Good Inside with Dr. Becky - Joy in Parenting
Episode Date: March 14, 2023Parenting can feel like such a slog sometimes and in those times it can be hard to feel joyful. Today, Dr. Becky sits down with designer and author Ingrid Fetell Lee to chat about ways that everyone c...an bring more joy into their lives through their spaces. And yes, this even applies to parenting.Join Good Inside Membership: bit.ly/3J8gvpbFollow 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/podcastÂ
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If joy were a sound, what would it be?
The sound that came up is the popping of a champagne cork.
Like the sound of, really what I wanted to say was the sound of bubbles,
but it's really hard to know what the sound of bubbles is like.
It's the sound of effervescence, right?
It's the sound of bubbling up.
To me, that is the quintessence of joy.
That's Ingrid Fattelli, the designer and author of the book, Joyful, which is all about the power of ordinary things to create joy. Together, we're going to talk
about how to find joy in parenting and how to create joyful spaces for our families.
More after this.
joyful spaces for our families. 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's 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.
They're super simple.
Just plain wooden, no color.
And my kids love them.
They're always building castles
or like a dinosaur layer.
And then my oldest will tell my youngest
to like
decorate them after he's built this crazy cool structure. My go-to's are Melissa and Doug too.
I feel like we have this ice cream scooper thing that my kids use when they were two and then they
used again when they were developing better fine motor skills and then for my kind of four-year-old,
my seven-year-old still using it in imaginative play. I really only like talking about items and brands that we actually use in our own home
and Melissa and Doug, I just don't know if there's any other brand I feel so good about
naming the way that their toys actually inspire creativity and open ended screen free
child led play. It's just unmatched. And like what's honestly so exciting is to be able to offer
everyone listening to this podcast, 20% off. Visit molissaandug.com and use code Dr. Becky 20,
DR, BECKY20 for 20% off your order. Molissa and Doug, timeless toys, endless possibilities.
and dog, timeless toys, endless possibilities.
I'm Dr. Becky, and this is Good Inside. I'm a clinical psychologist, I'm a mom of three,
and I'm on a mission to rethink
the way we raise our children.
So yes, we're gonna talk all about joy,
which is a word that rarely comes up next to parenting.
So I think it's gonna be a really important conversation.
But before we get into joy in parenting,
I think it's fun to get a little context on anyone who's on this podcast.
And in maybe a way that isn't the usual context we get.
So tell me a little bit about what you were like as a kid.
Tell me a little bit about what you were like as a kid.
I was...
That's a, I was a great question. I was a pretty serious kid, I think.
Pretty curious kid. I was the kid who was always asking why. I spend a lot of time reading,
a lot of time exploring climb trees.
I had like one of those sort of semi free range childhoods that I feel like doesn't exist anymore,
where I had a pretty sort of safe neighborhood
and I could just kind of wander across the street
to my neighbor's house.
I had sort of an area I could bike and wander through.
I had a swamp, I could sort of muck around in
and I was very lucky to have all of that.
Yeah. And what about joy in childhood? Joyful memory, joyful moment that you think about?
I mean, there were lots of small joys. I was very lucky to have a dad who encouraged,
play and encouraged me to do the things that I love to do.
So for example, climbing trees, you know,
one of the stories my dad loves to tell
is about how his mother was visiting
and I was going up this tree in the backyard
and I was getting higher and higher and higher
and she was like, aren't you gonna tell her to come down?
Aren't you gonna tell her to come down?
Now it seems like a good idea to tell her to come down
and my dad was like, nope, I'm just gonna trust that she knows what she's doing.
And I found a lot of joy in those kinds of things and being allowed to just kind of test my limits in that way.
What that sparks for me is I always think about control and trust as opposites.
And that memory and even the emergence of joy there really goes hand in hand with
what you were saying about a really free range, not control oriented childhood.
And you know, one of the aesthetics or the values that I talk about in my book is freedom.
And this idea that the ability to run around in a field and stretch your arms out wide and spin around
until you're dizzy and go up to the top of a tree and get that view, those are all experiences
of freedom that we associate with childhood.
And a lot of us don't get as many of those as we get older.
