Good Inside with Dr. Becky - Wait, What? You Used to Love This!
Episode Date: November 1, 2022One day, your two year old loves taking a bath. They love playing with bubbles and bringing in all of their different toys. And then all of sudden... they *hate* the bath. No amount of encouragement o...r cajoling will get them in the tub. What's going on here? On today's episode, Dr. Becky talks with parents of a toddler about navigating the (very common) bathtime resistance phase and how it relates to another part of toddlerhood. 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
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I'm Dr. Becky and this is good inside.
She was in the other room and I was like,
okay, maybe I'll just try and make this look really cool.
And so I just got in the bath without saying anything,
got a bunch of toys in there with me, some bubbles,
and was just splashing and...
Loudly. We were in the other reading books.
I'm not generally a person who squeals,
but I was squealing with delight just to make it as tempting as possible.
And she was interested.
She then walked in and played with the bubbles
from outside the tub.
And I was trying not to push it.
And she was doing that for maybe 10 minutes
and having a great time and thought the whole thing
was very funny.
And then I was like, you know, you could hop in
and she was like, absolutely not.
That moment, we all know it.
When your kid's been delighted to do a thing
and then suddenly and rather dramatically, they aren't.
Let's get into it right after the break.
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 kessles 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.
Mygotus are Melissa and Doug too.
I feel like we have this ice cream scooper thing
that my kids use when they were two.
And then they used again when they were developing better fine motor skills.
And then for my kind of four year old, my seven year old,
still using it in imaginative play.
I really only like talking about items and brands that we actually use in our own
home and Melissa and Doug.
I just don't know if there's any other brand I feel so good about naming the way
that their toys actually inspire creativity and
open-ended screen free child-led play.
It's just unmatched.
And like what's honestly so exciting is to be able to offer everyone listening to this
podcast, 20% off.
Visit Melissa and Doug.com and use code Dr. Becky 20 dr BECKY-E-C-K-Y 20 for 20% off your order.
Melissa and Doug, timeless toys, endless possibilities.
I'm Dr. Becky, and this is Good Inside.
I'm a clinical psychologist, I'm a mom of three,
and I'm in a mission to rethink the way we raise our children.
If this line should go down and we only get one thing answered, I think we want the emergency question.
Okay, let's do it.
Our daughter is two years and seven months old and for two years and six months and two
weeks of her life, she's absolutely loved taking a bath. Like,
looks forward to it, it's like, it is a treat. That stopped one day. Two weeks ago, no, 10 days
ago, Emily. Something like that, yeah. Screaming, crying, will not get in the bath. And this coincided with her generally discovering how to tantrum, but it seems very specific.
And the other tantrums seem random.
And the other tantrums seem like something
that we can, they're almost more minor, I would say,
and we know how to handle them.
I will say we've also tried quite a few things at this point.
We've tried offering a bath at different times of day, so changing the schedule. We have tried
getting in the bath with her, and then we've also tried a shower. Now she will only take a bird bath.
What's a bird bath? A bird bath is a washcloth with water getting her wet,
trying to use a little bit of soap. One day I tried a bird bath where I put her in the tub
standing up and then poured water on her and she was unhappy about that. So if you ask her,
why don't you, what's going on? Why don't you like the bath? What did she say? That, we try that because she's a very good talker. And we've tried that
inch, we can't get an answer out of her. She just kind of gets upset and says, I don't like
it. Or I don't want to. Okay. So here's where I would start. I would start by saying this
to her today. You know what? There's something about the bath you really don't like.
I believe you.
Like that's literally your homework today, just to say that.
I don't have some brilliant interpretation.
Like here's what I think this represents to her,
and with my own kids, I often don't have that either.
But leading with validation and believing, even when you
don't understand, is an insanely powerful intervention.
It's often like for some kids, it's like the only thing they need to have a little bit of
a movement, because you're saying, like, I believe this thing is real, even if I don't
even understand it, where it's usually easier for us to validate something if we do understand
it, right?
So I would just say that there's something about bath. You really don't like right now.
We believe you.
And I would actually let that sit.
