Good Inside with Dr. Becky - Emily Oster on the Real Data Parents Need
Episode Date: August 23, 2022You’re a good parent if you drink coffee while pregnant. You’re a good parent if you don’t breastfeed. You’re a good parent if you drag your kid to soccer practice… and then let them quit th...e team mid-season. This week’s podcast guest, award-winning economist Emily Oster, isn’t saying these things to make you feel better. She’s got the data to back it up. Frustrated by all of the “rules” she encountered as a mom-to-be, she researched popular parenting advice and discovered just how much of it is misguided or flat-out wrong. As Dr. Becky and Emily discuss her most surprising discoveries over the years, they demonstrate the power of data to deshame our parenting choices. You’ll leave the episode with your own version of, “I’m a good parent who _______.” For more information, subscribe to Emily’s newsletter ParentData on https://www.parentdata.org/ and check out her three books: “Expecting Better,” “Cribsheet,” and “The Family Firm.” 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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I am so excited to have Emily Oster on the podcast today. Emily is an economics professor at Brown University,
and she is a writer of many books on pregnancy and parenting. Her main goal is to create a world
of more relaxed pregnant women and parents, and she does this by providing parents with such valuable information.
I'm so honored that she's here with us
and I'm so excited for you to hear everything she has to share.
So let's jump in.
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Hi, I'm Dr. Becky, and this is Good Inside.
I'm a clinical psychologist and mom of three
on a mission to rethink the way we raise our children.
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.
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.
Hi Emily, I am so excited.
I am so honored, truly, to be having this conversation
with you.
And I would love to start by you are telling everyone listening
who you are and the types of things you're interested in.
All right, so first let me say I'm also
really excited to be here with you.
So I'm really looking forward to this.
My name is Emily Oster.
Professionally, I have two hats.
I'm a professor of economics at Brown University
where I do things with data, mostly around health,
and I'm a writer.
I have books about pregnancy and parenting,
and I write a newsletter called Parent Data.
So everything I do is about data,
but some of it's for parents and some of it's
for other economists. And I live in Providence, Rhode Island, with my husband, who is also an
economist and my two kids. And you're the author of three books. Yes, I'm the author of three books,
Expecting Better, which is on pregnancy, crib sheet, which is about small children and babies
and the family farm, which is about the older kid experience.
So what led you into kind of looking at or questioning
pregnancy and parenthood recommendations?
In some ways the answer is quite simple to that,
which is that I got pregnant.
And I think like a lot of women,
I had not had a lot of sustained, I was lucky. I had not had a lot of sustained, I was lucky.
I had not had a lot of sustained interaction with like medicine up to that point.
And I, you know, as a person who makes a lot of my own decisions and has feels like I have a lot of autonomy
and information and most of the large choices that I had made in my life were really things where I got a chance to sit down and think about the way I wanted to make that choice.
Because I'm a person who loves data, often those choices involved data or numbers in some
way.
And then I got pregnant and I found that the way that pregnancy was approached was pretty
evidence.
That evidence frees the wrong word,
but I wasn't being given the kind of autonomy
to evaluate my own choices with evidence
that I had been used to in all other spheres.
Like at my first prenatal visit,
I must have been like 10 weeks pregnant,
where they just like on the way out,
almost they handed me these lists.
It was like here's the list of things not to eat.
And it was incredibly long, you know,
it was like hot dogs and sushi and, dogs and sushi and it's also like cigarettes.
And it's like, surely these things can't all be the same amount of bad.
Like, it can't be that oysters and cigarettes are like the same bad.
And they certainly aren't going to be bad for the same reason.
And that kind of experience of just me being like,
but wait, wait, wait, can you tell me more?
And being like, well, no, just, there's a list.
Like read it off the list,
the feeling of sort of things,
the decision making being removed from kind of my control
and from my ability to make the decision
in a way that I was comfortable and happy with,
I think that was really where this started.
And of course, like, can I have oysters?
Is perhaps not the most important question,
but there were many other important questions.
And also like, I like oysters,
my particular coffee, which is also on that list.
So, you know, that was, that was really where I started.
You know, right away, I feel like we're starting with something
that on the surface is so simple, like, okay,
I'm pregnant for nine months.
Like, do I have to have coffee?
Like, whenever you isolate these decisions one at a time,
I feel like it's always, it's always hard for me And for nine months, like, do I have to have coffee? Like, whenever you isolate these decisions one at a time,
I feel like it's always, it's always hard for me
to choose something that increases risk,
even if it's like a tiny bit, right?
So individually, like, okay, oyster, sushi,
certain cheeses, but like these two things I see,
which is risk or like doing whatever you can
to maximize safety of your child. And then on the other
side, there's like, but I like coffee. Like, but I want coffee. I really love having sushi,
right? Like, there's like love and desire and wants for a woman who's pregnant. And then
there's, you know, maximizing safety, right?
Yes, and I think often the way it's framed makes it like the act of not having the coffee
is the act of being a good parent.
