Good Inside with Dr. Becky - Revisit - How to Keep House While Drowning
Episode Date: October 10, 2023This is a repeat of an earlier episode. When you have kids, caregiving tasks are never-ending. You have to make breakfast and pack lunches. Throw in yet another load of laundry. Answer snack requests.... Pick up goldfish off of every surface in your home. Put away toys. Answer more snack requests. It can all be overwhelming. In this episode, Dr. Becky talks to author and therapist KC Davis about how to care for yourself and your home when everything feels like it's just too much.  Join Good Inside Membership: https://bit.ly/3RCyN7RFollow 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 To listen to Dr. Becky's TED Talk on repair visit https://www.ted.com/talks/becky_kennedy_the_single_most_important_parenting_strategy Today’s episode is brought to you by SEED: It feels important to speak to the very real things in life that parents are dealing with. Overall immunity is one of those things — we want our kids to feel good in their bodies no matter what… to feel physically Good Inside. And one way we can support this is with a daily prebiotic and probiotic. PDS-08 from Seed is a clinically studied 2-in-1 Pediatric Daily Synbiotic that supports digestion and helps kids with easy, frequent poops. It aids in filling the fiber gap for most kiddos and is formulated with strains that support immune health, which starts in the gut! And bonus for busy parents… the container has a built-in daily tracking system, so you never miss a day. To get 20% off plus free shipping on your first month’s supply, use code GOODINSIDE at Seed.comToday’s episode is brought to you by KiwiCo: Not much matters more than helping our kids develop confidence. Confidence comes from watching yourself work hard, tap into your creativity, and do things you may not always do. KiwiCo is like a conduit to confidence. Each month, kids gets a box delivered right to them with a hands-on project designed to spark creativity and engage problem solving… but kids don’t know this is what’s happening, they just see it as a form of play! The projects cater to all types of kids: kids who like science, sensory play, games, or geography. KiwiCo is a win for kid fun, and a win for long-term confidence. And now, you can get your first month free on ANY crate line at kiwico.com/drbecky.Â
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How to keep house while drowning.
Now, if this doesn't resonate with all of us,
I don't know what title would.
The biggest thing I've learned about cleaning when you feel stuck or paralyzed
is just to find something you can do in that area that you don't feel paralyzed doing.
KC Davis is the author of this book,
and if you don't already follow her on TikTok,
here's what you're missing.
My kitchen likes it if I warm her up a little bit.
She likes it a little bit of four-play.
I can't just go in there and start putting things away, willy-nilly.
That's not respectful to her.
I'm Dr. Becky, and this is Good Inside.
We'll be right back.
We'll be right back.
Not much matters more than helping our kids develop confidence. And the way I see it, confidence comes from watching yourself.
Work hard, tap into your creativity, and do things you might not always do.
So if confidence is where we want our kids to get to,
what is a tool to get them there?
Well, KiwiCo is a tool to develop confidence.
Each month, my kid gets a box delivered right to them
with a hands-on project designed to spark creativity
and engage problem solving.
But my kids don't know this is what's happening.
They just see it as a form of play.
I've watched all my kids love their KiwiCo crates
because the projects cater to all types of kids,
kids who like science or sensory play,
or games or geography.
I love that KiwiCo is a win for kid fun
and a win for long-term confidence.
And now you can get your first month free
on any crate line at kiwiCo.com slash Dr. Becky.
That's your first month free on any line at k-i-w-i-c-o.com slash dr-b-e-c-k-y.
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.
Casey, I am so excited to be talking with you and maybe we can just begin by telling everyone
a little bit about who you are and the types of things you're interested in.
My name is Casey Davis. I'm a therapist.
I am an author.
I wrote a book called How to Keep House While Drowning,
which I wrote after starting my TikTok channel.
So I post as domestic blisters,
which is a pun on domestic bliss.
And it's kind of like the way I say it's like domestic,
but make it chafy.
Not so much ideal, but like kind of a struggle.
It hurts a little.
And so I post about how to care for yourself and your space
when you are struggling, when there's barriers in your life,
whether it's mental health or physical health
or maybe just like a hard season of feeling overwhelmed.
