Good Inside with Dr. Becky - Rethinking Bossy
Episode Date: July 19, 2022Raise your hand if you have a child who likes to take charge. Now keep your hand raised if you’ve ever snapped “Stop being so bossy!” Hand still up? Well, Dr. Becky’s is too. And here’s the ...thing: You’re not a bad parent. And your kid’s not a bad kid. You have a good kid who has a hard time with flexibility. In this week’s episode, Dr. Becky discusses how to help your assertive child build the skills they need without shutting down their strong sense of self. She offers a new framework for “bossiness” and, as always, pairs her big ideas with practical parenting strategies you can use in your home right away. Two things are true: You can love that your child knows what they want *and* teach them how to make space for what others want, too. Join Good Inside Membership: https://bit.ly/3cqgG2A Follow Dr. Becky on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/drbeckyatgoodinside Sign up for our weekly email, Good Insider: https://www.goodinside.com/newsletter Order Dr. Becky's book, Good Inside: A Guide to Becoming the Parent You Want to Be, at goodinside.com/book or wherever you order your books. For a full transcript of the episode, go to goodinside.com/podcast
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Hi, I'm Dr. Becky, and this is Good Inside.
I'm a clinical psychologist and mom of three
on a mission to rethink the way we raise our children.
I love translating deep thoughts about parenting into practical, actionable strategies that you
can use in your home right away. One of my core beliefs is that we are all doing the best we can
with the resources we have available to us in that moment. So even as we struggle, and even as we are having a hard time on the outside, we remain
good inside.
Today's episode is all about bossiness.
Or really it's about reframing the topic of bossiness.
I've received so many voicemails
from you about this topic.
And here's something really interesting.
Every single one of them described a daughter as bossy.
I haven't received one voicemail. That described a son as bossy and really struggling
with how to help a male child with this trait.
Now, in this episode, one of the things I'm not going to kind of solve, are the gendered expectations
around daughters and sons.
Who's allowed to have strong opinions?
Who's allowed to speak up?
Who's allowed to be a leader?
Who's allowed to be inflexible and prioritize what they want over social relationships.
And before we get into the rest of the episode,
I feel like I'd be missing something
if I didn't name that gender expectations
are certainly at play.
So let's keep that in mind as we listen.
And let's think about how we can help all of our kids honor their ideas, believe in themselves,
speak up for what they want, and figure out how to manage that alongside respecting other
people and developing meaningful interpersonal relationships.
So with that in mind, let's jump in.
Let's hear from our first caller, Veronica.
Hi, my name is Veronica.
I live in Denver, Colorado, and I have two, a 4.5-year-old daughter and
a 22-month-old daughter. I'm calling her, yes, of my older daughter, about how to rethink
the idea of being bossy. My daughter has a lot of strong thoughts about how she would
like things to go, and I find that she's not shy about telling other people how she thinks
they should go, kids, and grown-ups alike. And I tried reframing that as she knows what she wants, she has strong ideas, she's, you know,
determined all these things. But ultimately, some day they just feel like, no, you're just bossy.
And it's not a super fun trait in terms of interacting with her. And I noticed that other parents
coach their kids on how to be more collaborative or literally what to do in a play situation. We've taken kind of a hand off a probe but now I feel like the
end of the day my kid just looks bossy and mean and other kids are on the
surface saying and doing nicer things and my isn't and I think it's hard to
just like to be with her when she's directing how she wants a lot of things to
go and they're typically
or only on her agenda.
There's really a time for someone else to express how they would like things to go or
that to be a successful interaction.
So just try to figure out how to either think about this differently or support her and
understanding that I don't know like the natural consequence of if you're always telling
other people how things have to be.
There's some downsides to that.
So thanks so much. Hi Veronica. Thank you so much for calling in and for putting out so many
thoughts that really resonate with me and I know really resonate with so many other parents.
So first things first, as you probably know, I'm not someone who likes to choose, right?
I think that leads to this bigger, two things are true idea.
