that stuff
because I can't believe that this person who is nice to me
is also someone who would assault someone
or whatever the situation is.
When in actuality, we are many things.
There are parts of us that we represent
with different people.
And so if someone comes to you with a story,
it's best to just listen to them,
not to add to their story, not to change their story.
You can ask questions, but it's best to just listen.
And a really helpful thing is to say,
how can I help you and what do you want me to do?
You may not even wanna end your relationship
with this other person,
unless that's the help they ask for, maybe it is,
but you are there to receive,
because in the receiving, you are healing to receive, because in the receiving,
you are healing this other person.
You are continuing in the relationship.
You can't account for another person's action.
So I'm always puzzled when you watch the news
or when you hear of these sort of stories
and they're like, my neighbor would never do that.
Any neighbor on my street,
I don't know what they do inside their house.
So if you came to my house with a camera,
I'd be like, oh, he could have.
I don't know, he's nice, but I don't know.
And so we have to believe people's stories.
It's just so hard for us to hear. And our response to that
is rejection. And I'm going to throw this in. People have a lot of trauma that they
have not identified. And so when you bring similar trauma to them in an effort to not
have to go in their closet and deal with their stuff, they reject your stuff too.
I've seen that over and over,
especially with sexual abuse,
when you have family members who deny it
and this sort of things,
they likely also have been sexually abused.
And so in their unwillingness to deal with their stuff,
they're trying to get you to do what they did
that clearly hasn't
worked.
Yeah.
So if there's a parent who had a child bring them some shit, okay, and said, this hurt,
you know, the way you did this when I was younger, and they'd spun because of the inability
to hold the duality of I love this person more than my own life itself.
Not so I couldn't have done those things,
but, and I did those things.
And they spun out.
What would you say to them to pick up the phone
and say to their person now?
I couldn't hear you then, but I'm ready to listen now.
Can we talk?
And when they say, you did this, I felt alone.
You weren't there.
You're too critical.
I don't feel safe around you.
Then what does the parent say?
My apologies for parenting you
when I didn't have better tools.
Mm.
Mm.
That's good.
So when kids come to you with issues,
the most loving thing you can do as a parent is just,
listen, it's so hard.
It's so hard to hear some of these things
that they may think about you or their world
or some of the decisions you've made
that have impacted them because it wasn't your intention.
Maybe it wasn't your intention,
but that doesn't remove impact.
Yeah, I just keep thinking about how so much of this
is the generation before and they have
the particular tools they have and they have the understanding of what success is and then
a new generation.
What is culture?
Like it's books, it's movies, it's conversations.
Is there an angle in here where we are sharing more with our parents about the way the culture is moving. I think one of the things that
helps me understand my kids is constantly trying to stay plugged into whatever they are listening
to even though it feels not so to me. But like, do you know what I mean? This is why like parents
just vegging out on Fox News forever causes these dramas because they're not moving along with
the culture. They're not learning what everybody else is learning. Is that making any sense?
Mm-hmm. Like, is there a way to share? If we can't have a conversation with our mom,
we could maybe send them a book we're reading that helps shift our consciousness.
Absolutely. I would say book sharing is a wonderful thing. Also, you know,
I was listening to this song the other day
and it really made me think about whatever, right?
Or I read this online.
On my book tour, I had so many sisters and couples
and mother daughters come up.
I mean, I had moms crying.
My daughter shared your book with me and it was so hard
and they're like crying, but it was so hard. And they're like crying,
but it was so helpful for our relationship.
I'm like, really?
It is helpful for a person who wants to receive it.
It is very helpful.
I think one of the most important things
that I've heard you say is this idea of duality.
I logically know this,
but when I do something wrong or there is some sort of duality. I logically know this, but when I do something wrong
or there is some sort of conflict,
I go into I am now all bad.
And that perspective can also be seen
in the way that my brain works, I guess.
So if my mom did this thing to me when I was younger,
that means she's all bad.
And none of that is true
because I don't know, I want to say thank you for that because it will help me not just in my
relationships with our kids, but like, I think it really is going to help me add a little compassion
going outward. And I think I first need to figure that out on the inside.
Yeah, we can love and hurt.
And we can-
That's actually all we do.
And we can hurt and love.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
Nedra, thank you so much.
The conversations that your books are starting,
we're gonna be screwed,
because you're moving people so far along.
Our kids are gonna be really freaking healthy,
and we're gonna to be screwed.
So thanks a lot, Nedra.
Pod Squad, go pick up Nedra's books,
Set Boundaries, Find Peace, and Drama Free.
And you know you got to go pick up your babies at summer camp.
So thank you so much, Nedra.
It's wonderful to see you as always.
And Pod Squad, we'll see you back here next time.
Bye.
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["The Last Supper"]