And this comes up in early parenting also that it is, it is almost the fact that you like
it and are giving it up for your baby is a way to sort of feel to yourself or to others like you are sort of doing it, right?
Like you are willing to sacrifice.
And that gets us into a place where with something like coffee, if you dive into the data there,
just really no evidence that there's any risk to sort of moderate amounts of coffee.
So there isn't a gain on that side, but I still think
it can feel like, well, I would just just to be on the absolute safest side. You know, I am going
to be willing to give this up. And I feel for me that goes across many areas in parenting.
I mean, I 100% agree, but what you're saying, which I find really compelling, it's almost
like what makes us feel best as a newly pregnant person, is I am starting my journey of self-sacrifice
right now, and this is what good moms do.
Is that what you're saying?
Absolutely.
And I think it's particularly, it's actually particularly true with the first one.
I think often, when people get pregnant a second time, they're like, yeah, I'm of course,
I'm gonna have some coffee.
And there, I often will tell people,
well, you gotta balance a little bit.
Sometimes that's first moments you're pregnant.
It's almost exciting.
It's like, oh, now I'm pregnant.
Oh, all these new things I get to do,
not trying coffee and oh, I have to be careful
about the fish.
And that's like, that can be part of the experience
and it could be like in a positive way.
But it can also then move into this sort of self-sacrificing,
like that's how you become a good mom.
Yeah, this martyrdom, right?
And I think if I'm on a mission to do anything,
it has almost less to do with kids
and more of like changing this idea that motherhood
is martyrdom, but right away, is almost this like excitement we get. We're just like, oh, I can't eat that,
you know, or no, I can't drink that. And we're living in this idea that being a good mom means putting
your own pleasure and your own desires to the side for the benefit of someone else.
And ironically, I mean, I don't know if you've
looked into the data on this, but I'm just going to venture.
Like I can't imagine data supports that like self-sacrifice
is like great for parents.
Like that's like, there's a lot of, like that is just so good
for moms and babies.
No, data does not support that.
You know, data does not support that.
In particular, you sort of even on the other side
in some of the kinds of things we talk about, not so much coffee, but particularly
in the sort of early parenting, some of the kinds of sacrifices that we see in this space
can be triggers for postpartum depression, for postpartum anxiety, for people kind of moving
from, you know, happy to not happy.
And then that actually does have some not positive,
but you know, potentially negative impacts
on parental functioning.
And so when we think about the idea of self-sacrifice
as a positive value, it puts the weight on only one piece
of the functioning or one piece of what we're trying to achieve and not on,
you know, how do we structure our family in a way that kind of everybody is happy and everybody
is productive and everybody is getting the things that they need. And when I was talking about
Krybshidae, sometimes I would say we, you know, like parents or people too, which I think we sometimes
forget. Yeah. Is this the same in other countries? Is this like an American phenomenon?
This kind of, you know, this massive,
starting, let's say with pregnancy, if we stay in that,
and I definitely want to move post pregnancy to with you,
but pregnancy, the list, the notice,
the no cheese, the no glass of wine, the no coffee,
I'm thinking like sushi, a glass of wine,
and a cup of coffee, like those are like
a lot of my pleasurable foods.
Like my, it's like almost like if chocolate cake
was like listed too, luckily.
And that would be, that would be it.
Yeah, they've let us have that.
But like is this true in other countries?
The list is not the same.
So, you know, there's some things that are on everybody's list,
but you know, there are differences in the kinds of things
that are restricted.
So the French tend to be more relaxed about cheese,
the Japanese tend to be more relaxed about sushi.
And the Americans tend to be relaxed about chocolate cake.
Chocolate cake, exactly, Doritos.
You know, we're good, we're good.
But then you get other things where people,
you know, what people will have,
like, sort of different kinds of,
like, you can't have ice,
or you can't have two of the windows open.
Some of these things, I remember when I was pregnant
with my daughter and one of my colleagues from China
was like, did you get your radiation vest
for your computer work?
And I was like, I'm sorry, what do you say?
And he was like, yeah, in China,
if you're pregnant, you have to wear a special canvas vest
to protect yourself from the computer radiation.
I was like, yeah, we don't have that.
Like we don't have that one here.
But like, you know, no shade on that.
Like we got it.
We got a bunch of other ones, just like that one.
Huh.
Right. It's like everyone has this long list.
Summer.
Summer the same.
Yeah.
The word like preciousness keeps coming to mind.
Like there's this message.
And I think I see this all the time
with parents who are parenting their toddlers
or older kids is the same thing.
It's like if I do one thing wrong,
I've messed up parenthood forever, right?
It's like, and all of these restrictions,
there's such rigidity in that way.
There's rigidity, and I think it does come
from a good place of people wanting
to do the right thing. And the idea that there is a single right way to do this or a way
to kind of make it successful. And some of parenting is really about giving up control
and recognizing that you can make like, or pregnancy or whatever, that you can make all the right
choices or all the good choices,
and you can still end up in a situation
in which things go, unfortunately, go wrong.
And that's, I think, people,
part of the byproduct of some of these issues
is that people often blame themselves.
