Good Inside with Dr. Becky - Trying to Be Everything
Episode Date: January 31, 2023Our kids often ask us questions that wish we could buy ourselves a little more time for before we had to answer. Recently, Dr. Becky helped prep two dads of twin toddlers for some existential question...s they know are coming their way. Together, they talk through letting go of the idea that we, as parents, can be everything to our kids.Join Good Inside Membership: bit.ly/3DbMbIc 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
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I'm Dr. Becky, and this is good inside.
Here's something I hear a lot from parents.
I want to give my kids everything.
Or I want to be everything to my kids.
It is sort of a deeper fear on some level that I'm depriving
or children of something.
When I know in my heart that two loving parents who...
You know, are so devoted to them, they're lucky to have that with
us. I do, I don't think I'm depriving them, but I guess there's this sort of underlying
fear that I don't address often about how can I address if there is something lacking
in their lives, how do I address that? And in this case, is it that there isn't a woman
every day there for them?
I recently sat down with two dads of twin toddlers
to talk about their concerns
about making sure their kids have meaningful relationships
with women, about helping them understand
that they don't have a mother,
and about being prepared for the tricky questions
that will inevitably come their way.
Here's what's interesting,
and I think applies to all of us.
What our conversation ended up really centering on is reframing the limitations we have with our kids
and rethinking the idea of being everything to anyone. We'll be right back.
We'll be right back. Hey Sabrina.
Hey.
So I've been thinking about toys recently.
I don't want the toy to do that much of the work.
I want the toy to inspire my kid to do the work.
Because actually the toys that get really busy and do a lot of things, kids actually lose
interest in so quickly.
Oh totally.
There are certain toys that my kids have just played with
throughout the years.
I have a six year old and a three year old.
Like what?
So I have these wooden blocks from Melissa and Doug.
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 is our 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 MelissaAndUg.com and use code DrBecky20DRBECKY20 for 20% off your order.
Melissa and Doug, timeless toys, endless possibilities.
Hi Jeremiah, hi Pierre.
Hi.
Hi DrBecky.
It is really nice to meet both of you and looking forward to getting to know you.
So tell me a little bit about the two of you, your family, and like the topic that's on your
mind that you want to discuss.
Sure, I'll go first.
So we are two dads and we have two and a half year old twins and they were born or conceived through
surrogacy. And the reason why I'm mentioning this is that in the concept of surrogacy and
like an adoption, you really don't have a mother at all. You have a carrier as opposed to
a birth mother and you have an egg donor as opposed to a biological mother. This being said,
we've not ignored the concept of mothers
and over the past two years, obviously,
we have read tons of books with mothers and sex songs
with mothers, although I should say
we sometimes took liberty of changing the word here and there
from mummy and daddy to daddy and papa.
I should tell you daddy and papa, obviously,
the French man is papa and Jeremiah is daddy. And last point of context is that the kids started preschool.
It took program really in September. That same month, we noticed that our daughter
was playing with her dolls and two interesting things happened. One is that you
referred to herself as Mama, which I found interesting
because she had a little exposure to actual moms in the past, except in books. And second,
is that she made the following statement, which I still remember for Baidem, and I remember
where I was, and which Dolce was playing with. She said, Oh, you fell. You have a boo boo. You're crying.
You need your mama. And at that point, I felt ill equipped to say anything. I think I stuttered
something along the lines of, well, if your doll is crying, you know, go see Papa as well.
But I've failed almost embarrassed not to know exactly what to tell her.
And I think that was a clear indication that the question of where her mother is is coming
soon, probably sooner than what I expected.
And to me, that question could either come from her to us at home
or maybe at school from a classmate,
and that's something that maybe wears me a lot more
because I wanna make sure that she has all the tools
to feel confident in the answer
that she will give when asked
that the very question at school.
So first of all, thank you for so vividly
and thoughtfully painting that picture. And so there's so many things I want to ask you about, but Pierre,
what was it like for you when she said that? And maybe I'll also lead in question. Like,
was it injurious in a way? Did it? It was because my worry was that she had articulated that thought in her mind that the boo-boo required
a mama to feel better, to heal.
