Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1185: How to Raise Perfectly Imperfect Kids With Lisa Sugarman & Debra Fox Gansenberg
Episode Date: December 16, 2019In this episode, Sal, Adam and Justin speak with Lisa Sugarman & Debra Fox Gansenberg, the authors of How to Raise Perfectly Imperfect Kids and Be Ok With It: Real Tips & Strategies for Parents of Tod...ay's Gen Z Kids. How who they are and what they do are very similar. (1:44) What inspired the book? (4:34) Providing an opportunity for families, kids and teachers a place to come to not feel judged. (5:45) What does the term ‘humanistic’ mean to them? (8:12) The problematic future of ‘lawnmower’ parenting. (9:18) How do we as parents manufacture adversity? (14:45) Their take on the ‘everybody getting a trophy’ generation. (19:13) How the loses are where the real magic happens. (22:44) The challenges raising kids in this social media world. (26:32) The difference between EQ vs IQ. (35:10) Is depression and anxiety a symptom of overbearing parents? (38:43) Are we overinforming our children? (40:15) Walking the walk and talking the talk. (48:21) How you earn a reward, but you also earn a consequence. (51:20) What is the hardest thing to communicate to parents? (53:33) Why parents must hold their kids to their OWN standards. (56:45) Are there common challenges they see with moms and dads? (59:35) The benefits of ‘rough and tumble play’ with our children. (1:01:33) The importance of communication between partners. (1:03:44) The value of children seeing the impact of their choices. (1:09:48) What are the challenges they have faced with their own kids and how have they overcome them? (1:12:35) Understanding and managing the different parts of ADHD (attention deficit hyperactivity disorder). (1:20:37) Exploring the alternative methods of education with our kids. (1:28:40) Creating a movement with their newest book. (1:35:36) Featured Guest(s)/People Mentioned Debra Fox Gansenberg, LICSW (@foxganzy) Instagram New Beginnings Counseling Service Lisa Sugarman (@lisa_sugarman) Instagram Lisa Sugarman Warren Farrell, PhD (@drwarrenfarrell) Twitter Related Links/Products Mentioned December Promotion: MAPS Aesthetic ½ off! **Code “BLACK50” at checkout** Equal Parts Podcast How to Raise Perfectly Imperfect Kids and Be OK with It: Real Tips & Strategies for Parents of Today’s Gen Z Kids - Book by Lisa Sugarman and Debra Fox Gansenberg Kids of Helicopter Parents Are Sputtering Out Mind Pump 872: Dr. Warren Farrell- The Boy Crisis Montessori Schools
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
In this episode of Mind Pump, we interview a couple people who we consider to be experts on raising children.
We interviewed Lisa Sugarman and Deborah Fox Gansenberg.
Now Lisa Sugarman is a nationally syndicated opinion columnist.
She's a parenting author and a speaker who speaks and writes about the benefits of embracing
the perfectly imperfectness of life.
Her column, it is what it is, appears in newspapers and on lifestyle websites around the country.
How to raise perfectly in perfect kids and be
okay with it is her third book and she wrote this with Deborah Fox, Gansenberg. Now Deborah
is a founder and owner of new beginnings counseling services. Deborah has 25 years of experience
working in the mental health field as a clinical cycle therapist and business owner who specializes
in individuals, couples, group, and family,
therapy.
We think you're going to really enjoy this episode.
We talk a lot about that book that they wrote together, how to raise perfectly imperfect
kids and be able to play with it.
We talk about raising kids, parenting, excellent, excellent episode.
Now before it starts, I want to remind everybody that Maps aesthetic is 50% off.
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I was actually just with my best, my two best friends
that we go back to fourth grade.
Now the one thing I noticed now,
and I'm 38, they're both 39, we all grew up same class.
And we still are extremely tight.
I see them at least once a month before we all had kids.
It was probably two, three times at least a month.
We saw each other.
But I do notice that we are different now.
Like we're still bonded because we had this childhood
that we grew up together, but we definitely have
like, we have different political views.
Oh, sure.
So it actually makes it really interesting
that we have it.
Are you guys like that?
Are you guys very similar?
We're pretty similar.
Yeah, I feel like we're, except finding each other
after years of education and experience,
finding out what she was doing and what was going on
was impressive.
Like, wow, this is crazy.
You've written a couple books.
And I opened a business and a sizable practice
and both doing our things,
that was like what was most remarkable coming back together.
But as far as who we are and what we do,
very similar.
Well, you were off air,
we were talking a little bit about that.
I'd love to revisit that conversation
because it reminds me of the conversation
we all had when we first met
because we actually didn't even really know each other.
Justin and I had worked together 10 plus years ago.
Sal and Doug knew each other, but the four of us had never all met before.