You know, people have a miscarriage.
They'll ask me, you know,
well, what did I do?
And the answer is, nothing,
you know, huge share of first trimester miscarriages
or just a result, like not like 50%,
but like 90% are a result of chromosomal issues
that you never could have done anything about.
And the idea that people come and they say,
well, you know, what did I do?
Was it, did I take, I shouldn't have run?
Or I, you know, I should have had a cup of coffee
or, you know, what about this, you know,
I walk through this field and could that, you know know like all of these things where we get into a place where once you accept the idea that
There's a like right way to do it. Then if it doesn't go right it must be that you've done something wrong
and
That's a big challenge and
Right, I think there's so many of us and I think so many listeners right now probably can identify
Yes, when I struggle with something in my life when I have like a big hard feeling about
something.
My first thought is self blame.
Like I made this happen.
I did this.
And I think as women were like a lot of us are especially prone to this.
But it is interesting that the self blame is always about not being careful and like self
sacrificial enough.
Like I don't know if someone is having,
like, no one was like, I had a miscarriage
and I just, I wasn't having enough sex
because if I was having more sex,
I would have been like happier,
if I would have been happier,
I would have been more hospitable.
No one's like, I just, I should have had sushi
because if I had sushi, I would have been
so much more satisfied that day
and my baby would have felt that elation.
Right, it's just kind of interesting. It's always like, I didn't restrict enough. more satisfied that day and my baby would have felt that elation. Right?
It's just kind of interesting.
It's always like, I didn't restrict enough.
Yeah.
No, I had not even thought about it.
But you're absolutely right.
Like, when you said those things, I was like, that's a crazy thing to say.
Because I've never heard anyone say that.
But of course, I'm not sure why they wouldn't.
You know, I'm not sure what's wrong with your sex argument.
It's just as good as the, you know, all the other things that people say.
You know, and every time I have these conversations,
it's like, I feel like I learned so much
about how deep these stories are about like what motherhood
is, how deep the story of motherhood as martyrdom
like really goes, right?
Because as soon as you're pregnant, there's almost like we're signaling our virtue, right?
Like, oh, I don't eat that.
I don't do that because I'm a, I'm a good mom.
I'm a good mom from the start because I am willing to say no to things that give me personal
pleasure.
Yes.
Right?
And when you do get pregnant, same too.
And the OB is, it's all about like,
here's everything you could do to minimize risk, even if the data doesn't support it to babies.
Like, no doctor is like, here's what you need to do from the start to make sure you still
stay in touch with all the parts of you that pre-existed pregnancy.
I just want to say, I think there are doctors who do that. But I don't think that there, I don't
think that that it's it is not, it is not the norm. Yeah.
Yeah. How did you navigate all this then? So when you were
pregnant, like, how did you navigate the these things? Did
people say things to you? Because you your book, you're
expecting better book is the book. I feel like everyone I
know read during pregnancy. And everyone was like, you have to read this book, you have to read this book. But
what that tells me is before you wrote the book, like no one, no one gave you
that book. I didn't have the book. You didn't have the book. You wrote the book. Yeah.
So how did you navigate this and what was the reaction around you? I navigate
them. I talked in the book about some of the the ways that we sort of that we
navigated this and there were a lot of there was a lot of research and a lot of spreadsheets.
And I did a lot of the work for the book while I was in my own pregnancy. And so like an example is we were trying to make some decisions about prenatal testing, which actually the landscape is quite different now than it was when I was pregnant a decade ago.
But there were a bunch of different trade-offs and and you know my husband and I would go back and forth with these spreadsheets.
And he'd be like, okay, here's, well, I want to see a different assumption here.
I want to see a different assumption there.
Let's kind of, what about this paper, what about that paper?
And so we would work through this.
And then, of course, I would go to my OB, who obviously thought I was the worst. I mean, both like kind of insane and also just very,
very difficult.
It's just the truth.
But I did try to inform our decisions
with the numbers to the extent that I could get them
sort of in kind of in time.
But what was interesting was there were moments
when we sort of come to some decision based on the data
and preferences and whatever it was,
where I was really happy that we had thought
so carefully about it because there was sort of,
if not pushback kind of like dismissiveness.
So the example that comes to mind is,
I didn't want to have an epidural.
So we had talked a lot about this and sort of like,
why not?
And I just not, that is the thing is
of someone unusual choice that had a lot to do with
preferences and less to do with risks.
But anyway, it was the choice that I had decided was
like the right choice.
And I remember telling them and whoever I was seeing
at the OB, it was like, well, we'll see.
You know, and I was like, okay, we will see.
Let's see, you know, it's just, so, but I think that was
the kind of interaction that both
like spurred me on and also was frustrating because it again was this sort of like, well,
actually no, I'm an autonomous person who has thought about this and evaluated the evidence
and I have me this choice and it was, there was some dismissiveness.
Yeah, you know, I always think about that as a different type of data that we have,
which I feel like in the information age and this evidence-based world for everything we live in sometimes
is like really undervalued, which like you say the word preferences, I mean that's just
like internal data.