Whereas, you know, I dare say we had given her all the comfort that she needed in the past.
So we're in my first session.
Why would you associate healing with a mother?
Yeah. And actually, I think this will probably be a theme in what we talk about, or maybe we'll
be something the two of you can carry after we talk, is when moments happen with one of your kids,
and what you said was helpful, kind of almost writing down verbatim what they say, that's almost
good. And then with each other, actually being really honest
about what does it feel like she's saying?
Like even if it's like, that's crazy,
I know she didn't say that because in this situation,
and you can tell me if I'm off,
like I could understand if it feels like she's saying,
like you have not given me the person
I am supposed to go to for comfort and love
in a time of injury.
Like you are messing me up, you have failed,
you are not that person.
There's some version of that that it can feel
like a kid is saying.
And I don't know, is any of that resonating?
I don't know, maybe I don't know whether I was good
that's really the worry, right?
And by the way, I know usually we're coming not fast forwarding
too much but I can't help thinking what's going to be like of their teachers right yeah
yeah father um where's my mother you can give me a mother so all that will I think crystallize
I was not thinking about that precisely in that moment but this sort of fear is coming for sure
great and thank you for correcting me.
Sometimes I like to say things almost provocatively,
just to get back to what actually feels right.
And so in this moment, there's a lot that happens
when you watch your daughter kind of create a play scenario
with this kind of loving, comforting mother.
How did that happen?
Where is she getting these ideas?
At some point, she's going to talk about this more directly. She's going to ask, is she going to be
upset about this? What is it going to be like when she's 13? What is it going to be like when she's
18? What's going to happen when it comes up at school? And how can I use the time I have with her
in the protection of our home to talk about things in a way that she feels kind of protected and prepared for when those moments inevitably come.
And I think it's important to articulate all of that because again, there's a gap between
your daughter is playing.
She has a moment of like very simple play in the moment.
And for us as parents, this happens all the time. One moment for a kid can bring up a whole world of questions
and concerns for a parent.
And then even there, there's a big gap between like,
okay, what's going on for me?
And what's going on for my child?
And just recognizing that is huge
and validating that to yourself.
Wow, this one moment of play really did surface.
A lot of questions, a lot of concerns,
and even some fears I have, all at once.
No wonder, or I always think the phrase make sense
to something our body loves to hear.
It makes sense that this is a moment I've played out
in my head a lot, I can't forget.
It makes sense that I remember the exact words my daughter said
because it evoked so many different pathways in my mind.
Jeremiah, jump in here.
Tell me what this is like for you to hear.
Yeah, what's on your mind about this?
Yeah, certainly.
I think to answer your question,
I think we did sort of make a bit of a mountain out
of that.
Mulhill, because it is something we're very sensitive to going forward with this family,
is how we talk about family structure with our children and how we talk about where
they came from and how this family was created.
I think a related topic for me that comes out of this is how do I make sure what can I do as
a parent to facilitate bonds between our children and adult women in their lives because that is
something that is important to me. And thankfully we have very strong women in our lives from their
grandmothers, their aunts, just our close friends who are often around. And we will constantly surround them with these people.
But what can I do to make sure that they have a bond
with other adults that they can trust and go to and talk to
when I'm not the one that can provide a certain topic
or they just need someone else to talk to aside from us?
Yeah.
So are those two the big questions?
Let me just state them so we can frame the rest
of our time together.
How can I make sure our kids have exposure,
have connection, have meaningful relationships with women?
Given that, we know they're growing up in a two-father family.
And as another question, how do I help my kids kind of understand
that they don't have a mother? And how can I help my kids kind of understand that they don't have a mother
and how can I help them be prepared
for kind of the questions that will come their way?
Precisely.
Yes.
Okay, let's jump into the latter one first,
the one that, that, right,
because I think it's actually gonna help us lead
or maybe even reframe the second question.
And so that's the order of operations that seems to make sense.
So have they asked you, right, that question or comes, right?
Where is my mommy?
Do I have a mommy?
Why don't I have a mommy?
Would make sense if that question directly came up.
And it would also really make sense that your kids ages
that it hadn't.