And when we got together, we were just, we were talking about the fitness industry,
all the issues that we saw with it.
Like we saw the way we saw people marketing themselves and it sounded really similar
to kind of what you guys are talking about with the whole family thing.
So it's one of those.
Absolutely.
I mean, we can just kind of go to a place where we could talk from Boston Logan Airport
all the way to LAX without a breath.
I mean, we're at that point where there's just so much stuff that we connect over, you
know, being moms and working and now collaborating together and
and our backgrounds are so similar. I mean growing up, you know, what were we
like? Maybe two tenths of a mile away from each other when we were kids. You know,
the school was in the middle and we reached on either side of it. So, you know, we
have this lifetime of experiences together and it it's interesting too, because we have all
of this past history together and all of these friends, like after we leave you guys
were flying down to LA and we're going to catch up with a bunch of our high school friends
who are out there. And it's like, we have all of these things in common. And then we have
this chunk of time when we got married and when our kids were really little. And we weren't
together and living in the same place that we catch each other up on. So either we're talking about the
current stuff we're doing or the stuff we did when we were kids are filling each other in. So we
never really stopped. What exactly inspired the book? So you guys get together, you start talking
about what you're doing with the priest. She I bamed into her long story short. Oh yeah, I'm writing, I'm starting to write some books and I shared what I was doing,
which was on the psychotherapist and I've been doing this for 25 years and had a sizable
practice with my mother for the first 19 years and we got to talking.
She's like, what do you do?
And I go into schools.
I do lectures.
I do public speaking.
I write curriculum for teachers. I do all sorts of different things.
And when we started talking about the thing we both had in common, which was kids and parenting,
we both were aligned in the way that we were approaching our parenting, which was very humanistic.
And so I was reading a little bit of what she was writing about and I was sharing the work that I was doing and
It was just this very natural
Connection around okay. This is a very humanistic approach. And that's what I kept saying to Lisa was humanistic
Yeah, even doing this for 19 years in schools or longer longer. She has yeah, I started in schools about 25 years ago
So what have you seen over the
tell us what there's not enough time for what we've seen? Well, I started 25 years ago. I started
in a school and an inner city area just outside of Boston and I was in the middle of everything
from gang warfare to kids from broken homes homes living generationally with grandparents that they
hadn't, you know, the parents were still over in another country.
Two kids who, you know, I was, the town was sad alongside a very upper class nice community
where kids were privileged.
So long story short, I saw both sides.
And so from that seeing those perspectives,
it was a perfect place to start my career.
But I knew that I wanted to be able to take the work
I was doing in schools and bring it somewhere,
there was such a disconnect.
I'd work at a outpatient facility
and see kids coming in with parents worried about school
and friends, and then I was in the schools working with the teachers and see kids coming in with parents worried about school and friends and then I was in the schools
Working with the teachers and the kids and there was such a disconnect
So we created new beginnings counseling service my mother and I and it was a place to come after school
To then be able to see parents and families and kids to talk about anything and everything and then it got so big that I needed to hire
other clinicians because I couldn't do all the dark service myself.
So why is it growing so fast? What were you? What were you obviously making some sort
of connection or you're enlightening these teachers or parents?
I think it was honestly the way that I approach things. I'm not here to judge anyone. I'm here to give you four walls in a door.
Tell me what's going on.
Your honesty is what helps me help you.
So come in, talk to me,
and I think a lot of people,
when they think of therapy and counseling,
it's like, ooh, I know.
It was just, I think, a very,
for us, an opportunity to give families, kids,
teachers, administrators a place to come, not feel judged, throw it all out in the
table and start talking about what, you know, let's get real.
What is going on in the classroom?
What is going on in your home?
What is going on behind closed doors?
And then from there, I just, I think it had a lot to do with
my mother and myself and the way that we approached it and the people that we hired, we were
all in it for the love of the job, not to, you know.
You mentioned the term humanistic. What does that mean exactly?
Common sense. It really just boils down to a common sense approach to, in this case, parenting.
It was raising kids to take responsibility for themselves, let the kid climb the tree
until they feel unsure and they'll stop.
The old, not that we're encouraging kids to put their hands on burners on the stoves,
but put your hand on the burner.
If you're going to get burned, you're not gonna do it again. It's it's just
Teaching kids just how to advocate for themselves and and letting kids
be kids letting kids be unstructured letting kids
Explore and kind of define who they are on their own now that sounds
That sounds somewhat intuitive, but it sounds also it counter to, I feel like what's been happening, which is this, oh yeah, just sheltering the heck out of helicopter.
Helicopter.
Well, we've got, I mean, we've got a ton of that in the book, helicopter parenting, and
then we talk a lot about lawnmower parenting, which is really kind of the next generation.
