Good Inside with Dr. Becky - Deep Dive: Kristen Bell and Jackie Tohn on the Magic of Song
Episode Date: September 14, 2021Did you know that the tool you may be missing in your parenting toolbox is … singing? Don’t worry, no musical training or ability necessary! Music is one of the most powerful parenting tools for t...ricky moments. Why? When we sing, we not only help our child's body regulate, but we help ourselves stay grounded, too. Plus when we sing a song to our kids … our kids start to repeat it to themselves. This is how kids learn to self-soothe. Total game changer. In this week's episode, Dr. Becky talks with actors, singers, and producers Kristen Bell and Jackie Tohn about using music to diffuse all kinds of challenging situations—from moments of hesitation to hurtful words. Listen to learn a few tunes anyone can sing and get a sneak preview of Do, Re & Mi, a new musical series on Amazon Prime Video from Bell and Tohn. Join Good Inside Membership: https://bit.ly/3cqgG2A Follow Dr. Becky on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/drbeckyatgoodinside Sign up for our weekly email, Good Insider: https://www.goodinside.com/newsletter Order Dr. Becky's book, Good Inside: A Guide to Becoming the Parent You Want to Be, at goodinside.com/book or wherever you order your books. For a full transcript of the episode, go to goodinside.com/podcast
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Hi, I'm Dr. Becky and this is Goodinside.
I'm a clinical psychologist and mom of three on a mission to rethink the way we raise our children.
I love translating deep thoughts about parenting into practical, actionable strategies that you can
use in your home right away. One of my core beliefs is that we are all doing the best we can.
One of my core beliefs is that we are all doing the best we can. With the resources we have available to us in that moment.
So even as we struggle and even as we are having a hard time on the outside,
we remain good inside.
In today's episode, I speak with Kristen Bell and Jackie Tonne.
Kristen and Jackie are actors, singers, and producers with a new children's series on Amazon,
called Do Ray and Me.
The three of us sit down and share our ideas about using music to help diffuse challenging
moments and build core emotion regulation skills.
Kristen asked me some parenting questions
about the tricky situations in her home.
And Jackie reflects on how writing songs for this show
helped heal parts of her own childhood.
With all of that in mind, let's jump in.
Hi, Kristen. Hi, Jackie. Hi, that's good to hear from you, Kennedy. with all of that in mind. Let's jump in.
Hi, Kristen. Hi, Jackie. Hi, that's the good identity. I'm really excited to be talking with you all.
I know when I ask you all the questions. I don't want you to
ask us any questions. I want to ask you all good.
Good. Well, let's bring that on. So I'm like, look, I'm an
avid reader of anything about brain science or psychology or parenting
and have gone through, I mean, literally all of them,
like body keeps the score, a Danish way of parenting,
nurture shock, like, blessing of a skin need,
like everything, and I, wow, I just wanna know,
first question, am I doing it right?
That is the question, everyone is asking themselves all the time.
So much of what I think about with parenting is what goes on inside our bodies.
You know, what what what do we see in our kids that trigger something in us and
whether we have kids or we're thinking about our relationship with ourselves or with important
people in our lives. It's all the same principles. So I'm not to project.
lives, it's all the same principles. So I'm not to project.
Well, right, our kids, I often think, and I, right, I have three kids who have big personalities,
all of them, they really show us so much of what's unhealed in our own, from our own
childhoods, what, right, still kind of lives in us.
So especially in their, in their tricky moments, right, a whole world.
I always feel like kind of happens for us.
I'm so excited to talk about how this even all relates
to your show because one of the probably most popular videos
on my Instagram actually has to do with when our kids
are in really tricky moments, how everyone's like,
well, what do I say?
What do I do when they feel our tone and our kind of connection and even they feel
song way before they process words that we have to get their body back to a place of feeling
safe.
So I always end up making up songs with my own kids.
And that idea for parents of, oh, I don't need to get the script right, but maybe even song
can help me regulate myself is so powerful.
100.
I mean, that was the impetus for the show is knowing how important. and help me regulate myself is so powerful. A hundred.
I think it's not going to be a hundred percent.
I mean, that was the impetus for the show
is knowing how important music is.