But just give me a baseline on where things are from that point of play to that very direct question.
It hasn't come yet, but I believe it's imminent weeks, if not days. Yeah.
Yeah. And tell me then the things that the two of you do say to your kids about family structure
and about your family structure. So we often pause in fact in books when traditional with family structure comes up and we say,
you know, you don't have a mummy, you have a daddy and a papa who love each other.
And some families have a mummy and a daddy, some families have two mothers, some family have two
fathers, some family have a single parent. By the way, this is exhausting because it means
that every time we pause and I always wonder
whether sometimes she's just move on as opposed
to having a Roch-Piel on family structure.
But we will pause there and keep going.
We have recently added references to G.E.
our wonderful carrier whom the met multiple times. She was in New
York last summer. And they understand that they were in Ginny's tummy. And I think Jeremiah, as well,
always add that Ginny is not your mother. And we move on. But that's a lot, right? That's a lot of
information every time, as I said, sometimes exhausting, because you just want to read a book and go through your bedtime routine. But they've heard those
words and hopefully understand that it's not just one family structure model.
So let me just say right away, that's amazing. That's amazing how much you've talked about. You
guys have said such a strong foundation for ongoing conversations, right?
Because that's something I think is just really important
to be prepared for.
I would say this to any family about anything complicated.
These aren't one-time talks, right?
It's not like a one-time bird's in the bees
to talk about sex.
It's not like a one-time conversation
about not having a mom.
And you guys have really set a foundation.
A couple of quick things.
Number one, let me just give you permission
to read the book and move on.
Like I definitely think that you should allow yourselves
to do that for you and your kids' sake, right?
No matter what's going on in our life,
nobody wants all the time for that thing to be highlighted.
So the next time you're reading a book
and it's like, and mommy and daddy took their child
to the playground, allow yourself to be like, eh, next page. Okay, right, and moving on, right? Just, you guys just
got some time back, you're welcome. Okay. So that's number one. Number two, what I'm hearing from you
and it might not be true is that most of the time you talk about these things is in the context of
like reading a book or something that has a very traditional family structure
in which case you kind of add some dissonance
or some color to it.
Not as much, like we're around the dinner table
talking about something, there's no book
and we're just proactively mentioning something.
Before I have a point about that, is that accurate?
Yep, that's accurate.
That is accurate.
And actually, that's something I'd really recommend
because it also will give you so much more free reign
for these moments where it comes up in a book or in a movie.
So what might that look like?
Well, let me first say that these conversations
that I imagine families having with their kids
or you two having with your kids,
conversations probably the wrong word.
These things will take like 30 seconds
and after you say them, your kids will say,
okay, can I have my ice cream now?
Like, can I have my ice cream now?
That's what they'll say.
And then we often think like,
oh, that was a waste of time, it was not.
Like you said, these are complicated ideas
that they need exposure to
while they still don't have the sophistication
to fully understand. We don't wait for them to have
the sophistication to understand because by that time, if it's the first time you're talking about,
it kids feel like, what the heck? But as we're giving exposure, we have to understand that they're just
allowing it to kind of percolate and they want to move on with their day. So when I talk about a
conversation at your dinner table, remember, this is a 30-second conversation
where one of you was saying something,
maybe the other one, and then that's the whole thing.
So what might that sound like?
Might sound something like this.
You know, you're not thinking about families.
Families are an interesting thing.
There's no one way to be a family,
although a lot of times people show a family in one way, right?
And one of the things we just want to mention to you
is in our family, there are two dads.
Maybe you're like, I know, dad, I know.
But I just want to say it, there's two dads.
And there's you.
And we love each other and we're close.
And just like any other family,
we're gonna argue sometimes,
we're gonna talk about things,
we're gonna say sorry, we're gonna play games.
That's what our family is like.
You're gonna see a lot of families and books
and movies that have a mom and a dad.
And whenever that happens,
it might feel like,
oh, that's not my family.
Oh, that's not my family.
And we can always talk about those moments.
We can also not. But anyway, what do you want for your ice cream? Like, that's not my family. And we can always talk about those moments. We can also not.
But anyway, what do you want for your ice cream?
Like, that's a conversation.