And I would have that be the whole thing.
And just see what she says.
I don't expect some.
She's not going to offer some brilliance,
but I promise you, it matters.
And just allowing that be the whole thing
makes it more impactful without saying,
okay, so here's what we're going to do. So just let that be the thing.
Other things after that.
I would just evaluate internally for the two of you.
Like, how often at the stage do we need to do a bath?
The bird bath that you're saying?
Like, I refer to that as an important parts shower
or something like that, right?
Like, sometimes you only need the important parts to be washed.
We all know what those parts are, right?
And it's okay to do that.
Like, a kid's not enough to bathe every day.
Like, nothing horrible happens.
And so I would also just kind of consult
between the two of you of like,
how often do we need to make this happen?
And you can even deliver to that,
that kind of idea to her by saying,
again, after this other intervention, you know what?
I know there's gonna be a time that bath is easier.
I know now bath is really hard,
and there will be a time that
is easier. And while it's hard, we don't have to do baths every day. We're not going to
bring it up. And we can't do baths never. But there's a lot in between every day and never.
And so let's almost come up with that together. Let's come up with a schedule together. What
do we think? And I let her participate. I doubt she's going to say to you, I don't know
how about every third day, you know, I don't know if she has the math for that.
But I can say, okay, today is Friday.
But you know, there's a couple of reasons
why we definitely need to take a back.
If we get really muddy and really dirty,
we definitely have to wash that off.
And also every, and then pick a number,
that feels right to you.
Every so many days,
even if that doesn't happen, we need it.
So let's look at our calendar.
And I'd even give her a little bit of visual
kind of symbols around this.
So today, this doesn't have to happen.
Oh, tomorrow we are going to the playground.
We always like to play on the sandbox.
You'll probably end up falling in the mud.
Okay, so that might be a day.
And then as that day gets closer,
I would just prepare with her.
Ooh, this is gonna, I just own it from the start.
This is gonna be hard, right?
Like this bath today, oh, nobody's gonna have fun.
Let's think together, what's the easiest, you know,
way we could do this?
And even then, it might be a standup kind of scrub down.
You could call it like it's a scrub down.
It's not even a bath, you know?
You can almost like differentiate it.
And I think like a key almost formula
when our kids are in some really tricky stage
is validate exactly what's happening for them in the moment
in the intensity they feel it.
And hold hope for a shift.
And often we do one and not the other.
We're like, come on, get over this, you're fine.
Or we almost like join in their anxiety
versus holding those both at once.
It sound like, look, I know,
there's, bath feels really tricky.
There's something about it that feels really, really bad.
I believe you, I know that's real.
And I know there's gonna be a dozen feel like this.
And so we're doing these scrub downs
and there's gonna be a day I know that you say to me,
like let's do that bath again.
I'm ready for the bubbles.
Like I just know that day is gonna happen.
It's not today and I know what's gonna happen.
And so it really respects where a kid is today.
And it feels really good,
even as an adult when you're struggling
for someone else to see or struggle
and to hold hope for something different.
That's often enough to help a kid have some movement.
It also gives a kid back control.
It gives them back control.
Bath time can be a place that kids really
kind of struggle and resist because often bath time
is associated with going to bed.
Often bath time is something that parents want kids to do
that they don't wanna do themselves, right?
And so especially at this like-year-old age,
it becomes almost symbolic of, on my own person.
No one can make me do things that I don't want to do.
This is one thing I kind of have control over.
I can't control the school I go to.
I can't control how many hours Daddy works,
but I can say no to back.
And then what ends up happening in those situations
is we often get more controlling
and then it only builds a child's reasons to resist.
It actually no longer has anything to do with the bat.
It has to do with defining their independent identity.
We can't fight or win that battle.
So having this other way of approaching it, validating it, letting it go on your side,
like people say, on our side, we're going to the rope. Like there's less tension if you drop the rope
and both people aren't pulling.
It also gives a kid back control.
And so any element of the resistance
that's actually just about control,
once it's no longer about that,
removing that factor often allows for movement as well.
