Good Inside with Dr. Becky - How Dare You Speak To Me That Way!
Episode Date: June 13, 2023When your child is being rude it's easy to fall into the trap of yelling, issuing timeouts, or threats. But behavior is not identity and as parents, we have a choice. We can choose to see it as our ki...ds disrespecting us or we can choose to see it as our kids having a hard time and needing us to show them the emotion regulation skills they need. Myleik Teele joins Dr. Becky this week to talk about disrespect and rudeness.Join Good Inside Membership: bit.ly/3J8uKLFFollow 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/podcastToday’s episode is brought to you by Melissa & Doug: One of the best ways to help our kids build true self-confidence is…PLAY. And Melissa & Doug is one brand that really embraces the power of play. Their long-lasting, 100% screen-free toys inspire creativity and open-ended play. And most importantly, spark big imaginations for babies, preschoolers, and beyond! Imaginative play with Melissa & Doug gives kids a safe space to practice problem-solving, manage frustration, and watch their ideas turn into reality - all core pillars of confidence. From pretend play to arts & crafts, puzzles to developmental toys - when kids play with Melissa & Doug toys, anything is possible! Visit MelissaAndDoug.com and use code: DRBECKY20 for 20% off your order. Melissa & Doug: Timeless Toys. Endless Possibilities.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I'm Dr. Becky, and this is Good Inside.
Hi, my leak.
Hello, Dr. Becky.
I am ready to talk about one of my favorite topics of all kid time.
Can you name it and frame it for us?
Disrespect?
Wow.
I've had a journey. I feel like with this respect, I think in the very beginning,
I had so many expectations of how I felt my child should treat me. I am putting a roof over your head.
I am feeding you. I am clothing you and I have expectations of you, you know? And the more words they get, the more intense it starts to get.
And then now it's just engaging with other parents, family members,
watching my child do what he does
and results in that conversation of like,
it's just so disrespectful.
I don't remember it being like that back in my day.
Yeah.
I know one of the things we often talk about, right,
is just a kid does something, right?
So there's a behavior, that's the fact.
And then one of the things I often think about is,
there's so many ways actually that we can look
at a single moment or behavior.
There's so many frames.
Just like if we have, actually it's perfect.
You have a picture of something.
There's infinite in some ways picture frames.
You could put the picture in.
And I think we all know,
sometimes you put a different picture frame
on the same picture and it looks different.
It actually makes you feel something different,
even though the picture isn't theory the same.
And there's a framework of interpreting a
child's behavior through the lens of disrespect. Yes. And I just want to say as a start, I don't feel
any pressure to say whether that's true or not true. Is it respectful? Is it disrespectful? Is it
disrespectful? Is it not disrespectful? To me, the thing I often like to think about is just
Is it disrespectful? Is it not disrespectful?
To me, the thing I often like to think about is just,
is it useful?
Mm.
Is it effective?
Based on where a kid is today and where we eventually want them
to be, is the framework of disrespect?
Going to get them with my help from point A to point B,
or might it get in the way of getting to point B?
I'm so excited to have Myleek Teal back on the show today.
We're going to be touching on the topic of disrespect.
You don't want to miss it, more after this.
Hey Sabrina, hey.
So I've been thinking about toys recently.
I don't want the toy to do that much of the work.
I want the toy to inspire my kid to do the work.
Because actually the toys that get really busy and do a lot of things, kids actually lose
interest in so quickly.
Oh, totally.
There are certain toys that my kids have just played with throughout the years.
I have a six year old and a three year old.
Like what?
So, I have these wooden blocks from Melissa and Doug.
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They're always building kessles or like a dinosaur layer.
And then my oldest will tell my youngest to like,
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My go-to's are Melissa and Doug too.
I feel like we have this ice cream scooper thing
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And then they used again when they were
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I think the hardest part, and you and I talk about this at Nazim, it's so hard not to see your child as 25 when they're four or five. And you just think,
oh my god, if they do this at their job or in their college classroom, you know, what's going to
happen? I have to stop this now. Yes. Yes. That fast forward though. Yes. And actually, I know you
talk about swim classes. And it is interesting, right?
When we take our kids' behaviors,
the hitting that I hate you, whatever it is,
out of that context.
And I think about another way
where we could have a fast forward thought
where my kid is five, let's say,
and they don't, actually my five year old
isn't a great swimmer, he's really not.
And if I think about him being 25
and being in, I don't know, some ocean with friends,
like if he swims at 25 in an ocean,
the way he swims today in a training pool,
yeah, he would die.
He would die.
Yeah.