And I think I just, if it's okay,
I wanna add to that because you do all that
and you do something I think so much grander,
which is I really think you help so many people
react to their good enough worthy feelings
inside themselves and to separate those feelings
from how their space looks or what they are or are not doing. I think one of the big differences between when I talk about like systems for the home and what like maybe other books or other
Creators or self-help people talk about is like I don't have a program. I don't have like a okay one two three four steps in your
Home will be clean. I have really a philosophy
and it's kind of based on two main ideas and the first is that care tasks are morally neutral.
So off the bat, we're going to stop calling them chores, housework, and we're just calling them
care tasks because that's what they are. They're just tasks that care for us. And when I say they're
morally neutral, what I mean is that the way that you do them, whether you do them, how often you do them, whether you struggle with them,
that is no reflection on whether you are a good or bad person, whether you are a success
or a failure. And then from there, we sort of start to build this self-compassionate messaging
about, you know, what does my house mean about me? And really try to get away from this
idea that I exist to serve my house. And instead lean into the idea that my house mean about me and really try to get away from this idea that I exist to serve my house and instead lean into the idea that my house exists to serve me.
And we kind of just, I like to give people permission to break the rules and do things
only kind of good enough and just get creative about the way that they can change their
environment and their home and the way that they talk to themselves to have a more functional space and a better quality of life.
Making my space work for me rather than me working for my space. What's an example of the difference just to delineate for everyone?
Sure. So let's just take laundry. For the longest time, I am someone who has just always lived with sort of like clothes scattered all about my house or my room.
I will put laundry into the washer at a random time when I realize that I've sort of run
out of clothes.
I typically forget that I've put it in the washer, so I'll come back like three days later
when it smells like mildew and then be like, ah, rewash it, get it in the dryer.
Then it sits in the dryer for a few days.
And then I'll be living out of that
pile of clothes, kind of the whole time thinking like, I really should go full of those clothes.
And I'm also being very reactive to my home.
So I don't have a plan for when I do laundry.
I just wait till I've run out of clothes on a Monday morning when I'm freaking out because I have nothing clean to wear.
And I don't have a plan for when I do my dishes.
I just sort of wait until I can't find a dish. I don't have a plan for when I do my dishes. I just sort of wait until I can't find a dish.
I don't have a plan for when I change my sheets,
except for the night that I crawl in
and realize that there's like cat litter in the bed
because my cats have walked all over it.
So it's sort of this two part.
One is that I started thinking about me and my brain.
So I have ADHD, I have two little kids.
And so I started creating little patterns for myself
where I was like, okay, I'm just gonna like
change my sheets every Thursday.
And maybe like the general advice out there is like,
well, you really only need to go every two weeks,
but my brain doesn't compute like two weeks at a time.
But my brain can compute like every Thursday,
every Thursday, every Thursday.
And the other part that I realized
that was kind of stressing me out was that
at the time my kids were one in three,
so I was still dressing them.
And it just sort of hit me like,
why am I going to three different areas in my house
to dress people that I am the one dressing?
Like that seems silly.
And so I did what I call family closet
where I put all of our like family's clothes
into one big closet,
and then I stopped folding clothes.
Like I just put in some baskets,
and I was like, you know what, I'm just gonna sit on my butt,
and in eight minutes I could have like three loads sorted
so that like everyone knows where their clothes are,
they're clean, they're accessible,
and they're not on the floor.
And that's what works for me.
It's not my job to like do laundry
the way that laundry quote unquote should be done.
It's my laundry's job to live within a system
that works for me, my lifestyle, my brain,
maybe my barriers or my disabilities.
So that's kind of what I mean by that.
I mean, it's so person centered.
Like that's what I keep thinking that like you're centered in that moment and that task,
right?
Coming from the questions, what works for me?
What serves me?