It's like just something inside me that's like, I want this.
I don't want an epidural.
Or like, I just have a gut on this.
And I would never say that that's more important than, you know, scientific data.
Like, I just don't think you can compare them side by side. But I feel like that's something
that's really, really important, right? Yeah, I agree. But I think case it's so many of these
choices, the, there are kind of some pluses and there are some minuses. There are some
benefits. And there are benefits. There are very few things, not none, but very few things where you could point to the data
in this space and be like 100% like that activity
is risky and like a significantly risky with no benefits.
It's just very few things where the data
almost makes the decision for you.
There are many more things where there's pluses,
there's minuses.
And so then we are left with, you can call it your own
personal data, you can call your preferences, whatever it is,
as something that has to be a big part of the right choice for you.
But that also means that the right choice for you is not necessarily the right choice
for someone else.
And that recognition, both in the kind of patient provider space,
but also in the interacting with other parents space, is one that can be really hard to navigate
because I think we want our choices to be like so right that they are right for everyone.
Yeah, no, I completely agree. I think, you know, in that search to feel like you trust your own
decision, it almost feels easier for everyone outside. You would just validate it. Right.
And then we get very judgmental of other people, not actually because we're judging
what they're doing because it feels like a threat to our feeling good about what we're
doing, right? And then we just enact that over and over and over.
When I had this, so I didn't have an epidural, and my best friend was pregnant at the same
time. She was doing like three months after. And she was like, I'm going to have an
epidural. That was great. And I remember she called me the next day. And she was like, I'm gonna have, you know, she was like, I'm gonna have an epidural as like that was great. And she, I remember she called me in the next day
and she was like, you're insane.
Like the epidural is the best.
Like, you know, of course it was, it was very nice,
but it was like only an interaction
would have with someone where it was like, okay,
we both trust each other, like we understand,
we have different preferences.
Yeah, it's just like you're a crazy person.
And it sounds like that was held with such levity, right?
Which, yes. everyone listening right now,
to think about a decision you've made for your family,
maybe it was back in pregnancy,
maybe it's a long time since pregnancy,
maybe it's the amount of screen time,
you'll let your kid watch two day, right?
Or maybe it's whether you let a kid have a sleepover
or not, or how many after school activities
your kids do, whatever the decision is.
I really think it's like the ultimate grounding exercise,
just remind yourself,
like, I'm making decisions that feel best for my kid
and my family.
And my neighbor over there is actually doing
the exact same thing.
Like, it might look totally different on the surface,
but internally, like, we're actually doing the same thing.
And their kid who watches less, you know, screen time or more.
Like they're no better or worse.
Like we're each trying to make decisions for our family, right?
You and your friend, Emily, like you actually made the same decision.
You made the decision that felt right for you.
That's such a good message because it's so easy to both judge and also to sort of feel
judged or to second guess in a way that they can promote a tremendous amount of anxiety. Yes,
and and strife, right? And just yeah, you know, I say this to myself a lot too when I feel that
like the rate of comparison. It's like that's not a referendum on my parenting. Like that parent's decisions is not at all a referendum on my decisions.
And I feel like pushing away other people's decisions in a way so you can see them.
And then you can be curious about them.
Like, oh, you love the epidural.
Like, cool, tell me about that.
What worked about that for you?
Once you have a little distance, you can actually be curious.
When we don't have distance, it really feels like an evolutionary threat.
Yeah.
Yeah, exactly.
Hey, so I want to let you in on something that's kind of counterintuitive about parenting.
The most impactful way we can change our parenting actually doesn't involve learning any new
parenting strategies.
The most impactful way we can change our
parenting is by giving ourselves more resources so we can show up as
sturdier so we can show up as calm amidst the inevitable chaos. It's what our
kids need from us more than anything else. This is why I'm doing my mom rage
workshop again. I'm doing it again because it is one of my most popular ones to date.
It's coming up July 19th, but no worries if you can't make it live.
It'll be available as a recording for whenever you have the time.
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but also in our kids.
Can't wait to see you there at GoodInside.com.
Okay, so I want to transition into breastfeeding.
Like, so all of this, the stuff with breastfeeding.
Like, just, I'm just gonna say,
Just do it. Go, go, go.
You're breastfeeding. Yeah, go.
So breastfeeding is, I think, in some ways,
the most significant early parenting example of this kind of self-sacrificing thing.
And when I was writing Crib sheet,
this was like the biggest place I wanted to start.
It was just to dive into the evidence
before we get into preferences.
So in just like diving the evidence behind a lot of the things
we get told about breastfeeding, many of which
are very extreme.
So I pulled up together like a list of the things we get told about breastfeeding, many of which are very extreme. So I pulled up together like a list of the benefits
that are listed and there's some of the things
you're familiar with, better health, better antibodies,
higher IQ, less serious illness,
later lower obesity, and then you'll get into like weight loss,
free birth control, like have better friendships.
And you know what that means,
what's wrong with your friends, you know?
We get different friends, that's what I think.