But at the same time, I don't think coming down
harshly on him for swimming.
Hey, if you swim that way at age 25,
you're gonna drown.
You know that, like, I don't think anyone would say,
that is really helpful.
Yeah.
That is really useful.
And so, understanding our kids behavior
in their developmental stage,
understanding, well, what helps someone get
from point A to point B for swimming,
or for emotion regulation.
And what is my role as the parent
or really as the coach in either situation
to get them there is critical?
I'd like to add the black parent caveat
because I know that a lot of black parents
we are feeling like we are wanting to save our kids' lives.
And so there's another layer of that
where it's just like, I am so worried that if you say this
to the wrong person at the wrong time, your life is on the line. And so that is usually the big
thing that I get if I'm out with like my peers or other black families. And it's just like,
this is all fine and dandy, but how do you know that you're keeping your kid alive?
And I appreciate you adding that context.
So you and I as we parent our kids,
we have different histories, we have different fears,
we have different realities.
We have very different realities for our fast-forward thoughts.
Maybe I'm thinking, oh, I don't want my son to get fired from a job,
and maybe you're thinking, I don't want my son to get killed when he's out and about,
right? I mean, those are different. Completely. Yeah. Yeah. We're thinking of both, right? Like
yeah, I need you to stay safe and employed. And so might you have any examples from your own life
with some challenging could be interpreted as disrespectful behavior. Should we just talk about other children? Yeah, I mean, my son gives me so much content and material just by the hour.
We had a situation where we had some friends over, new friends that dad had made,
and we are going to walk to the park from our house.
And it's a little chilly, and I say it's getting late.
We're all gonna put our coats on
before we go to the park.
My son says if he has to put his coat on, he's not going.
And I say, you know, these are new parents,
and I'm just trying to keep it low.
And I said, okay, you know, his dad said,
I'll stay in with him if he doesn't want to go.
So he goes inside, we start walking, and I get a text from dad that says, okay, you know, his dad said, I'll stay in with him if he doesn't want to go. So he goes inside, we start walking and I get a text from dad that says, yeah, he says he's gonna relax by the fireplace.
And so I kind of just say to the family, yeah, my son's not gonna come.
And one of the parents said the fact that he even has a choice, you know.
And we started talking and it's just this idea that you don't get a choice.
If we have new guests and they're coming, it's just respectful for you to not come.
And so that's one.
And then I'll give you another one that is, you know, my son has said, I'm going to slap
you in your face.
And I mean, that would have gotten me and anybody I know, that would have gotten
them in a little bit of trouble. And then just because we're going to have a third one
just at school, I said, Dad's going to pick you up. Dad didn't pick him up. I walk in
the class, Becky, you liar. You are a liar. And he screams at me in the class all the way down the stairs
out the door. And I think he told me the next day that someone an adult who had witnessed
it said they were going to make him write an apology letter. He's terrified. He goes,
I can't even write a word. So it's like in the context of school building, new friends, my home, I understand because I am
consistently in this work and in the community with you and everyone else, but it's not easy.
And if you would have bent me over achieving my league, what do you have a kid that would tell you
they would slap me in the face, I would bet every dollar in my savings account.
Never.
And here I am.
And here we are.
So, for some reason, the example of, I'm going to slap you in your face.
Yeah.
The loudest right now.
But they're all kind of linked.
So let's take that one.
I'm going to slap you in the face.
So the first thing I think that's just a good exercise.
And everyone listening, I'm sure you have a kid who said something similar or maybe you're
like, that's weird that my kid said those exact words to me this morning.
So probably in one bucket or the other, if you're in either bucket, then I don't know,
keep listening, I think it'll still be useful.
You will one day have a child who says those things.
So I find when I say to myself,
I'm picturing that as my son,
my youngest would definitely say those words.
And I just think, you're so disrespectful.
How disrespectful.
As I say those words, my looking, you can see me.
Like my eyes get like glary.
Like I am looking at my kid
with the feeling, with the lens of like you
are an awful person.
And I basically hate you right now.
I don't know, does that, what about for you
when you think about the lens of disrespect,
you're so disrespectful?
Yes, and I feel like there feels like hierarchy and power.
Of like, to me, you are gonna talk to me.
The person who does everything, you know?
Does it feel like he doesn't appreciate it?
Yes, yes, it does.
I feel so unappreciated.
Does everything that I do do you not see it?
You know, and I also think when you add this work
that I'm doing of like, I've never hit you.
I've never hit you.
I've never said anything like that to you.
Where the hell did you get this from?
That you're gonna talk to me like this.