And so being able to make sure that we have the memory of that, the imprint of that as
children, I think is really formative. Like we bring that with us as we get older. Okay, so this word joy, simple word,
three letters. What does joy mean to you and how is joy different from happiness?
Yeah, we use those words interchangeably a lot, right? And they just kind of get tangled up in our
culture, but from a scientific perspective,
there are different things. So happiness is a broad evaluation of how we feel about our lives
over time. It has to do with a range of different factors, whether we feel like we have a sense of
meaning and purpose in life, how connected we feel to other people, how we feel about our health,
all of that goes into this kind of complex equation that we call happiness. And so in a given moment, it can sometimes be hard to know how happy we are, right?
Some part of your life is going great, you're kicking butt at work and men at home,
things are kind of a little bit in transition or up in the air and you're like,
am I happy? I don't know. How could I put like a number to that?
So happiness can often feel kind of vague. Joy is much simpler and more immediate.
When psychologists use the word joy, what they mean is an intense momentary experience
of positive emotion. And we can measure that through physical expressions like smiling
and laughter and a feeling of wanting to jump up and down. So if happiness is how good we
feel over time, joy is how good we feel right now in the moment. And I think that that distinction is so helpful because there are times in our lives where
we're not going to be happy.
We're going through something really, really hard.
We've all been through it the past few years, right?
Or we're new parents, and we're transitioning to all of the challenges that come with that.
And yet there are still these sparks, these little moments of joy that we can find,
that we can hang on to, that kind of provide a light in those more difficult times.
So I always find that distinction really helpful in thinking about my own wellbeing.
Well, I do too, because prior to you're saying that, I would have felt like joy
was like a very intimidating feeling like joy.
Do I feel joy?
I don't know.
It's like really extreme.
But now that I'm thinking about your definitions,
joy actually feels like something I could cultivate
or experience more easily because it's short term
rather than happiness.
And as you were saying, we're in these stages,
and sometimes I think just like parenting is a stage.
And we're in the parenting stage.
Like a really long time, you know, especially if we have more than one kid.
It's a minimum of, I don't know, 18 years when your kids are in your house.
It's long.
So cultivating happiness.
Yeah, it is complex.
And there are so many factors, but moments of joy, all of a sudden, I feel like hopeful.
Like, oh, like maybe especially after this conversation with you,
like I feel like maybe I can find that.
Yes, let's take the pressure off.
We don't have to constantly be creating like
every day as a magical experience.
What is one moment of joy that we can find in our day?
And what is one moment of joy that we can find with our kids in a day?
If I take that attitude, like even if I'm having
a really terrible day, I can go out and play blocks
with my kid for five minutes.
And I am quite sure that somewhere in there,
we will find one little moment of joy.
So if I'm looking for that, I don't need everything else to be great.
Yeah. Like I can kind of let everything else go a little bit and say, okay, it's okay
that this day kind of sucked. But when you look back, you will have those little moments.
Because you didn't kind of write off the whole day. You said, okay, I'm still going to be aware
of the possibility that joy can happen today. It's attainable.
Okay.
So, I know something about you that your background is in design and you wrote this amazing book
about joy and you wrote that book before you became apparent.
Correct.
Yes.
True.
Then life changed.
You know, I gave a little shift.
I'm curious what you've learned about joy
since becoming a parent,
or like has becoming a parent changed the way
you think about joy.
Well, I think everyone says that you'll never see joy
the same way after you're a parent.
Everyone said that to me.
You know, when I wrote this book and they're like,
oh, you're gonna have a kid,
oh, you'll totally change the way you see joy. And I think that's true and it's not true.
I think that parenting opens up new ways of experiencing joy and you certainly have a more
first-hand experience of getting to witness what it's like for someone to discover the world
and the wonder that they feel.
And I think if you allow yourself to be led by your child,
like me, allowing myself to watch what my child finds joy in
is a very powerful conduit to joy.
I think joy is so diverse and so accessible to us
in so many different ways.
I think the highs and lows of parenting
certainly put in perspective some of the things
that we're talking about about being able to hang on
to those little moments, especially for me,
as someone who became a parent in the middle of the pandemic
for the first time and spent my first year
without childcare, without really any close family
for support.