And I'd encourage all of us who have strong-minded kids to watch for the potential to be locked
into, oh, is she a kid with big ideas and she feels really confident?
Or is she just a bossy kid who wants to always get her way?
And to instead tell ourselves,
whoa, I'm thinking about this in a really binary way.
Let me find two things are true.
Two things are true.
My child knows what she wants and has strong ideas.
And my child needs some help managing this part of her
while figuring out how to connect to others in a way
that feels good both are true and I want to preserve this trait and help her harness it.
It makes me think about just how hard this is. This is hard for me too. Sometimes I have a strong idea
and I'm expressing it to a friend who also has
a strong oppositional idea. And figuring out when to express myself, when to insist, when
to listen and be flexible, well, I promise you Veronica, it's something I'm still working
on as an adult. So it makes sense that our younger kids are trying to figure this out as well.
What can we do? Well, you said something earlier that to me actually feels like the start of an intervention.
And I really mean this.
I heard this in you.
This is not my idea.
This is your idea.
You said something like it's so hard for her when she wants things to go a certain way.
And she's with other kids who also want things to go a certain and different
way. This is actually the making of an intervention. This is something I'd say to her in a calm
moment. Hey, you know what's kind of hard. I mean, I don't know if it's hard for you,
but it's definitely hard for me. It's hard when you know how you want things to go and you're with other people who kind
of know how they want something to go.
And those things are different.
That's so tricky, right?
What am I doing here?
I'm setting a baseline.
I'm setting a baseline for my generous interpretation of quote, bossiness.
I'm not sitting down my child and saying,
you know, no one likes to play with the bossy kid.
I'm just saying, like, you might not have any friends left.
Right, and I'm saying that out loud Veronica,
because I've heard myself say those things too.
And then I think later than I had,
like that was not impactful or helpful intervention, right?
So what we want to do instead is something kind of minimal,
which is just saying what's true.
Sometimes you want one thing and other kids want a different thing. That is really tricky. Why do I
love that we're tricky? Tricky is very validating when a situation is hard and yet it also does something to
our body where it activates our problem solving. Like, tricky is something that I feel like is manageable to solve.
And so I'd really encourage you to use those words.
That's intervention one.
Just name what's happening.
Say that in front of your child.
Let it sit.
Strategy two.
Model struggling with this yourself.
You can either tell your child a story from your adult life.
Like, you know, I want to tell you,
I had a really tricky situation earlier.
I was meeting my friend for lunch and I really wanted to go to one place and surely wanted
to go to a different place.
I really, really, really wanted to go to the restaurant I said and she really, really, really
wanted to go to the restaurant.
She said, oh, what do you think we did?
Right. We all are better at problem solving for someone else than we are for ourselves. And yet, when we problem solve for someone else, we're building the muscle we need. So let your child do this
for you. Anyone who's thinking, my child is two and a half or my child is for my child. Is
that any age not going to be able to offer me kind of any thoughts here, you can also model this in play.
If you have a child who struggles to be flexible
around their ideas, I highly recommend playing with your child
and modeling that struggle yourself.
So maybe your child says, let's build an airport
with these blocks.
I can imagine myself saying, no, no airport.
We have to build a school.
I want to build a school.
It's going to be a school.
No airport.
No, no, no, no, no.
No way, school, school, school, school.
My child will probably be surprised to see me act in this way,
and that's okay.
You've gotten their attention.
Then you could take a deep breath.
And maybe say something simple aloud like, whoa, whoa, sorry, I think
I meant to say, I really want to build a school. Even if you only do that, you've modeled
going from this kind of intensity around the righteousness of your idea to expressing your
idea in a way that will probably land on someone in a better way.
And that movement is a lot for a kid to learn. That's a great first step.
You might model one other thing.
One of the reasons it's hard for kids to be flexible is they have a hard time understanding
that even though I don't do my idea, it's still a good idea.