You've never hid him.
He is therefore, and this is multifaceted as I think about it.
He's not as scared of you as he would be if you hid him.
Oh.
Is that, I think that's fair to say?
It is, and I don't know that I even thought about that.
Yeah, and as I say it, it seems like that can almost be looked at.
So if we don't, let's just say in a multitude of ways scare our children
through
hitting them through I mean, there's also a lot of verbal emotional ways we can like terrify our kids if we are not using that as a prime
parenting strategy
our kids are not
terrified of us right
And I'm actually trying to think we could take it out of kids too.
Like if you have a partner, you're not terrified of, you probably feel much more free
rain to express a wider range of things.
Yeah.
If you're terrified of your partner, if you thought your partner would hit you, that
would really
restrict movement. Yeah, right. Right. And conversation or what I'm going to talk about.
Sure. And I mean, it's like, it feels very unfair because I know for you, right? It's like,
I'm working really hard around cycle breaking in that way. I'm working sore in my, so my
reward is rudeness. Yes. And I'm gonna slap you and you're a liar
and I'm not going.
Becky, are you saying my reward?
That's what I need to know.
Are those things?
Yes.
Like that is messed up.
Yes.
Your reward should be, hey, you know, mom,
thank you for, you know, working so hard.
Thank you for operating from a place of love
and boundaries, not from a place of fear.
But I appreciate you so much.
That's what I would like.
Yeah, understandably.
And so before we go further, I mean, it is interesting.
I think we're both kind of struck by this at the same time.
Like, if you're a parent, especially if you're thinking,
I really am the first one.
Yeah. My lineage.
Yes.
To not hit my kid, to not spank my kid,
to not really operate primarily from a place of fear.
Right.
My kid is going to express a wider range of behavior toward me.
That is the hard part.
I think when you said that, he's not terrified.
So I think about all the ways that I would behave
or what I might say on a free.
Yeah.
And then I'm thinking about this layering.
I don't know why.
Things like I appreciate my mom
or my mom does so much for me
or my dad, right?
Any parent.
First of all, it's the same thing with us in our relationships.
Even if we have access to those thoughts,
which by the way, appreciation and gratitude
are so sophisticated, like you have to develop
so much perspective to have those,
which most like four or five-six-year-olds
haven't even lived long enough.
But let's even say they do.
Same thing with us.
Like when we're feeling appreciative of someone,
in a moment that you're overwhelmed
by like a core feeling of anger or frustration,
that disregulated feeling,
meaning the feeling that just overtook you,
kind of does cover block access to
all of those kind of higher order level of thinking.
Because I know for me, like I really appreciate my husband, he's a wonderful partner.
I don't know when I'm really annoyed at him or I'm really mad about something he did.
I usually am not in the moment even me and I'm like a real adult.
I'm not like, you know what though?
He's so great in these ways.
And so let me balance out my anger.
Like, my anger takes over me.
Is it the same for you?
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
So our anger and our frustration,
I just think as humans, when they overtake us,
all the other feelings, they're in the back seat of the car.
They're not anywhere near the driver's seat.
And so I'm thinking about this moment, they say, I'm going to hit you. You're like, what
the heck? And you don't even know how lucky you are basically. Right. Right. And I've said
that. And here's the emotion regulation layer, okay? Because our kids learning how to manage,
that's what regulate really means how to manage anger That's what regulate really means. How to manage anger and frustration.
Jealousy, disappointment, all those dark heavy emotions.
It's so important in life.
If you're an adult who doesn't know how to manage those feelings,
ironically, you are the person who gets fired from your job
for saying something you just shouldn't utter to your boss
or yell at your boss.
Right.
Because the feelings that you have just explode out of you because you've never learned
how to manage them. Yeah. But in childhood, our kids have all of the feelings, right? We know.
They have none of the coping skills. And in the period of the many years or hopefully helping them build the coping skills. We have to expect
many moments where those feelings overpower the very little coping skills they actually have.
Question for you because I know that some may wonder this. What about when they say, well, when my kids with grandma or grandpa or with their dad or
with their aunt, they don't do any of these things.
It's as if they have more respect for them.
Yeah.
I think a couple things.
First of all, I think sometimes when we say our kid is more respect for someone, we actually
mean fear of them. Because if we define respect
by a more limited range of behavior,
which I have a feeling we do,
I've never even consciously thought that,
that a kid who's quote respectful
kind of just means they stay in line behaviorally.
Well, the more fearful you are of the person you're with, the more that fear will limit
you.
Now, fear, though, also means you are not developing any of the coping skills you actually need for
life.