And even that every Thursday changing your sheet schedule, like, I know you well enough by
now to know you're like, I'm doing that not because that's better than someone who changes
every other week, right? But every Thursday is the best fit for me. It really centers what works
for you, your desires, your needs. Is that, is that right? Totally. And I was recently actually on my channel
talking about patterns versus routines. And a lot of people like to say, oh, like 80-HB
people like routines, or like that new mom should get on a routine. And like, that's not
actually true. I don't actually like routines. I like patterns and rhythms. And when I explain the difference, the difference would be that like routines are usually
like connected to a time, so like here's my morning routine. A routine has multi-step phases.
So like wash your face, then brush your teeth might be a routine, but like there's a lot of steps
in that, right? But the biggest thing comes down to this. A routine is an expectation,
and a pattern is a tool. So I might develop that when I clean my kitchen, I have a pattern
and a rhythm that I do every time. I clean all of the trash and throw it away. I put all
of the dishes in the sink. I put up all the things that go in the cabinet, and then I take all of the dishes from the sink,
and I organize them, still dirty, with likes with likes,
then I open my dishwasher and load them in category
at a time, then I sweep my floor,
and then I go from left to right
around wiping everything down.
And I don't have to do that at any time.
I don't need to, you know, make sure I do it every
night or every Sunday or every whatever. But when I find, oh, I'm noticing that my kitchen isn't
functional anymore. I want to reset my kitchen so that it's more functional for me because I am a
person that deserves a function in kitchen, not because kitchens should look a certain way, or because that means anything about me
to have a messy kitchen.
I go in with this pattern.
And what it does is that it kind of puts me on autopilot.
I don't have this decision paralysis.
I'm not having to think about what I'm doing.
It moves pretty quickly.
So that is something that serves me.
That's a tool that I use to help me.
As you're talking about this, it feels like a dance. Like there's like a dance to it. Like, you know, like if we... Well, that's a tool that I use to help me. As you're talking about this, it feels like a dance.
Like there's like a dance to it.
Like, you know, like if we,
let's waste the rhythm.
Yeah, right?
Like you're on the dance floor and, I don't know, for me,
I'm not like a dancer professionally,
but if I'm dancing, I'm not like,
oh, I didn't do that exact move I wanted to do.
I'm such a horrible person.
It's like, like enough.
Like I kind of know what I want to do
and a couple of moves I got down, you know?
But like, it doesn't have to be so prescriptive.
And I think that prescriptive nature you're saying is what
is so equated with morality for so many of us
and then the irony is then we activate the shame spiral.
Shame is a freeze defense state.
We can't do anything in that way.
Then we see that as more evidence
that we're a horrible person
and then we're just, you know, in a abyss.
Totally. And this idea that as more evidence that we're a horrible person and then we're just, you know, in and of this. Totally.
And this idea that, you know, I don't need to self-improve to reach the mountaintop of
worthiness.
Like I'm worthy now.
The only reason I'm trying to quote unquote, improve anything is because I'm a person
that deserves to function.
Like I deserve to wake up in the morning and roll into getting my kids ready without
like feeling the stress of like searching for the cup they were drinking for yesterday that
is probably curdled milk under the fridge. And now I'm like trying to hand clean it while they're
like crying because they're hungry. Like that's stressful. I'm not a bad mom if that happens. It's
just stressful and it's more enjoyable and functional for me.
And the cool thing about rhythms over routines,
and this was some, I learned that language
from a friend of mine who's a psychologist,
Dr. Leslie Cook, but when you think about rhythms,
like you can have an every Thursday rhythm, right?
Like you can have that pop song that is a predictable beat,
and it's, you know, the same thing, the same pattern. But then you can also
have like a jazz rhythm that isn't predictable. Isn't every Thursday. And so I can have a rhythm
that is every night I like to do these three things. But I can also have a rhythm that is,
I don't necessarily have a plan for my bedroom. But when I start to notice my bedroom isn't serving me anymore, I have a pattern
where I get four baskets, ones for trash, ones for laundry, ones for dishes, and ones for things that
belong into another room. And then I start at the top, right? All the trash, all the laundry, all the
and I'm fine that I'm getting things done quicker. I'm not struggling with motivation. I'm not
struggling with the task initiation of, I need to do that, but it's going to be so awful. It just really
circumvents a lot of barriers that we feel about sort of getting the momentum
going and addressing our space.
