Good Inside with Dr. Becky - Good Inside Parenting is Not Gentle Parenting
Episode Date: January 16, 2024The Good Inside approach to parenting is many things but gentle is not one of them. Good Inside parenting is sturdy. And sturdy parenting does not need consequences or punishments. In this episode, Dr.... Becky hears situations from several parents where they aren't sure how to be the sturdy pilots their children need them to be.Join Good Inside Membership: https://bit.ly/3S4XE4nFollow Dr. Becky on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/drbeckyatgoodinsideSign up for our weekly email, Good Insider: https://www.goodinside.com/newsletterOrder 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/podcastTo listen to Dr. Becky's TED Talk on repair visit https://www.ted.com/talks/becky_kennedy_the_single_most_important_parenting_strategyToday’s episode is brought to you by Qeepsake: As a parent, have you ever thought to yourself, “I wish I could push pause right now?” There are certain moments we want to remember forever...but as busy parents, it's hard to find the time to just sit down and put those memories into a book. Now, thanks to Qeepsake, capturing these moments is as easy as answering a text. Just a daily text from Qeepsake is all it takes to start saving photos, stories, and memories of your family. It’s also a simple way to connect and bond with your kids. And the best part? Qeepsake transforms all of your captured memories into a beautiful book. No matter if they're toddlers or already in school, each cutely mispronounced word, first day of school, soccer tournament win, and family memory is priceless. And it’s never too late to start. Visit Qeepsake.com and try it free for one week. Plus, you can take 20% off your annual or any gift subscription when you use code DRBECKY at Qeepsake.com to start preserving your family’s memories today.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
So here's a question I get asked a lot.
From reporters, from parents, tell me about gentle parenting, Dr. Becky.
Tell me about gentle parenting.
And you know, I often am struck by this question because I don't even exactly know what to say.
Nothing about my approach to parenting, nothing about good inside. To me, actually reads gentle.
And to be clear, I don't think there's anything wrong
with the word gentle.
And when I say it's not gentle,
I don't think the opposite has to be true either.
It's not harsh, it's not mean.
But when I think about a word that describes good inside
parenting and my whole approach, It's the word sturdy.
And I want to go into this a little bit because I think it's really important.
It's not just semantics.
That good inside is sturdy, not gentle.
So many of the most critical moments with our kids require intense sturdiness.
The moment when I have to pick my kid up
because they're out of control at a play day
and all the other parents are around
and I carry him to the car and he's screaming,
I hate you, let me down.
I don't think there's anything gentle
about me in that moment.
There's also nothing punitive.
There's nothing hurtful, but I think to be effective
in that moment, I need intense grounded sturdiness,
sturdiness in my role, sturdiness in my body, sturdiness in my intention.
It makes me think a lot about a pilot. If you think about flying through intense turbulence,
and you think about the pilot you might have. I don't want what I would consider,
a kind of gentle pilot. All right everyone, we're gonna figure it out, seems like you're scared.
That to me is not the fit I'm looking for. I also don't want a harsh pilot. I definitely don't want
a pilot saying, what's wrong with you? Stop screaming, you're making a big deal out of nothing.
What's wrong with you? Stop screaming. You're making a big deal out of nothing.
I want a sturdy pilot.
And to me, sturdyness is the ability to be connected
to yourself and be connected to others at the same time.
You see other people's feelings and experiences as real.
And there's a boundary between their experience and your own.
So you can see their experience and not be taken over by it.
A sturdy pilot in that situation would say,
it's turbulent. I hear that you're scared. That's okay.
I know what I'm doing, and I'm going to make sure we get to our destination safely.
And so I want to talk about sturdiness. I want to talk about why good inside parenting isn't gentle.
It isn't soft, and it also, to be sturdy, does not need consequences or punishments which
have never taught anyone anything in the history of the world.
Sturdie leaders don't lead with punishment.
They don't lead with consequences.
They don't lead with flimsiness.
And in my mind, they don't lead with gentleness either.
They lead with clarity and conviction and confidence.
And I really believe that's what our kids need from us.
And so that's what we're going to be talking about today.
We'll be back right after this.