So that's not great in the long run.
So I think that's one thing I would say is when we say they more respect for this person,
do we really just mean do they have more fear and they have a more limited range of behavior? And then the other thing I think I
would add to that is we all express the widest range of kind of feelings with the people we feel
safest with. We do. And it's very inconvenient to be that safe adult for your kid because hearing
these words, being at that grocery store,
it's one of the things I felt most unprepared for.
It's just how inconvenient it is to parent young children.
It is so inconvenient, so exhausting.
They do so many annoying things,
but all of those moments, I also believe
if you're that safe adult for your kid,
you have the biggest impact on your kid's life.
If you're the adult that they're with,
when they feel, let's say disappointed, jealous, anger,
the feelings that are the hardest to manage, even for adults.
You're like the coach with the most impact.
You're seeing the most in practice.
Right. I think this lens of seeing kids quote bad behavior. We have these choices almost.
Like do we see it as disrespect of me? Or do I see it as kind of my kid having a hard time and I'm kind of showing me the skills they need to build
for the rest of their life.
So I always want to make sure all of you have everything you need.
To be the parent, you want to be especially in those tough
moments of rudeness and disrespect. If you're looking for more please know I
just did a crash course on rudeness and disrespect and it's available within
membership. Why a crash course? I know we don't have time for too much so I put
everything a parent would need to know to make lasting change in their home
into the rudeness and disrespect crash course. It's there when you want it.
Now of course, you know, I have another, another one.
Shown. So I have it. Yeah. So someone as I was talking about this topic, someone brought up
the idea that their daughter said to them, I want a new mom. And she said that that felt
disrespectful. And so I don't know that's not necessarily bad behavior, but I know that it definitely
hurts your feelings. And when I think about feeling appreciated,
probably you want a new mom.
You know, so what might you say to that mom
who's just like, you know, she says she wants a new mom?
I feel disrespected.
So in a way that doesn't seem that dissimilar to me
from I'm gonna hit you in the family.
I really doesn't, okay?
And in both of those examples, I feel like we take our kids
words so literally.
Yeah.
And honestly, Miley, great, I'm sure you and I
have arguments with our partners around this too.
And we're like, wait, I didn't actually mean,
why did you take that up face value?
I didn't mean that.
Yeah.
So us too, we say things when we're overwhelmed with feelings.
Our words are not the best kind of manifestation of what our needs are.
They're usually not.
So if I think I want a new mom, it can mean a lot of things.
And I think one of the things, if we really want to help our kids, we have to kind of learn
to do.
And it takes a ton of practice and so hard, is translate.
What might my kid mean?
If I said to my partner, I want a new husband.
You go with me, my like, what do you think I'm saying?
You may not be feeling seen.
Absolutely, you're frustrated.
I don't know, like I'm saying this
and I'm showing you something
and you are just not seeing
me or hearing me clearly.
100%.
And in escalations of words to me, the more desperate the word, the more desperate your
plea is to be taken seriously.
Although it can usually evoke the opposite, the more desperate a kid's words, the more apparent is prone understandably
to respond with invalidation.
That's such a ridiculous thing to say.
You want a new mom, I do everything for you,
which only then makes a kid kind of think unconsciously,
well, I guess I have to escalate this further
because even that didn't get seen.
Right.
Right.
Right.
So first of all, I think like self-suiting
is really important as a parent,
because if we look to our kids to feel worthy
and respected as people, we're gonna lose.
And I often think, I like care way too much
about myself for it.
It's way too important to put in the hands of my five.
You're like, I'm gonna give that to him.
He's five.
Like, I know what I know about the type of mother I am.
I know what I know about the type of cycle breaker I am.
And if I don't, then I deserve to give that to myself.
I don't want to wait for my four year old to acknowledge that to myself. I don't want to wait for my four-year-old to acknowledge that.
Right.
To me.
Yeah.
And then if we're able to do that, this translation almost always, we can translate a kids' words to.
Like, I feel awful.
Can you see that, right?
Or, and I think in your situation, I want to feel powerful.
I want to feel powerful.
I need to feel powerful.
Like, I'm gonna hit you.
I'm not gonna ever say I love you again.
I'm never gonna clean up.
You're a liar.
Yes.
Right?
I think all times when kids are saying,
I feel so disempowered. And I need to feel
powerful and important. Yeah. No, kids don't say that. Frankly, adults don't actually often say
that either. Instead, they fight back hard too. Right. But not only do I think it's more accurate,
I guess again, the thing I'm often led by is I just, I think it's more effective to work on seeing our kids
tough moments through that lens.