It's the next generation of lawnm lawnmower parent, you know, of helicopter parenting.
And also there's, you know, there's this whole movement,
while helicopter parenting, you all know what that is.
You're just over the mold.
All the time you're hovering and, oh,
and the bulldozer parenting is the other one
that's kind of symbiotic too.
lawnmower parenting is you're just,
you're paving the way
in such a way that there's absolutely no bump
in the road for your kid.
You just picture of that backyard,
that long, straight, thin lawn mower line
and there's nothing obstructing anybody.
And that's what parents are doing.
They're just bulldozing or lawn mowering.
And then they come in my office and they're like,
I want my kids to have wings and do something independent
and go off to college or manage themselves
and they haven't had adversity.
They haven't had obstacles.
They don't have the skillset to problem solve.
And so I know we all come from a place that we love our children.
We don't want them to struggle.
We want them to have success.
But in doing that, it is really problematic
for this generation because they really don't know
how to problem solve and manage themselves moving forward.
And so for us, we're doing a lot of talking
around being a lot more apparent
and how teachers are also impacted by this as well.
I don't know if you guys work with
any youth, but a lot of them come in and they expect you to do it for them and help them along
in a way that is not very productive. Do you feel that this may be a contributor towards the
outrage culture we're seeing out there today? I do. When you say outrage just in terms of like, I'm offended.
I'm offended by everything and everything.
Well, I think it's the same mentality that parents have who are so pissed off when their
kid doesn't get atrophy.
Yeah, exactly.
Well, my kid knew that. My kid could do that at home with me while we were studying.
What do you mean they didn't pass the test?
And...
Now statistically, when you look at statistics on children, there's a lot of measures that
seem to be improving or a lot better.
Kids are having less
You know premarital sex or risky sex. There's drug use seems to be down
They less car accidents with children, but they're also they also seem to be more sheltered Is that a are those positive side effects of the helicopter?
Parenting or what are the what are the negatives that would say that you guys are seeing that need to be addressed with The you know law more parenting or helicopter parenting or what are the what are the negatives that would say that you guys are seeing that need to be addressed with the you know law more parenting or helicopter parenting.
Well, yeah, they're just they're not
giving their kids the ability to hit obstacles. They're not I mean that's so critical for human beings
to have to understand what it feels like to
to have to understand what it feels like to see an obstacle and identify what it is and find a workaround. Figure it out. If you can't go straight through it, find a way over under
around and without the skills and that history of doing that and maybe failing and then
getting up and starting
again and trying a different path and pivoting.
Without the ability to do that, kids are, they're at such a disadvantage because they're
ill equipped.
They can't, you know, it's like we have a whole chapter in the book about saying no.
How important it is to say no to your kids.
It's the same kind of a thing where we're doing too much
for them. We're, you know, breeding this generation of, you know, entitled kids. And they're
just expecting that everything is handed to them in every way.
But on the flip side of what you were asking is, are there benefits? And I think, I know
as parents, we want
our child to succeed, right? We want our job is to set them up for success. And I think
that the flip side of that is, I know I come from a place where I want my kid to get
where they want to go. And as a parent, I'm going to make sure that they get where they
want to go. And I think a lot of parents think that it means making sure they get the
A and not the B. So I work with teachers and the front line of that and they're, you know,
getting a call from, you know, Mrs. Fox saying, Hey, you know, why did my son get a B and
not an A? And they're saying, well, your child earned a B. And so in that case, that's where it goes
a rye. I feel like the parent needs to let the child earn what
they worked for. And if they didn't study enough or they got a
few wrong, it's okay. So on the flip side, I get why parents are
doing what they're doing. And kids are going to wonderful
places. They are getting to wonderful colleges
and getting into the careers that they yearn for, but at what cost? The scandal in the news
right now. That's a tough cost. It is. There's a lot more parent at its best. They're going to
remove any obstacle in the way and break the law
why they do it. So how do we, how do we as parents, manufacture adversity? This is something that I
think about a lot now that I have a newborn. And he certainly is going to be raised in a very
different household than I was. And I know that as a kid, all the adversity
that I went through, I probably went through a time in my life where I was angry at my
parents because it was so hard or we didn't have things. And then you go through this transition
when you get older and you go like, oh,, I'm so glad. I went through that because it forged me into who I am today.
And so I think about this a lot as I'm raising a young one now
and going like, man, he's just not gonna face any of the same
similar challenges as I had.
And I think that's really important to developing his character.
So how do I manufacture adversity?
I don't think you can manufacture.
I mean, you can't manufacture.
You can't manufacture.
You just allow them to experience it.
So just like a simple conflict with a friend, right?
I didn't get invited.
I didn't get invited.
Or I wasn't included.
