Good Inside with Dr. Becky - Compassion Isn’t Dangerous

Episode Date: April 22, 2025

We’ve been taught to fear compassion. That if we’re too soft, our kids will be too weak—unable to handle the “real world.” But what if that’s exactly backwards?In this episode, Dr. Becky f...lips the script on one of parenting’s biggest myths: that compassion makes kids fragile. She shows how the compassion we offer our kids becomes the model for how they treat themselves—teaching them self-compassion, emotional regulation, and real resilience.If you’ve ever worried that being too gentle means you’re doing it wrong, this episode is your permission to rethink everything—and your guide to raising emotionally sturdy, grounded kids.Get the Good Inside App by Dr. Becky: https://bit.ly/4fSxbzkFollow Dr. Becky on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/drbeckyatgoodinsideSign up for our weekly email, Good Insider: https://www.goodinside.com/newsletterFor a full transcript of the episode, go to goodinside.com/podcast.Today’s episode is brought to you by Airbnb. Recently, I’ve been on the road spreading the word about my new children's book, That’s My Truck: A Good Inside Story About Hitting!. I’m so grateful and excited to be on this book tour, connecting with our community in person. And it’s also true that being away from home can feel hard. That’s why I love Airbnb–I can find and book a place that feels just a little bit more like home away from home, somewhere I can come back to at the end of the day and recharge. Something else I love about Airbnb is that you can become a host while you’re away by offering your home to someone traveling to your town!  Your home might be worth more than you think. Find out how much at airbnb.com/host.Today’s episode is brought to you by Midi. ****Two things are true: There are great things that come with age and there are some not-so-great things. If you’re a woman in mid-life, you know what I’m talking about: insomnia, brain fog, mood changes, sleep disruptions. It feels hard because it is hard, and you deserve resources and support through this phase of life. That's where Midi Health comes in. Midi Health clinicians are specialized perimenopause and menopause experts. They get it. They're not going to tell you it's "all in your head." They’re not going to dismiss your concerns or struggles. Instead, they offer real solutions: safe, effective, FDA-approved medications when needed, plus guidance on supplements, lifestyle changes, and preventative healthcare. Midi is covered by most major insurances —plus, you can connect with their clinicians through convenient telehealth visits and 24/7 messaging. You deserve to feel great. Book your virtual visit today at JoinMidi.com.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 So I was recently at a birthday party for a toddler. It was a family friend. I don't have a toddler right now, but it really brought me back to toddler birthday parties with one of my kids. And they were so painful. I'm going to tell you the arc, okay? My kid would always start the morning of,
Starting point is 00:00:17 I'm not going to this birthday party. I don't want to go. And too many people. And I think back then, if I really am honest, I just got really activated. I was just like, it's not a big deal. You know, all these kids in your class or you know your cousin or you know this gymnastics place, whatever it was, it would always kind of be some fire. I would get frustrated. I'd kind of go like this internally. We'd get there. My child would cling to me as if I don't even know,
Starting point is 00:00:46 there was some like massive threat of my child being abducted and taken from me, even though we were almost always in a situation with people we knew and in an environment she knew. I'd feel annoyed. Eventually she would join the birthday party and it would usually be with like five minutes left of the activity.
Starting point is 00:01:06 And then sure enough, it was like a pizza and cake. And then my child would come back to me hysterically crying that the birthday party was so short. You and I know a lot of choice words I wanted to say. That's what happens when you join, you know, for the last five minutes of a 90 minute activity. And then often with the pizza and the birthday cake, it was like, oh, I didn't get the seat next to the birthday
Starting point is 00:01:27 party friend and I really wanted that seat. Or, oh my goodness, I wanted the flower and the cake and my friend got the flower and I didn't get the flower. It was just really, really challenging. But here's what I reflected on now that I've older kids and I was a little bit more in kind of bird's eye view in this situation this past weekend where there were a bunch of the toddlers I realized having a hard time at
Starting point is 00:01:50 this birthday party. Something that was in limited supply when I was going through that time was compassion. I was so triggered. I felt so annoyed. I was so judgmental. And it just really made me think about how common it is to lead with judgment, to lead with criticism, to lead with seeing your kid or their distress as the enemy. And how compassion has almost become something in our minds, and I think there's a lot of reasons for this,
Starting point is 00:02:30 it's not because we're cruel-hearted people, that is almost deemed as dangerous. I can't be compassionate to my kid, like something bad's gonna happen. Compassionate about their resistance to the birthday party, compassionate about not getting a flower, compassionate about being sad that it's over. It's almost like we view compassion as dangerous. And I just started to think after this birthday party,
Starting point is 00:02:58 like, what if we knew that compassion wasn't dangerous? What if we saw it as safe, as important, as helpful? I think this matters as scientifically backed and as a source of strength, not as something that causes weakness. And so that's what I wanna jump into today. Compassion isn't dangerous. Let's get into it.