It's the reason why we all know what baby Mozart is
and why they say, oh, put it on your belly.
It music changes your brain.
It can put you in a different mood.
It can grow the neuroplasticity of your brain.
Like, there are studies that tell us
that kids get better at math and that they're social skills
when they're exposed to music and music education.
And the goal, Jackie had this idea with our friend Michael,
they brought it over to my living room
as a guinea pig tester for my kids.
Like, hey, they looked at my little girl,
they were like, do you like these images?
Do you respond to these songs?
And I said, what are you doing?
They were like, well, we're trying to develop a kids show
because music education is being cut in all public schools right now.
And my kids go to public school and I was like, I want them to get as much music education as possible because I wouldn't be here without a music education sincerely would not have become an actor.
It's how I discovered acting.
And I have such a profound respect for it.
And developing this show, it's Jackie Label at a sneak teach, which I love that term.
It's an original animated series, and it's entertaining,
but it's also teaching your kids music theory,
an emotional lesson, and a musical genre all in one.
And like, some of my greatest mom moments
are when my kids are begging to use my phone,
and I need to succumb to that.
But I've found a puzzle game where they have to spell.
And I handed to them with a slice smile
and I faced knowing they're getting educated.
And the apps that go along with Dore and me will be that
because they will be able to make music
and they will be growing their brains,
which is really important.
And I talked to my kids on a daily basis about how you,
oh, I talked to them on a daily basis about regulation
in general about how our bodies need to regulate,
and about how music can regulate us. And we actually two days ago just built an actual physical
toolbox because one thing that, because I love like science and brain reading and parenting
reading, and I talk to them a lot about their tools, like when they're upset, what can you use?
What do you want to pull out of your toolbox right now?
You got a hundred things in your toolbox.
You gotta take a deep breath, you gotta ask an adult,
you gotta take a walk around the yard,
you gotta get a glass of water, you gotta cuddle a dog,
you gotta look up at the clouds and find a shape,
you've got hundreds of tools.
And my six year old said, wouldn't it be great
if we had a real toolbox?
It's obviously I immediately ordered real toolboxes. And they're mini, and I used, as a buy-in if we had a real toolbox? So obviously I am immediately order real toolboxes.
And they're mini.
And I used, as a buy-in, I used a bunch of stickers.
And I had them decorate this toolbox.
And then I wrote them all out on note cards, like a hundred of them.
And I was like, any of these that you
want to put in your toolbox, you put in there
in case you need to locate them.
And one of them was put on a song you love and sing out loud.
Beautiful. Yeah, so powerful. I'm curious if you're open to it. I'd love to hear about kind of
like a real life difficult moment in terms of using those tools or how song comes up with your
kids. Yeah, I mean, I have one child that is fairly introverted. She, you know, what's weird is
I noticed I was an introvert
at like 37 and I have been pretending to be an extrovert
but all the tests of like, do you feel filled up
after you go to a party or do you feel drained?
I was like, oh my God, I am the most outgoing introvert
that I know, but I really need retreat time.
I need it.
And with my closest group of friends,
I actually have like code where if we're sitting
at a table of six or eight like our pod,
and I'm three hours into the night
and they still wanna hang and I'm cashed,
I will go in the other room and do a puzzle
and be in my own head and they know I'm cool.
Like we have like, they know that about me.
My oldest daughter is fairly introverted
and needs a lot of alone time,
but doesn't know how to ask for it
because she like me is wants to please as well.
And one thing we've done that I think is helping
though I would love any other tips
is we got her a little like iPod touch and
loaded her favorite music on it. So she has the ability to close out everything as one
of her tools if she needs to and she doesn't do it like at the dinner table. It's not a
it's not a chance to ignore. It's when she's feeling in a heightened state. She can choose
the song she wants to regulate to and go upstairs and she'll just be sitting on her bed and listening for 20 minutes.
Yeah, it's so tricky. I feel like when you're describing that, I think about
I have two sons and one daughter, my daughter's my middle, and she both wants time alone,
and also I think wants me to be there at the same time. There's like such
conflict, like, I want you to book it out of my room, but if you go out of my room, I'm
also going to scream, I can't believe you left me. And one of the things, this actually
ironically led to me putting out this, my Instagram, because it all came from I was developing
this button for sleep, but like picture a staple's easy button,
but why do kids have trouble falling asleep?
