Good Inside with Dr. Becky - “She Can’t Play With Us!” and Other Tricky Friendship Moments
Episode Date: January 11, 2022Unpopular opinion: It’s okay for our kids to like some kids better than others. After all, we want them to grow up into adults who can build meaningful relationships, which requires recognizing why ...they connect with certain people over others! Of course, we also want them to be kind, inclusive people. So, what’s a parent’s role in helping kids navigate tricky social situations? In this week’s episode, Dr. Becky talks to three parents about challenging peer dynamics—from leaving someone out on the playground to disliking a family friend’s daughter. She explains why curiosity is the most valuable social skill, and shares practical strategies on how to model it. Remember: We want to teach our kids how to think, not what to think. 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.
In today's episode, we'll be talking all about peer dynamics.
What happens when your kids say, I don't like this person.
What happens when your kids don't like to play with someone and you're really good family
friends with the parents?
What is a parent's role in helping our kids navigate social dynamics.
I've received so many voicemails on the topic of peer relationships.
So I know it's on everyone's mind and it is definitely on my mind this year as well.
So with all of that in mind, let's jump in.
Our first caller is Katie.
Hi, that's Jessica Becky.
My name is Katie and I live in Monclon, New Jersey and I'm calling about my daughter who
is five years old and just started kindergarten.
A specific situation I'm thinking of is with my daughter, which has happened during
recess, where she was playing with one little girl and friends in her class and the
other friend from her class wanted to come and play with them.
And she didn't want to play with this other little girl and my daughter ran away and she
played with another group and upset the one
that the little girl who wanted to play with her.
And any tips or suggestions you have with talking to our kids
about these situations or how to, you know,
if we should not be talking to them about them and letting them handle these situations
and if we should just be modeling the good behavior
of what sort of behavior and empathy we want them to have,
and how should we be helping them?
Because I think that the sort of situation
happens for my daughter.
In this case, she was the one who ran away,
but the next day it could be her,
like it's left out, or she's the one
that someone doesn't want to play with.
And I think that these situations in this day
and I think between the girls changes every day,
and I just would love some tips on how to talk to her
and talk about this stuff at home.
And when an apology or a recognition of her behavior
is necessary at all.
Hi, Katie. Thank you for calling in and for raising so many really important
questions that I think are on so many parents' mind. What is our role in our kids'
friendships? What happens when they report things that happened in school?
What happens when we see things on the playground? Really,
really important questions and something that'll be great for us to think through together.
So, a couple ideas on my mind. Number one, I think we have to consider what our goal is.
When we're talking to our kids about their peer interactions. So, kind of taking a more zoomed out perspective. Our kid is four.
Our kid is seven. I think we all know that figuring out peer relationships is always tricky.
It's tricky when you're in elementary school. It's tricky when you're in high school. It's tricky
when you're an adult. It never gets to be completely easy. And so for me, with my kids,
to be completely easy. And so for me, with my kids, my goal for them kind of involves two things. Number one, I really want to establish myself as someone they can continue to talk to about
these things. It's not like I'm going to say one really smart thing and then my daughter is going
to think one day, wow, my mom said something so smart to me when I was seven and I just figured out
every peer interaction after that, she's amazing.
That's never going to happen, right?
It's laughable.
What I do hope gets almost embedded inside her is peer interactions can be tricky and there's
an adult in my family home who helps me think through those dynamics.
I would ask us to all take that on as a goal, because the best we can
hope for is that our child continues to come to us as a thought partner to think through the
situations that will always be tricky. And that also alleviates some of the pressure we put on
ourselves to kind of say the right thing. What's the second goal I have? Well, it actually kind of relates to that first.
I really want to teach my kids how to think, not what to think.
I actually don't think we can teach our kids
what to think anyway, or if we are successful,
we're actually controlling their thoughts,
kind of doing something that makes our thoughts their thoughts.
And that's not something I think is going to be successful
in building their self-confidence or sense of self
for the things that really matter in the long run.
What does that mean?
How to think?
Well, I hope my kids, as they get older, learn to pause,
learn to be curious, ask themselves more questions
than they conclude immediate answers.
So I would love one day if I over here my child saying,
yeah, I don't really know what my friend meant
when they said that to me versus,
oh, I think that person doesn't like me
and I don't wanna be friends with him either.
Right, we wanna teach our kids how to think,
how to pause, how to wonder,
how to notice how things feel to them,
how to kind of put data together,
how to make decisions for themselves that feel right rather than making a decision that seems to
feel good to all their peers. And to do this, it's really a slow burn. It really involves us
continually being part of these conversations. And helping our kids ask more questions, then have definitive answers.