Cause let's walk through this.
Your son, my link says to you, I'm gonna hate you.
Yeah.
And let's walk through what happens when we see it
only through the lens of this is so disrespectful.
Like, what would someone do next from that lens?
Oh, I'm going to slap you in your face.
It's what he said.
It's like, oh, you're going to slap me in my face.
And then now, I'm probably thinking of what I want to do to him.
Or now that he has said this to me, I want to say something
to hurt his feelings.
If I'm not going to hit him or I'll show you, when I was coming up,
if I had ever said that,
I probably would have got slapped first.
So like, oh, you think you're gonna slap me?
Right, yeah, right, yeah.
So now wearing this mindset, it's me against you.
You're off now.
I have to like prove my power to you.
And like we are really against each other.
You're gonna slap me in my face, right?
Like you said, you feel like punishing that.
I need to punish you.
Okay.
So, then what?
Something has led to a kid saying those words.
And I think the hardest part as a parent is that
it's like, for me, it felt like it was out of nowhere. Like we are having a good day and you just out of nowhere decide you're going to
slap me in my face. It wasn't like, oh, I told you we have to go somewhere. And I think that's the
hard part when it comes to parenting is that we want for one and one to equal to, but
sometimes one part is missing.
And now we're here.
And I don't even know what to say.
Like how do we get here?
Yeah.
Which I feel like makes it harder because it's like, this isn't even a home with drama.
We don't even do that.
But yet you still feel, and I don't know, I know this isn't, but it feels
like violence. What are you doing? This isn't a violent home. We don't hit, we don't
scream, but here you are. And look, he, he saw the impact it had, right? Probably at
which it would to me too. And look, our kids all, they all have these darker impulses as humans were animals.
We're curious, at least, about how impactful I am.
Could I hurt someone with my body?
Could I hurt someone with my words?
That's why kids play around with words,
especially when they make parents upset.
Even something silly, like, poop, poop, poop.
It's amazing for a three-year-old to be like,
well, all I have to do is say a word
and my parents, like, unravel?
That's actually just interesting.
I guess I'm more powerful than I thought it was.
So playing around with power is natural, is normal.
And I would argue it's something I'd want my kid to play around
with and figure out in their childhood rather than have all of that at bay
only act up for the first time when my kids 18 out of my house
and they have a much bigger body don't have any of the coping skills to manage those urges but have
as many urges as anyone else like that's scary. I think a lot of parents think that by the time their
kid turns 18 they are going to have this magical maturity that then it's like, oh, save all of this stuff
because when you're 18, you're going to know how to handle it. But you're not, you don't
get to practice with me because you must respect me. Why should we not wait until our kids
are 18 to start letting this happen?
Yeah. So look, I'm a firm believer. It's never too late. Like if you're listening, like
I have an 18 year old, I do not predict Doomsday never too late. Like, if you're listening, like, I have an 18-year-old,
I do not predict Doomsday for you.
Like, our body is always able to learn and rewire.
And we know the body wires early.
And what does that mean?
We learn how to interact with the world
and how to interact with our own feelings and urges.
During our earliest years,
we literally are forming the circuitry
that will then activate at 18.
So by 18, you don't have a clean slate.
You have the wiring that you developed
in the context of your family home.
And now that's the thing that will play out over and over.
So let's go back to this.
I'm gonna slap you because I think this is really interesting, right?
So first of all, when kids say something like,
I'm gonna slap you or I'm gonna drown you
or I'm gonna push you out the window.
Okay, I like that.
Kids say all these things, right?
So one of the first things that I think is powerful
to say back to them is I would never let you do that. And I'm gonna explain more. I'm gonna push you out to them is I would never let you do that.
And I'm going to explain more. I'm going to push you out the window. I would never let you do that sweetie because my job is to keep you safe. And actually, I know you're a really good kid.
And you're having a hard time. So I would never let you hurt me in that way. And that might seem
I get it. It's like, oh, really? Like, I can't just
say go to your room, you know, because that's a ridiculous thing to say, here's why. Because
I promise, like, I am the least soft, like, even like the term gentle parenting, I think,
like, please don't use that term, but the gentle so far down the list of adjectives I would
use to describe myself. Okay. Is our kids have an urge? An urge is like a want to do something, an urge to hit,
an urge to hurt someone with your words,
an urge to throw something,
an urge to slap someone in the face.
When our kids are older, they don't not have urges.
Urges live in our body, they are human,
they are just natural.
Okay.