So I really dug into that, I think, part of the issue
in the data there is that there are a lot of differences
between women who breastfeed and women who do not
on a bunch of other dimensions.
So when we study those problems,
it's really difficult to separate a correlation
from causality and much of the evidence
we have is really problematic for that reason. When we look at the best evidence, which is typically from
either like the one randomized trial or more likely sibling studies where they compare
to siblings within the same family, you see some evidence of these early life benefits, like better
digestion, less gastrointestinal illness,
you know, those effects are not enormous,
but they're definitely, they seem to be there,
maybe some effects on ear infections,
but you don't see compelling evidence of many of these longer term,
things like IQ, obesity, height.
It doesn't help you lose weight, like, sorry.
You know, so when I,, sort of when I wrote,
Crypt sheet, then I sort of went there,
the discuss that tried to get people on the same page
about like, what is the truth?
Like when people say breast is best,
like based on the data, I guess that's not wrong
in the sense that there are some, you know,
small benefits that show up in the data,
but when we see people say breast is best,
they imply a thing which is far beyond the data
and the thing that made me most compelled
to write crib sheet.
The emails I would get from people that would say,
like, my wife really liked your first book.
We have our first kid,
press feeding is not going well, she's so upset.
And she's really, like, it was just really, really hard.
And I feel like if you told her it wasn't that big a deal,
maybe she would feel better about herself.
That's crushing.
Yeah, well, and I said this to you, before we started today,
I feel like there's just such overlap in our work.
It always just kind of comes together in the right way.
And I think what I see over and over
from parents and especially moms is the kind of looking
for one thing, and the one thing keeps changing,
to kind of prove like I'm a good parent,
like I'm a good parent.
And early on, there's just not that much. There's not that many options, you know
That much to do there's they don't do much like there's not you know like they're not even smiling
But you know there's how do I feed my baby? Which is the acid like how am I sustaining this child and
There's like one thing or maybe there's two. There's how they sleep, right? Nobody's baby's sleeping that well. And then there's how you're feeding, right?
And what always strikes me about data, right?
And breastfeeding, this is, I thought about this life before
crib sheet came out.
It was like, you know what?
I know as a human without looking at any study.
Is mother's feeling depleted, exhausted,
resentful, shitty about themselves, is not good for a mom. It is not good for a baby and it is not good for a baby's connection.
Like, the idea that whatever is in breast milk would be more important to a baby than all of that.
Like, this is your sturdy leader. Like, you know, like the sturdy leader of an organization,
there's nothing more important in an organization
than that sturdiness, right?
So like I just, I always remember thinking,
like I don't buy it.
And that's not a way of saying,
I don't think people should breastfeed.
That's not a way of saying that when it gets hard,
you should give it up.
I'm not saying that so concretely,
but I know in my bones that if a mom is so
overwhelmed and depleted in that way, there's no way she's forming a strong bond with her
child. Yes, and I think in, you know, this idea of elevating this one behavior, which is sort
of maybe another way to say what you're saying. Like we're elevating one behavior as if everything is in economics, we'd say,
the lexicographic, that like there's one thing that's the most important.
And everything else is almost like completely secondary.
And if you do the one thing, everything else is, there's nothing else to worry about.
And if you don't do the one thing, it's basically over.
And that is not true of the data on breastfeeding.
And as you say, there are many compelling reasons
that people would choose not to breastfeed,
including they don't want to.
And that, I think, is a piece of this
where we're often, we'll see, people say,
well, I could, somehow, have to meet,
there has to be an excuse, I couldn't, you know, I didn't have enough supply, I tried really
hard, you know, but as opposed to just being like, why didn't, you know, just didn't think
it would work for my family, which is actually a completely legitimate reason.
On the flip side, and this is, I think, a frustration that's perhaps unique in some ways to,
to the US, that we are both very pushy about breastfeeding
and also tremendously unsupportive in other ways.
Like actually breastfeeding is quite hard
for at least for many of us.
Like it's not super intuitive, it's not,
I thought it was just gonna be like,
you just like put the baby in the vicinity
and it just kind of does it,
but actually, like maybe that works for some people,
that didn't work for me.
And so we have this activity, which is difficult
to get started.
And we have very little support for new parents
outside of the hospital, very little, like,
home visiting or whatever you would need to make that work.
And then we have, like, basically no support
for breastfeeding in public.
And so it's kind of like, you know,
the most important thing you can do for your baby
is breastfeed, but put those boobs away because nobody wants to see that.
And get back to work because there's no paid parental. And get back to work. You can pump
in this in this dirty bathroom. Right. I'm sorry that there's no plug, but just buy
more batteries. It's really messed up, right? And I know, right? Like it was, you know,
then there's like, Oh, and by the way, if you can breastfeed up to age two, that's also best, right?
Like that extra little cherry on top.
And, you know, one of the things that I think is just always helpful,
whether, you know, you have a young baby or a teenager,
is the sentence like, I'm a good mom who?
And then you end the sentence with something
that societally has been deemed something
that quote, good moms don't do
to like hold those two truths at once.