How do you manage that?
Is it rejection?
Is it, I'm not good enough?
Is it, I'm left out?
And so that is not something you have to manufacture.
It's going to happen.
And that child is going to go through some social stuff,
some academic stuff that is going to come forward naturally
if they're part of a team.
Or as we were talking part of a band or part of something,
it really is these things are going to happen.
And when the obstacles happen, you need to let them experience it.
Well, let's go back to that.
That's a great one that you brought up.
And my brain's spinning right now, as you said that, like, what would I say to my son?
He's been left out, a birthday party or something.
He thought it was his friends.
He wasn't invited.
What does that conversation look like or what should it look like?
Right.
I think that it's really important for kids to understand that when someone behaves in a certain way, that's their choice.
And so if a child didn't include them, that person's behavior and choice, that's theirs.
This is your behavior, your reaction, and how you manage it as yours.
And so helping them understand, okay, I could take this personally.
I could take this as a form of rejection, or maybe there's more to the story that I don't
understand.
And so it's helping them understand, okay, this happened.
How is it landing on you?
What does it mean for you?
And so it's helping them understand you can meet this with anger and, you know,
you know, confrontation, or you can manage yourself in a more productive way and be able to say,
okay, I'm going to step back. That's them. If I want an opportunity to do something,
I'm going to create the opportunity for connection. And I'm going to create a social encounter for myself.
So you're just trying to sort of coach into how they're going to be able to react to situations
like that.
That's right.
And that's a thread.
We talk a lot about that throughout the whole book.
I mean, that's one of the major pillars in this book.
It's really all about how as human beings, we are limited to very few things that we can
actually fully, completely control.
And one of the things, one of the big things that we can totally and completely control
is the way that we act and react to the situations around us and the people around us and the
circumstances that we find ourselves in.
And that's something so important to teach your kids.
So my youngest is 19 and my oldest is 22.
And we still have these active conversations every day
because now they're in the working world
and they're college and there's so many different opportunities
when they're not under your roof anymore
where they're faced with all these challenges
where so much is coming at them, it could be a professor,
it could be a roommate, it could be a roommate,
it could be someone at their job,
and they're in a situation where someone's handing them
something, whether it's a dialogue or whatever it is,
and you have to react to it, and you have a choice.
You can pivot one way, you can pivot the other way,
and it's our ability to manage our own attitude
and response that is one of the most powerful things
that we can give to our kids to empower them.
Do you think, what do you think about the,
you know, everyone gets a trophy saying with it.
Hate it, hate it, make it.
Why does it open my mouth?
Yeah, I mean, we hate it too a lot. Yeah, you know what, I think personally, hate it, hate it. Why does it open my mouth? Yeah, I mean, we hated two more.
Yeah, you know what?
I think personally as someone who, you know,
I played sports all through, you know,
college and high school.
And for myself was never on a team to get the trophy.
My, do you remember my school,
I went to a local private school for a couple of years
in our town.
We had a
losing streak, our basketball losing streak was like 77 years long. It was that what was
gross. That one win that we had when I was a senior, we had one win and it was, there
was no trophy. It was nothing. It was just the W and it was the greatest thing in the
world. It was being part of this unit that's bigger than yourself.
And not for a trophy.
I think that the generation that we're seeing
emerge the Gen Z kids, there's a lack of motivation
for a lot of them.
And that's because if everyone's getting a trophy,
it really doesn't matter how hard you worked,
the effort you put forth, the level of commitment
you had because you know, at the end of the day, he's going to get one, I'm going to
get one, he's going to get one.
And so having athletes that I've, you know, my boys, all were athletes through high school
and even my son who's a musician, that for them to be part of something or selected for
something, that is earning it.
That's putting forth effort.
Not everyone's gonna get the part in the play
or in the band or on the team,
and they have to learn how to deal with failure.
They have to learn how to manage
when they don't get what they want,
and if everyone's gonna get a trophy,
you're not teaching them that.
It dilutes the whole experience. You know, you're the essence of being a gonna get a trophy, oh, you're not teaching them that. It dilutes the whole experience.
You know, you're the essence of being a part of a team
is being a part of cohesive groups
working towards something together,
that's training towards something together
and experiencing success and loss together.
And when you, all of a sudden,
are just given out medals and trophies just for showing up,
it dilutes everything. And the essence, if you back it all up and you look at it,
you look at it objectively, the reason why we're there is to just show up for one another,
and to show up to play the sport, or to act in in the play or to do the thing. Yeah, when I think back, the best lessons I ever learned for life were in my losses.
Yeah, we talked about that all the time.
Yeah, they weren't in my wins.
It was when I lost, or I didn't do well that I learned the most.
I agree.