The best we get is developing a circuit where our urge to hit someone
is wired next to a boundary that kind of stops that urge from acting out and kind of can
channel the urge maybe in a different way. Now we want over time for our kids to have the urge to hit and not hit. Of course,
that's the goal. Right. We don't want to get rid of those urges because I think sometimes we feel
like we do. Well, we can't, right? It's just like we can't beat our body. It's like asking an
animal to like, can you just not want to fight back when you think someone is attacking a
public? Right. It's just like we are living
in, you know, based on animal defense states, the urge to attack, protect ourselves in that way.
This is evolution. Right. Right. And so kids say these things when they feel emotionally
under attack. They do. Now, if we want our kids to learn how to stop their urges,
here's actually how it works. They have an urge in their body.
And before they can stop that urge from being acted on, they have to pair our
boundary next to their urge. Because then with their body learns, is I am able
to have an urge and watch. It didn't get acted out. And then when we pair our boundary next to their urge,
over time, that's literally how a kid develops their own boundary.
Right.
Next to their urge, are reactions to our kid's big feelings
become their reactions to their big feelings?
So this is not a way of saying, I would never say to my
kid who says, I'm going to slap you in the face, oh, sweetie, feel your feelings, you're
so amazing, slap away, of course not. But when I say, whoa, I would never let you do that.
You're a good kid, you're having a hard time, you seem to be having energy in your hands,
you know what, let's go, bang on the floor. What my kid is learning is I have this feeling
of wanting to do something powerful and harmful.
I'm watching myself not do it.
And now I'm developing something else I could do in its place.
There is nothing more helpful to end.
I don't know a 30 year old and saying,
I'm gonna go on my boss's office
and I'm gonna really tell them of,
ooh, I'm gonna not do that.
Yeah.
I'm gonna pause.
I'm a good person, having a hard time.
Yeah.
I'm gonna instead, maybe not bang on the floor, maybe,
write this down.
Yeah.
I'm gonna go outside and scream.
I'm gonna go call my friend.
That's what it ladders up to.
I think the thing that is sticking with me that you said that is vibrating for me is our
reaction to our kids, big feelings, becomes their reaction.
And I think you said something like that.
But that's the thing that I think is hardest for us to remember in those moments of like, this is an opportunity for me to show them how to do this versus responding to exactly what they're saying.
I think I've talked to you about this about those times when my son actually did let me in the face before.
I took a breath and I looked at him in the rear view.
He's still crying.
I know he's feeling shame because he punched me hard.
And I said, there is nothing you could ever do
to make me stop loving you.
You're a good kid and you're having a hard time.
And you could just see, I felt like I could see
just computing in his eyes like I'm a good person, like I could see it.
And I think just remembering in those moments,
you know, that like I'm getting a chance
to show them how things should go.
Yes.
And could go.
Because let's go down the opposite road.
Because I think I see a two.
It's like, okay, so kids, if I'm in a sloppy or they do,
and I, you know, I send them
to their room and I say, you think about what you did and no iPad for a week and maybe
you know, give them the silent treatment for a couple days.
And I get it.
But you're like, but that might also help them have kind of good behavior.
But here's what happens when they get older.
They're not going to be scared of their boss the way they're scared of you.
The reason they're scared of you is because they need you at age five to survive. They
literally don't get food, shelter, water, love without you. They literally need those
things. So they're locked into a relationship with you. That won't even happen again after
18 because they're more physically capable of surviving. So the fear that might temporarily
maybe even block that behavior, even though for some kid it doesn't,
it won't even be as strong of a blocker at leader wrong.
So then that's just all the rage released.
That's not great.
But more so, I think a principle, I think about of emotion regulation, is we can never
learn to manage feelings and urges that we don't allow ourselves to have. If you don't
think it's okay to have a feeling or an urge in your body, then you have to get
that feeling and urge out of your body. Well, bad behavior is literally just a
feeling or an urge coming out of your body. It is exploding. It's like, get out of
me. I don't have the capability
of managing it in here. So it's going to explode out of me. So now you have a 30-year-old who's
mad at their boss. They have never learned to manage anger. Maybe they've encoded their anger
next to punishment, next to shame, and next the idea of, I'm a horrible person. I hate feeling this
way because I feel so out of control. I don't know what to do.
Those are literally the conditions for anger, volcano, explosions.
If you want to set your kid up to explode at their boss, then sending them away and adding
shaman blame to their worst moments is probably the best way to do that.
But that's not usually a parents goal.