So, what would that look like in a conversation
with your daughter?
I would say to really activate your curiosity.
Remind yourself, there's no right answers here.
And I'm gonna actually go into this conversation
with my daughter kind of as a naive scientist.
That's always the mindset I try to adopt.
So my child tells me,
well, I didn't want to play with this person
and she started crying,
but I really didn't want to do that.
I wanted to do this other activity.
If I have all the answers, I might give advice.
Well, you could have said it this way.
Well, how would you feel if someone said
that they don't want to play with you, right?
I would be trying to guide my child
toward a specific end. If I'm activating curiosity and I tell myself I don't have the answer,
let me just wonder with my child so my child can wonder with herself and learn to ask
herself questions. I might say something like this. Huh, that's interesting. Tell me more. Huh, then what happened? I might recap.
Oh, so they were playing on the slide and you thought you wanted to play on the slide and then something happened,
you didn't want to do the slide anymore and you wanted to do soccer. Is that right?
Hmm, something happened where you wanted to be on the slide.
Another friend came over, you didn't, and you changed activities, huh?
Then pause.
It's amazing how much our kids will share with us when we kind of just hold space for them.
When we don't lead them somewhere, when we don't have any judgment, where we don't give
them any explicit advice, we're really showing them through this recap.
I hear you.
There's something important here, but you're the narrator of this story, not me.
Why is this actually helpful to your child?
Because what's going to be useful in peer interactions
is not figuring out this moment on the slide,
but being able to think through,
why do I like to do some activities and not others?
What is it like for me when someone does get upset?
Does that make me feel like I should have said something different?
Does that make me feel like I did something wrong?
Is there a way I could express myself that honors my needs and still is respectful to others?
We want our kids to wonder about things.
And the more we're willing to ask questions, the more your kids will start to put things together
in their own mind. Katie, I have a feeling that some of the other strategies I talk about in this
episode will also be very relevant to you and your daughter, so keep listening.
Let's hear from our next caller, Becky.
Hi Dr. Becky, this is Becky.
I live in Texas and I have a four year old little boy.
I have a situation come up lately that I'm just kind of perfect from.
I'm exactly how to deal with it.
My little boy trusted school for the first time and so he is
in covering all different kids that he has never encountered before and some of those
kids I think are a little bit emotionally not as mature as him and socially maybe actually
and honestly my little boy is figuring out social interaction still of course too.
But he has had two of ways that he has said something about not wanting to play with them
and not wanting them to be invited to class play dates, not wanting to invite them to
like a future party he could potentially have.
And I just don't really know what to do about it.
I want him to grow up to be an inclusive person, to be kind to everyone, to be respectful of everyone.
And the teacher is that something about one time in class where he didn't want one of those
little boys to be able to come into an area that she kind of intervened.
So I'm just perplexed on what to do about it because I want him to also have the freedom
to choose his own friends and to establish really deep friendships and just not sure what to do.
Hi, Becky. First and foremost, great name.
Just have to put that out there.
But I promise I actually have some other things to add as well.
I was really so excited to hear this voicemail
because it raises so many things
that I think are so important.
And that we often intervene with our kids
from such a well-intentioned place
when it comes to our kids not liking certain kids
or not wanting to play with certain kids.
And yet, we often end up working against our long-term goals.
So I wanna put a different framework on these comments
our kids make.
So your kid says to you,
I don't wanna have a play date with Jason
or I don't like playing with Jason at school.
It's okay to like some people better than other people.
And to say this more directly in terms of our kids,
it's okay for our kids to like some kids better than they like other kids.
I think we're so afraid to allow this to be true.
It says, if we worry we're teaching,
some awful, wrong lesson.
I think we're teaching the right lesson.
I don't know any of us who want our 30-year-old kids
to say, the row someone my way would be happy to marry them.
I really can't differentiate between people.
I really, really like inside and. I really, really like inside
and people I don't really like inside. They're all the same to me. This is definitely not what we
want our kids to say. And we can't expect our adult kids to generate experiences that weren't allowed
during their formative years. Now, another thing I have to add on here is we need to differentiate, as always, between
feelings and behaviors.
Here's the irony.
We can't regulate feelings we don't allow ourselves to have.
And kids are always asking, parents, if it's okay to have certain feelings.
The more we allow a feeling, the more we can learn about it, the more we can actually
help regulate that feeling, which makes it less likely to turn into behavior.
What does this have to do with friendship and this made up person Jason?
Well, the more we allow our kid to not want to play with Jason, the less likely our kid
is going to be to say nasty things to Jason.
Why?
Because if our kid is allowed to have that experience, it would lead to our saying things like,
huh, there must be something about Jason that doesn't feel good.