It's always been important to me to speak about the very real things in real life that
parents are really dealing with.
An overall immunity is just one of those things.
We want our kids to feel good in their bodies no matter what, to feel physically good inside.
And we all want fewer sick days, am I right?
Well, one way we can support this is with a daily prebiotic
and probiotic. PDS-08 from seed is a clinically studied two-in-one pediatric daily sinbiotic
that supports digestion and helps kids with easy frequent poops. It aids in filling the
fiber gap for most kids, and it's formulated with strains that support immune health, which actually starts
in the gut.
And bonus for busy parents, the container has a built in daily tracking system, so you
never miss a day.
So easy.
To get 20% off plus free shipping on your first month supply, use code good inside at
seed.com. So I'm on for cheats a little bit in hacks just because like we all need, you know, some
time savers around here.
So I keep thinking about this as you speak.
So tell me if this is in line with your approach.
I find the word should to be a great clue word.
It's just a great word to pause and get a little skeptical about.
So should is a very
outward gazing indication. I should, means like, I am literally looking at an expectation that
someone, an individual society, I don't know, has put on me. That's a should clue. And that also
really links with morality, right? Because when I should do something, there's some connection
with like, I'm a better person. If I do this like, I'm a better person if I do this thing,
I'm a hard person if I don't.
Like I wonder if we all start to catch our should.
So for me, it might be like,
I really should clean up all the toys
that are still out after my kids went to bed.
I don't know.
And if we note that and say, okay, there's the should.
And I feel like there's something you do
where like you help us replace it with like,
and I deserve statement.
Instead of I should clean up the toys,
I deserve to walk in this room and not trip on things
and fall down, right?
And maybe if it's not even that messy,
I'm like, oh well, I already have that.
Oh, maybe I am just gonna go to bed
because maybe I already have the system that works for me.
Yeah, because I deserve a functional kitchen, but I also deserve rest.
And so some nights, I get to choose to not touch the kitchen at all because I also deserve rest.
Or I get to choose to do some part of the kitchen so that I can rest. Like I get to choose to have
good enough or the bare minimum. And so I do, I want to replace this should,
which is about performing to expectations,
this sort of performative housekeeping
that I think a lot of us do,
and really replace it with the I deserve.
And I think in general,
even when we're talking to other people
or talking as experts,
I think that we should replace should with benefit.
So don't tell me what I should do.
Tell me what the benefit of X is.
Right? So even if you're talking about parenting things,
like don't say that I should back forward face or rear face my kid,
say, tell me that the benefit of rear facing my kid for four years
is that their spines aren't fully grown and
they're more likely to be injured in a car like that has this incredible respect for
the person hearing that information that like I can hear that and then make a choice
that's right for me and my family.
And obviously I want to take that benefit and that one's an easy clear cut one.
But if we think about other types of things,
that, you know, oh, hey, tell me about the benefit of,
you know, waking up early and doing a morning meditation.
Okay, great.
So you can tell me all about the benefits of that,
and I get to listen to that and then go,
that's great.
However, the benefit of an extra hour of sleep for me right now during
this season, when I've got A, B, and C going on, is actually a more important value to me now.
And I'm going to choose to utilize that benefit over this benefit. And it just has so much more
respect for the listener as the captain of their own ship, as the expert in their own life,
as the captain of their own ship, as the expert in their own life,
to prioritize and deprioritize things in a way that best serves them.
Also, not controlling, right? And as humans, we don't like to feel controlled.
Our kids don't like feeling controlled.
We don't like feeling controlled,
because then we have to battle for our own existence
and our individuality.
So we have to take the other side of something.
Right, I often think about this with potty stuff, like the way we say to kids, like,
you have to go to the bathroom before we get in this long car ride.
I'm like, if my husband ever said that to me, I don't even care how much I would pee in
my pants, I would definitely not go to the bathroom, because I would have to show him,
hey, on my own person, and I'm defending my existence by resisting, so no, I'm not going
to the bathroom, right?