Yeah. probably the best way to do that, but that's not usually a parent's goal. Yeah, I, small detour, the silent treatment because I, I experienced the silent treatment my entire
life and I know parents who use it and find it to be more effective or well, I'm not hitting them
and I'm not putting them in their room, but I'm not talking to them for a couple of days, and I just would like for you to tell us
why that's not a good idea.
Yeah, you know, and again,
I'm empathizing first with all the parents.
Like I think the thing I haven't said yet,
it's conversation, there's no job
that's more important and more challenging
and more ongoing than parenting.
It's not even 18 years.
We know that.
But let's even say it was.
Okay, let's say we're done at 18, which we're not.
18 years non-stop because we know the job is overnight.
Okay.
18 years non-stop, like hardest, most ongoing, most important job in the world that we are
given, no training, no education, no support.
That is messed up.
The system is stacked against us.
So any partner is listening and thinking,
oh, maybe I haven't done a good job, or I'm not.
Do what they say.
What's wrong with the silent treatment?
At least I'm not adding my kid.
I know my leak and I both have just tremendous empathy.
Complete, yes.
So I just want to state that, okay?
So what's the issue with the silent treatment?
You know, the silent treatment truly is
a psychological abandonment.
Maybe it's not physical abandonment.
Some people I know aren't saying,
well, my kid has really acted out
some putting them in a forest and driving them,
driving away for three days.
But physical abandonment, psychological abandonment,
they're really tied together for kids
because kids depend on attachment with caregivers
to survive.
They're helpless.
In the animal kingdom, humans, we remain helpless
for so many more years than any other species.
So kids know in their bones, I need my parent, I need their attachment, I need their proximity,
I literally need their love and connection to survive and thrive. So the silent treatment,
it really leaves a child feeling deserted, usually in the very moments that they are actually in desperate need of a caregiver.
So they're in need of closeness. Instead, they feel ignored and alone.
Right.
And so what does a child do in that moment?
Well, the only thing they can really do is fill themself with self-blame.
And this is one of my favorite quotes of all time,
Fairburn wrote, right?
It is better to be a sinner in a world ruled by God
than live in a world ruled by the devil.
So what a child does at a young age
is they preserve the goodness of their parents
and take in all the badness, I am so bad,
something is wrong with me, I am unlovable,
I make bad things happen because they need to internalize fault to believe that their
parents and really the world around them is safe and good.
And so what does that do more long term?
Well, it wires kind of circuits in our body that say, I am only lovable when I please others. When I struggle, I cannot
need other people. My vulnerability will be met with rejection. And if we think of how
those play out in adulthood, none of that is adaptive in adulthood. It's not we know
when we struggle, we need others. We know so many of us are working away from all those
people pleasing tendencies
and saying, wait, I'm allowed to want things and need things
and ask for things even if other people are upset.
I'm allowed to be vulnerable.
That's how I'm close with people.
That's how people actually get to know me.
But the silent treatment actually wires kind of the opposite
of all of those lifeless.
I think that's what's so extraordinary about, I don't know,
being in the community with good inside is that the things that we have learned,
like that we should be doing in these moments, if we knew like the result, you know, it's like
the result of like what are some of the results of some of the things I've been taught to do,
might I do something different. And that is why I just wanted to ask that question.
Parenting is hard.
It is overnight.
It is decades long, but I just think about a person
who experienced the silent treatment,
like I said, all of my life, and it's just tough.
And you said this, and it's just like, okay,
in those hard moments, it's hard to remember
that in those harder moments, that's when they really are needing us because it doesn't seem like
it. They're calling us liars and saying they're going to hit us and it's just remembering
they actually need us in those moments.
They're out of control.
It's why they need a boundary.
So when our kid is saying, I hate you, you're the worst mom.
I need a different mom.
What again, like you don't say to,
oh, let's have a tea party together.
Like no, that's such a awful match.
But I may say, you know, I'm gonna carry you
into a different room.
I'm not gonna let you say these words in front of our whole,
you know, extended family, not because I'm embarrassed,
but actually because like,
you're just gonna feed off that out of control energy.
Like this isn't a good look for you.
Yeah.
So I'm going to help you.
Big thing that I learned is that I have like,
in bold in my notes, I think you helped me better clarify what boundaries mean with my kids.
He said, boundaries don't require our children to do anything.
And sometimes when I throw that help people are like,
what?
It's like, yeah, no, they don't require my kids to do anything.
It's what I'm going to do.
I am not going to let you slap me.
I am going to move this out of your way.
I'm going to move this.
I'm not going to let you hit me.
Yeah.
You know, I'm not going to let you talk to me like that.
Exactly.
Exactly.