Starting point is 00:03:32 I'm Dr. Becky, and this is Good Inside. We'll be back right after this. This show is sponsored by Midi Health. Two things are true. There are great things that come with age. Deeper understanding of who you are, the resilience to navigate life's curveballs, the confidence to speak your mind. And there are some not-so-great things.
Starting point is 00:03:57 If you're a woman in midlife, you probably know what I'm talking about. Insomnia, brain fog, mood changes, sleep disruptions. While symptoms of hormonal changes are a fact of life, these changes can also significantly impact your daily functioning and overall health. It feels hard because it is hard, and you deserve resources and support through this phase of life.
Starting point is 00:04:19 That's where MIDI health comes in. MIDI health clinicians are specialized paramanipause and menopause experts. They get it. They're not gonna tell you it's all in your head. They're not going to dismiss your concerns or struggles. Instead, they offer real solutions, safe, effective, FDA-approved medications when needed,
Starting point is 00:04:40 plus guidance on supplements, lifestyle changes, and preventative healthcare. Imagine finally feeling heard, validated, and then walking away with a personalized plan to tackle those symptoms head on. And the best part? It's care that fits into your budget and busy life. Midi is covered by most major insurances. Plus, you can connect with our clinicians through convenient telehealth visits and 24-7 messaging. You deserve to feel great. Book your virtual visit today at JoinMIDI.com. That's JoinMIDI.com. Okay, let's jump into why we fear compassion and why do we as parents fear someone being compassionate toward our kids
Starting point is 00:05:26 in their hard moments? And I wanna answer this in two ways. First, I wanna say the first thing that comes to mind. And I think this is where me and a lot of my friends, this is like kind of the first thing we say to each other. Then I'm wanting to get to the second thing. I think there's a deeper reason why. That's probably more true than the first reason.
Starting point is 00:05:46 Okay, let's get to the first reason. I think we worry that being compassionate toward our kids, especially when they're having a big reaction to something we deem to be a small childish thing, we think that compassion is going to lead to our kids being soft, being snowflakes. My kid has to know how the world works. No one cares if you don't get the flower on a cake
Starting point is 00:06:12 when you're an adult. And I want to prepare you for that eventuality. I wanna make you strong. I don't want you to have a meltdown when you're 18 or 48 about, fill in the blank. Now, just to break this down a little bit, and again, I thought these things myself. Being compassionate to your kid when they're young
Starting point is 00:06:36 does not lead to your kid being soft when they're old. Interestingly, the way we respond to our kids today has the biggest impact on how they respond to themselves when they're older. And the ability to say to yourself, oh, that stinks. Oh, I didn't want that to happen. Oh, that makes sense that this is hard. Ironically is the thing that stops you from spiraling. You've already ended the loop. Something was hard. You named it for yourself. This is hard. I'm allowed to have a hard time.
Starting point is 00:07:07 Oh, this is disappointing. Yes, it is. And I'm allowed to feel that way. That actually ends the loop of that feeling faster than almost anything else because we're all searching for compassion. We're searching to be understood. And so when we berate ourselves, ironically,
Starting point is 00:07:21 that makes us so much softer because we're not able to deal with the feeling because it lasts longer and gets even bigger. Having said that, I almost don't even want to entertain the question. Because the question, does compassion when our kids are young make them soft, weak adults when they're old? I think it just allows us to walk down a path that is just a lot
Starting point is 00:07:48 less productive than a different, deeper, more self-reflective, more true path. And here's what I think it's really about. Why does compassion feel dangerous to our kids? Anything that's new tends to feel dangerous because our body is kind of saying, oh, what is this? What is this response? What is this feeling? I do not have this in excess. I don't know what this is. What is this foreign body? And you know what our body tends to do with foreign bodies? Reject it. Read it as a danger before you figure out if it's safe. And I think for most parents,
Starting point is 00:08:36 compassion wasn't such kind of limited supply. It was so rare. Maybe it was completely absent from your own childhood when you were struggling, that your body reads compassion as dangerous, even though it's actually just new. It's unfamiliar. It's really just new.