That's the whole thing.
There's something about doing it proactively.
That normalizes it even more as part of day-to-day conversation
as opposed to only when it comes up.
So tell me what that would feel like to do.
Yeah, that sounds great.
And we've never thought about proactively talking about it,
which is, which is, I think a great suggestion.
My full-up will be, do we take it step further,
which is to explain how babies are made?
Because we, of course, in our case,
are two conversations that almost collapse
into one another.
Completely. So, great question. So, when you say, have this conversation, I would then use your kids as a guide for what to happen next. If they do go into, Papa, you're being annoying,
just get me that water. Then that's their way of saying, this is enough for now. Let me digest this.
That's their way of saying this is enough for now. Let me digest this.
If a child says, but I, I don't know,
but what about Jeannie?
Didn't you say Jeannie?
Then they're saying, I have not reached the level
of information in this conversation
that I would need to be able to ask you
for my ice cream and move on, right?
And so I think you can really wait and trust and trust that this
is not your only opportunity. Most complicated conversations, even as adults, have to happen
in parts, right? And you can use your child as a guide. There's something I find actually
very relieving about that. Like, oh, I don't need to know. Like, I don't need to know how
far I'm going to go in this conversation. Good,, I don't need to know. Like, I don't need to know how far I'm gonna go in this conversation.
Good, because I don't know.
But I can kind of wait and trust myself
and my child to figure this out.
Because I think you're right.
There's another conversation that I do think
would be another good conversation to have proactively,
but not necessarily at the same time, which is,
you know what's interesting?
Families.
Families are different than making
babies. Sometimes the people who make babies are the same people as the parents and a family.
Like your friend Mela, I don't know, I'm making this up, right? They, you know, you could
give an example just to ground it. Those parents made Miele together, and they're her parents, and they're a family that's interesting,
right?
And sometimes a family.
It's a little different than the people who made the baby, and it's actually just important
for us to start talking about it and for you to know that that's the situation we are
in, right?
And then I think, yes, the biology of it matters, right?
For now, right, we still need egg and sperm to create the baby.
And so there's implications of that, right?
And talking to your kids about that, demystifying it.
Yeah, it is really important because sometimes we get caught up in my three-year-old doesn't need to know about sex.
Like, right, it's not sex.
And your two and three-year-old doesn't care about sex.
They don't understand sex.
But your two-year-old, your three-year-old,
your four-year-old, your five-year-old,
your older kids are, their job is to figure out
how the world works.
That's their job.
That's what we want them to do
if they're doing a good job.
And so the questions they have in the confusion, especially if their family's structure is
one, that might lead to more questions, not in a bad way, just in a, whoa, whoa, wait,
okay, well, how did I get here?
We want to be talking about that with our kid, because then they can actually understand
more things.
And the more they understand, the safer they feel. That's very helpful.
It would even broaden the conversation to other types of diversity or keep it, if the
question is, mommy daddy, keep it simple mommy daddy, or do you shoehorn race, nationality,
sometimes you know, I should tell you when we talk about mommy and daddy. Sometimes
at all you know we are French and American and other families are all American. All
there's all Italian. All there's all Asian and German. But I've older with our maybe
there was almost diversion in you know the topic. You know what strikes me about the two of
you and I mean this and like the most loving way. I mean way. You want to do so well by your kids.
You do, and that's amazing.
That is amazing, and that says so much about you.
And I don't think there's a right or wrong way,
but again, I think you can give yourself permission
to not put it all in one conversation, right?
It reminds me of someone who was asking about, they're like, I wanna talk to my kids about how babies are made. I, it reminds me of someone who was asking about,
they're like, I wanna talk to my kids
about how babies are made.
I think it's one of the things I wanna do really differently
than my parents did with me.
I think it's part of deshaming your body
and understanding sexuality before you're a teenager
and everything's awkward.
And they're like, so in the first conversation,
here's what I wanna talk about.
And they were talking about, you know,
a penis of vagina, they were talking about IVF, they were talking about. And they were talking about, you know, a penis of vagina.
They were talking about IVF.
They were talking about donors.
And I was like, look,
I think it's amazing you want to talk about all this.