As a parent, have you ever thought to yourself, I wish I could press pause right now and remember
this exact moment. I know I have.
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your family's memories today.
memories today. I receive so many questions about consequences and punishments, and I get it.
We've been raised with this idea that if you're not giving a kid consequences, you're
approving of their behavior.
If you want your kid to grow up and do an upstanding adult, they have to understand they're going
to get punished because in real life there are punishments and consequences.
I see this very differently.
And I want to go through your questions to illustrate a couple of really important points.
So let's hear from a couple different parents.
Hi, Dr. Becky.
I have a three-year-old daughter and a six-year-old son, and I have a question about what a consequence
might be for when my younger daughter calls her older brother names.
I tell her that I won't let her call him names and that it's unkind and that she can be
mad but not mean.
But I don't know what unnatural consequence is when I can't control the words that are
coming out of her mouth.
This is such a good question.
I hear this all the time.
And actually, I think the first thing we need to do is what I'm going to call kind of
upgrade this question.
There's not many things that matter more in parenting than noticing the questions we're
asking.
I know that sounds odd.
You might think, no, isn't it important
to answer the questions?
It's not.
It's actually first important to wonder,
am I asking myself the right question?
Here's a question, what consequence do I give my kid?
Well, I guess I'm already assuming,
and that question I'm giving a consequence.
To me, a question we need to ask ourselves
is, what does my daughter need?
And what skills does my daughter need to build?
So that she can feel frustrated or maybe jealous toward her brother and not call him names.
Those are very different questions. The question, what consequence can I give?
my mind have any understanding of the progress or change we even want to make. Is a consequence going to give a kid a new skill that they can use the next time?
It would be like if I didn't do a project while it worked.
And my boss said, what consequence should I give Becky?
What's a natural consequence?
I would hope someone would say to my boss, well, don't you want Becky to do better the next time? Like, how are we just teaching her what she missed? How are
we helping her develop so she can do better? That's a much more empowering question. So,
let's answer that question a little bit together. What's going on for three-year-old when
they say mean words? And what skill does a kid need so that they might feel a distressing
feeling, but the feeling not explode out of them in mean words.
So what I would do here first with my daughter is talk to her outside the moment.
That's always when we build skills for adults and kids.
I might just say something like, it's really hard to have a brother, right?
It's amazing how much that can diffuse. Kids are just so desperate to feel seen and saying, it's really hard to have a brother right? It's amazing how much that can diffuse. Kids are just so desperate to feel seen and saying, it's so hard to have
a brother, speaks to your kids need to feel understood that there's a lot of tricky moments
with siblings. I might go a little further. I might say, I have a tricky question.
Sometimes we feel mad at our brother. I get that meat too.
It's okay to feel mad.
It's not okay to say mean words.
Hmm.
Okay to feel mad.
I might put my hand out.
Not okay to say mean words.
I might look at my other hand.
What could we do?
And then I can work with my kid to brainstorm.
And yes, if you're wondering,
is my three year old going to be able to participate
in that, they will.
Kids love to activate their problem solving
when we scaffold that ability.
So I think the key thing here is that consequences
don't teach skills.
That's really what it's all about.
I'm not saying avoid the consequence
because, quote, it's not nice. I mean, it's not, but I'm a pragmatist. Giving a kid a consequence doesn't
help them do better the next time. And if we're really invested in change, we have to be invested
in teaching our kids skills. All right, let's go to the next question from a different parent.
Hi, I have an eight-year-old DFK, and I've been using Dr. Becky's approach and trying to
be the sturdy pilot during dysregulated moments.
During those times, my son will often hit me and tell me I'm stupid and dumb.
I try to hold his hand and stop him from hitting and ask him not to hit me and not to use
mean words.
After years of doing it the wrong way, I've
learned that addressing those issues in the moment only escalates things. I believe our
new method is helping him move through those times much quicker and prevent a complete
explosion. But here's my question, how do I circle back to addressing those behaviors?
I feel that we need consequences so he knows those behaviors are not okay,
but it also feels so ineffective
to come back to them later in calmer moments.
And it doesn't feel right giving consequences
when he is calm and doing well later on.
In the meantime, it feels like we're just overlooking
and giving into bad behavior.