You know, there were days when I was crying into a pile of laundry and I would still say,
it's not all lost. You say all the time, two things are true, right? Two things are true. I am
really unhappy with the situation that I'm in and also I found an intense moment of joy today and I'm not going to look back at this time as just a
Hard struggle. I'm going to be able to hold both. I think that's really usable because I know there's so many people listening
who
feel like parenting is so
joyless and
When they reflect on their own childhoods
And when they reflect on their own childhoods, they feel like their parents never experienced joy with them.
Joy and play and that effort, Vessence, was totally absent.
And one of the things I hear you saying is this version of two things are true.
Like someone can hold, I feel like I'm drowning.
I feel like I am drowning or I feel like I am drinking from a virus.
And I can find a moment of joy today.
And both are equally true. One does not negate the other. Exactly. And I think our culture is so
used to seeing emotions as the average. It's like the average of everything you experience in a day and that's your day.
And I think it's about understanding that you're not taking the average. You're taking, like,
let's take the best and the worst, right? And we'll say that let's hold that. And it's like,
oh, my day sucked because of this. But also, you're not going to believe what I saw. Or there
was one pure moment where I got outside for five minutes
and I breathed in the fresh air and I felt free. And yeah, it was only five minutes, but I can take
that feeling with me. I can build on that. I can build on this one small moment. Yeah. And so I
think there is an action item for anybody listening to this, to start by actually validating how hard something feels.
That part of us, the one that's saying joyless,
joyless, drowning, the difficult, exhausted, depleted,
that part needs a magnet, like the other side of the magnet.
It needs to hear, yes, yes, I'm depleted, yes,
I'm exhausted, yes, I'm frustrated, yes,
this feels so challenging, yes, I feel alone, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, and maybe even just together
We can like say that say those yeses and then use that other powerful three letter word and and
I can do something joyful today. I can and
In a way you're building up a different part of you.
I guess you'd say there's always a part of us that can experience joy.
It probably, you know, is pushed underneath, especially when we're
apparent the parts of us that have logistics and feel frustrated and feel
overwhelmed, right? But that part's there. And if I think about my
own body, like bringing her out like once a day, you know, cumulatively matters.
So for me, I don't know, it might be like putting on
a Whitney Houston song and dancing in front of a mirror
like just by myself.
Like that might be a moment for myself.
And I think that what's important to say here
is what you point out about it having a cumulative effect.
The research suggests that that's true.
When we experience these little moments of joy,
certain things start to happen.
So for example, sharing small moments of joy
with a partner deepens the sense of trust, intimacy,
and connection in the relationship.
So when we bring someone else into those little moments,
that's powerful.
When we experience little moments of joy,
we are more likely to make better decisions.
When team leaders express more joy, their teams complete their work with less effort and in a more coordinated way.
So what does that suggest about what might happen in our families as well if we bring a little bit of a spirit of joy into it?
There's also research to show that those moments of joy help reset our
body's cardiovascular responses to stress and make us more resilient over the long haul. So
reset cortisol levels, blood pressure, heart rate. So if one little moment of joy helps to
reset our stress responses make us a little bit more effective in what we're doing,
bring a little bit more energy to what we're doing, that does start to have a cumulative effect.
It sort of shifts the dynamic
and allows us to go into the next thing
with maybe a slightly different perspective.
I love that.
And the last thing I want to say on that
before shifting to something a little bit different
is if you're a listener and you're thinking,
that's gonna be really hard for me to start.
Like I don't want to do something silly
when I'm making dinner.
You're going to have that resistance
because that loudest part of us,
especially when we're a parent,
is the one that's saying, this is so hard, this takes energy.
And what I know, I guess I'll just speak for my own experience,
is I often don't wanna start the thing
that might bring me joy.
I don't, and that's just part of my arc.
I can't wait to have a moment where I'm gonna say,
yes, Becky, I'm so excited to dance in front of the mirror.
So I know to have the resistance, I always like to say hi to it Becky, I'm so excited to dance in front of the mirror. So I know to have the resistance.
I always like to say hi to it.
Oh, hi.
I know you're going to start by saying, this is stupid.
Don't do it.
And then inevitably every single time after 10 seconds or after 30 seconds, like I'm there,
I'm at that joy part.