I mean, the losses, I remember one of my kids was on a losing baseball team.
And he was so frustrated because he just
he was working his hardest. He couldn't, he couldn't control the outcome and he was so frustrated
that he went to a field not far from our home and he screamed. I said, let it out. Scream
your brains out, let it out, because he was just so frustrated.
Instead of getting frustrated with his teammates or getting confrontational or pointing the
finger at your fault.
So, it's helping them learn.
This feels awful, but you know what, I'm going to take my part and walk off the field and
figure out how to manage it.
So yeah, through pain is growth.
Do you think if there's a classroom where, let's say all the kids got a, let's say the
teachers teaching history and everybody gets a, you think that's a success or do you think
that?
No, that's pushing a kid through his academics.
Yeah.
And I see that a lot and I see the kids on the other side of that.
And it's really just us.
It does them a distustus because they don't have the skills to earn the A,
but they got the A.
Yeah, so I have a son who's very academic.
He does really, really well in school.
I've never helped him with homework
because he just seems to,
I'm sad.
Well, my worry is that he's not going to have
strong adversity in school. And eventually you will have adversity,
right?
At some point it's going to get real hard.
It's inevitable.
And I'm afraid that he's not going to know how to handle that kind of challenge because
school has been so easy.
Now, what I've done is I've encouraged him to take classes, that stretch him a little
bit.
And he is getting a little bit of that.
And I'm excited to see that he's getting some of his first b's
because it's okay.
It's humbling and it's reality too.
I mean, you can't just expect to have a 4.0
across the board in your life.
I mean, you're not gonna get every job necessarily
that you apply to and you're not gonna get picked
for every team and not every girl you ask out
is gonna say yes.
And all these things, I keep going back to the wins versus losses.
And I've always felt that the losses are where the real magic happens, because that's
how you learn to persevere.
I just feel so crucial to learn that.
It is.
It's a young age.
Because going on through life, you're going to have relationships, you're going to have business failures, you have so many things that if you don't learn
those skills to be able to deal with it and move forward and you know, get through all that.
I don't know how. You know what? You're screwed if you don't have those skills. But it's out of your
control. Like you were saying, your your child has ACE. And I see some kids who come into my office
and they're in college and they're getting their first B.
And it's taken 13 or 14 years to earn it.
So I feel as though when the adversity comes along,
it might not happen right away.
Use it as an opportunity to learn.
Their teacher was right.
Instead of figuring out, oh, well, the teacher was a hard teacher. And that's why I earned the B. I use it as an opportunity to learn. They're teaching moments. Right.
Instead of figuring out, oh, well, the teacher was a hard teacher.
And that's why I earned the B. Or, you know what?
You know, it's my, it was a group project.
And not everyone did their part.
Your lesson is that you, you know, when the child is earning A is good for him.
That's wonderful.
And then the day comes when he doesn't.
And it's like, okay, what part of this is,
you know, a difficult part. What is this part? You know, what, okay, how did you earn your B?
Was the content hard? Did you put in enough time studying? Did you understand it? Did you, you know,
I feel like sometimes people just sugarcoat things a little bit too much too. Like if my kids do worse than other kids at something, I've heard of the parents say things
like, well, you know, it's okay, it's your thing.
And you know, my kids will ask me, hey, why did so-and-so do so much better than me?
Or we lost?
Well, they were better than you.
They were better than you today.
And that's okay.
And that is okay.
You know, maybe they tried harder, they studied harder, or sometimes people naturally are
going to be better than you.
Yeah, strengths and weaknesses vary across the board.
I laughed my youngest one wanted to take an AP class this year as a sophomore and I was
like, oh gosh, but he said, mom, I'm taking it for the subject matter.
I want to take this class.
And he's knocking out of the park where as other kids who took it for the purpose of the
AP might not be doing as well, right?
They might be earning the C or less because they're in it for a different reason.
And so, you know, to your point, what do you guys think about raising kids today in this
social media world?
And do you think that it is having a huge impact?
Do you think that it's affecting social skills?
Absolutely. What do you think that it's affecting social skills? Absolutely.
What do you guys see?
When you say social skills, the very first thing that comes to my mind is my 19-year-old
who will try to make plans with friends, and they're all on their phones, and they're
all in different places, and she's 19.
She's a grown woman.
They'll be back and forth about some ridiculous, simple plan that they have
for that day.
And it's taking them an hour and 45 minutes before everyone's responding on the thread
and everyone's connecting.
I'm like, pick up the phone.
Just pick up the telephone.
That's not how we do it.
My generation doesn't do that mom.
That's not what we do.
Or you get back, we talk about this a lot that your kids will text you and it'll be all caps
And it's they're yelling at you or or there's a period at the end you get that from the boys
Yes, if you accidentally put a period at the end of a sentence or something that you've written
I'll get another text immediately. Why are you so angry?