Another excellent question.
I think to me, you know, the thing that strikes me is how
embedded the idea of consequences are in our ideas about parenting. It's like we've
taken them for granted. I know that we weren't born. Thinking, when I become a parent, consequences
are going to be the thing I do to my kids or give to my kids. Like, no one was born thinking that way.
We just absorbed it as if it's fact.
And so that's the first thing I want to question.
Consequences are an idea.
It's something someone put out there.
We should give consequences.
Just because people have been saying that forever doesn't mean it was ever effective.
In fact, if we look at the struggles, so many teens and adults have, it all
has to do with not being able to regulate your emotions, feeling bad, feeling not worthy,
feeling like too much or not enough. Well, guess what? So many of those adult struggles come
from our childhood when no one helped us when we were vulnerable and instead judged us and
gave us consequences for the behaviors
we were engaging, which were just a sign of our desperation and need for help. So when your kid is
out of control, your deeply feeling kid or your non-deeply feeling kid, you're right when they're
in this out of control, 10 out of 10 dysregulated state, the words that are coming out of their mouth
are a sign that they are in total
threat mode. They are in the most animalistic part of their brain. They feel like
they're being attacked by their feelings. Everything feels like a threat. Their
words are not a statement of some truth. Their words are a sign of their
overwhelm and feeling of being totally out of control. So if we reframe the question that way, when my kid is overwhelmed and totally out of control,
and in the purely animalistic part of their brain, what consequence should I give to them
when they're calm?
I'm pausing, and I wonder if you are too, because I feel like when we say it that way, we
shake our heads like,
what?
Why are we talking about consequences?
You know, we conflate things a lot. Well, if you don't give your kid a consequence,
they're gonna think that you think it was okay that they treated you that way.
Again, and I mean this, it's made up. I mean I think about myself let's say I'm
not at my best with my husband and I say some words that you know I really don't mean again probably
because I'm in a state of threat and feeling like a 10 out of 10. Let's say we got through the moment
maybe he says in the moments some version of look we've got to get through this. We'll talk about this when we're both calm. I don't know.
Later, if we're calm, and he says to me something skill building,
like, hey, you were really upset earlier,
and I don't know, maybe I could help you,
or maybe you could get help yourself,
now that you're an adult, to really figure out
how to manage whatever feeling you were having,
so it doesn't come out in those words you were talking to me.
And maybe if he continues and says, and I love you, I know you're a good person.
And I know you can work on this.
I want to know, are you thinking wow, Becky, your husband basically said to you
that it's okay for you to talk to him like that?
Like what human actually feels that way?
No, when we're at our worst and when we're overwhelmed,
we are so desperate for the people who love us
to reflect back our goodness,
because we've temporarily lost it ourselves.
And when instead, they reflect our badness,
what's wrong with you? No TV for a week,
even though it's like kind of totally arbitrary.
What we take in as see, I really am as bad and awful
and toxic and overpowering as I worried I was,
which guess what?
Only makes all of those
dysregulated moments more likely. What I would suggest doing after those moments with your DFK
is one of what I call the side-door strategies that deeply feeling kids need. I know this is
going to sound paradoxical, but I'm going to say it anyway, because I've watched it be one of the
most powerful things I do with my own kid, definitely my DFK. After some of her quote worst moments, one thing's of calm,
I'll say to her something like this, that I ever tell you about this thing that happened to me when
I was eight. I, oh, I can't tell you, oh my goodness, type. Okay, well,
saw my brother riding a bike.
He was younger than me.
And I was so, I don't know, so jealous.
And do you think I stayed calm?
No, I didn't, oh my goodness, my mom had to carry me
to my room and you don't even want to know the things
I said to her.
You don't even want to know.
Then I'll keep going.
I'll share a screen.
I hate you.
You're the worst.
Right?
What am I doing here?
And why is this helpful?
Because you might be thinking, wow, so instead of giving her a consequence, you're
telling her you've done the same thing.
Yes, yes, yes, a million percent.
Yes, I'm deshaming the moment.
Think about yourself.
Think about your worst moment.