And I just wanna say,
and I think I've said this elsewhere,
I did not choose to breastfeed my kids for that long,
like at all.
And it was a combination of factors,
but I wanna name one of the factors.
I didn't like it, I wasn't into it, it wasn't my thing.
I didn't want to do it. And it's so true.
It's like, oh, but you tried this.
Or oh, to do a supply issue.
Like you have to prove your sacrifice
to get permission from the world to not breastfeed.
And that is some fucked up shit.
And I'm just wanna say on air,
I am a good mom who shows not to breastfeed her kids
for that long at all, period.
Yeah, I think that's amazing.
And I will say, you know, some of those people,
I knew all this stuff about breastfeeding all this data
like before I had my first kid
because I've done it for something.
I looked into it for research and so on,
so I knew all this and I really knew it
and I still killed myself to try it,
to breastfeed my first kid. And I really, like,
I did not, it mean eventually we made it work, but like, it was not an experience that I look
back on and think, like, I'm really glad that I spent so very many hours walking up and down
the hallway, like bouncing my kid because that was the only way I could get her to latch. Like,
I wish that I had not done that because I wish I had sort of let myself off.
Let me solve all of the hook is again, like, I'm so quick.
You're so quick to get into that.
Emily, what are we doing?
What are we doing?
Oh my God.
It's 100%.
Let me backtrack and to say, by the way, like I'm, I also, like was in a horrible guilt
shame spiral for my first child, right?
Like, 100% me too.
And I very much felt like I had to talk to everyone about my schedule and then how I have
to pump after.
And this, I had to prove my worth through self-sacrifice and proving that this couldn't
be good for anyone.
And that might be true.
And I just do.
I think so many things in motherhood
goes back to the way women have distanced ourselves
from the start from our desire, right?
As if like, desire is like anti-female,
like half, like, the desire of like, I don't want to, right?
I don't want to press feed.
Say it, I don't wanna do that.
Right?
It feels very radical, and, you know I, I think there, and there's this
flip, which is like if people want to do this, we should provide more support.
And somehow, like somehow we've sort of hit a place where, you know, we don't
support it. And yet we, we sort of force it into people who would like to do it
to kind of aren't able to, to, you don't really give it a chance to kind of,
because it is hard at the beginning. And for many people, you push through that,
and actually it's something that you enjoy,
and it really works for you, and so on.
At least some people, it doesn't work,
and it's not something that you necessarily
want to do for two years.
And exactly, and yes, like this is not
an anti-breast feeding message,
and I think the message is,
good moms get epidurals, and good moms don't get epidurals,
and good moms breastfeed, and good moms don't get epidurals and good moms breastfeed and good moms don't breastfeed right and
that no one of these choices is a choice that makes you a good mom or not
like that that hanging any idea of sort of good parenting on a choice is a huge
mistake I think that that's exactly right you. One of the questions that came from our membership community
is about choice frameworks, COVID risk,
sending your kids back to school amidst increased gun violence,
things like that.
How do you think through these decisions
and things that maybe have seemingly are definitely lower risk
but still feel like hard choices.
Like, how many after school activities do I do?
And, you know, when do I give my kid a phone,
like any of those?
I would love to hear how you think through those things.
Yeah.
So, I spend a lot of time in family firm
on this kind of like a decision framework around
big choices, hard choices.
And I think there's a few sort of insights in there.
And so, so kind
of one is that I really encourage people to try to be very specific about what their question
is. I think often when we're asking ourselves these hard questions, we frame them, almost
as like, should I do this or not? You know, should I send my kid back to school or not?
And you know, you've got to recognize like, or not, it's not a schooling outcome, you know,
that it's not a, or not, it's not a place you go to school. And if you've got to recognize like, or not it's not a schooling outcome, you know, it's not a, or not it's not a place you go to school.
And if you are gonna make that choice
in a way that is thoughtful,
you really do need to say what the two options are.
And so I call that framing the question
that we're often sort of reluctant to frame the question
in part because or not seems great,
like or not could be almost anything, right?
Like or not, or not could be like an amazing outcome.
Whereas the school is just like a known quantity, but of course or not is actually sound
not a choice.
So how would you change that question?
So you know, in the case of something like school, I think what you'd have to ask is,
you know, should I send my kid, this was more of an early pandemic thing, but like should
I send my kid back to school or should I enroll them in Zoom school?
And, you know, those are two things where then you could say,
let me evaluate the dress, let me evaluate the,
you know, learning outcomes,
or, you know, in something like extracurriculars,
you know, like, people say, well, should I do this activity
or not?
In some ways, that's sort of well framed,
but I think you wanna say, like, should I do this activity or another activity? Should I do this sport or another sport, or is it this sport or not, in some ways that's sort of well framed, but I think you wanna say, like, should I do this activity or another activity?
Should I do this sport or another sport,
or is it this sport or theater,
or is it this sport or nothing?
And that, I think, makes the questions
often more tractable because you are now facing
an actual choice, which you can then move forward on.