And it doesn't have to be a specific
of order of operations.
But if you're talking about your three-year-old
all at once, understanding all of those things,
I'm pretty sure a three-year-old's going to be like,
I don't understand any of those things now, right?
So do I think that it's really normalizing and helpful and modern and wonderful for kids
to know that you can make babies in other ways than a penis and a vagina?
Yes.
And with my kids, they know all those things.
Do I think very practically talking about everything you want to talk to your kid about
in one sitting is helpful?
I don't. And I think the way I tell myself is I trust myself.
I trust myself as a parent and I trust myself and my kids development and time to know that I don't
have to prove to myself that everything happens in one conversation to know my values and know
the things I'll eventually talk to my kid about. So if your child is processing two dads,
well, really, two dads. And I'm not saying this is the case, but it could be for some families,
everyone else I know has mom and dad. That might not be the case for you,
but for some people listening, that might be the case. That's a big piece of
information. Is it also important to understand racial diversity, to understand
nationality, to understand disabilities? I do think those conversations should be
had. I just think we want to do that in a way that a kid can actually digest it, right? Which
probably requires some restraint. So again, if it feels natural, yeah, we have two dads just like
your friend Milla, right? That's really interesting. Her mom is in a wheelchair, and her dad is not in a wheelchair.
I don't know anyone else in your class
who has a mom in a wheelchair,
just like I don't know anyone else
in your class who has two dads.
That's interesting.
Families can really look different.
Could I see that being useful?
Sure, but also if you just wanna tell yourself,
hey, you know, Jeremiah,
today we're just doing the two dad thing.
That does not make us bigoted,
that does not make us bad. That just makes us centering on the exact thing our kid needs to Jeremiah today. We're just doing the two dad thing that does not make us bigoted that does not make us bad
That just makes us centering on the exact thing our kid needs to hear today
Make sense. Yeah
Absolutely. Yes, and then look in terms of naming the surrogate and in and you have an egg donor and a surrogate
Those are two different people is that correct right and both of those things at some point
right Is that correct? Right. And both of those things at some point, right?
I do think are really helpful.
And you can use proactive conversations to talk about that.
You can see how it goes talking about some things and then watching your kids' questions.
Right?
I'm going to say something that seemingly conflictual, but I do believe both sides of it.
So I guess it's like a two things are true.
I do believe we have to own proactively, kind of having baseline conversations with kids
that we can't just wait for kids to come to us and ask. At the same time, when kids do ask
what they're saying is I already have enough information inside to formulate a question
about this topic.
Because let's say Jeremiah, I don't know what you do,
but if I told you on the street, I met you
and I was like, I am a molecular physicist,
ask me a question about what I do.
I'm sure you're curious.
Maybe you're like, I have no idea.
I don't know anything about,
do you know anything about molecular physiology
for exactly?
I don't even know if that's a real thing.
Probably someone will say music.
That's the same thing exists. Okay, but that's my point. You'd be like, I don't even know if that's a real thing, probably someone listening to me is like, that's the same thing, that's the same thing, that's the best.
Okay, but that's my point.
You'd be like, I don't even know,
I can't even come up with a question.
But if I told you I did something similar to what you do,
you'd probably have a lot of questions.
Asking a question demonstrates a baseline knowledge.
So when Kips asked questions like,
oh, well, my friend Mela, and this can happen.
Okay, and I'm just going to go for it. So bear with me. My friend Mela on the bus told
me a baby is made when a penis enters into a vagina. So did one of your penises enter
into Genie's vagina. And you're like, what the heck just happened to my life? Okay, like
I was not prepared for this moment
on the walk to church, okay?
Like what is going on, right?
Which kids will, and they don't mean it,
provocatively, they're just trying to figure out
how the world works.
You might be tempted to say,
you're five years old, like we'll talk about this
when you're older.
But all that's happening to a kid,
is they're saying, well, I've already developed
enough baseline knowledge, not from you,
but from a kid on the bus to ask a question.
So really now, dad, really now, Papa, your only choices are,
are you're gonna meet that knowledge and curiosity
with connection and an answer,
or are you gonna leave me alone with it,
which leaves me more confused
and feeling ashamed for answering the question.