Think about your most embarrassing moment. Think about, you know, a moment, I don't know,
you were, you know, work meeting and instead of doing a good presentation, I don't know,
you've got super embarrassed. Your pants fell down or you said something that was just awful
that you didn't even mean and you're talking to a friend. If you're like me, there's only one
thing that's going to help in this moment. It's if they tell you, they basically add the same type of experience. Because what they're really saying to you is,
you're not so bad after all, you're not alone. I'm right there with you.
And when we de-same a situation, when we connect to someone after their struggle,
we actually give them the connection they need to start digging their way out of that hole.
And so again, it's not just about helping our kid feel good. It's actually building the foundation they need to incorporate new skills and
make positive change.
Most of us have been taught to take punishments and timeouts and consequences as a given.
It's embedded in so many messages around parenting.
While if hearing this conversation is starting to make you skeptical,
is making you wonder, huh, punishments and timeouts really might not be so effective.
And that doesn't mean I'm soft. It actually just means I want to be effective, but wait!
If I'm not giving punishments and timeouts and consequences, what am I doing?
What am I doing instead?
How can I make sure my kids are getting what they need today to actually make the changes
they need to make?
I've got you covered.
I am so excited to be hosting a live workshop focused on exactly this.
Why punishments and timeouts and consequences don't work and what to do instead. That last
part really matters. Here's what to do instead. So your kids can stop hitting or rude less
often. Do actually listen to you. I actually do have a road map from where their behavior is today to the outcomes we're all looking for.
And I cannot wait to share it all with you.
For more information, check the links in my show notes or go to goodinside.com.
And also, yes, it will be recorded, so if you can't make it live, no big deal, it's all there for you.
No big deal, it's all there for you.
Hey, Dr. Becky, my 8 year old daughter who is also a DFK just has the hardest time staying on top of her stuff
putting her school laptop on the charger, putting her gloves back in her basket or her ping tights for ballet. We have invested time and money in setting up structures and routines, creating places for everything that she needs for her activities
and for school. But she doesn't use them unless we walk her through the entire process.
So we are starting to feel like, okay, there needs to just be consequences.
She forgets her water bottle, she forgets to plug in her laptop.
She doesn't have her uniform for dance.
She should just experience that consequence.
How do we prepare her to take the safety net out and say, okay, if you don't use these things and you don't do these things, you're going to feel the consequences.
Thank you.
So, this brings up a general kind of struggle I have with the word consequences, because people say, okay, is there a difference? You're giving a kid a consequence, which is kind of like a punishment, or you're letting
them experience natural consequences, which is the feeling you have when you want your
water bottle, but you forgot it, and your parent didn't put it in your backpack for you.
So here's my general perspective about consequences, and then we're going to get to this question.
I think the mindset we're in is the most important thing
when it comes to our interactions with our kid.
The mindset we're in determines the interventions we use.
And here's what I think about mindset.
I think you probably heard me say,
I think a lot about how there's a good kid
having a hard time, not a bad kid doing bad things.
There's a difference between a good kid's identity
and there's sometimes bad behavior.
That has to do with mindset,
but here's another version of mindset.
I just sometimes say myself,
the language I'm using about my kid,
and the question I'm asking myself,
does it make me like my kid
and make me want to feel closer to them?
Or does it make me not really like my kid?
And it makes me want to distance myself.
So then I say to myself the word consequence,
what consequence should I give my kid?
Well, for me, and this might not be true for you, but for me, if I'm using the word consequence. What consequence should I give my kid? Well, for me, and this might not be true for you,
but for me, if I'm using the word consequence,
I just don't like my kid.
Like I don't really like anyone
I'm giving consequences to.
That word, just for me,
a list, it's like a sense of antagonism.
And like this is my enemy.
And to make me think of, I don't know,
I was gonna show up late or make some mistake
and my husband was around.
He's like, I just gonna let Becky have that consequence.
Again, it just feels like we're against each other.
So what I think this question is really talking about
isn't really consequences in that way.
Letting my kid have consequences.
To me, we're just talking about letting life transpire.
I think that's really what we're talking about,
just letting. I think that word is what we're talking about. Just letting.
I think that word is really important.
And it's something I've been thinking about
with my kids a lot as they get older.