Because potty is another area where kids feel like
this is one of the only things I can
control in my life is what goes out of my body and when and where that happens, right? And in potty,
I call learning because one of the reasons I don't like to call it potty training is training really
is kind of a method of control. As a trainer, I'm controlling the process and I think that very setup
is just a recipe for disaster and resistance.
And so here we are connecting those two topics.
So I would say on the bath thing,
that's where I would start.
And even internally to yourselves,
there's a lot of power as parents at the end of the night
when our kids are sleeping,
and kind of resisting, they're like,
oh, I can't believe it's been two weeks of this.
Like, is it always gonna be like this?
I feel like there's power in this system
when the leaders do hold hope. Like, okay, this is still happening. And you know what, like, it's been two weeks of this. Is it always gonna be like this? I feel like there's power in this system when the leaders do hold hope.
Okay, this is still happening.
And you know what, it's gonna change.
It's not that big of a deal.
We're gonna figure that out.
I feel like that really filters down
and kids end up really feeling that.
Yeah, that sounds good.
That feels good.
And we've definitely seen her go through phases before
and then just kind of come out of them naturally.
She did go through a phase
where she just didn't wanna use a towel after a bath
for a while, which I kind of loved that phase.
She was just like nope.
And then one day she was like, okay, towels back.
And that's something you can emphasize to her.
There's something to say to a kid.
Like, wow, there's something about a bath
that really doesn't feel good to you.
I believe you, and you know what?
You know that, like whenever we bring up the word bath,
you're like, no, no, no, you really know
what's going on in your body.
I really respect that about you.
And look, where your parents are job is to keep you safe,
and there's some amount of basic cleanliness
we're just gonna have to do with you.
But we can really change kind of at what level
that's at to respect the fact
that this doesn't feel good to you right now.
Because the main message a kid gets is,
yeah, I do know my body and that leaves them
more flexibility when we relinquish control
to at some point say, you know what, like a bubble bath is fun.
Like I actually do want to do that again.
So I think that's really helpful in the long run
that messaging.
And I do think that this, you know,
it does feel related to our approach
and our philosophy around potty training or potty learning
or whatever you wanna call it,
because my understanding was,
I think like even before I had kids,
was that it was like a kind of thing where you're like,
okay, we're doing this and we're doing this right now.
But then, I don't know, from her school and just feeling
it out, it has felt a little bit more like let her lead with this because the more you make a
thing of it, the more it becomes a thing. And so really let her kind of run with this. I mean,
I think that this is something that Ian and I kind of talk about, just while we're parenting, like, when do
you really force or push something and then when do you just kind of like follow her lead
and give her the autonomy?
And so this, with potty training, it feels like it's a little bit more, she's definitely
sending signals to us and we're listening to those signals, but we're not pressuring
her at all at this point.
Say, tell me a little bit more about that journey
where you're at.
I'd say several months ago,
she just started talking about potty
and wanting to try the potty.
And so we got her a little kid potty
and she would want to sit on it and read
and just kind of hang out and talk about it. And so I think at that
time we got our couple, potty training books, potty learning books, which like I liked reading
some of them. One of them was really gross and remains gross, but then she just kind of,
she lost interest. And so we didn't push it because it didn't seem urgent. And then recently, in
the last couple months, she's gotten very interested and wants to sit on the potty probably
every day and sit and read books. And talk about it. She wants to flush the actual toilet
in her house. And she tells us about other kids at her daycare who use the potty and she talks about what underwear she wants.
There's a lot of conversation about it in our house.
But not a whole lot of action.
There's a lot of sitting. There's a lot of sitting and reading about it.
A lot of trying. A lot of high-fiving for trying.
But occasionally a success,
which I think is probably,
it's just from the sheer probability
of sitting on the toilet that long,
once in a while, it's gonna work out.
Oh, man, two days ago,
she was sitting on the potting,
she did poop.
Emily looked at it and said,
you did it, you did it, hooray, we high-fived.
And the first thing she said was underwear,
because she's so excited about getting underwear.
And so tell me about that, is she in underwear?
So she is wearing diapers right now.