It's almost like is my idea a good idea if I don't do my idea, it's still a good idea. It's
almost like is my idea a good idea if I don't put it into action, how will I know
it's good and real if I don't see it played out? This really is something
inflexible kids can struggle with. So I could see myself in this play
situation with my child saying aloud something like, whoa, sorry, one moment, one moment, one moment, I need a deep breath.
Ooh, Becky.
I have a good idea and someone else has a good idea too.
Or I could see myself saying, I have a good idea and I know it's good,
even if I don't do it.
I have a good idea and I know it's good even if I don't do it.
Then I might turn to my child and say,
Huh, airport, school, airport, school, I don't know.
What can we do?
Because after all, if one day you witness your child saying to another child,
Hey, here's my idea, here's your idea.
What should we do?
I think we all would count that as a major win.
Let's hear from our second caller next, and Veronica, I think you'll hear more ideas
that will apply to your situation with your
child.
So keep listening.
Hi, Dr. Becky.
My name is Elena.
I'm from Washington, DC, and I have two daughters, age two and a half and five.
I learned early on that things like transitions from one activity to another could be a challenge,
especially with my daughter who is now five.
It's so interesting to me how different the two children are. to another could be a challenge, especially with my daughter who is now five.
It's so interesting to me how different the two children are, my two and a half years old,
see fairly flexible, not all the time, but my five-year-old has very strong opinion
about what she would like to do or what she think is the best option.
And I love that about her. I never want her to doubt her own view
and what she thinks is right. However,
I would love to help her build a tolerance for considering other options. Now that she is not
really focused only on our life here at home but interacting with more and more people,
how can I help her to cultivate flexibility in different situations, different circumstances where I am
not there.
Thank you again so much.
Hi, Alina.
First of all, I just want to say I love how you frame this.
You know, I think so many of you, you good inside listeners, you're starting to do my job
for me.
And I love that, where you're not even saying,
hey, what's wrong with my child?
That she can't be flexible.
You're seeing so much of the kind of positive version
of your trait in your child.
And then you're saying, okay, I love that she knows
what she wants.
And I think I need to help her with figuring out
what to do when she doesn't get what she wants.
That framework is just so powerful.
It sees our kids and their strengths instead of seeing them through the lens of something's wrong
with them. And I think all of us want to be seen in that first way and not that second way.
So I really only know I also just want to commend you on the first way and not that second way. So I really Elena also
just want to commend you on the way you're thinking about this. Something you said
that really stands out is I want my child to build tolerance for things not
going the way she wants or maybe not going the way she imagined or would
prefer. That word, tolerance, it really, really stands out to me. And here's why. We have to
tolerate in our kid. The feelings they struggle with before they can learn to tolerate those
feelings themselves. I'm going to say that in another way because it's so powerful and it applies to any situation your child is struggling
with.
I, as a parent, have to show my child that I can tolerate their struggle way before they're
going to learn to tolerate their struggle.
Why?
Because when a kid is having a hard time, they're really taking in interactions with us,
their parents through the lens of, is this ever going to be manageable? Is this feeling that overpowers me?
Is it something that just overpowers anyone? Or are there people out there who can manage this?
And then that would give me the faith that I too will get there. That's how they're taking in our interactions.
So let's play this out.
You give one of your children a red water bottle
and one of them a green water bottle.
And you're less flexible child,
the one you're calling in about says,
no, no, I want the green one.
It has to be green.
I have to have green.
What's really happening there?
Well, there's a feeling.
She's having a hard time tolerating.
The feeling is I didn't get what I imagined
or I didn't get what I wanted
or this didn't go the way I thought it would go.
We can name that feeling disappointment
or frustration or some combination,
but that's a really, really hard feeling.
Well, how do we help our child be more flexible?
Well, flexibility, which would look like a child saying,
oh, I wanted green, but I got red and that's okay.
That comes from tolerating that feeling of frustration
and disappointment.
We have to tolerate it in them first.
So let's play that out.
Oh man, you really wanted green and you got red.