What's that?
Oh, yeah, oh yeah look? Period. Like what the hell? That's a new.
Oh yeah, oh yeah, look it up, it's a thing.
That's how mom used to incenses growing up.
Yeah, yeah, I think that, you know,
just even simply writing the word what?
What?
Yep, that's a big one in my house.
You know, it's texting and all of the social media piece,
I just, I've, it's very hard to watch.
It's one to mention, and that's the problem.
There's no inflection, there's no,
I'm sitting across from Sal,
Sal knows what I mean when I say something a certain way,
because he sees my face, he understands how I'm saying it,
without that, in the of that that human contact
You don't know and it's it's all subjective and it's all flat
I feel like one of the probably what I think is one of the scariest things is and we talk about this because we're in the fitness space
You know, I and I'm guilty of this. I have I don't follow I follow probably thousands of people that are anybody who's into working out and fitness in our space. I tend to follow. My feed is just flooded with all these perfect
bodies. I know from working in the industry for 20 years and being actually in brick and
mortar gyms and seeing people working out, which already that's a selection bias that these
are people that
care about their health and fitness, they're in the gym. And if I were to look in the gym at all
the bodies in there, everybody looks pretty fucking normal. Maybe there's that one or two people in
there that look amazing or look like a model or that. But everybody else looks to fucking same. So we,
and so as these kids and these kids tend to gravitate towards these other kids that look amazing or have amazing things.
And so I fear that.
Yeah, I think that the thing that I see is this, just when social media started an Instagram and all of that, I used to have kids that would just be so anxious because they didn't get likes on their pictures and people weren't acknowledging. And, you know, the whole Facebook frenzy of how everyone
putting out the perfect images to present a certain way
and no one puts out the first thing in the morning
or the, you know, not so good outfit that you put together
and looking a little chubby right now.
Not in shape.
But I do, I mean, my heart is heavy
when I think of social media
because I think it's a blessing in a curse
because kids are dealing with, like you said, perfection.
I think constant contact has just destroyed a lot for kids.
I'm not, you know, a child's being bullied in this school.
When I was in a school and someone wasn't kind to me,
I left the school yard and I would go home
and it was done for the day.
And now it's not, it follows them home.
And if anything, there's more to strangle them.
It follows them everywhere.
And it's so hard to, you know, watching that.
So I'm, you know, the mom of two girls.
And, and they, they've grown up with social media,
not as much my older one, because it was just emerging when she was coming you know kind of into her own but
my youngest especially i mean the hardest thing is is you know you see the pictures of the bar mitzvah and and everybody's there and they're all wearing the matching hoodies and
you know they've all they're on the photo booth and and she's not there. And, well, those are some of my friends.
Why am I not there?
And then it's just this frenzy of activity around whatever event was this weekend and
you're not a part of it.
You see it in colleges.
Kids go off to college now and they've been there for three and a half days and they're
already at mixtures and everybody's got their solo cup. And they're all, you know, they're like 42
kids in one picture. They don't know each other. But all these kids are posting all these
pictures that, you know, they're, they're their first frat party. And they don't know a
single person's name. But to the rest of the world, they're like live in large, you know,
they're on campus. They've got a huge network, but they don't.
And it's this false evidence.
Exactly, it's this perception.
We see this in our space, even.
We, you know, I remember as the podcast started to grow,
we began to get more and more connected to people
that were insta-famous or, you know,
have these massive social followings.
And as we'd go around and we meet them,
before I met them, my only perception of them
is what I had seen on social media.
And some of these guys and girls, they do,
they take pictures with only other people that are famous
or big.
And then you get to know them
and you find out they're extremely lonely.
But they put on
this perception that they're hanging out with famous people and that's all they post. But then
when you get to know them, they don't have one, they don't even have a real connection with those
people. It's all smoke and mirrors. Right. And then you see that they're actually extremely lonely.
How do you guys speak to this to kids growing up?
Like, what do you say to them?
I say it a lot, and I think that helping kids understand,
dialogue and having those conversations with your kids
is so important.
And some kids that I work with choose not to be
on social media so that they can retain their own comfort
and their own self-worth and not feel like they are comparing. So they might not have Snapchat
and they might not have Instagram or all of this to preserve themselves because they can't tolerate
or know how to navigate. And that brings up the dialogue that I have with a lot of parents,
which is giving your kids too much technology when they're not ready for it.
And being able to say, you know what, kiddo, I'm going to, we had flip phones back when we had kids getting phones.
And I gave them flip phones on purpose so that they weren't on the internet or getting access to technology they weren't ready to handle. And I unfortunately think that nowadays, you know, iPhones and Android and all these, you're
handing them the world.