And I think a lot of the rest of the framing,
there are sort of decision tools are really about
giving that decision the attention it needs,
think about what are the tradeoffs,
what are the risks, what are the benefits on either side,
then making a decision and trying to move on.
So I think other than the sort of two big mistakes
I see you make here are not framing the question
as to concrete alternatives,
and then actually not ever really making a decision.
Like just saying, should we do baseball or not, and then kind of dribbling it out until
the decision is either made for you because you forgot to sign up, or you know, at the
last minute, you just like sign up because like your kid is standing over you and bothering
you and you actually haven't really thought about it.
Yeah, but you know, I have a couple thoughts on that.
Yeah, I can struggle with things in that way.
And my husband always says to me when I'm struggling with the decision that one side of how I frame a question is like known risk
And the other one is like always all upside because like I don't actually right because that's what you do when you don't name the other side
Like should do this or not. Well if I send the school it could be like over this this and you're not realizing that the other one
Has some known risk too, but as long as you don't quantify it or name it, it just has infinite upside and no risk.
So I think that that's really, really powerful. So I feel like what anxiety is is something unknown
about the future coupled with our under-estimation of our ability to cope. That we chronically
underestimate our coping abilities because you can't cope with a worry.
I think as humans, we actually cope very, very well
with problems, but in the stay and age,
we have many, many more worries in the future.
Sometimes, and we have problems in front of us,
and we kind of forget we always underestimate that,
okay, if that thing does happen,
like I probably won't enjoy it, it might be inconvenient,
but like I actually am someone who has cope with hard things and I'll get through it again
You know whether decision fatigue or decision handicapping or not making the decision if you think that's a part of it
The underestimation of coping that people have or what what does get in people's way of making decisions?
Yeah, I think it is some of the underestimation of coping
I think the other piece of it is that once you have made
an active choice, you could be wrong.
And people don't like to be wrong.
And if you don't really make the choice,
then even though, yes, it could turn out badly,
you haven't chosen to be wrong.
And so I think this comes up,
it came up a lot in COVID.
So I think if I choose to send my kid to childcare
and they get COVID, even if the chance that they got COVID
was basically the same, whether I sent them to childcare
or not, I've made the choice.
And then the outcome that I fear occurs,
it feels like I chose wrong.
And we don't like to be wrong.
So I think that's a piece of it
that's committing to an active choice gives us responsibility
for the choice. And in part, I actually like, I think that's why it's sort of valuable to frame
it as two options because then you have to make a choice, right? There's a recognition that not
doing anything is also a choice. And it doesn't let you off the hook for this, you know, for this idea that you've made a choice,
you just kind of made it by accident. Yeah. And then we're going to back to that cycle of self-blame
when we struggle. Like, it's so many of us, it's almost like a possible, it feels to disentangle.
It's like, oh, wait, I could struggle or end up being in a hard situation and not blame myself,
because you're saying people end up blaming themselves who think, oh, I made this decision.
Yeah.
But there are almost two different things.
Like, I made a decision with the information I had
at the time.
Yeah.
Okay.
Now I have different information.
It stinks, and I can cope from here versus,
oh, it's all my fault.
Yeah.
Exactly.
No, I think we really, it's really valuable
to separate.
Like, this decision was right, X-anti,
and this decision turned out to be wrong, X-post, right?
So, like, I could have made the right right choice and most of the choices we make or many of them there could be
something negative that could happen, but the confidence that comes with sort of having made
the right choice can sometimes help us navigate through that. And so
so actually one of the things I talk about in the book, not in the COVID, but like, so think about like the example of an extracurricular, right? So like, you know, we decide to
enroll our kid in travel soccer. And some of the time, you know, you've chosen to do that.
And then sometimes it's really terrible. You know, your kid hates the travel soccer, you like drive
around all the time. Every weekend is meant at this activity, nobody likes it, everybody's unhappy, okay, that could happen,
maybe it won't.
And one of the things that happens,
I think because people don't wanna be wrong,
is they will sometimes re-op these activities
or these things that they don't, that were not good,
because by not doing it again next year,
it's like saying, I messed up, last year.
And I think there's a way to sort of push back on that a little,
to sort of address that a little bit psychologically
by like planning to revisit these things,
by saying, you know, we're gonna choose this for this year.
And we are going to explicitly acknowledge
we could learn more after this year,
and then we are going to plan to revisit it.
And then it's, when you revisit, if it was a disaster,
well, it's not that you were wrong.
I mean, maybe that wasn't the right choice
in the moment, but you had planned to revisit it
as an experiment.
I think sometimes we can trick ourselves a little bit
with tools like that.
I love that.
I also find the idea of a mistake.
More and more, I feel like, is that really a thing?
Like, I actually feel like-
It's a learning experience.
Yeah, like if you make the best decision you can
with the information you have,
then when you have more information and you zoom out,
you might make a different decision,
but again, it makes me think about you and your friend
with the epidural, like you actually went through
the same process.
Like I now I made the best decision
with the information I had a year later.