And I think that a lot of what she is seeing
and a lot of her desires are coming from being
in school because it's school.
They offer her the opportunity to use the potty.
There are definitely kids on her floor that are using the potty.
And so she's interested and she's seeing kids wearing underwear and she kind of wants
to participate.
Right now she's using diapers and what has also changed in the past,
I would say month, is that we used to always lie her down
to change her diaper.
And now she wants to stand up.
She wants to take off her diaper, standing up.
She wants to put on her diaper, standing up.
And we have not used pull ups because we've heard that that can actually get in the
way of potty training. Pull-ups at this point would perhaps be a little bit more convenient or
easier because we're sort of putting her into a diaper standing up as, you know, a little awkward
and also cleaning her up, especially if she poops is not that it's
never feels like it's as thorough as I'd like it to be.
So you know, a question we also had was, where is this coming from in terms of wanting
to stand up and connect it to potty training?
So, let's start with why kids want to stand up.
So this is a great thing that she wants to stand up.
And it's actually something I encourage parents
to do with their kids when they're younger,
to even start to suggest this as, you know,
a kid kind of moves into that potty stage.
Standing up to me is a communication from a kid
that they're kind of saying,
I'm not such a baby anymore
in this way, right? Like laying on your back and being changed is just an act of total dependence.
And we want our kids to of course maintain parts of them that can get help from other people,
right, that no one's okay to stay attached, of course. And when they're moving into the
potty stage, we want them to feel like they are capable
of kind of embodying their older, you know, more independent self.
And so being changed standing up is really a way that your daughter is saying to you,
I'm ready to move past this diaper phase.
So even when she says I want to be, you know, I want to be standing up, I would just reinforce
that and say, wow, you're feeling like really tall right now.
Like you're showing me, you're ready to be a little bit more independent about all this.
That's really awesome.
Like I would just celebrate that.
Hey, so I want to let you in on something that's kind of counterintuitive about parenting.
The most impactful way we can change our parenting actually doesn't involve learning any new
parenting strategies.
The most impactful way we can change our parenting is by giving ourselves more resources so we
can show up as sturdier so we can show up as calm amidst the inevitable chaos.
It's what our kids need from us more than anything else.
This is why I'm doing my mom rage workshop again.
I'm doing it again because it is one of my most popular ones to date.
It's coming up July 19, but no worries if you can't make it live.
It'll be available as a recording for whenever you have the time.
I promise it's really the best investment we can make not only in ourselves, but also
in our kids.
Can't wait to see you there at GoodInside.com.
So in terms of this question you were asking, kind of, oh, I wanted to feel like it's my child's interest.
That's motivating this.
And we don't have to, we're not forcing her
or saying, now is the day.
I think there's something in between that.
That's important in the potty process.
And it actually relates to what we are talking about earlier,
which is this idea of, I see where my kids at, and I hold hope
for where they can be.
Right, because we do have a role as a parent
that enables our kids to feel increasingly capable.
If a kid at a certain age said to us,
I really want to be at a soccer team.
Like, we would still have to be the ones
to like go look for the soccer team and find it
and figure out if we can get them there, right?
And if we didn't do that, our kid's desire to be at a soccer team, it couldn't be realized,
right?
It would just kind of live as a desire.
And actually, when a kid says to us, I want to be at a soccer team and then they watch
us a little bit going to action, oh, okay, let me look into that.
Here's this option.
They feel from us, wow, my parent really thinks I'm capable of being on a soccer team.
And if we don't, there's a message,
not only a frustration, but if a kid feeling like,
oh, maybe my parents don't think I can do this.
And so I think there's this balance with potty
that when we do see our kid giving us signs
from them that they're ready,
I really actually think as parents,
we do need to take a step.
Because if we don't, we give our kid a kind of a communication that we think they should
stay in diapers. That's very different than forcing, right? It doesn't mean, hey, we're
doing this three-day process starting now. Not that, but if a kid is talking about potty
and they want undies and they're talking about daycare. I do think we need to say that, hey, you're showing me that you're really excited about being in
undies or you're excited to start peeing and pooping on the potty. How cool, you know what we're
going to do this weekend? We're going to have three days where we say bye to the diapers and we
say hello to the potty and I'm going to help you through that. This is such an awesome thing you want to do. So in my mind, we're like the boundaries,
and we're putting up these boundaries
and making these decisions based on what our child is giving us.