Letting, what do I mean?
My kid doesn't remember his water bottle.
I'm gonna let that happen.
I'm just gonna let it happen.
I'm not gonna change the course of events.
My kid doesn't plug in her laptop before school and I know it's going to die.
I'm going to let that happen.
I'm just going to let things transpire, not because there's a quote consequence, but because
it's important for my kid to live through the kind of natural arc of events so that they
can feel empowered to change that arc of events so that they can feel empowered
to change that arc of events.
What arc am I talking about?
Here's an example from this parent.
My kid doesn't charge their laptop.
Maybe I've had a history of saying,
okay, I said you should do it.
I guess I'm gonna do it.
I'm gonna charge your laptop.
Okay, now it's charge.
I'm putting it in your backpack
and now it's good until the next day.
What's the arc?
Here's the arc.
Kid forgets to charge.
Parent seems annoyed.
Parent charges the laptop.
Kid has charged a laptop.
Now, when I think about an arc of events,
and I would encourage you to do this too,
I often think, I am trying to work myself out of a job.
I don't think I want my kid when they're 18
to associate me in their arc of having their
laptop charged. So if I don't want that for myself, and frankly, I don't think that's
good for my kid either, right, to be 18 and be dependent on me to charge their laptop,
then I have to ask myself not what consequence should my kid experience, but what is my role
here? And how am I preparing or not preparing my kid
for the rest of their life?
Same thing with the water bottle.
My kid forgets a water bottle.
I put the water bottle in their backpack.
My kid has a water bottle.
Is that not the arc that I think is helpful for my kid,
which I think we all agree, not so helpful?
Because the arc we want is I have to have a water bottle.
I remember my water bottle. I fill up a water bottle. I remember my water bottle.
I fill up my water bottle. I put my water bottle in the backpack. My parent isn't really involved.
Well, then I have to take myself out of the arc. And again, consequence for me just doesn't come
into the equation. Resilience does, independence, planning skills. So if this is a shift for you,
and this is what a parent's asking to, I have kind of inserted myself into that arc. So it's no wonder why my kid
isn't gaining these skills because we're just practicing the arc over and over
that involves my solutions. Can I give my kid a heads up? And can I do it in a way
that doesn't feel punitive? Because again, I think that's really not the purpose.
The purpose is actually doing our job as a parent and helping our kids prepare
for life. So yeah, I think what we could say to our kid there is some version of, hey, you know what I'm
thinking about? There've been a couple different things. You know, you're a laptop being charged,
your water bottle, maybe it's remembering your homework. Here's the thing. I really mean this
sweetie. I'm actually doing you a disservice. In the short term, I'm doing a lot of the remembering for you. I'm remembering the
charging, I'm remembering the water bottle, I'm remembering the homework and the folder. And
I know you're capable of the remembering. It's like any other skill. It's hard before it becomes easy.
But the more I do that skill for you, the less likely you're gonna be able to practice it yourself.
And sweetie, I'm also in some ways telling you
that I don't think you're capable of doing it
by doing it for you.
And I really do think you're capable.
So I just wanna be very clear starting tomorrow.
If I notice your water bottle isn't in your bag,
I'm not gonna get it.
If I notice your laptop isn't charged,
I'm not gonna charge it.
And if I notice your homework is still in your desk in your room, I'm not going to put it in your folder. And I know that means
there's going to be moments where I don't know what to do. But you left it, I'm not charged.
And I run my water bottle and I promise you when you come home after those moments at
school, here's what I'm not going to say. Told you, well, you got to remember, I'm really
not because this is going to be new for you. And learning any new skill independently is actually hard
and always has bumps in the road.
So what I'm gonna say to you is, oh,
what was that like not to have your water bottle or,
oh, you don't have your laptop charged.
Oh, it must have been so annoying.
I really will show up in that way for you
because I promise I'll have patience with you
as we help you develop these skills.
That is a completely different mentality to me.
It's again, it's a completely different mindset
than should my kid experience that consequence.
The other thing just because I can't help myself,
that I think it's really important in this conversation
is it is so hard for us to not charge our laptop
and not fill up that water bottle
and not put the homework in the folder.