And then, again, even though it goes counter to how so many of us were raised, there
is probably a safer way to express the urge or the feeling that they're currently expressing
in not the best way.
So, because I'm in a chile, I'm in a drown you, right?
Like to me, I hear a five year old who's saying,
I want to feel powerful.
I want to know I have impact in the world.
So, maybe later in the day, I don't know.
I'll make sure to say things like,
what do you want for a snack?
Do you want pretzels or chips?
Please don't say chips.
Just don't, oh, chips.
Oh, okay, you say chips. I guess I have to get chips from the drawer, right? I'm just giving my kid here in there. Ways to feel more powerful. Yeah.
Yeah. Pack full maybe and pretend play.
Okay.
I might say, hey, oh, you're the dragon.
Oh, dragons are scared.
I'm scared of the dragon.
You're so big.
Oh, you're so big.
And then maybe I say to him, I said,
what should I do now?
What should the hell?
Oh, I'm scared.
I'm scared.
I'm scared.
I'm scared.
I'm scared. I'm scared. I'm scared. I'm scared. I'm scared of the dragon. You're so big. Oh, you're so big.
And then maybe I say to my son,
what should I do now?
What should the, oh, oh, the dragon is going to get eaten
scarier.
Should I look?
Is that why you should look scared?
OK.
So we're kind of both in on it.
OK, I'm so scared.
And I'm allowing my kid, which kids need to do,
more opportunities to play around with their power, with their impact,
which means actually they're less likely to need to express it when picking them up from the
classroom. Why do kids need to feel powerful, Dr. Becky? Why do they need this? Because I could see
someone saying, I don't really want that, you know, or I don't think that's what I want. Why do they need to?
Our kids need kind of periods of feeling powerful, meaning, feeling in touch with who they are,
feeling like they're own independent person, feeling powerful is very linked with having
self-worth.
I'm not talking about kind of toxic power, but if we want our kids to become adults who
feel like they have a sense of
self, who feel like they can speak up for themselves, who feel like they can set boundaries, who feel
like they know what they want, and they can express what they want, that comes from feeling powerful,
and we can't raise kids from a place of subservience, and then expect them to have assertiveness and
self-worth 18 years later after we've wired them the other way. So that is why that I'm like my drop boom that's because I know people I don't I don't
know that I want my kid to feel powerful and it's like but I I do I do today and tomorrow
you know it's like I don't want them to wait until they're 21 or 18 to to quote unquote
find their power step into their power. It's like it starts, it's now. That's exactly right.
Yes.
So I appreciate those ways that we were able to do that.
Yes.
Any less thoughts are kind of caveats or kind of,
you know, again, I think we're both aware of this when we talk.
We come from such different families.
We have such different live realities in America.
Yes.
I've, you know, come into this conversation
with a lot of privilege
around my race and the way I'm viewed
and the lack of fear I have for my kids.
And so I'm wondering even if there's anything on your mind now
that you're like, you know what,
let's add a little asterisk Becky
for some of the things you said that,
you know, even for you,
you're like, yeah, that doesn't apply to me as much.
Yeah, you know, I think when we kick this off,
this idea of like keeping our kids safe,
like you said something during this podcast,
you know, like my job is to keep you safe.
And sometimes I know that when we are thinking about keeping our kids safe,
it's just, there's that added layer
and what if we're not there and I need for you to be respectful
and just, you know, there is this
policing of black kids with respect, like even out at the birthday party yesterday, I just see
this, I see a black dad and I know why he's doing this. It's like forcing man to, I need you to say,
excuse me, you know, and I grew up that way. And so I know if there are parents of color listening,
there is that asterisk,
but I think something that's so important
that you have said that has really helped me
on my parenting journey is that I want my kids
to be powerful and exercising their power.
And there is a way that they can do both
and a way that I can keep them safe.
And that my home should be a place where they get to both and in a way that I can keep them safe and that my home
Should be a place where they get to practice and they feel safe and my my home cannot mirror the world
Like I know you are going to experience
people who will treat you
differently because of the way you look and I don't want to
Duplicate that at home so that you get practice and I think that's just the big thing that I want for parents to know and to hear from me that you can do both of these things,
you know, in your home, your home can be safe, your kids can practice with you and be safe in the world.
Next week, my leak will be back and we'll hear from you about stories of disrespect
in your home.
I hope you'll join us.
See you then.
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.
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Good Inside with Dr. Becky is produced by Jesse Baker
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Our production staff includes Sabrina Farhi,
Julianette and Kristen Muller.
I would also like to thank Eric K Belsky, 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.