We'll sleep a separation.
So how do you internalize a parent soothing function
when for a lot of kids they don't sleep
with the parent in the room?
Is really the trouble with kids sleeping independently.
And so for this daughter who both is fiercing independent
but also I know wants me there.
I recorded myself singing, you are my sunshine,
which is not like melodic when I sing it,
but it's my voice singing it,
and it's like this on-demand mom, right?
So and also to be frank, it's an on-demand nice mom,
because when she called me back at like two in the morning,
I wasn't, I was not my best singing voice
then despite my best attempts.
So we started using that when she went to sleep.
And so a part of the routine, I'd walk out
and she pressed this down and it was me singing,
you are my sunshine.
And then I'd say something,
I'd say her bedtime mantra, right?
So it'd be like, mommy is here,
or maybe mommy is near,
Beth is safe, your bed is cozy,
and kind of again, in this kind of just melodic,
almost hypnotic tune.
And one of the deals when she was having trouble sleeping
is I would ask her to press it on my walk out of her room
and press it at least once more before she called me back.
And then maybe twice more.
So through kind of this connection.
And I'm and honestly through this melody too, she was able to really take that in.
I love that because we're deep what we so I have a she's a velcro child. The same one we're
talking about. She's very much a velcro child and will trail me around the house no matter what
she she could be playing with her friends and the the funnest game possible possible if I walk up the stairs the second my foot hits the stairs she'll
yell my name where you going and I'm like I'm just going upstairs to pull some clothes
and she follows me like if there's a Velcro aspect that I want to make sure is staying
healthy because I will I never want to push it away but I also want her to grow and as
she falls asleep I mean there's, five of the seven nights a week
I'm sleeping with them. But there are some nights where we go, no, this is Mommy and Daddy's
time. We're going to watch a show and we want it. We want our time together because we
love each other. And when I leave the bedroom, it's always the exact same conversation. It's
like, mama, are you leaving? Yes, baby. Will you check on me? Yes, baby. Will you lock your door?
Absolutely not, baby. Will you leave the door open? Yes, baby. How many minutes till you're back? About 10 every single night.
And I'm wondering if my fatigue with that conversation, I
should just throw out the window because maybe that conversation is the soup?
window because maybe that conversation is the suit? It's interesting. I think often, the way I think about anxiety for kids and adults is
kind of like an equation, which is uncertainty plus our underestimation of our ability to
cope. Most of us try to solve anxiety, me included,
from the uncertainty side. We try to get information, information. We read a million
Twitter threads. We ask a million Twitter threads.
We ask a million questions.
And I actually think information is super helpful,
especially to kids.
We want to tell them what's going on.
We want to be really honest with them.
But then I always find there's this point where,
and you know it as a parent, you know it as a non-parent, too.
You're like, I think you know the information.
Like you're looking, like that.
Like I'm guessing you don't ever lock her in her room.
I'm guessing you don't ever peace out exactly, right?
So I wonder if at that moment, I think two things.
First of all, I would so love to know
if she would find soothing in this button
because if you are able to leave her with mommy
when she can't actually have mommy, right?
There's a way to extend your presence
or even infuse your presence into her room.
That's what we wanna do for our kids, right?
We wanna give them our presence and our soothing function
until they have enough of it
that it becomes their own voice.
That's what these early years are about.
And if a kid can access a soothing part of a parent
through a voice in some ways while you're not there,
it's really win-win for everyone because you could be on the couch watching a
movie and enjoying yourself while your daughters actually doing some major
regulation work. The interesting thing is I do try to remind her of her
capabilities all the time and it is not a struggle to do that. This girl at six
years old wanted to keep this other foster dog we had.
And I said the thing that everybody says, which is if you can take care of this dog, we can keep it.
And by God, for the last four years, she, three years, she has gotten up every morning,
and she feeds them. She makes sure they pee. She feeds them at night. I mean, she does it. Like, she,
she is one of the most responsible children
I have ever come across.