And so I think it's powerful to think about pushing through the resistance and welcoming
that the resistance is part of your arc to reach joy
rather than thinking we're going
to have a moment where it's
absent.
I love that you brought up that
idea of the resistance to joy
because I think it's important
to recognize where that comes
from for a lot of us because
as you point out, a lot of us
didn't necessarily have joyful
childhoods or we were judged for
our expressions of joy.
Maybe we were judged for the way that we laugh,
or the way that we dance,
or the way that we sing.
And so a lot of us put those things away,
and we have a culture that judges joy as childish
and as superficial and frivolous.
As we get older, we're supposed to put play aside,
we're supposed to stop being silly,
we're supposed to be serious,
and that gets reinforced over and over again.
And so we often end up in a place where as parents it's hard to access.
It's actually really hard to find that.
And I think being able to access it for ourselves, like actually recognizing that there's going to be some resistance
and that it joy can actually feel quite vulnerable if we're not used to it.
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.
I promise it's really the best investment we can make not only in ourselves,
but also in our kids. Can't wait to see you there at goodinside.com.
Now, one of the other things that you've such expertise in that I love hearing you talk about
is this other way of thinking about joy. I think about this a lot in my parenting life.
In my apartment, or maybe
someone else lives in a home, and there's stuff everywhere. And everywhere I look is like
triggering in and of itself. There's like, oh my god, every single tiny Lego piece is like
all over my table or everything's cluttered. And so can you explain a little bit about the
aesthetics of joy and how joy relates to design and space?
Sure.
So I started out as a designer.
I actually never set out to study joy.
I was in my first year of grad school at Pratt Institute.
And I was at a review.
And I was studying industrial design.
So how we make products tangible things.
And a professor said, your work gives me a feeling of joy. And I
thought, well, that is weird. Because I had always thought of joy as this very ephemeral,
fleeting, intangible thing. So how does that relate to a cup or a lamp or a chair? What does that
have to do with joy? And these professors couldn't answer the question.
That's really what started me on this arc of work to try to understand how do our surroundings,
our physical surroundings influence our emotions. And in particular, how can our surroundings
cultivate the feeling of joy? And so when I started out this work, I just started asking
people about things in places that brought them joy. And what I noticed was that there were certain patterns,
there were certain things that came up
as I talked to people over and over again.
And these things seemed to cut across lines of age
and gender and ethnicity.
So they're not joyful for just a few people.
They're joyful all over the world.
And they're things like color, pops of bright color.
We see that in celebrations all over the world.
We even see it in children's drawings,
studies of children's drawings show that when children
represent joyful or happy topics,
they use bright colors.
When they represent sad or angry feelings,
they use dark colors.
So we see that that's a universal association.
Another one is round shapes, round shapes,
signify joy. And if you look at childhood, all of childhood is
round, right? You have hulhoops and balls and bubbles of balloons
and Ferris wheels and Mary go rounds and even kids around, like
they are in literally a rounder versions of adults. Their faces
around their proportions around their eyes are bigger and
rounder and that's actually part of a biological device that makes us find
them cute. Cute things are rounder, right? There's a sense of order or
rhythm, visual order or rhythm, so a sense of repetition, repeating patterns are
very joyful. We find joy in balance and symmetry. So all together I
identified ten of these different elements,
and I started calling them the aesthetics of joy. aesthetics comes from the Greek word
esthenome, which means I feel I sense I perceive. So the aesthetics of joy are just sensations
that bring about the feeling of joy. And so for me, this is a very different way, I mean,
first of all, it's a different way of looking at joy, which is this thing that we're just
supposed to happen upon,
we're supposed to look into it.
If we recognize that our surroundings and our senses
can be a conduit to joy, and a meaningful one,
it's not a trivial thing, it's a meaningful way
to cultivate joy, then it gives us a lot more agency
and power over our environment.
So if someone's listening to this, including me, and I'm thinking, okay, that actually makes so much sense.
Like, yeah, I think about cultivating joy.
Maybe it's, yeah, I need to dance in front of a mirror,
do something that's silly,
but there's other factors at play besides what I do.
