Good Inside with Dr. Becky - We Can Do Hard Things Crossover
Episode Date: January 24, 2023On this very special Good Inside and We Can Do Hard Things crossover episode, Dr. Becky brings all your questions about parenting and the like to the podcasting trio behind We Can Do Hard Things, Glen...non Doyle, Abby Wambach, and Amanda Doyle. Join Good Inside Membership: https://bit.ly/3R4BLQyFollow Dr. Becky on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/drbeckyatgoodinsideSign up for our weekly email, Good Insider: https://www.goodinside.com/newsletterOrder 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/podcastÂ
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I'm Dr. Becky, and this is Good Inside.
So I just put out a book, and as part of my book tour, I talk to a lot of different people
on a lot of different podcasts.
Maybe one of my all-time favorites was being a guest on We Can Do Hard Things, the podcast
hosted by Glen and Doyle, Abby Womback, and Amanda Doyle.
If you haven't heard of We Can Do Hard Things,
definitely go check it out.
Wait, wait, wait, not right now,
because you're here and I have an amazing episode for you.
I asked the good inside community for questions.
They wanted the four of us to discuss,
and that's exactly what we're gonna do together
in this episode.
Let's jump in right after this. What's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's up, what's 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's 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's 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 molissaandug.com and use code
doctor becky20drbcky20 for 20% off your order. Melissa and Doug, timeless toys, endless possibilities.
I have Miss Amanda Doyle, Miss Glennon Doyle, Miss Abby and Womback right here. We're all waving,
as if you could see us, but because we're all excited. So if you want to wave back and you're not driving, please do. And the other really special thing about this episode
is that I went to the Good Inside Membership Community to source questions. And we received
so many amazing questions for Abby and Amanda and Glennon. And really, I just want to jump in
and hear from them. So you can hear their brilliant answers, no pressure.
All right, let's jump into questions. I am really curious what you're going to say to
Brooks' questions. So let's hear from Brooke.
Hey Dr. Becky and hey, Glennon, Abby and Amanda. I listen to both of your podcasts regularly
and love them. My name is Brooke.
I have a six-year-old son and a three-year-old daughter.
And I would love to know what is the best parenting decision
that you ever made.
Do you all want me to go first?
I can go first.
Okay, so I don't know if you're going to have to cut this answer.
I don't know if this is what we were expecting,
but I think that with a lot of nuance, I would say that the most important parenting decision I
ever made was to get divorced. I was in a really broken marriage to a good man, which is a tricky
place to be because we're also supposed to be grateful for what we have, right? And um,
much ensued, I fell in love. I almost didn't go for what,
for you, for Abby. I almost didn't follow the great love of my life because I was so afraid to hurt
my children. I was raised in a family that was together, that was never divorced,
and divorced was considered to be such a failure in my mind. And one day I was looking at my
daughter and I've told this story in the book, but I just remember thinking, oh, I'm staying in
this marriage for her, but what I want this marriage for her. And I realized that I was modeling bad love for my children and calling that good parenting.
And that was because I had this idea in my head that a mother was a martyr.
I think we just do whatever we have to do to avoid our children having any discomfort.
And so I did, well, I guess I just decided I have to, if she came to me in 20 years and described
this marriage to me and then said, Mommy, what should I do? What would I say to her? And I would say
to her, get the hell out. You have one life. You know what to do. And so I got divorced, came out as queer, married Abby,
and it was really messy and hard and horrific
as divorce always is in the beginning.
And I think that in the end, what happened
is that our kids learned that we are true to ourselves,
even when it causes discomfort to other people
and that we have decided together that a broken family
is any family regardless of structure, even if they're still together, well, where people
have to break themselves to fit in, and that a whole family regardless of whatever structure
it is, whether it's a single parent, whether it's divorce, whether whatever it is, is any
family regardless of structure where everybody gets to bring their
full selves to the table?
And I think that our family is messy and weird and imperfect,
but it is a place where everybody gets to be themselves,
even if it makes everybody else uncomfortable,
and even if there's a constant rebalancing of the collective.