Right?
And so so many times, I live in New York City too.
My kids see things on the street.
They ask me all types of questions.
Or I'm in like, you're three years old.
Like, are we really talking about this?
My five-year-old found a condom on the subway.
And could read at the time and ask me
if he could have this magnum candy,
which looks different than the magnum ice cream bar,
he's used to seeing that happen on a crowded subway.
When unfortunately we had a 45 minute ride,
so it was like, well, here we are.
I was like, I wasn't going in being like,
you know, I'm not gonna talk to my five-year-old about condoms.
And by the way, you can't talk about a condom
without talking about sex, right?
And I'm not one to cut off.
So I was like, you know, everyone on the subway
was looking at me being like, oh, I'm staying on the subway
car.
This is going to be a good one.
And we talked about it.
It was right there in front of me, right?
Because my choice was leave him alone
and make him feel like he can't come to me
with his questions in general.
Or deshame the situation and be a little bit of a cycle breaker
and say, hey, you're five.
You're just want to know information.
And you know what?
I can give you that if I can push through my awkwardness.
Hey good insiders, so sometimes with parenting,
a podcast does the trick.
And sometimes with parenting, we need a bit more.
And I wanted to be sure you knew that we're set up
to help you in those trickier times.
The good inside membership platform
is your parenting in psychopedia, coupled with a community of parents and experts you trust, which
means that no matter what you're going through, we've got you covered. And then
we take it a step further, because I know that we're people who don't just want
to solve a problem and return to baseline. We want to raise our baselines, right?
And this is what we really do, together.
Reduce triggers, learn to set boundaries, and access that sturdy leader that I know is inside all of us.
It's all there when you're looking for that next step. And until then, please do check out
GoodInside.com slash podcast. Scroll down to the Ask Dr. Becky section at the bottom and let me know what you want to talk about in future podcast episodes.
So
I'm thinking about your other question about kind of
Mater, I don't know. Maybe it's not this. Is it maternal figures or the role of a woman if you have two dads?
You know the thing I refer to before round,
maybe reframing this question.
And I think that's worth doing before we answer the question.
Is just almost like deconstructing this idea
of like you have two loving parents versus a kid needs a mom
or a woman or what, I'd love to hear a little bit more from you.
Not because the I'm not trying to say the answer is it's true.
A woman would be unnecessary if you have two loving dads.
I'm not taking a side on either, you know, on that, that idea.
But how do you see it?
Like what is what is what are your thoughts?
What are your fears?
What are your concerns around like there might be times when my child really needs a woman
a quote,
maternal figure in their life.
Yeah, I think well, the right word probably is sort of a deeper fear on some level
that I'm depriving our children of something.
When I know in my heart that two loving parents who, you know, are so devoted to
them, they're lucky to have that with us.
I do, I do know that,
and I don't think I'm depriving them, but I guess there's this sort of underlying fear that I don't address often about, you know, how can I address if there is something lacking in their lives,
how do I address that? And in this case, is it that there isn't a woman every day there for them?
And there are strong women, as I said in their lives, but I want them
to have those, an avenue that feels very open to them to, and this is my, this is our daughter when
she comes to her own realization of sexuality, right? Like I'll read every book I can about that.
I will be ready. I feel, but there's, you know, I can't tell her like from my own experience
of sexuality, I can't guide her from that, right, from a place of my own experience.
Yeah, and I would say, Jeremiah, like, yes and no, right? Like there's aspects of,
you know, puberty of sexuality that that certainly she will experience things in her body that
you have never gone through, right? That is for sure. And she will experience things in her body that you have never gone through, right? That is for sure.
And she will experience things in her body
that you have gone through.
Aquareness, discomfort, oh my goodness, what is this?
This is happening earlier to me than other people.
This is happening to me later than other people.
I'm not sure how to live in my body right now.
I'm not sure how to feel right now.
Right, those are very human experiences around puberty.
That is not to say, she might not say to you at some point,
I need a woman to, you know, I don't know, what is this?
What are my, what was happening to my nipples?
Or, you know, what is this whole period thing?