Like if I'm a sensing being,
then I take in the surroundings of my environment
and those surroundings and how I perceive them will also influence how accessible
joy is that makes so much sense and it's not something I ever thought about honestly before I've talked to you
So you have a parent. I don't know. They're listening. They are like I have a two-year-old and a four-year-old or you know
I have a baby and a two-year-old and four-year-old and a six-year-old and eight-year-old and ten-year-old right?
They just have all the kids in the world. Um, and we know, like there's a million things.
Right. So what are some things parents could do if I know that they're resonating about your
saying and they want to put some of this into action. Like how do you create joyful spaces while
meeting the demands of your kids? Well, I think one of the first things that you can do
is start to see your home as a series of moments.
Think that the way that we're trained
by consumer culture to look at our spaces
is rooms full of stuff.
So I'm gonna decorate my home and I need a sofa
and I need a chair and a table
and a lamp and a rug. I need stuff, right? If instead you approach your home and you say,
this is a potential series of moments. When I walk into my living room, what do I want to happen
here? When I look back at this time in my life, 10 years later and the kids are gone from the house,
what do I want to remember about our time in this space?
That to me is a radical shift because now you're not
thinking, oh, my sofa's shabby, I want to replace it.
Or, oh, it's so much clutter, it's so much stuff.
Instead, you can think, how do I create a space
where the things that I want to have happen
actually do happen?
So if I want game night to happen, what am I going to do?
Can I make my living room a magnet for my family?
Maybe that means I need to bring a little bit more color into the space.
So it's like people are just drawn there.
They just want to spend time in that space.
I need to make the games accessible. I need to put them in a basket right next to the coffee table so
that it's right there for us. So there are functional things you can do to make play accessible,
to make joy close to the surface. But there are also things you can do aesthetically to say, like,
add color or add round shapes is another one that often makes a space feel very playful and accessible, right?
There's a there's a neuroscientific explanation for this which actually is
interesting to know that when neuroscientists put people into FMRI machines and they show them pictures of angular objects and round ones
What they find is that when we look at angular shapes a part of the brain called the amygdala lights up
The parts associated with fear and anxiety and we look at round shapes, a part of the brain called the amygdala lights up. The parts associated with fear and anxiety,
and we look at round shapes,
that part of the brain's tail silent.
So it's not just that round shapes are playful.
Round shapes actually sort of come
a part of like an unconscious anxiety.
So when we have round shapes around, it makes sense, right?
If you're walking around a living room
that has all sorts of sharp angles,
you're gonna be more cautious.
There's a part of the brain that's on alert. So if you have round shapes around,
it just sort of softens the lines, it makes everything feel a little bit more relaxed.
So I love like a round coffee table for that reason or round edges on furniture.
I mean, you're always baby proofing, if you have young kids, you're always baby proofing anyway,
get things that are naturally baby proof. And so I think those are things you can do in a space
that make it feel easily more playful and more accessible.
And I love that difference.
Like when I walk into a room, how do I want to feel?
What do I want to experience?
Like what would serve me instead of what,
what items do I need in my living room?
What type of experience would serve me?
Do I wanna have a pop of joy?
Okay, so if I have to get something on my wall,
maybe I get these like yellow round,
you know, yellow and orange and bright round circles
are kind of these prints, you know,
and that actually would give me an experience
walking into that room that is very different
than if I only asked myself,
what do I need to put up in my wall?
Exactly.
It's about recognizing that your environment can trigger
this feeling of joy.
And if you can embed some of those triggers into your space,
you are creating opportunities for joy to happen more often.
And you're doing it for yourself, and you're doing it for your family.
And I think it takes, again, some of the pressure off,
like my home has to be perfectly ordered
and you know, it has to look great all the time.
I think recognizing your home is a canvas for joy.
It is the setting for these joyful moments to happen.
And so, you know, what I think about in my living room,
like, I don't like my floors.
I would love to redo my floors.
But one of the great things about our house
is that we can roll cars down the floors
and we have lots of space to do that.
And so I can see these features in like the designer way that I'm like
I wanted to look a certain way, but actually I don't feel precious putting tape on the
floors so that we can make little racetracks for the cars and we can actually have a much
more relaxed experience. And that's what I'm going to remember. Like in 10 years I'm not
going to remember that I hated these floors. I'm going to remember that we wield cars down them and that we made tape roads and that is the memory
I'm going to have.