I believe you, you know you want green, you love green.
You really, really wanted green.
You don't want red at all and ugh.
Getting the opposite of what you want.
That stinks.
Now that's the validation piece.
That's the tolerating piece combined with,
and you don't even have to say this with your words.
It's really just the action of not giving them the thing they're demanding,
because when you hold that boundary,
what you're really doing is you're saying to them,
I know you can tolerate disappointment.
I know you can tolerate disappointment. I know you can tolerate frustration and way before you act in a way on the surface that's
quote, flexible, you have to tolerate the feelings that would allow you to be flexible.
Because as long as you can't tolerate frustration or disappointment,
you have to insist on getting the thing you want because that's in service of helping
you avoid this feeling that feels larger than life.
So I would think about this across the board in different situations with your daughter.
Does this mean saying once in a while, look, today we are going to watch the show that
your sister wants first.
I know it seems like she doesn't even care that much,
but sometimes we all need to practice waiting and not having the exact thing we want first.
I know that's hard. That's why I'm sitting with you.
And if it's too hard to stay here while that show is on,
you and I can go into your room and we'll take some deep breaths because I know this is hard
and I know you can do it.
Right?
I am showing my child that I can tolerate that feeling
in her.
I'm also showing my child that I believe
we're going to get through it.
I'm kind of holding hope for this.
Hey, quick thing.
If you follow me on Instagram or if you're a part
of the Good Inside membership,
you probably know I've written a book. And I'm so excited to say that you no longer have to pre-order
it. You can order it because it's available right now. You might have guessed the title is Good
Inside, a guide to becoming the parent you want to be. And let me be clear, it's not a book or perfect parenting.
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Visit goodinside.com slash book to order your copy today.
Now let's get back to the episode.
What else might I do?
Well, you can add a few things kind of after these tough moments that also build a child's
tolerance for frustration and disappointment, which is what builds their capacity to be
flexible.
So, later that day, when things are calm, I might see myself saying, so hard to not get
the things we want, right?
Oh, that's really hard for me.
Or just wanna let you know, that I also don't like waiting for things
that I want to happen right now,
even though I'm an adult, that's hard.
It's not my favorite.
It's not something that's easy.
It's something I just manage.
And I promise I'm gonna help you learn to manage that as well.
Let's hear from our final caller, Talia.
Hi, my name is Talia.
And I have a fine room, fun, and a three-year-old daughter.
And my question is basically a dad had a deal with the dynamic
that we have going on in our home.
My five year old son is very sweet and more like a gentle
calm type of child.
And my daughter, who's younger, is your like a strong personality,
a lot of fun, but also like a little bit bossy for
a black-of-beditor. So many times my daughter, the number one, is trying to tell my older son
what to do, trying to kind of be his mom, telling him what to do, what not to do, and he obviously
gets very bothered by this. I don't know exactly how to deal with the situation of a whole
if you can help out. Thanks so much.
Hi, Talia. Thank you for raising
how kind of the topic of assertiveness and inflexibility and flexibility plays itself out
in a sibling dynamic because I think if we have a child who might be labeled as quote, bossy,
it often goes hand in hand with a child
that we might hear labeled as, oh, so easy
and so flexible or so mature.
And then one of the things that really happens in a house
is our children get kind of more and more rigid
in those roles.
We have one child who's always dictating
what the play is going to look like or who goes first. get more and more rigid in those roles. We have one child who's always dictating what
the play is going to look like or who goes first. And the other child is always essentially
saying, okay, no big deal. And the way we frame the dynamic is really important in terms
of helping both kids get out of these rigid roles. So here's a way of framing it that
I think might be kind of different from what we're used to because we're used to saying
How do I help my really inflexible child be more flexible?
How can I help my bossy child finally go second or finally say sure I'll do your idea?
Well, I think it's really empowering and
Different to frame it almost in the opposite way. And it would sound like this.
My child, in this case, Talia, my son is kind of hogging like all the flexibility.