So that I think getting divorced and coming out
or my best parenting decisions which interestingly enough didn't have anything to do with direct
parenting but did. I don't know if it's a decision as much as it's a constant effort to
And as much as it's a constant effort to re-decide on a daily basis, that is my answer, but I think the most powerful thing to me as a perfectionist, performer person, and that
has brought a lot of good and a lot of pain into my life is practicing the decision
on a daily basis that my kids triumphs and quote unquote successes and achievements are
not a reflection of me and that their behavior and struggle
are not a referendum on me.
Because I think that that,
when I look underneath my reactions
to some of their struggles,
what is really driving that is that I think that it is receipts of me failing to
parent them correctly. And then when I take away the me-centeredness of everything,
their struggles and their triumphs are their own. And I can just react and be with
them and guide them through that as their own thing
instead of taking the perspective that this is either something I've done or failed to do
and I think it allows me to actually be in relationship with them instead of being in
relationship with myself via them. It's good. It's really good.
I would say my favorite parenting decision
or my best parenting decision
was when I made a mistake early on in our marriage
with a child, with a kid.
I didn't go and comfort her.
I had the, I parented in the way I was parented,
kind of an avoidance, you know,
our kid was having knee pain injury
and I was just kind of like suck it up, sort of thing.
And I, Glennon and I were talking about it in bed that night
and I was like, I just don't feel that good about it.
And Glennon, she suggested maybe I talk to Emma
about it tomorrow.
And I looked at her confused. I was like, what?
Like a parent, like I'm going to apologize to a child like that had never happened in my life.
I had never known that that was even a possibility. And so the next morning, I prepared my whole
speech in my head during the night and I talked to Emma and I tell her all the reasons why I didn't respond in the
in the way that I wished I had responded and I was so sorry and that I would keep working on it
in the future. And of course, she was like, you know, getting ready for school. And she was like,
yeah, no problem. Like it was no big deal to her. But the art of repair had been something that I
had never experienced or practiced before. So I think that that has helped me learn how to
constantly go back and try to repair things that I've done, faults that I've had, issues
that I've made in our kids' lives.
Cool. And being in therapy, I think the best decision any parent can make is just being
therapy themselves. Which I always tell my community, weekly therapy, like me too.
Like I just always want to make sure everyone knows that.
And not to like be like, look at how amazing I am.
Like, no, I don't have it all figured out.
There he is hugely helpful for me.
And when I think about my best parenting decision, I guess I'm thinking like
what has been some of the most impactful ones?
And I feel like when my kids are struggling, the decision, like nothing's wrong with my kid.
And I really, really do believe that,
like so much comes from these two paths,
like am I looking at my kid and they feel it?
Yeah, like they're a bad kid doing bad things.
Or am I looking at my kid?
Like they're a good kid having a hard time.
And especially with one of my deeply feeling kid,
it was a struggle in those,
oh my, those hand from the animalistic,
the keyed animal, the viciousness,
and just deciding over and over in the moment.
As much as I could after in the way me and my husband would talk about it and how I talk
about it with friends and what I thought to do, I have a good kid.
I have a good kid.
I have a good kid.
Good kid.
And like trying to decide that just over and over.
I think that would have made a big difference for me. and like trying to decide that just over and over. Mm.
I think that would have made a big difference for me.
I think I had a beautiful family.
I also had parents who I think were afraid of me.
I think I had parents who were afraid of me
and who were trying to protect me,
but what I always felt like they were doing
is trying to protect me from myself,
which made me afraid of me. And so my entire life has been trying
to figure out that am I bad? Am I bad? Am I bad? Am I bad? And so I think that that is
everything. You're good. Well, these kids, these deeply
feeling kids, which I know you identify, and there's a lot of us deeply feeling adults,
like that, that is such a core thing in our approach for these kids.
They're my passion project.
That even saying to kids in those moments,
I say this to recommend all the time.
And people tell me, their kids,
the way they look when they hear these words,
it is everything.
I am not scared of you right now.
I am not scared of how you're feeling.
I'm not scared of how big they are.
That's why I'm staying here.
I know you're screaming at me to get out.
You don't have to like it.
I'm not scared.
I'm sitting here. I don't even have to look at you out. You don't have to like it. I'm not scared. I'm sitting here.