Starting point is 00:09:04 It's unfamiliar. Now, the irony is if you want to kind of give something to your kids that's even slightly different than what you received, you're going to feel like that new thing is dangerous. It's going to bring an uncomfortable feeling in your body. So in a way, I think we have this kind of amazing framework. Compassion does kind of feel dangerous because it's new. And if I'm trying to be a cycle breaker,
Starting point is 00:09:35 then that new, dangerous feeling is maybe the best signal I have that I'm actually giving something very different to my kids. Compassion is a huge part of self-regulation. And just to define what self-regulation is, self-regulation is our ability to have a feeling and not be taken over by it.
Starting point is 00:10:00 I think that's really important because maybe some of us think even unconsciously self-regulation means I don't have hard feelings. That's not a possibility. Everybody in the world feels mad. Everybody in the world feels jealous. Everybody in the world feels disappointed and less than other people and sad.
Starting point is 00:10:18 That's just part of being human. So if we think about the feeling as kind of one of your fists, and then you think about the other fist as how you respond to that feeling, those two things together determine how a feeling lives in your body, and whether you're able to regulate the feeling and move on and make a good decision, or whether the feeling takes over you, in which case we tend to be very, very reactive.
Starting point is 00:10:44 I want you to think about compassion as one of the key ways we can make a feeling more manageable. So in a way, if you're, let's say, less than feeling, I got fired from a job, I feel less than, I feel unworthy. Let's say that spikes, which of course it would if you got fired from a job or for your kid, of course it would if you weren't invited to a birthday party, kind of the same situation, except one is when you're, I don't know, 45 and one is when you're five, okay? You're both gonna have hard feelings.
Starting point is 00:11:21 Compassion is one of the key things that can help that feeling not explode further and can almost make it smaller, not smaller like suppress it, but smaller like, wait, this feeling is a part of me, not all of me. Because let's take your five-year-old not being invited to a birthday party. Now I get it. For me too, it's easier to say. We have an urge right away.
Starting point is 00:11:49 It's not a big deal. You guys aren't even really friends. Some people get invited, some people don't. Oh, you'll get invited to the next one, right? Or why are you making such a big deal out of this? It's really not a big deal. Stop crying or I'll give you something to cry about. So what's happening for my kid in any of those situations
Starting point is 00:12:06 is they feel less than unworthy, disappointed. If I add my criticism, my invalidation, the feeling just gets bigger. It's so counterproductive. Plus my kid has learned to pair hard feelings with an invalidating self-critical voice. Well, guess what? A parent's voice becomes a child's self-talk. Meaning, when I approach my kid's distress with invalidation, you're making a big deal out of nothing, and criticism, you're such a crybaby.
Starting point is 00:12:47 What is happening in my kid's body is now they're more likely when they get older, and let's say what's happening when they're older is they get fired from a job, they're more likely to say to themselves, I'm making a big deal out of nothing, I'm such a crybaby. Which guess what? Is only going to make it more difficult
Starting point is 00:13:07 for them to find their feet, find their confidence, find their self trust, find their resilience and actually move on and figure out what they want to do next. And it will get in their way of reflecting. I wonder why I got fired. I wonder if there's a pattern I should pay attention to. Is there anything I can learn when you're overwhelming yourself with invalidation
Starting point is 00:13:26 and self-criticism, your body can't get grounded enough. It can't recover enough to do that higher level work of self-reflection and kind of planning for the future. When instead a parent's voice is something like this, oh, you really wanted to go to that birthday party. It makes sense you're upset. And listen, I know there's going to be a day when it doesn't feel this hard.
Starting point is 00:13:54 And yes, you are going to school tomorrow. We're not gonna miss school just because you're upset. You're upset, that is real, and I know you're going to get through it. Okay, let's fast forward 40 years. I'm upset I got fired from my job. Of course I'm upset. I'm allowed to be upset.
Starting point is 00:14:11 That makes sense. And I might give myself one day to stay in bed, but after that, I'm gonna get out of bed. I'm gonna get into a routine. I'm gonna figure this out. That is what we want for our kids when they're older. And that doesn't just happen with age. What happens when we're older is we activate the circuitry
Starting point is 00:14:33 that was put in place when we're younger. And I think what I'm trying to illustrate here is the circuitry that leads to resilience and growth and self-reflection starts with compassion. ["The New Children's Book"] Recently, I've been on the road spreading the word about my new children's book. That's my truck, a good inside story about hitting.
Starting point is 00:14:57 I'm so grateful and excited to be on this book tour, connecting with our community in person. And it's also true that being away from home can feel hard. This is why I love Airbnb. I can find and book a place that feels a little bit more like home away from home. Somewhere I can come back to at the end of the day and just recharge. Something else I love about Airbnb is that you can become a host while you're away by offering your home to someone traveling to your town.