Right? He is so flexible that he gets in his sister's way of learning how to be flexible and
generous. I really need to help him. In a way we need to say,
I need to help my more flexible child learn how to be more inflexible so that my other child learns
how to tolerate frustration and disappointment which would lead to there being more flexible.
Here's the big idea. And yes, if you're thinking, wow,
this applies to my partnership
and so many other relationships, you're right.
There's only 100% of a trait to go around
in any relational dynamic.
So looking at the dynamic between your siblings,
it's almost like your daughter has a hundred percent of the assertiveness,
and your son has a hundred percent of the calm and flexibility. Well, we need to shake that up.
It's probably not going to be 50-50, but the only reason things feel so off is because it's 100 and zero.
So, here's how I'd intervene. Let's say your daughter is insisting on the drawing they make and she's saying to her
brother, no, I'm drawing a flower in this wing set. You have to draw the same thing as me.
And maybe to avoid the argument, your son is saying, okay, I was going to draw something else,
but that's fine. We often think of turning to our daughter and saying, hey, don't tell him what he has to make. But try this.
Say to your son, you know what? You're a kid with ideas too. And you probably know what you want to draw. I'm going to help you have your own space. So you can do what you want. Another example.
Your daughter is saying, I'm going first in candy land and your son says, okay, fine.
Instead of saying, can't you just let your brother go first once? I would actually say to your son,
you know what? I'm gonna help you go first. I'm gonna help you go first because that's something
you need my help with. Standing up and saying, hey, I want to go first.
I don't want you to always go first.
It's my turn.
Now, I'm a realist.
What's going to happen, Talia?
Candyland is never going to happen.
Candyland's never going to happen.
Why? Because your daughter is going to have a meltdown.
I am aware of this.
And I promise I'm not one for increasing the number of meltdowns
in a family's home.
That's not my definition of psychological success.
I am one for building important skills
that lead to meaningful, lasting, family changes.
And that might mean some meltdowns.
It might also mean you're son having a hard time
because often when you start to do this,
the one who's in the more people pleasing mode will say
over and over, no, it's fine.
It's fine.
Let my sister go.
And then it really highlights for us as a parent.
Wow, my kids really are locked into rigid roles.
I'm so glad I'm stepping in because clearly both of them need to rebalance the situation.
So then your daughter is melting down that she's not going first.
What would I say or do?
Well, I'd make sure there was no further damage.
I wouldn't let her grab the board and knock it over right so I'd kind of get ready
for that and just say I know you really want to go first and often your brother
lets you today is different and that seems to feel really hard for everyone. My
number one job is to keep everyone safe and make decisions that are good decisions
in this family, even if people are having a hard time, and right now is one of those
moments.
Then I'd probably, if it was me, kind of try to play out the game of Candelian, me against
my son while my daughter was probably having a big meltdown on the side, and then find
some time when all of that passed to kind of put my feet on the ground,
put my hand on my heart and say, wow, that was hard. That was hard on everyone. And that was the
start of something really, really important. Thank you, Veronica, Elena, and Talia for calling in and helping us jump in to this important
topic.
Let's tie it all together with three main takeaways.
Number one, if your child struggles to listen to others or to be flexible here and there,
model struggling with that yourself.
That is so much more effective than sitting a child down
and giving them a lecture.
Two, we have to tolerate feelings in our kids
before they can learn to tolerate those feelings in themselves.
This means when your child hasn't melt down
because they're frustrated or disappointed,
because they have to be more flexible than they want to be.
Take a deep breath and remind yourself,
I can cope with this.
I can get through this.
That's really the first step
for a child learning to regulate that same experience.
Three, if you have kids who are locked into an inflexible role and flexible role, notice how you think about that.
It's really powerful to start an intervention, helping your more flexible child become a little, more inflexible,
to hold a boundary boundary to assert themselves.
This then creates the space where your other child would have to tolerate
more frustration and that's the first step to becoming more flexible.
Thanks for listening to Good Inside.
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