I think it's so hard.
We worry, oh, I'm kind of knowing my kid
is going into this bad situation,
or am I a bad parent, right?
If my kid doesn't have their homework
is everyone to think I'm a bad mom.
So first of all, I just wanna ground ourselves
again in our job.
So much of our job is making sure our kids
develop the skills when they're young
that they really need when they're old. When the stakes are so much higher.
And no matter how old your kid is right now as you're listening to this,
maybe you're thinking, my kid is four. My kid is seven. Oh no, my kid is actually 18,
and I've been doing this all wrong. Now you have it. Your timing isn't peckable.
No matter how old your kid is, now they're going to be older in years.
And the stakes will only be higher. And so this is the perfect time. how old your kid is now. They're going to be older in years,
and the stakes will only be higher.
And so this is the perfect time to peel back,
not to give your kid consequences,
but to let them experience what they need to experience
so they can develop those independent skills
that they're going to need.
I just wanna wrap up with some final thoughts about consequences,
about punishments, and making sure that you know if you don't give
consequences, if you don't give punishments, that doesn't mean you're a
soft parent. That definitely doesn't mean you're approving of your kids'
behavior. In fact, one of the things that really strikes me
is parenting is in some ways one of the later fields
to kind of modernize with respect to our thoughts.
If we think about management consulting,
if we think about business, psychological leadership,
if we think about coaching, okay?
In the workplace, if you have an employee who's, I don't know, forgetting that their project
is due or showing up late to work, I think we know that going to that employee and giving them
a punishment is not going to be the thing that makes them more engaged. It also means that if you go
to your employee and you say, hey, you've been really late to work. And we're on the same team here,
and I know you know how important it is
to be here. And so there must be things that get in your way. Let's figure that out together.
And I'm happy to help you to make sure, you know, you can do the things you need to do to get your
at-9. I don't think any employee walks out of that conversation saying, my boss really lets me
get away with things. My boss is so soft. You know what people say? What an effective boss.
is so soft, you know what people say? What an effective boss.
If you are a basketball coach
and your star player or any player
is continually missing lamps,
I don't know one coach says, go to your room.
Go to your room and you come back
when you can make lamps from this team.
Oh, if you don't make the next layup,
I'm going to bench you for the next game.
I don't think any of us find that coach inspiring. You know what coach we want for our kids or for even a professional team is the coach that says,
hey, you know, I'm going to sit you down for this game. I'm going to kind of keep you here with me.
You're not in trouble. You're having a hard time. That's okay. We're going to really work on
some things in practice. And I'm saying that to you because I believe in you. And I know some
things off and I know I can be the one with you to help figure this out. We're going to get there.
I don't think anyone's saying what a soft coach.
That coach is really kind of saying to the player that it's okay that they're missing all
those laps.
What that doesn't even make sense.
So let's bring the thinking that we've already incorporated into athletics into the workplace,
into parenting where we're talking about our small children.
I promise, it doesn't lead to things going off the rails.
It doesn't lead to spoiled and tidal kids who feel like they can act the way they want
to act.
Of course, our kids need boundaries.
They need us to step in with sturdiness.
They need us to stop them from engaging in behaviors
that are dangerous.
And then they need us to help them build skills.
They need practice and they always, always, always need us
to see the good kid under the bad behavior.
Let's revolutionize parenting together.
Let's revolutionize parenting together. Thanks for listening.
To share a story or ask me a question, go to goodinside.com slash podcast.
You could also write me at podcast at goodinside.com.
Parenting is the hardest and most important job in the world.
And parents deserve resources and support so they feel empowered, confident, and connected.
I'm so excited to share good inside membership.
The first platform that brings together content and experts you trust with a global community
of like-valued parents.
It's totally game changing.
Good Inside with Dr. Becky is produced by Jesse Baker and Eric Newsom at Magnificent Noise.
Our production staff includes Sabrina Farhi,
Julianette and Kristen Muller.
I would also like to thank Eric Kabelsky, Mary Panico,
and the rest of the Good Inside team.
And one last thing before I let you go. Kobylski, Mary Panico, and the rest of the good inside team.
And one last thing before I let you go.
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.
I remain good inside.