Tell me more about that. Oh, you're building towers and it seems like whenever
he's doing a tower with you, he knocks it down. That really doesn't feel good to
you. Huh, tell me the things you've tried in terms of talking to him. Oh,
you've done that and that. Oh, I understand why you might not want to build with Jason.
I wonder how you could tell him that in a way that really does preserve your block building.
And also, does it in a way that's as kind as possible? I'm teaching my kids such an important lesson
that it's okay to say no to people. It's okay to honor our feelings. Now because I've allowed this experience, I can get to a place where I'm even role-playing
how to say no to someone in a respectful way.
If I don't allow this experience, my child has built no skills and maybe even has shame
around this experience.
Not building skills and adding shame is just a recipe for acting out behavior.
What's the main point?
We want our kids to be aware of how their body feels
around different people.
That's really adaptive in the long run.
I think one way of summarizing this, Becky,
because I always like kind of quick phrases to hold on to,
is let's replace shutting down with opening up.
My kid says, I don't want to play with Jason.
Shutting down would look like that's not nice.
Jason likes to play with you.
Come on, there's something you can do with him.
That's fun.
Or we don't say things like that in this family.
Those are shutting down responses.
What's opening up?
Huh.
I wonder what makes a kid someone you want to play with?
Versus someone you don't want to play with.
Huh, I wonder if something happened with Jason recently that didn't feel good.
You must have a reason to be saying that.
Let's figure this out together.
Now one more thing to add on.
To me, this is a totally different conversation,
then whether I insist or not that we invite Jason to my child's birthday party.
Right, let's say I'm having a birthday party and basically all the kids are invited. I would
imagine saying to my child, here's the thing. We're inviting most of the kids in your class
and it just doesn't feel right to leave out too.
Right?
That's a decision I'm making.
There's no shaving my kid.
I'm not saying they're doing something wrong.
I'm not saying they have to like having Jason
at their party.
I'm just making this decision because I'm an adult.
Rather, I could also see a situation
where my child says,
I don't wanna have everybody at my party.
I wanna have three friends.
And I would have to really check in with myself, I think, in that situation and say,
this probably isn't really a matter of being nice or mean or inclusive versus exclusive.
Might it be okay to allow my child to have that version of a party and maybe even check in further and say,
what is it like for me to say no?
What is it like for me to put up boundaries?
We actually need to kind of check in
about those dynamics inside of us
to be able to fully show up in a sturdy way to our final caller, Candace.
Hi Dr. Becky, my name is Candace and I live in New York.
I have two daughters ages seven and five.
I'm calling to ask for your guidance on a tricky situation regarding social dynamics among
children.
My two best friends and I have daughters around the same age,
and every now and then the three families who gather at a park
for someone's home.
It tends to happen on more than one occasion that one of the girls
who's five years old as an only child will get upset that no one is playing with her.
I've asked my daughters after the play date for their input
on why they don't want to play with this child. The feedback I receive is that she is unfair,
whines, and complaints often. During these play dates, my children can come across as mean-spirited
girls who reject and run away from this child. My children are usually firm on their feelings
and when something is uncomfortable, they make a choice to step away and don't from this child. My children are usually firm on their feelings
and when something is uncomfortable,
they make a choice to step away and don't want to engage.
I don't want to have to force my children to play with her
as that doesn't foster natural play and socialization.
However, not having these get-togethers
doesn't make sense either as us moms are all lifelong friends.
Any thoughts you can share on navigating this sort of situation
or things I can say to my children that may encourage them to feel comfortable
about being more inclusive would be greatly appreciated.
Hi Candace.
I'm just kind of sighing because my first reaction is this just really stinks.
I just wanna name that, that stinks.
It stinks to have a best friend, two best friends.
You wanna be together, you have daughters at the same age,
it's kind of a dream come true until you see the reality
and you think, oh my goodness, this is a nightmare.
And it's so awkward.
And I think it's so disappointing.
And I think there's real loss there.
It's loss of a fantasy but that's still loss and I want to name that and I'd actually really
encourage you to give that to yourself, to really care about the feelings you have about the situation,
both because those feelings matter
and also taking care of our own feelings
helps us see things with greater clarity.
So that our own, if you will, stuff
doesn't bleed into our interventions with our kids.
So just take a moment and say to yourself, simply,
oh, this is trickier than I wish it was.
Oh, I really had this image of what this would be like,
and it seems like all the elements are in place,
except for the reality of how things are.
That stinks, and I'm allowed to feel sad about that,
I'm allowed to feel mad about that,
and I care about those feelings.
Next, talk to your daughters,
and when you talk to them, I'd validate what's
happening for them first without suggesting that they have to behave in a different way.