I don't even have to look at you,
but we are going to get through this together.
And your presence and you're showing them
exactly the feelings that overwhelm you
aren't actually so toxic and destructive in the world.
And if you can't show that to your kid,
of course they can't internalize that about themselves.
It's everything.
And you can say that even if you don't feel it,
it's like what if you're,
I mean that really,
like if you, like sometimes I,
I naturally get scared when I don't know what to do
because I feel like in 95% of my life,
I know what to do.
And sometimes I feel like I hide from parenting
because it is the one area that I don't know how to do
exceptionally.
And so when I'm in those situations, I am not necessarily afraid of them.
I'm afraid of how I feel in that situation because I don't know what to do.
So two things, one shorter and one longer.
I'm sending you my deeply feeling kids workshop and bring the tissues and bring the pause button
because you'll have to digest it.
But like it, I mean this more than I would say
about anything else I do, it will change,
it will change your conceptualization
and it will change your sense of knowing what to do.
And when you're overwhelmed, it's very different
to say to a kid in those moments,
you are crazy or I can't stay here
when you're acting this way.
Versus saying, I need a moment, I love you,
you're a good kid, I'm going outside
and I'll check on you in a few minutes,
totally different, totally different.
And that is another way of kind of removing
the arm too much for people
and removing the blame because you're owning that.
And then I really think with these
deeply feeling kids the more you actually understand their core fears, the more clarity you have,
and then the more clarity you have, the more you can use those skills in the moment.
Hey good inside listeners. So sometimes with parenting, a podcast does the trick,
and sometimes with parenting, we need 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 and 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.
All right, let's hear from Kristen.
This is a good one.
Hi, my name is Kristen and I'm so excited that Glenn and Abby and Amanda are here.
My question is about faith and religion.
I know the three of you were raised in somewhat stricter religious environments and chosen not to continue that with your kids.
So what does that look like? I want to pass on my faith to my children while making sure that they don't soak up any poison in the abuse. Thank you.
Oh God.
Literally. Yeah. Right. I mean, I'll tell you my things. They're not necessarily right. Or, you know,
they might feel awful to some people and good to some people. I don't know. I mean, I am a person
I mean, I am a person with such wild, passionate, fierce faith. Do I know what that means?
No.
Can I put it into words anymore?
No.
Does it have a religion?
No.
But I, at some point, had to get to the point where I had to lose my religion to keep my faith, because it kept getting bigger
than whatever container I was trying to put it in.
Okay.
I have, my kids, I have,
I was a Sunday school teacher, okay.
So I would go to every new church
and then I would be scared about what the Sunday school teacher
is gonna teach my kids about God.
So then I would become the Sunday school teacher
and then everybody else was terrified about what I was gonna teach their kids about God. So then I would become the Sunday school teacher and then everybody else was terrified about what I was going to teach their kids
about God, which I preferred. So my I had a child and I want you to picture this. Like I
would be teaching the Sunday school in front of the whole church congregation because we
did part of the lesson in front of everybody. And so I would be reading a passage, you
know, like about Jonah or something, okay?
And you know, he got swallowed by a whale, okay?
And allegedly, allegedly, well listen, so my kid, my child, would raise her hand
in front of the whole church while I was reading the scripture. And I would not call on her, because I knew that she was going to mess me up.
Yeah, she's a hair dick.
Yeah, and so she would wave her hand and wave her hand and then I would start to look ridiculous.
So I would go, what?
And she would go, so mom, so you're telling us that this guy got swallowed by a whale
and lived in the whale and then got spit out and and I would just be sitting there and I would go, I guess so.
Do not rely on your own understanding.
Right. Exactly. So here's what I think.
I think that if you can find a religion to share with your children, that is not based upon them doubting themselves.
What I have found about a lot of religion is that in order to keep the collective,
what is taught to the person is do not lean on your understanding. This is what I was taught.
The heart is wicked. God works in mysterious ways. So whenever you have an instinct, a knowing,
a personal, then you are taught, no, it's like sometimes religion can be a complete gaslighting, right?
Of the self in order to buy into the collective and that is also what a cult is.
So what I decided was that I kept trying to tell my children what really what faith was
as if it was math, okay?