But if we don't do that, kids often take that as a communication
that we don't think they can do that,
and then they do become more conflicted.
Tell me if that resonates,
that difference between like forcing
versus providing the structure to make change possible.
Oh yeah, that, I mean, that completely makes sense to me.
And I certainly, I don't wanna feel like
we're holding her back in any way.
And I think we've been very enthusiastic
about using the potty, but like for example, we've said to her,
you know, great, when you start using the potty, we will get you underwear.
But I'm wondering if what you're actually saying is, hey, maybe we get the underwear now,
and we start trying it on or using it and talking about the potty in that way. And maybe it,
because I was seeing it as a more of a,
like, I don't know, success.
And that is something I would encourage us to rethink.
Right, I think that seeing our kids
as capable of doing something
is often a precursor for them fully believing
they're capable of doing that thing.
So I think the message of when you do this
we'll get to that next step.
It little bit reverses it.
I think she's telling you, hey, mom and dad,
don't you see what I'm doing?
Like make this possible for me.
Show me your hope, show me the structure,
show me the steps.
I am giving you everything I have as a two year old.
Give me that little bit more so I can actually make this shift.
And I think so many times it's interesting with parents where either we lead with potty
with a lot of control, which is not what you're doing, or sometimes we lead with almost
too much backing off.
And I think that middle ground is she saying, I'm here, help me get to the next step.
And so I would just pave that way.
I think there are a lot of step-by-step things
because when the moment comes,
oh, what about this moment?
What do I do now?
What about when there's an accident?
What about when they say no potty?
Like truly, the potty workshop that I have
that comes with a handbook is going to give you
every single thing that is a process
that actually not only leads to potty success,
but I think is really in line with your parenting philosophy.
Because how we approach the potty, how we go about the potty process,
can set the stage for body autonomy, for confidence, for boundaries.
I always think how awesome to have a potty approach that buys us wins in the future,
right? Like just efficient. That's how I think about it.
And it will just give you that kind of relief of,
okay, like all of my questions and the step-by-step
kind of moves are right here.
So I will send you that.
And I think that'll be kind of that how-to
that'll get you to that next step.
But before we do that, I wanna get to the book.
I wanna hear the book, and you said it to stuck in my head.
There's one book grosses me out. And another kind of aspect of the potty process, I think that
kids pick up on is our relationship with pee, with poop, with gross, with mess. And actually kind
of learning a little bit about that is actually really important. So Ian, I'm going to put you on
the spot. And I want to hear about this gross disgusting
book.
Well, let me first say I do everything I can to keep this discussed between Emily and
I. We talk about it after hours.
I think as far as our daughter knows, I love this book, but I'm telling you, I hate this
book.
I hate when she makes me read it.
Tell me, like, is there a page, is there a moment
what comes up for you about it?
I don't, I don't wanna disparage any authors on your show,
but we'll just say, should I read it?
Would you like?
Yeah, read the page.
Piss, piss, piss.
And a little bitty push, outcomes might be
with a teeny tiny wash.
So far so good. Then it goes, mm-mm, says mama, do we
have to poop too? Mm-mm, I grunt, and then I poo. There's
something about, mm-mm, I grunt, which is what, that's a
terrible sentence. Is it the sentence structure? Is it the
noise? Is it the grammar? Is it the order of
operations? I want to know. The word grunt is a, that's a tough place to start from. But I think
pairing grunt with mm-mm is like, we have other potty books like we have other potty books, like we have other potty books that are totally fine and that are,
but there is, I tot, I'm on the same page with age of half one page, but otherwise, I
think everything else in that book seems, I think it's okay, right?
And is this the one your daughter happens to love?
Because that's always the case.
It's like, read that one.
She, I mean, I'd say she demands all of them equally, yeah?