Like, if I had to ask her to,
like, if we were in a bind and I had to be like,
drive my car up the street,
I actually think she might be able to do it sincerely.
But when it comes to like,
I'll say, I wanna go next door for a cup of sugar
or something, she will, and she's eight and, uh, she's almost nine.
I think that's a fully capable, free range parenting type to be like, you can be alone for 20 minutes,
100%. You know, and she's got Wi-Fi on her iPod so she can text me like everything's covered.
And it would, she will not allow it to happen. And she says, I know I'm capable of it, but I don't
like it. And I wonder how I encourage a little more separation so that she can see her vast capabilities. Yeah. Well, I don't
I've known you for, you know, it's I don't know, 16 minutes. So I'd take all of
this with a grain of salt, but my guess is with doing what you do, you have to
keep your kids pretty close. That like you're, you're, there's like you're, you
have to be aware of them. Like there's different levels of security, different families need to take.
So in any family I've worked with where that's the case, there are kids are 100%
understandably a little more anxious about separation because the world
doesn't actually feel as safe as it might do another kid.
There's more concerns involved.
So I do think it's this tricky dynamic
of how do I help my kids say, no, I know you could walk
right there, like that's okay.
But in some ways, they've internalized a message,
again, understandably, that makes them think
that the safest place in the world is right next to my parent.
I don't know if you already used song,
but to me, song is such a great way
to get into that space, right?
And made up songs, right? So it makes me think about like how far away she could be when you're practicing.
Like, I don't want you to go. You cannot go to the neighbor's house without me.
But I wonder if you could go to like that blade of grass, right? And there's like a little song.
You can sing. I don't know, I can imagine singing you guys
at the song, people, not me.
But it would be something like,
I can move a little further and take a deep breath.
I can move a little further and take a deep breath.
I don't know, something like that, right?
That's like the basis of, you know, Daniel Tiger
is also such a wonderful show,
which was the reinvention of Mr. Rogers.
And the great show that my,
and so my littlest one is just a fireball Tasmanian devil
opposite in every possible way,
has a none of the same issues.
And so we have completely different parenting techniques.
We cannot use the same techniques for them at all.
So my husband and I are constantly going like,
okay, well, which one is that?
Because yelling, because we walk it into the room in a very different way. But she took a lot of the Daniel Tiger
phrases, because that was sort of her when she was in preschool and would sing them when she was,
oh yeah, she used to sing the one that goes, stop, stop, stop. It's okay to feel angry, but it's not,
not, not okay to hurt someone.
And that is literally exactly like, and because I'll bring Jackie into the conversation
here since we're talking about what you can do with these songs is like the idea of Daniel
Tiger was so prominent in at least my mind when Jackie was developing this because each
of the songs that are in Do Re and Me have a different emotional lesson to them,
like the one that I think I referenced before
about you gotta listen to your body
when it's trying to talk to you,
but it's a hook that you actually might wanna sing
that will, so rather than making up the songs
by watching the show if you're overhearing it with your kid,
I mean Jackie, you can speak to it
because you wrote all 52.
You know, there's a song in the show.
It's like, this is how you wait, wait, wait, wait.
Give your wings a shake, shake, shake.
And it's like a little disco song about waiting.
And so when your kids need to wait,
it's no longer like, oh, freaking out.
It's like, all right, well, then sing, wait, wait, wait.
This is how.
Also, there's another great song that Jackie wrote,
which the emotional lesson was about when something bad happens,
like when something that you don't want to have happen happens,
like, rain on my parade, because it starts raining in the show,
and she's about to have a picnic,
and Jackie wrote this great song that goes,
rain, rain, rain, you can stay,
the sun will come out another day.
And it's just like the sort of acceptance mode of that.
Yeah, so I just flipping, flipping like how much rain stinks
on its head, rains the best.
And we're always like as kids, it's like rain, rain,
go away.
And this is more just like, no, this is, we actually,
we kind of love this.
There's songs about insecurity.
My character Ray has a little moment where she tries out for this.
She wants to be part of the flamingo goes dance troupe,
but they're big tall, gorgeous flamingos, and she's a hummingbird.