And a should is really, you should even
that face your kid backwards.
Or you really should get up in the morning and exercise.
You know you would feel better, right?
Someone else has to hold on to the other side again,
just to feel like an independent person.
But you're right, showing someone,
or naming a benefit, right?
First of all, you're owning it from your own perspective.
Like, well, here's what we know,
or here's what I know about getting up and exercising. And it leaves someone else still able to make any decision and feel like an
independent person because you're not doing it from a place of trust. You're doing it
from a place of almost just like, here's some education on the matter. I trust you to
then make your own decision. I think that that's so powerful.
And I think it decreases the shame that we feel too, right?
And I think that's one of the problems
with sort of the commercialized self-help industry
is that they'll take something that is a good thing
like waking up early and exercising.
Like there are a lot of benefits to that.
But they moralize it by making it
the sort of superior choice over any other benefit.
And then the implication is,
if you're not choosing that benefit, it's
because you're not healthy enough, you're not enlightened enough, you're not smart enough,
you don't have enough willpower, you don't care enough. When none of those things are probably
true, you're probably just recognizing that in your own life, there's a different benefit.
Like none of us can have the benefit of all the things all the time, right? Like we have to pick and choose.
And if you're not, like if I'm in a place where I'm not actually just like picking a benefit, I actually just,
I mean, I want to do this thing. I need this thing, but I can't seem to do it. Well, that's still not an issue of morals.
That's an issue of ability. That's an issue of someone that needs support and skills
and compassion and non-judgment. They don't need the extra weight of, I am failing because I can't
make myself do this self-help advice. And I think for everyone listening, it's really powerful to
think about both sides of that because as soon as we say to ourselves, okay, I got up this morning
and I did work out and like I finally feel in
some ways like a worthy good person.
That's as dangerous as staying in bed and you know, kind of shit talking yourself, right?
Because motivating yourself or rewarding yourself in some ways from a place of morality only
sets you up for the flip side.
And I know you talk about that a lot too
in terms of rest, right? Like resting from a place of shame, right? Can you can you speak to that?
It's your idea. So I'll let you know. Yeah. So yeah, I think that what happens to a lot of people
is that they don't feel like they're allowed to rest until everything's done. And the problem with
that is when it comes to care tasks, which are cyclical and ongoing, they're never done, right? Like we're not children. We don't have a finite
list of four chores that we can then go play. It's never done. And when you have this moralized hierarchy
of it's always the more responsible, better matured person thing to go do that task then to sit down on the couch, you will do and do and do and do and do.
And then you'll kind of like start to not be able to do that anymore.
And you'll start sitting on the couch and you'll start laying down and you'll start
procrastinating and putting things off.
But what will happen is that as you are resting there, you will be feeling so much shame
about the fact that you are resting and not quote, working that you won't actually get any rest.
And then you'll feel like you want more rest and you'll go, well, I just laid on the couch
all day.
How can I not sort of rally myself to do one load of laundry?
And what we do is the conclusion we make is I must not be working hard enough.
I need to push myself more. But in my experience,
for most people, it's counterintuitive. Actually, you need to rest more, but you need to rest fully
and with permission, because if you were fully rested, people are afraid that if they allow themselves
to rest with no strings attached, they'll just rest forever and just like atrophy into their couch.
That will not happen unless you have other
sort of disorders or disabilities happening that need more support.
If I lay around, at some point I go, oh, now it doesn't feel comfortable to lay.
Now I want to do something.
Now I want to get this done.
And so I think that resting in shame, I find that people that work in shame rest in shame.
And I'd love to lay a couple things on top of that for everyone listening.
Number one, I think it's powerful to reflect
on our own upbringing.
And if you came from a house of, we don't sleep in,
and come on, there's more than you can do.
Or it's even almost more indirect,
like commenting on other families laziness,
or in our family, the early bird gets the worm, right?
Things like that.
We pick up on these values in our own family of origin and who we need to be.
Then the part of you that wanted to rest and pause and exist without productivity, you
had to really shut down that part to adapt to your system.
That was actually very adaptive to do.