I just want to know from someone who's, you know, had one, right?
That could definitely happen.
I just think it's important to hold at once,
right? Your ability to be a support and a holding space and a listener to her. And the potential
actually for all of our kids to come to us and kind of say some version of, I need something from someone that I'm not getting from you.
And I think that's actually really universal.
What the two of you can do that maybe most parents don't do early on
because there's something more concrete.
Like might you want a female figure in your life, right?
Where if there is a woman and a man raising a kid,
you know, it's almost like, well, we've checked those boxes
so what else could our kids need?
So you almost have a leg up here.
And what I think is this really beautiful opportunity
you have when your kids are getting older is,
you know, one of the things that's really important
to us as a family is you just always let us know
when you need something that we're not giving you.
Right? And as you play baseball,
you might want to talk to someone who was a,
you know, a baseball player in high school.
I'm, you know, making this up. And as you get older, you might want to talk to a woman about things.
And as you get older and you realize you, you know, really love art and the rest of us are really more into sports.
You might want to talk to someone who also grew up feeling a little different in their family.
And I just want to let you know, we know that we love you and we are there for you.
And we also know, no matter who your parents are,
parents can never be everything.
And we just always hope you come to us when we're not giving you what you need.
And I just know we're going to figure those situations out together.
Tell me your thoughts about that.
Beautiful, but yeah, I think it's a conversation we should have with them. I guess it's not too early.
I think anytime we just want to, I want to be everything for them, right? And I know that I can't.
So telling them, I'm here for you, we're here for you. And if you need someone else, let us know.
We're here to help you find that person.
Yeah, and maybe that sounds bold,
but like, I don't wanna be everything for my kids.
Like, I really don't.
For so many reasons, number one that feels,
I feel like, I don't know, it feels like really tough on me.
It seems like, oh, I better like get to work.
You know, I also, I don't, because I want to leave room for me
to be something for myself and for me to be something
to my husband and my friends.
And I don't, because I feel like the model of a relationship
we develop with our kid becomes internalized as what love is.
And therefore, what to expect as they grow up and
find romantic partners, even, and I always like take a deep breath because it's heavy when you think
about it. It even really impacts who they end up being attracted to later on because they tend to
be attracted to people who fit into the model of a relationship they had in their earliest loving
relationships. And, you know, I don't want my kids
when they're like 25 to be like,
who out there is everything to me?
Who can fulfill all of my needs?
I mean, Pierre and Jeremiah, I don't know.
Do you guys do that for each other?
Are you like that?
What is it, Pierre?
No, not so much.
No, you're right.
You're right.
I'm going back to your previous point,
we're making an assumption that a mother will provide stuff
that we can't provide.
And conversely, we're making an assumption
that being man and being fathers,
we will check all the boxes.
And I don't know, we'll take them to sports every Sunday morning.
I have no interest in going to soccer every Sunday morning.
So it worked both ways.
We might not give everything that a man is supposed to give.
And conversely, we might provide lots of love.
You will sometimes see it more with a mother.
Yeah.
And I guess I think that's a massive opportunity you have.
Yes, that's gonna lead them.
The more they know that it's okay to come to you saying,
you're not giving me what I need,
then they're gonna find that female figure
if they need it, but they're also gonna find
that mentor in the career they want,
that the two of you know nothing about,
because they don't feel like they're upsetting you or insulting you or insinuating you're not good enough.
It's a huge burden on a kid when they feel like a parent needs to be everything.
It's a burden they have to carry, actually, right?
And I think this is where I see your questions together actually really kind of having a lot
of overlap, right? Because I think a lot about how we respond
to kids' questions.
When those questions are a little bit injurious to us
or make us feel awkward, so when a kid says,
why don't I have a mommy?
I can feel like, oh, right?
And I think there's a lot of focus.
I'm like, what do I say back?
What's the script?
What's the script?
And we can come up with that together.
You can come up with it.
But I actually think more important than what you say,
your kid is gonna remember how you responded.
Because what they're really encoding in their body
is is it okay for me to ask questions that matter to me
and might feel uncomfortable to other people?
Is it okay for me to ask questions
that don't have easy answers?