Starting point is 00:15:26 Your home might be worth more than you think. Find out how much at airbnb.com slash host. So remember how I said that there is science to back up the idea that compassion and self-compassion is part of resilience and is not the same thing as self-pity. I want to prove it to you. Now, I don't know if you all know Kristin Neff. She's amazing. She's probably one of, if not the leading researcher on the impact of self-compassion. I just wanna read a few things her research has established. Contrary to the fear that self-compassion
Starting point is 00:16:08 makes people complacent, Neff's research shows that it increases motivation. Compassion after failure makes people more likely to persevere and try again as compared to those who self-criticize. Also, self-compassion helps people take responsibility for mistakes without spiraling into shame. That's huge.
Starting point is 00:16:30 A couple other things, I'm gonna put my computer away. Self-compassion correlates with lower levels of stress, anxiety, and depression. And self-compassion acts as an emotional buffer, helping people handle challenges with greater resilience. Let me double click on the difference between self-compassion and self-pity. And there's someone out there, Joshua, it's you, who has really kind of helped me see
Starting point is 00:16:58 this difference. And he said to me, Dr. Becky, so many of your deeper materials at Good Inside, I think honestly for him, it was a lot of the stuff around reparent deeper materials at Good Inside, I think honestly for him, it was a lot of the stuff around reparenting, where he said, I finally understand that self-compassion doesn't mean me waking up in the morning and saying, I don't want to go to the gym. Oh, Joshua. Okay. Stay in bed.
Starting point is 00:17:19 He said, I always thought that's what self-compassion was. And so I stayed away from it. But you helped me see that's what self-compassion was. And so I stayed away from it. But you helped me see that it's not self-compassion. Self-compassion and kind of the good inside way is saying to yourself, I really don't wanna go to the gym. That makes sense. It's six in the morning and I'm tired. Most people would want to stay in bed.
Starting point is 00:17:44 And two things are true. I am tired and I see the version of myself that's going to feel proud for going. And I know I can do something even when I don't want to do it. And this is going to make me feel so good about myself and I really deserve those feelings. Now, interestingly, Joshua said to me, there are still some mornings where I don't go to the gym. It's not like there's anything magical, but I've noticed when I say those two things to myself, acknowledging why my feelings make sense and also really believing in myself. I'm getting to the gym more often.
Starting point is 00:18:28 I'm actually able to feel more motivated and I can have less shame in the moments when I do say this is a bed morning, not a gym morning. That's the difference. Self-compassion doesn't keep you stuck. Self-compassion might wonder why you're stuck from a most generous interpretation perspective and helps you see a path to getting unstuck. That's why self-compassion is not self-pity. So here's what I want you to think about today. Compassion often feels dangerous because it's new, not because it's wrong. And I think there's two things we can kind of think about in terms of how to action on this. And these two pillars to me,
Starting point is 00:19:27 is kind of what makes good inside good inside. I love your kids and I love helping you show up for them in different ways that make you really feel proud of yourself and where you watch the impact on their resilience and confidence and things that matter long-term. And two things are true. I want you to really know, and I mean this very directly, I am here for you too. Not just meaning for you to be a better parent to your kid or be a parent in the
Starting point is 00:19:59 way that feels better to you. No. For you. If you have not received a lot of compassion in your life, I want you to develop a small practice around compassion, not just for your kid's benefit, for your benefit. You deserve healing and growth and self-confidence. You deserve to feel a little bit more at peace with who you are, and I promise you as that happens for you, your kid is going to naturally benefit without any concrete script or strategy. So let's think about both from here. Maybe
Starting point is 00:20:39 ask yourself, who is it harder for me to give compassion to? Is it my kid? Is it myself? Is it equally hard? And maybe we could take a moment right here and just do it together. Because I talk a good game about compassion, but it's not exactly my forte either. I'm quick to criticize and judge myself and my kids. So maybe I'm doing this for you, maybe I'm doing this for myself, maybe two things are true. Just place a hand on your heart. And I want you to think of one thing that's kind to say to yourself. I'll share a few, and that way if these words are hard, which only means they're new, you
Starting point is 00:21:33 can try one of these on. I listened to this whole podcast today. I'm pretty amazing. It makes sense that this whole parenting and being an adult thing is hard. It feels hard because it is hard, not because I'm doing something wrong. I'm doing a lot. I hear the list of things I'm not doing. It's just more practiced for me to hear that list than to hear the list of all the ways I'm showing up.
Starting point is 00:22:16 I am showing up. And that really matters. I'm sending you a hug. I'm sending you my belief in you. And I'm sending you an extra dose of compassion, which I promise is not dangerous. Talk to you soon.

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