The first grade kids and they've got iPhone 11.
I mean, the phone is bigger than the kids head and it's getting wet.
They're on all the time.
Now the challenge I have is that the technology, social media, cell phones, this is where kids meet
and hang up or hang out, I should say, with each other.
This is how they socialize.
Right.
So where's the balance?
Because cutting your kid off of technology,
it's not like they can go outside and hang out with friends.
Nobody's outside.
Right.
Going over each other houses, they don't typically do that
as much because they're all online
with each other.
So how do you balance that out?
Because cutting them off is also cutting them off of their friends sometimes.
It's limitations.
It's just setting boundaries and teaching them young, right, that they're moderation.
Exactly.
Exactly.
So that when there's a time and a place for it.
And so I do think there are certain ages and we talk about it in the book.
I, some of my tips kind of help out line ages and technology a little bit and the quantity
of it because I do think that, you know, I work as young as preschool kindergarten going
in and helping teachers assess and kids just don't have the social skills that they need, simple salutations and eye contact.
We talk a lot about EQ versus IQ in the book.
We have a whole chapter dedicated to it because kids are losing, they're fast losing that
ability to just do this, to just have a conversation with someone and look someone in the
eye or show empathy.
What is the difference between EQ and IQ?
So your IQ is your intelligence quotient.
It's how you're going to perform on the IQ, the written IQ test.
And EQ is your emotional quotient.
It's your ability to be a good friend, to be a good listener, to sympathize and have compassion and empathy
and really be there as a support for another human being
who might need it.
There's social skills, the ability to sit down
and have a conversation and not interrupt someone
in which some of these things seem so basic
and fundamental and yet kids
can't do it.
I mean, there are so many kids that can either.
Right.
So I'm going to say that dinner time in my house is no phones.
We do the same thing.
Stack them.
We stack them right in the middle of the table.
But parents have to do that too.
And the bummer when kids come in, I have this one child that I've worked with for years.
She wishes that her parents would put the phones down
during dinner.
And she's the kid.
She just wants to have a conversation.
So I do think when you say, okay,
you don't want to cut your kid off,
might get that.
But when I was a kid in the phone rang on the wall
on the old-fashioned phone, my dad didn't answer.
It was not during dinner
time that I answered phones. Sure. And so nowadays, it's like, okay, even though the phone isn't
on the wall and it's in your hand, I want you to take it and put it over here, turn it off.
It's okay to tell a friend, I'm not able to talk right now, I'm out to dinner with my family,
or I'm at home having Friday night, movie night. It's okay to let people know you're unavailable.
Do you think that we're just in a transition?
Yeah.
Neri kind of phased where I had a little glimpse of hope because I was talking to
some other parents at a party and they were saying that there's this big
movement amongst a lot of the kids kind of coming up that aren't using phones
at all.
And they're not even interested in it. My son who just went off to college,
he's a freshman and he told me,
I just saw him a couple of weekends ago
and he said, I'm barely on my phone, barely.
I don't have time for it, I'm not interested.
It's boring and it's funny because he's not,
you know, no pictures, no, I'm like,
hey, what's your roommate look like?
And I don't see it.
I feel like that's the rebellious nature of all children.
And what it has to probably be is the parents
are probably so bad on the phone.
And the kids growing up being like,
I don't want to be like that.
I don't want to be like that.
So, is that funny?
It's a longevity.
I mean, of course, this is a longevity of kids.
I mean, there are some kids that
will be sitting there and they're hitting all their snapchat things to just show that
they saw it. And they're like, I have to do this. I'm like, what do you mean you have to
do it? Oh, well, my streaks and my this and my bad. I'm like, it's a chore. Look at you.
You look miserable. And it's like, yeah, it's, it's, I, and it's so, I think the longevity
of this, I hope there's going be a U-turn at some point
where people are gonna understand
that our very efficient lives and technology
is gonna take us backseat to the intimacy
of what's so important in our lives today,
which is time well spent with people face to face.
Now, you had named a few, I don't know if you want to call them parenting styles, but
you helicopter parent, the law more parent, bulldozer parent, or these things that you name
in the book, are there more?
Yeah, there, no, those are, I think those are the more common ones.
I mean, the very first one that was ever coined is helicopter parenting.
And then bulldozer and lawnmower have kind of been interchangeable over the years.
And those are the ones that you hear most often.
And what are the negative?
Because there are, you know, I had mentioned earlier, certain statistics show things are
better, but then there's other things that seem to be a little alarming.
I think it was anxieties and depressions are seem to be on the rise in adolescence.
Is that a symptom of the helicopter bulldozer type parent style?
I see, exactly.
So, well, I think it is, it's a combination of stuff.