And so she's just like, forget it.
I'm too small and nobody can see me.
And I don't even know why anybody would want to see me up there.
Those big beautiful flamingos.
I mean, I'm so miniature.
No one even knows I'm even there.
So just forget it.
And her friends try and make her big
and put a big bow on her hair.
They try and put her on stills.
And then I'll have chills.
And then ultimately, she just has to be herself
and fly next to the flamingos.
And then everybody can see her.
And it's a song about acceptance.
And look at me, little me, too small for anyone to see
that I'm up here on this stage.
And that one's to like the vibe of that one's actually
like kind of queen.
So it's like all big harmonies and stuff,
but that's not the point.
But there's a lesson in every single song.
And we had a workout cut out for us
because every episode, as Kibi said,
is a musical genre, a musical lesson,
and an emotional lesson.
And when the three of those things married,
which was often I think is when our show's really at its best.
I'm curious if you guys have,
is there a song that speaks to you most personally,
or that you could have really used as a kid?
Funny you're asking that because I get chills every time I talk about,
look at me little me because Ray is me.
I mean, once they realize, once I started voicing it, they, you know,
that's why she became a hummingbird because, you know,
I have attention problems even into adulthood.
And I'm just a hummingbird.
I'm going. I'm always doing. I talk a. And I'm just a hummingbird.
I'm going, I'm always doing, I talk a ton,
I'm stacking a ton, and a lot of the things that I am,
Ray is, and I think it's might be an overstatement,
but I don't think it is to say that I really worked
through some childhood stuff in the making of this show
because I was watching this little bird that is me.
It's hard, it's confusing because there's a character named me.
But I was watching Little Ray, who is Miyjaki,
go through things and have her friends support her
and overcome these things and overcome feeling
and significant and feeling not seen.
And it was really powerful
as a grown-up. I think I may, I think I probably got those lessons as a kid and I think so many
of them are going to be so, hopefully, so valuable to the kids watching because like, you know,
we said earlier with the sneak teaching, I don't even think the goal is that they're not even going to notice
what we're instilling in them.
Well, what's funny is we both were on this road of like,
how do we reduce these big lessons, these big sort of psychological lessons
into tiny little songs, and Jackie and I both felt the same thing.
We were like, huh, I need to be reminded of that today.
Like, a lot of these need re-adoration, there's one song that's that were like, huh, I need to be reminded of that today. Like a lot of these
need re-adoration. There's one song that goes like, together we're not alone
and that hook always stayed with me because that's the truth. If you're
feeling lonely, if you're together, you're not alone. And just like it's so
simple but kind of profound.
Yeah, you know, one of the things that I always notice is the things
that we feel like our kids need most always end up touching us as
parents. Two, so it makes me wonder, you know, if the parents will
end up also just singing the jingles the way from like singing
the songs away from their kids, right? For I mean, that was one of the major goals musically so hopefully energetically and emotionally that'll
happen as well but you know musically one of the major goals was to make a show that the parents could
sing along too as well and not want to put the tablet in the microwave.
Yeah exactly. Dr. Becky I have one more question for you. One more parenting during our session. So are you gonna vent more, Kibi? I think I believe so.
Yeah. So it's more prominent with one kid, but it does happen with both. So because I am an
outgoing person and because my job requires me to be so and not, you know, not not say hi to someone on the street if they say hi,
I have to be a responsible polite,
well-mannered human being,
there are sometimes in which my kids are with me
and they're engaged, let's say someone says like,
oh, what grade are you in?
And I'm talking to another adult,
and I'm with my child,
and this is something I take very seriously.
What's my story and what's your story?
Because I don't really have the right to comment
on your story, your story is yours.
But we do have the right to have my story.
And when I'll say, oh, this is Delta, she's in first grade.
And she will become so angry and want to cover my mouth
because I told that detail.
And I'm wondering how you would handle that
because I'm caught between really wanting to respect her. If someone says don't say a detail about me, then I want to respect
that. But at the same time, as a six year old, I don't know if you get to edit the way
that adults are talking to that extent.
So and I'm guessing in that moment, she doesn't want to answer the question herself. That's
what is that part of it? That she doesn't want to answer the question herself. That's what is that part of it? That's.