I actually think as adults, we need to start from a place of gratitude.
I go, thank you, kind of system inside me for figuring out that it was dangerous
in my family to say, I want to sleep in or no, I don't want to clean the house right now.
I really need to sit in the couch. And so as an adult, our bodies don't know that it's no longer 1980 or 2000, right? They don't understand that time frame.
And so now, when you're an adult, if it's really hard for you to get that rest, that KC is
describing, there's something from your past playing out in your present. And it's actually
pretty easy to be shameful about that. What's wrong with me? I can't even rest, right?
We're doubling shame on shame on shame.
Yep.
And I think the opposite messaging is really important,
which is, okay, something powerful is happening right now.
It is deeply uncomfortable for me to sit on the couch
and I'm learning something.
I'm right now noticing this part of me.
That was really helpful for my first, I don't know, 18 years.
It was really helpful to actually say those words, thank you, like thank you for your years of me. That was really helpful for my first, I don't know, 18 years. It was really helpful to actually say those words, thank you. Like thank you for your years of service.
You will probably continue to feel uncomfortable as I sit here for 60 more seconds. And still
in that discomfort, I am showing you that it's safer now, that I can trust the part of me that needs rest, that it won't subsume the part of me
that wants to get things done. And I think that that's a really different intervention than what
most of us usually do when we're struggling to rest and coming at it from a place of gratitude
and understanding of our history, I think is often the unlock
to practice this new skill. And it really is a skill, the skill of pausing and getting
rest. And it reminds me whenever I talk about self-compassion and sort of, you know, okay,
I'm looking at the dishes in the sink and I'm saying, ugh, I'm such a failure. Okay,
but what else could that mean? What's a more compassionate message? Because it could also mean that you have fed your family for the last three days. You have fed
yourself. But what's funny to me is that whenever someone comes to me and says, I'm really trying
to work on self-compassion, but I'm really struggling. I'm not very good at it. Like, how do I start?
And the funny thing is, it's like you start there. You start with being compassionate with yourself
about the fact that you're pretty shitty
at being compassionate with yourself.
Mm-hmm.
What is something someone listening could like do
or think or consider differently right after this,
that really would have a big impact on their lives,
the way that I think your framework does
for so many people.
Well, I think kind of the way the book approaches
this whole subject is talking about some of the,
like, internal influences that we can start to shift,
how we're talking to ourselves, recognizing the messages
we're giving ourselves when we see that something needs to be
cleaned or we don't want to go do that laundry,
that caretasks are morally neutral, that,
you know, and that first step is just observation. It's just awareness. It's not trying to change
anything. That first step is just recognizing how hard we really are being in our inner dialogue
and our inner monologue with ourselves. And from there, you can move to, you know, how can
I take steps to be more compassionate
to put in a sort of a purposeful, different message.
And then the other part of the book is really focused on the practical help.
How do I tackle a mess?
What kinds of things could I do with my dishes that would be easier?
And I think that when people are looking for, okay, practically where do I start? There's a kind of a couple of things.
One of my favorite little breakdowns is the five things tidying method, which is,
you know, when we look at a room and we're feeling really overwhelmed and anxious about
how much is in that room and how messy it is, reminding ourselves that in any room there
are only five things.
Trash, dishes, laundry, things that have a place,
and things that don't have a place. And I find that if we start and go category by category,
so instead of just picking up any item and then trying to put that one item away, which tends
to lead us to feeling overwhelmed, feeling decision fatigue, wandering about the house, getting distracted,
not making up progress, we stay in that room and just go category by category.
And that is a really great starting point for people
who are kind of overwhelmed and don't know where to start.
And then the other one is when I talk about closing duties,
that's my favorite sort of maintenance rhythm,
which is it came from because I was a server
and there's always like a joke in the world
of being a waiter that there's a morning shift and
a closing shift. And the closing duties that the night shift does are to set up the morning
shift for success, right? So they'll cut the lemons and roll the silverware and vacuum
under the tables. So everyone who's worked at a restaurant knows that feeling of walking into
the restaurant in the morning for your shift and looking around and there are no leavens cut and
Somebody didn't roll the silverware and you start screaming across who closed last night, right?