That's always a helpful way for anyone to approach us, right? By actually validating how
we do feel, by being curious about how we do feel, about trying to understand how we do feel by being curious about how we do feel, about trying to understand
how we do feel. What we're really doing there with someone then is we form a lot of what
I call a connection capital, right? And that allows for things to change or at least have
the possibility of change. So what would that sound like?
Hey, you know what I'm thinking about? Tomorrow we're going to see and then, you know, whatever the friends name.
And here's what that means.
Something I'm looking forward to, it's my two best friends and I know that's tricky.
Because I know, whatever the daughter's name is, is someone that you don't have the easiest time playing with.
Now, if you notice in my language, there's no bad person. There's no
one who's cruel. There's no blame. There's no shame. Even that phrase, she's
someone you have a hard time having fun with. She's someone you have a hard time
playing with. She's someone where it feels tricky to do anything that feels
really good for a prolonged period of time. By giving this really generous
interpretation,
a maintaining connection with my daughters, and I might learn a little bit more,
and also, I'm leaving open. I think the possibility of movement here, because I'm not provoking
my kid's defensiveness. I'd pause after that. See what your kids say. If they don't say much, I'd go a little bit further.
Here's what I'm thinking about.
I wonder if there's anything that could feel good,
even for a little bit.
All right, I wonder what it changed things if,
you know, when you guys play that board game,
I play it with you.
What it changed things if I say, you know what, maybe we don't have to go for three hours.
Let's just go to this house for 45 minutes.
I wonder because I'm trying to figure out a way to honor
the family's desire to be with each other
and your experience of what it's like to actually
be with each other.
Where could I see going from there?
I might even see if my kids are open to a role play, right?
Let's say they always end up getting into an argument about a certain game they play.
I might try to mimic that and say, ugh, I wonder if there's a way you can say I really
don't like that.
Huh.
That's set in a way you would be okay hearing it if someone said that to you.
Hmm, let's even practice that. I wonder how you react to my different ways of saying that.
I don't want to play with you anymore. I really don't like that. I really didn't like that.
Hmm, so interesting. Isn't that interesting that we can tell someone something was strong words
Isn't that interesting that we can tell someone something was strong words and still do it in a way
That actually allows them to hear it because they don't feel kind of so blame that is so tricky to figure out right and again I'm leading with validation with empathy. There's a little skill building there
But nobody is in the bad kid role and nobody is wrong.
Now Candice, one of the things I'm aware of is this is all messier than it seems right here.
So the other thing I would really kind of be prepared with is language for how to handle moments
that feel really not so kind with your friend's daughter. So be prepared to say things like,
hey, I need the two of you to come with me. We need to talk and pull your kids out of the room.
If you notice something that feels really, really hurtful happening. Again, I don't want to end up
saying to my kids, you girls are being so nasty. Can you be nice to her once? Because that's actually
going to shut down your kids further.
So I'd practice a way of setting a boundary,
maybe even review this with your daughters.
Hey, if things get to a point
where they seem kind of out of control,
I'm gonna ask the two of you to come into a room with me.
You're not gonna be in trouble, you're not bad kids.
This is just a way for us to kind of take a break
and figure out a solution together.
Thank you Katie, Becky, and Candace for calling in and sharing stories from your home.
Let's tie it all together with three takeaways. One, when it comes to talking with your kids about peer dynamics, focus on activating
your curiosity rather than solving problems or offering guidance right away.
When we ask questions, we help our kids learn to ask themselves questions, and this is how they will learn to think through tricky social situations.
2. It's okay for our kids to like some kids better than other kids.
We all like some adults better than other adults. Remind yourself, this is a safe feeling. I can allow my kid to express these preferences
and actually by talking it out with them, I make it less likely for them to say something
rude or mean to the kids they don't prefer to be with. Three, dry runs and roleplays are great strategies
for tricky, peer situations.
If you know you're going to a situation
where your child might be uncomfortable
or your child has to go see someone
that they often get into arguments with,
mimic one of these situations in your own house.
Model, how to take a deep breath.
Model for your child.
How to set a boundary firmly and kindly.
Our kids learn so much when we're willing to practice situations with them.
Plus, doing a dry run is really helpful for us,
in that it allows our body to get ready for a tricky situation to come,
and therefore it makes us less reactive and more likely to show up as the parent we want to be.
Thanks for listening to Good Inside. There are so many more strategies and tips I want to share with you.
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an executive produced by Erica Belzky and me, Dr. Becky.
If you enjoyed this episode, please take a moment to rate and review it,
or share this episode with a friend or family member as a way to start an important conversation. 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