Yeah.
And in consequence, but there was a day
when this was requested four times in a row.
There's something that also as a parent,
you really, you're reading for your child,
but also, and I think this is coming from both the work
that Ian and I do, which has a lot to do with words.
And so when you encounter something where the words just
like feel abrasive, that's an example where the words just
like they don't work together or something,
I have the same feeling about that book.
But I'm all the other potty books and talking about,
do you have to poop, Do you have to pee?
You know, that's fine. Which by the way, I also wanted to say, we also had to have a discussion about what we wanted to call poop and pee. Because I grew up and it was called a sissy and a duty.
What about in your house, Ian? I think just pee and poop.
Yeah, the word duty kind of grosses me out.
Yeah, it was a sissy and a duty.
And I remember actually, I have a memory of being in pre-K
or kindergarten or something and telling the teacher
I have to make a sissy and someone teasing me
because they were like, what's a sissy?
So yeah, it pee and poopop or a P and Poop,
P and Poop and Tute.
Yeah.
And I think the reason these words
and looking at our own just reaction,
whether it's to the words or to certain books,
why it actually matters,
is because especially with Poop,
like our kids pick up on just how we relate to mess,
just a period, right?
And poop is, there's just mess, there's mess involved.
It's similar to how our kids pick up on
what happens when our parents walk into a room
that has toys all over it, how bookshelves need to look.
And actually, how kids end up relating
to the pooping process is a little bit related to
how they answer the question,
like is it okay to have mess,
is it okay to have messy things in me?
Is this allowed?
Is this kind of part of what exists in our family?
And that actually sometimes has more to do with some kids,
kind of poop withholding or real poop resistance
is sometimes a kids way of saying,
I'm not supposed to have things in me.
You know, that are messy and imperfect and aren't clean.
Right, so checking in as a parent of like,
yeah, what is my relationship with mess?
Not just poop, but poop often stands for,
just like things that are, yeah, that it's messy
and it's smelly and, right, it's not beautiful
and linear and perfect.
And our kids pick up on that separate
from how we talk about poop itself.
And I think especially as we go into the potty process,
as a parent, it's kind of doing a little inventory
of what our kid might have picked up on there
and how we can actually get ahead of so many poop issues
by, you know, thinking about mess in the less black
and white way.
It is so opening and helpful for kids.
Look, everything you're saying,
it seems like she is so ready to,
just like put all these things together.
And yes, our kids get to an age where when they poop, like, oh my goodness, like I can't,
this is not the same as when they were six months.
And so you too, I think, are ready and deserving of her to put these skills together and be
more independent in this process.
And I am going to send you my workshop, which comes with the handbook and I can't wait to hear how it goes. So keep me in the loop. And before you go. And I have heard that
you interview in animate objects for a living. I do. Yes. Yes. I don't know how many people
I could say that to. Before we go, I am curious to know
what might a potty sound like
or what might a potty say in an interview.
Oh man.
I mean, I think that the interviews
that I've done with an intimate objects,
often I have an expectation of how they're gonna feel
about their lives.
And it's most rewarding for me when how they feel is surprising.
Like I interviewed a subway seat, which I would have thought would be a terrible existence.
But the subway seat loved his life and loved nothing more than connecting with people through their butts. I don't know, I think a potty would certainly
it would be unable to recognize us by our faces. That's not the part it is so often introduced to.
So it would sort of know us by our tushes as we say to our daughter. And maybe our faces
would kind of, it wouldn't want to look at it. That would be unpleasant for us. So it would,
it would always just want us to turn around and say, oh, there you are. Yeah, no, I know you.
I know you. Yeah. I love it. That seems pretty perfect.
All right. Well, for more about the potty, come back next week when we will be talking
about the thing everybody does, but only our kids seem to want to talk about.
Yep, we're talking about poop everyone, and you do not want to miss next week's episode.
See you then.
Thanks for listening.
To share a story or ask me a question, go to goodinside.com-podcast.
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 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 Nat and Kristen Muller.
I would also like to thank Eric Koebelski, Mary Panico, 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