Like I could tell it to
them. And my our family's faith life opened up very much when I stopped telling them and
I started asking them. Yes. I asked my children stories. I mean, questions about what they
think about God, what they think about the afterlife, what they think about this, what
God is to them now, what faith means, can they put it into words?
And they have the most beautiful answers.
And it starts beautiful questions and conversations that the answer to all of those questions is
we don't freaking know.
So let's have beautiful conversations about how we all don't know and how we just have
beautiful guesses.
And faith is more like an art than a than math. Yeah.
And so there are no answers.
There are just beautiful questions that we can all ask together.
Yeah.
And just because you have a specific faith or religious angling, doesn't mean your kid will, right?
Like we all do get indoctrinated by our parents as much as the churches and
the temples and all of the institutions and religion. And so just make sure that it's
their choice. I think that that's when our kids talk to us about their faith. I'm like,
that is so cool because I don't, I don't have it. I was indoctrinated Catholic, you know,
was told I was going to hell. So I was like, fuck you, religion.
And now I'm like curious about that.
Yeah.
Like that makes sense to me.
I could get on board with that.
So it's kind of like this, they're teaching us now.
And if you do choose a religion, please God make sure that it's one that is not
accidentally or purposefully teaching your children that anybody on earth is out of God's
favor or is flawed. One of the things I think is so revolutionary about Dr. Becky's work is the
good inside framework because that can sound soft. It is not what I learned in Christianity is that
I was bad inside. Original sin, the idea that we are all especially women put here to lead people astray and that
our badness is inherent in us and that we are shameful.
Feeling and being taught that you were bad inside is something that it takes a lifetime
to recover from.
And in a lot of institutional religion, women, gay people, people of color, a lot of religions are just patriarchy
in concrete and with a God decal on top. And so make sure that if you're bringing your children
into pews or to wherever you're bringing them, that you actually believe what is being taught
because it's being imbibed into them, whether you know it or not,
and it is not okay to bring your kids to a place where you, I don't know how many people I know,
who bring their kids to churches where women aren't allowed to teach and speak,
and then they don't actually believe that, but what are you teaching your kids by doing that?
So be intentional about it.
There is a whole theory that is in spite of the, I love 90% of it.
There's just this 10% that I have to overlook because there's so much good of it.
And I think it's important to be real careful about that because you are an adult human that can make those
distinctions and a child may not be able to. So if you are asking them to swallow the 90%,
the 10% is going down with it and that's very, very hard to get out and the studies that have shown that it's actually much harder for people who come out later to recover precisely
because the 90% was so good.
They really feel disembodied and cut off
from their communities and from the safety
of their home base.
Two other things about it.
I think there's also this idea of like,
well, it's all or nothing.
Like, our kids are either going to have a faith. And that means we have to find a church and get
involved in it, or they won't have any of that. And I was a kid who was a very, that was a big deal
to me when I was young. Like, I would pray all the time. It was a source of comfort for me. It was
a source of peace for me. When I was a little kid, I would get scared and I would pray.
And so I think that it is really cool to think about like what
Glundends think about that it isn't all or nothing.
It isn't like that you can be talking about those things, be even
suggesting that there might be a source of power and comfort for them
and a way of processing and comfort for them,
and a way of processing the world around them, that isn't tied to this whole other structure.
And then I also just throw out because I think that people don't think about this as much.
Talking about our bodies and sex and sexuality is such an important piece of all of this. And so, yes, to the LGBTQ
affirming, yes, to the having leaders of color, having women of color, having women. And
it's also be very, very careful about the messages that your kids are receiving about their body and their desire and their worthiness and
what about them has value because that sets up like we are our bodies.
And so you cannot say that you are teaching people that they are good and that their
bodies are bad.
And you're teaching them that they can have everything that they want in life
and that all of their dreams and their desires can come true
and that they need to kill the part of them that has a desire.
And it's just, I have spent a lifetime trying to undo that piece
and I haven't done it.
And I think that it is very important to not overlook that piece of what
you're learning, interges. That's good. So on this topic of bodies, I'd love to hear from
another member from Genevieve. Hi, my name is Genevieve and I'm mom to three year old Adelaide and one year old Eva.