And she, she doesn't want to answer it and she does not want me to answer it either.
Hmm.
So I don't know if there's one way forward.
I actually think you're going to get the most bang for your buck and kind of play.
You can do around that outside of the moment.
Like I feel like there's always these tard moments.
Like whatever we do in the moment, we say it.
We don't.
It's probably less relevant than I would.
I actually think that would be like a really helpful thing
to role play if you don't already,
not to get her to talk, but actually just to see,
well, like, what could I do?
And ask her, what do you think I should do?
I mean, I do get a lot of,
I get a lot of help from them.
And like, what do you think I should do here?
And whenever I've had like mom fails or, you know,
things I've been working
on. And I mean, like my gut is telling me what it is psychologically is that I'm in an
interaction with an adult that she doesn't know. And so rather than, um, you know, to be
involved in that conversation, she wants to go into shutdown mode because it's too much
for her. She doesn't know this person. And she probably doesn't want to talk. She doesn't
want me to stop to talk to them. So rather than go into shutdown mode, what
she wants to do is be an observer. And by by them asking the details, which is
just another friendly adult who doesn't know a kid being like, oh, what's your
name? How old are you? They're incorporating her in it and she has decided that
that moment in her brain is that she is an observer and they're
forcefully pulling her in so it feels more combative to her.
I also think, as Alessa, I can imagine you saying in public, Delta takes her time, like
she'll share that when she's ready or like kind of going back to that song, like, you
know, Delta knows her body, she'll, you know, she'll share that information when she's
ready.
That's actually that feels the most right to me is maybe I'll even run that
buyer and say, is this a solution?
Like, hey, when you come in, what if I said Delta takes her time,
she'll answer, if and when she's ready and then leave it up to you?
Because like, to be honest, I really don't care if the other person knows her
age or grade. I'm just trying to be a well-mannered individual.
And I don't, I'm over the point of like, my kids are embarrassing.
I don't project like their activities
and emotional states are theirs.
Mine are mine, I wanna be supportive.
So that's actually a great one.
I'll say, what if I did this?
Do you think that or any other solutions would help you?
Exactly.
I'll definitely Venmo you after this.
Thank you, Kristen and Jackie for spending some time with me, for talking about the dynamics in your home, and for sharing details, and giving us all a preview of some amazing new songs
in your new show.
We covered so many things.
Let me tie it all together with three takeaways.
1. So many things. Let me tie it all together with three takeaways.
One, music is a powerful way to connect with our kids.
When we sing, especially in tough moments,
we help the body regulate, and also we have something to do.
So we can stay grounded and not be swept away
in our own emotional experience.
Try singing with your child today in some
tough moment or make up a song together that connects you.
2. Our kids are unique and might cope differently than us. They may have different needs than
we do. They may be outgoing and love talking to people or our kids might be hesitant and
need more time to warm up. Learning to support our kids in all the ways they're different from us is so challenging
for me too, but also so rewarding.
Three.
You are not alone.
There's not one parent out there who isn't struggling with something.
So the next time you're in a tough moment, take a deep
breath. Imagine this community of parents surrounding you, saying to you, I
know, I've been there too. We're going to get through this.
Thanks for listening to Good Inside. Let's stay connected. At GoodInside.com,
you can sign up for workshops and subscribe to Good Insider. My weekly email with scripts
and strategies delivered right to your inbox. And for more ideas and tips, check out my Instagram.
Dr. Becky at Good Inside. Good Inside is produced by Beth Roe and Brad Gage,
at Good Inside. Good Inside is produced by Beth Roe and Brad Gage, an executive produced by Erica Belski and me, Dr. Becky.
If you enjoyed this episode, please take a moment to rate and review.
And if you really like the episode, please share it with someone you know.
Many of you tell me that sharing an episode has allowed you to start conversations
about tricky topics with spouses or extended
family members and to bond and connect with fellow cyclebreakers. I actually do read each and every
review, so please know that your feedback is meaningful to me. Let's end by placing our hands on our hearts and reminding ourselves.
Even as I struggle and even as I have a hard time
on the outside, I remain good inside.
you