And I find that really grounding in my own house. Like when I come into a room and it's
just like a mess with toys, you know, part of me's like, oh, this is such a mess. I
think it's that control. And oh, what's wrong with me? What's wrong with my kids and that
whole narrative? And then, you know, you get triggered and end up yelling something you don't want to yell.
It's interesting to say,
this space cultivated joy for my kids today.
I am prioritizing joy right now.
We all remember, right, who said this is my angel, right?
We don't remember what people said or what people did.
We remember how people make us feel.
And probably we remember how spaces make us feel. And I think that's really empowering for
everyone here. I know so many parents who find mess very triggering. And I'm part of that club too.
So to reframe things as the cultivation of joy as allowing for fun as we're a family who
of joy as allowing for fun as we're a family who really allows for play.
My kids will remember that. It doesn't mean we can't then talk to our kids about how they can clean up their toys, but you go to talk to your kids about that from a place of appreciating joy.
It's going to come out in a much more grounded connected and therefore effective way than if you go
in from that place of, you know, rage.
And how could you do this to me,
which just makes us all feel bad
and is completely ineffective?
And it's not to say that you don't want to cultivate
order two and that you don't want to have a place
to put those toys, but you can also think about that
from a joyful perspective and say, okay,
let me put three bins side by side
and put a little pop of color on these
so that it's something joyful to look at.
You know, there's joy that's part
of the tidying up experience as well.
It's not like everything gets put away
and then the home doesn't feel fun to the kid anymore
because all the toys are tucked out of sight
or that it's this tug of war between adult and child
where you feel like to have an adult space means you have to hide
all of the kid stuff. Everyone should have ownership over the home
and an experience that they really live there. And I think sometimes that gets out of balance,
where parents feel like the kids run the place and sometimes it runs the other way, where
parents have this minimalist home that is gray and beige and all the toys have to be either made of wood
or tucked out of sight.
And I think that, you know, we can find a balance between the two where it feels like
home that everyone lives in.
I love that.
So maybe last question, is anything that we didn't talk about related to Joy that you
feel like is important to kind of get in?
I think the only thing, and it was sparked by some of the things
that you've been talking about lately,
I think around self-care, and the notion
that we have a parenting model that I think
idealizes self-sacrifice.
I feel like what isn't said is that we do a disservice
to our kids when we don't let
them see us joyful.
Because kids who don't see models of a joyful adult think that they grow up and joy goes
away.
And I think we're seeing so many kids in middle school.
Like, that seems to be the age when anxiety really starts to hit.
And I think it's not a coincidence that that's the age when there starts to be more homework,
more pressure, less, less freedom to sort of feel joy.
Yeah.
Parents often ask, you know, how do I cultivate joy?
I don't think it's so much about cultivating joy as modeling it and allowing your kids to
see you playing with them joyful,
but also doing things that you love that have nothing to do with them that you find joy in,
letting them see you that way. I think that's something that parents can give themselves,
that often feels like they're taking away from their kids. I would love to reframe that and
help people understand that that's actually a gift you're
giving to your child to help them understand what joy will look like for them when they
get older.
I love that.
That's also an amazing place to end.
So, Ingrid, thank you for being here.
Thank you for your really important work and tell people where they can find you after
this.
Yes, aestheticsofjoy.com and you can find me at Ingrid Fatel on Instagram.
Okay, and I just want to ask one more question about that because I find the word aesthetics Yes, aestheticsofjoy.com. And you can find me at Ingrid Fatel on Instagram.
Okay, and I just wanna ask one more question about that
because I find the word aesthetics really hard to spell.
So can you just spell out?
I mean, I know how to spell of joy.
That would be OF, J-O-I, okay?
But the aesthetics of joy,
like how do you spell aesthetics?
Just for a friend.
This is so much extra.
This is so much extra.
This is so much extra.
This is so much extra.
This is so much extra. This is so much extra. This is so-E-T-I-T-I-C-S.
So either go to a stat hits of joy or aesthetics of joy.
I recommend the latter.
I don't know what you're going to find at the former.
It might be interesting.
Oh, the listers.
Let us know. Thank you, Ingrid. This is my moment of joy with you right now.
Thank you for that.
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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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.
you