And something I'd love to hear from you all about
is I really just been feeling the weight of responsibility
when it comes to raising these two girls
and just believe so strongly as does my partner
that we want them to be raised from an early age,
knowing that they are made for more and just to have
the space to grow up untamed. And just to be able to embody that and have this be that safe and
supportive space. And at the same time, I know that as they are increasingly out in the world,
that as they are increasingly out in the world, they'll be exposed to spaces and to voices and experiences
that give other messages, like,
diet culture and kind of patriarchal structures
and all of those things.
And so, would love to hear from you all kind of what you think
about that and maybe any experiences that you've had
with those situations yourself.
I haven't had any of those.
No, no experiences like that.
I think she'd move to the next question.
I'm good, I'm good, I'm good, Jennifer.
I just sometimes feel like I shouldn't have named that book Untamed.
It should have been Untaming because it just feels like nobody's untamed and I sure as hell I'm not.
And it's just an actually a process each day to enter as opposed to something that you can be or not.
I can tell you some things that I feel like we did right with our kids.
The first thing that I would say that I, to Genevieve, is that if I could do anything
over, it wouldn't have been anything I said or didn't say to my girls or boy, it would have been that I would have had myself in
Therapy about all of this earlier
like I
Wish
that I there I was saying
All the right things with this there is nobody
There is no parent out there
with us. There is nobody. There is no parent out there who wasn't saying more untamed things to my kids. I just accidentally had raging body issues the
whole time. So perhaps had I in all seriousness, I wish that since our kids don't
take in as much what we say as what we are, I wish that I had been working harder earlier on my own taming.
What I will say that we did that seems to have manifested in our kids so far,
is that I always think about that quote that probably isn't true,
but the one about all the water in the world can't sing a ship unless it gets inside.
Sometimes I think about the toxic messages about women being just all the water in the world can't sing a ship unless it gets inside. And sometimes I think about the toxic messages
about women being just all the water in the world.
It's the, we can't even see it because it's the water
we swim in, we're like fish and we're in it
and we don't know it because it's incessant.
And it's like in every single thing
that anyone says to us and it's in,
on every billboard, it's in every commercial
and it's in, it's everywhere.
And so one of the things we try to do is,
that every awareness really made me very sick as a kid
and still, and I'm still trying to get un-sick about it
because it all got in because I couldn't see it.
And so one of the things we're trying to do
with the kids is make everything that's invisible visible,
which means we did the opposite
of what I think we tend to do as parents, which is try to hope they don't notice
it and turn it away from them and turn the commercial off and turn them away from the
billboard.
And instead, we would always point them straight toward it.
We would like stop and be like, oh my gosh, you guys, look at that billboard.
Look at that magazine.
What do you think that magazine is trying to tell you about what kind of woman's body is valuable?
And you know, they would start thinking like, oh, it looks like they're saying that white bodies are more valuable or like
skinny bodies or blonde bodies or whatever it was. It was like they started to develop this
consciousness or they were becoming
wise
consumers of things as opposed to just swallowing everything whole.
And I think like in the, they got pissed for a while.
I think in this culture, little girls either get really pissed or really sick.
And so we chose pissed.
And now they're older and they're critical of the culture they end.
And I think that they're less self-critical because of that.
One thing I've noticed recently is their take on body positivity, which in lots of ways
is as toxic as all the other shit.
My daughter told me that she didn't even know that her cellulite was a problem until
she saw this big thing online that said, love your cellulite. Your cellulite is not a problem.
Hashtag body positivity. And she was like, well, holy hell. I didn't even know. Right. So
we have to analyze the body positivity just as much as we analyzed all the negativity,
which is a whole nother layer, but I guess making the invisible visible and getting ourselves
into therapy is my takes.
I think it's also just all day long. I think it's, you know, reading the books, noticing the pronouns that are used when we tell. I mean, I was, we were playing a new card game the other day
with my daughter, and she was so excited to play it and got out the directions.
And it was like when the first player goes, he passes three cards to his left.