You just want to ring their necks and it started off as a joke on my TikTok channel where I would walk down the stairs in the morning
And I would look at the kitchen and I would go, oh who closed last night?
The joke of course being it was me. And so, when I started to think about closing duties for my
house, this finite set of things to do that would put my kitchen back to functional. And I would do
them by thinking about what do I need for the first few hours in the morning. So I'm not trying to make
the kitchen perfect or even clean, or, you know, I'm really just saying, what do I need for the first few hours in the morning? So I'm not trying to make the kitchen perfect or even clean or, you know, I'm really just
saying, what do I need first thing in the morning?
And I determine that actually I need only a few things.
I need enough dishes to eat breakfast.
I need enough counter space to safely prepare food.
I need an empty trash can with a bag in it.
And then, you know, maybe I need to pack a lunch
or I always add a kindness to self.
I wanna pre-make my coffee.
And if I do those things every evening,
and I do them as a kindness to my future self,
because morning Casey deserves a functional kitchen
in the morning, that started this snowball effect
of not only gaining a more functional
space, but gaining a better relationship to self, a better relationship to motivation,
a better relationship to care tasks. And it has really changed my life. And the key thing
for me, because I was a stay at home mom when I started this, is that I would put my children
to bed at seven, or actually my husband would put the children to bed. And I would use from seven to seven 30
to do closing duties, and then I clocked out.
It doesn't matter if the playroom is still a mess,
if the laundry is undone,
if I have to move a bunch of toys off of the couch
to sit down after that,
once I made the kitchen functional for the next day,
I clock out because I deserve to clock out.
I deserve to be off the clock and fully rest
and have some time autonomy,
not jumping up and having to do things.
I love your ideas, both of those ideas
and the closing duty is huge.
And I think anyone who's listening,
it might be familiar to things you've talked about
on Instagram or in the good inside communities
when things I say there are a lot
is this making coffee for myself,
you know, for the next morning, but not from a place.
If I notice I really should get up and make that coffee,
I'm like, no, no, no, no, I'm not doing it from that place.
Like, what can I do for my tomorrow self, right?
Like, there's things I do to help my kids mornings become easier.
And I deserve to treat myself with the same compassion.
And if it doesn't feel from that place,
then I deserve to not make coffee that night
and do something else.
And again, that person-centered approach of,
not I should, but what do I deserve?
That mindset shift sets you up for compassion and motivation,
rather than doing the same task from a place of blame and shame,
sets you up for blame and shame.
And I think we all know where that leads to,
and it's not pretty for any of us, right?
So I always think that if everyone here takes just one thing
from the conversation, noticing those sheds
and noticing what's the process in which I'm thinking
through this task is gonna give you more success,
like true success than any amount gonna give you more success, like true success,
than any amount of things you check off, right?
And I think your book lays out that framework
and then does even more translate that framework
into so many practical, actionable strategies, right?
I mean, we could have a whole nother podcast,
but your understanding of division of labor
and division of kind of rest,
you know, in terms of you and a partner
and so many other things in your book,
I think just make so many people take a deep breath
and think like, where has this information been?
All of my life and thank goodness I have this now.
And so thank you for spending so much time.
Thank you so much for writing this really important book.
Thank you, this was wonderful.
Thanks for listening.
To share a story or ask me a question,
go to goodinside.com, backslashpodcast.
You could also write me at podcastatgoodinside.com.
Parenting is the hardest and most important job in the world.
And parents deserve resources and support so they feel empowered, confident, and connected.
I'm so excited to share good inside membership.
The first platform that brings together content and experts you trust with a global community
of like- like valued parents.
It's totally game-changing. Good inside with Dr. Becky is produced by Jesse Baker
and Eric Newsom at Magnificent Noise. Our production staff includes Sabrina
Farhi, Julia Natt and Kristen Mueller. I would also like to thank Eric Kabelski, Mary Panneco, Jill
Cromwell-Wang, Ashley Valenzuela, 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.
you