Is it okay for me to ask a question
that's never really been talked about in our house before?
Which is why I feel like the best script is,
I'm so glad you're asking me that question.
Wow, that was really on your mind
and you knew it was okay to come to me and ask that.
Wow, this is really important
and I'm really glad we get the opportunity to talk about
this.
I find myself wanting to say more, but another part of me says to pause.
Tell me what, tell me what, tell me what you think about that.
Yeah, just acknowledging the fact that this is a question as opposed to pushing it off
and saying, well, what are you talking about?
You have to, dad, move on and you're not feeling concerned about it.
Just acknowledging that this is not a traditional structure.
So having a question is perfectly justified.
Yeah.
And, you know, when your kids ask you, right, where's my mom?
Why don't I have a mom?
Right. ask you, right, where's my mom? Why don't I have a mom?
Right, what their body is really gonna remember is the next time I have a question
that's a little awkward and uncomfortable.
Can I go to Papa?
Can I go to Dad?
Right, because so often I hear from parents
or older kids like, I want my kids to talk to me about drugs.
I want them to talk about social media. I want them to talk about social media.
I want them to talk about this relationship they're in.
If my kid was ever in a relationship with someone who wasn't
treating them well, I would want them to come to me.
I would, I really would.
But look, we can repair a relationship at any point.
If you haven't really talked to your kids about tricky topics
until they're 16 and you want that we 100% can help that happen and and
It's work and it takes time
Whether kids when they're teenagers and in their 20s talk to their parents about topics that are awkward and tricky
and uncomfortable
Hums from how their parents responded to tricky and uncomfortable, hums from how their parents responded to tricky and uncomfortable topics when they were younger,
which aren't the same topics.
No four-year-old, I know, goes to their dad and says,
you know, thinking about going to a party
where there's alcohol in marijuana,
like, I know four-year-old I know is saying that,
but when a four-year-old says,
I don't have a mom, that is the exact same circuit.
How that question is responded to is the exact same circuit
as when they're 16 and they're thinking,
my boyfriend's been kind of saying
some really mean things to me.
Should I talk to my dad about that?
things to me. Should I talk to my dad about that? Or I really feel like I need a woman to understand what's happening to my body. And in some ways, the way we make our kids
comfortable with asking us tricky questions is way more important than just saying to them
over the years, here, go spend time with Aunt Sally.
She's a woman, you guys should develop a relationship, right?
Because the point is we want our kids to know
that we can give them access to people who aren't us.
But that comes from their ability to speak up for themselves
and potentially even offend us.
So going back to that moment of play, right?
Maybe we can kind of end in a way going back to that beginning, right?
So, oh, this person's hurt, she needs her mom.
I, again, just want to give you permission to just go with it.
I think often times we think we have to like, oh, but she also could go for her dad, right?
Because dad's comfort kids, right?
Like, we take them out.
You can also just open that up
because in a way, you're also saying like it's it's okay to have that storyline. You don't need to
change it for me. Oh, she needs to go to her mom. Why? Why? Oh, her mom's going to give her a big hug.
Oh, it's so nice to have a mom. You could go to for a big hug. And then I could see opening it up a little more.
It is so important for kids to have parents who can comfort them when they're hurt.
I totally get that.
And in a way, I've shifted things a tiny bit.
I've also allowed it.
I've relieved myself of the need to open up a book and be like, but look, also, they have
two dads in this book, right? To be there.
Right?
I totally got it.
And again, maybe trust that, like you've done something
really powerful and trusting that it all also
doesn't have to happen in that exact moment.
That's super helpful.
By the way, I should mention that we're only talking about
our daughter because in a typical
fashion, the daughter is developing a little faster.
So she came up first with those questions the same way that she walked first and talked
first and used the party first, but our son is next.
Well, you two are fabulous to talk with and clearly, like, such soft, full, amazing parents.
Your kids are so lucky to have you.
And I always love updates, so maybe reach back out, let us know how things go, and maybe
I'll run to you on the street.
On your city or maybe we'll see each other in a subway car with a Magnum condom on the
ground.
I'm sure I know.
I'll keep my eye out.
Thanks for listening.
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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,
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