Left. Then the second player, he gives four cards to the third player and she was like,
why would they assume that the person playing this is a he? I mean, it's just the
that the person playing this is a he. I mean, it's just the, I think, I think we think exactly
like Lenin said that it's gonna overwhelm them and hurt them
and kill a little part of their spirit
that we identify the truth of how ragingly male,
heteronormative the world is.
But it's not like they're not gonna notice. male, heteronormative, the world is.
But it's not like they're not gonna notice.
And in fact, if they don't notice, that's worse.
Because if they don't notice, by the time they realize
they don't fit into the system,
they think it's because of their deficiency.
But if we can say, yeah, this is bogus,
that this says he, and it shouldn't be that. And so we like wrote
a little email to the person. Yes, turn it into action. Yes. I mean, I will, she crosses
out all the time on the bat on books that she's reading. If it says he, she crosses out and
says slash she on all the books she's reading. So she's she's putting herself where the world is not putting her. And I think that
that, I mean, the question before about religion, like if you do choose to go to church, great,
trust yourself and your decision that you've made on that, that's awesome. And then if something
comes up during a sermon, if your child wants to know why father, why son?
Like, maybe we can talk about that.
Maybe we can talk about why is God a father?
How come maybe?
And I think just naming it is so huge,
and naming the places where you still struggle is huge,
because they aren't missing that either.
Yeah, and it's like what Dr. Becky always teaches us. It's like if you are noticing it, you are not it.
If they are not noticing it, then that's, then they are it. But it's like what we talk about with
when you notice your anger, you know, suddenly you're not the anger, you're the wiser thing. If our
kid is noticing it, that means they are not it, which is the whole shebangs. Good. And also not
identify like the assumptions. We had a conversation with Hannah Gadsby and she was talking about how
a really moving thing where her mother who had a hard time because of culturally the way they grew up
mother who had a hard time because of culturally the way they grew up with her coming out later in life and that she she came around to saying that her
greatest regret was raising her assuming, raising her as if she was a straight
girl. And I think we do a lot of that. The realization I came from a place of is that I was raising neurodivergent children as
if they were neuro-typical.
So I was projecting on them the way they were experiencing the world and trying to protect
them from it, but that was not the way they were going through the world.
And I think that we do a damage when we assume anything.
With my daughter all the time or my son, I'll say,
do you have any questions on any boys or girls?
Or do you like, is there anybody out there
you have a crush on, or who would you like to,
and just not making assumptions.
Because assumptions are burdens to them. That they have to, it is an assumption, an assumption is an expectation that they
will either live up to or will have to come and confront you and let you know you
weren't right about that. And that's not a burden you want to give them.
And the one thing I want to add there for everyone listening, okay, is a lot of times we
think we have to know something
or be able to fix something as a parent
to talk to our kids about, right?
This diet culture, right?
Patriarchal structure.
I don't think any of us task ourselves
with single-handedly fixing that or knowing everything.
And actually, that's the stuff our kids need us most.
So just to raise a question, hey, what is that?
Why do they have he there?
What is going on there?
You notice that.
And again, I think we say, and then what?
That's it. That's it.
That's it.
Question to say.
As long as you can question something,
the water doesn't flood in.
You've already kept it outside.
So to end, one last question will be short answer.
I'm big on mantras, right?
I think a go-to mantra for me related to the stuff
I'm working on is always like,
Becky right now, you're doing enough.
You're doing exactly what you need to be doing when I'm working on, it's always like, Becky right now, you're doing enough.
You're doing exactly what you need to be doing
when I'm trying to not maybe be productive.
And I'm curious if each of you could share,
I don't know some type of mantra or message
that you feel like in your own personal development journeys,
a quick one, like one sentence that you might say to yourself.
We can do hard things.
Mine is you don't need to suffer to succeed.
Mine I'm working on is things can come easy to me because I think that I try to earn
the good things I have by suffering for them. And Glennan said something earlier on that don't worry so much about raising good kids
that you forget you already have them, that we can just rest in ease that our kids are good, that we are good, that good things can come to us without
manufacturing all of the suffering for it.
Thanks for listening.
To share a story or ask me a question, go to goodinside.com slash podcast.
You could also write me at podcast at goodinside.com slash 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 Erica Belsky, Mary Panico, 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