Now I know my child complained to everything on Kar-R, now I know that, you know, whatever, I have this whole year of information.
But I don't think it means the first decision with ever a mistake. I find it's like a very
disrespectful word to our to ourselves. Like why is that a mistake? Because information
changed, right? And I think again, it goes, all this stuff is all related because it's this way where we so often define our internal goodness by a single kind of external moment. I breastfit,
I'm a good mom or I, I have to sign up for soccer again. I know what you mean because I
just signed up for soccer last week and I can't face, you know, quote being wrong. Like that's,
that's a manifestation. If I'm more focused internally of like,
okay, what do I know? What information do I have? What uncertainty do I just have to cope
with? Well, that process, I'm probably going to replicate over and over. Like, that's
the process that matters. And it's going to take me different places, right? Yeah.
What is something that beyond the data,
like beyond everything you know, you know so much
that you struggle with as a parent,
or that you, the data just doesn't kind of come together
to give you ease, that's still hard.
I find that as my kids have gotten older,
the data can be helpful, but it is often sort of less.
There's less of it, and the choices
that we're making
are much more specific to our kids.
And I think there are a lot of things
with my younger kid in particular,
where I am just not sure that I'm doing it right.
I is almost, or like quite how to deal
with the force of will that comes with a willful seven year old.
And what I found interesting about that is almost the need for experimentation around all
of these different parenting strategies and figuring out what works for you.
So the other day, my son didn't want to, he didn't feel good,
oh, he'd been on to antibiotics.
So his stomach was bothering him.
He didn't want to go to camp.
And it's the kind of thing for us that can very rapidly move into a kind of place where
like he's in his bed.
And I cannot like physically move him out of his bed.
And we can't go to camp.
And also I have to go to my job.
And so it's like a little bit.
And in that moment, it actually like, like what I did ended up working, like telling him like we can
be late, if we can be a few minutes late, can you, you know, say it, why don't you say
to need a cracker, you do have to go to camp, that's not negotiable, but you can say to
need these crackers, you can bring their cracker to camp and like we ended up going and
having a very nice, like a very nice time and we were not late because I always planned
to be like 45 minutes early. So we were late.. But that is not the norm for that outcome.
And it was sort of the fact that I was so happy
about like, call my husband.
I was like, we had this and then it worked out.
And he was like, okay, great.
But it is a place where I have found it
to be somewhat resistant to sort of broad data
and even resistant to my own like attempts
to collect personal data about what works
in the moment.
Well, I appreciate you sharing that because also,
oh yes, it just confirms that you are like every one of us.
Who, yes, you know, we have this knowledge and need to,
and I always need to say it because, you know,
my kids don't have some doctor-becky person
as their mom.
Right, they have me with my triggers and my own stresses.
And moments that sometimes feel really good and sometimes feel confusing.
And, you know, some say, I feel like that's the data we all need as parents, is the data
of knowing 100% of parents find parenting hard.
Yes.
It's hard. It's just hard. It's just hard. parents find parenting hard. Yes. It's hard.
It's just hard.
It's just hard.
It's just hard.
And you know, you guys celebrate the wins and, you know, like, gave yourself grace on
the times when, you know, you actually are, like, literally picking up your seven-year-old
and carrying them out the door, like, over your shoulder.
Because actually, you have to go to camp.
Yeah. Some moments are like that, you know, in my house too.
Well, tell everyone listening if they don't already know how to find more of you.
So, let's see.
So, in the professional space, you know, I'm working a lot on the newsletter and sort of really trying to,
you know, to make that as useful as possible, I guess, is the way.
And it's amazing.
So tell everyone, people need,
you need the lower air time for your,
and newsletter like such a disservice
to like the amazing work that you put out in an email.
So it's called parent data,
and it comes out as sub-second newsletter's do
in your email, but really, you know,
the, I think the goal in the newsletter
is to sort of dive into the new evidence, new data around parenting and help parents, you know, navigate the things that
that come up, navigate some of these hard decisions, see what the data says, you know, it's a little
bit of a combination of, you know, here's a new fact, like all of a sudden, apparently there's toxic
metals and baby food like, me and you know trying to
to write people through those kind of choices or what are the AP breastfeeding guidelines
like really based on.
And then I you know I do write some about COVID again around these these data pieces.
So you can find me at parent data Emily Astor that's abstract.com you can find me at Instagram
at prof Emily Astor those are probably myac.com. You can find me on Instagram at ProfEmily Astro. Those
are probably my two most important. And you can find me in my books, which are for sale,
where books are sold. I really feel like you've truly changed so much for parents. You've
helped empower so many women to get back in touch with the parts of motherhood that are not about
self-sacrifice and to give themselves permission to do that and redefine what good mothering
is.
So thank you.
And I know this is just one of many conversations we will have and can't wait for the next
one.
I hope so.
And thank you.
Thank you both for those lovely words.
That is what I wanted to accomplish. And so I hope I have done part of it.
And yeah, I would love to talk again. I just really enjoyed this.
This was amazing.
Thanks for listening to Good Inside.
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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