I think it has to do with pressures to perform academically.
But I also think like we're talking about technology,
I think socially and
emotionally, constant contact and social media is creating also an underton of anxiety
that you don't have that many friends or you weren't included in something or I don't
look like that, you know.
So I think it's definitely a combination.
And Lisa and I have done some wonderful lectures at some of our schools to reach a lot of parents
around what anxiety actually is,
what it looks like, how to manage it,
and what our role is in helping kids.
So something else I've seen,
you know, there was my kid's school, my daughter now,
she's in elementary school,
and they do these like shooter drills,
where they lock the kids and they have to get in a certain room and
Turn the lights off or
You know, I've heard now there's a term called
Eko anxiety where children are anxious over the climate or over big problems
These are big issues that are super complex for adults to handle and and little kids
I hear my daughter getting freaked out
about them.
Do you think we're just over informing them with things
that maybe they shouldn't necessarily be afraid of
because it's out of their control?
Do you think that's an issue?
I mean, they're definitely saturated with information.
Because I never watched the news when I was a kid,
but all of a sudden, my kids,
I'll think about them.
It's accessible right there.
I mean, you've got alerts coming up all the time. I mean, kid, but all of a sudden, the kids had, you know, it's accessible. It's right there.
You've got alerts coming up all the time.
I mean, you can't get away from it.
Right.
It's, you know, tickers are across your phone
and notifications.
I mean, you really can't step away from it anymore.
So there is, I think, a real high saturation factor now.
And I think the best thing,
I was asked this question,
maybe a month or so ago.
And I think that, how do you handle all the negativity that's in the world when you're
a parent?
I think it's age appropriate.
It's like anything else, you're not going to talk to your four year old about 9-11.
But you're going to understand and help them understand that there are things in the
world that are scary and concerning and that you need to be mindful of and give them
the tools to deal with those things as they can handle them depending on their age.
And I think since 9-11, really, I've been in practice for, you know,
wait before 9-11 and I think that things like Columbine and 9-11, it's
induced a certain kind of anxiety had never seen before in kids and parents,
separation anxiety, a child being anxious to be left at school or a parent
anxious to leave their child at school. I do think there is a level of over and
you know, over and forming for sure. However, you know, it's funny we're having this conversation
with my parents. My mom and dad had bomb shelter by, you know, practice in their school.
When they were kids, they had to learn how to crawl under their desk.
That's true. That's true. Like it would have helped. Right, right.
But I do think, for, you know, from my generation, we really never went through stuff like
that.
So we had a fire drill.
That was about it.
That was all we ever had.
But we have looped back around to a period of time where I do think kids are being exposed
to things like my parents' generation.
Because the irony is, it's, I mean, for all intents and purposes, it's far safer today
than it was when we were growing up.
Kidnappings are lower.
Yeah.
Violence is actually lower.
We're not at the threat of thermonuclear war like we were for much of the cold war, but
I think the perception is not that.
I think if you go out and you take
a random group of 100 people and you ask them, hey, was it safer today for you to go play outside
by yourself or was it safer back in 1975 or 1985? Most people said, oh, it was way safer back then.
Statistically speaking, it wasn't. It's actually safer today. The perception is off.
But it's all relative, too, to the age that we're living in and the issues that we're dealing with
nowadays. I mean, we have terrorism now where we didn't. We had, you know, it was the two super
powers that were the big issue and who was going to push the button first. And, you know, and now we're
worried about, you know, getting on planes and, and well,. Well, there were terrorists then too.
I mean, there were hijackings.
Did they were 1978 with the Haas and Shore?
Well, and we had domestic terrorism.
We had several domestic terrorist groups that were performing bombings.
Yeah.
We had civil rights leaders being assassinated.
Yeah.
I feel like we're just terrified, even though it's way safer today.
I think that could be causing issues.
Well, I think if you turn on the news,
what do we see?
I can't watch the 10 o'clock news.
My husband puts it on and I,
that is when I allow myself to go on my phone
because I cannot tolerate.
This one got shot here.
This one got hijacked here.
Oh, this child was beaten here.
I think we don't necessarily hear about enough of the good stuff.
Although there is, there is.
Well, we tune into that stuff.
Right.
We do.
And I don't.
I work so hard not to because what does it do?
It heightens your anxiety.
It heightens your fears and your worries.
And I have kids who have been definitely impacted by their environment.
And so you got to keep from me.
I feel like, again, we're only in control
of what we're in control of.
So take the management in your own home
and determine how much you want to inform your kids.
Yeah, like we were using the social media example
before where, you know, it's more rare to see people
with six pack abs and statistically
than it is to have for a millionaires.
People don't realize this thing. They think everybody's got a
six pack of reality is almost nobody does. But if you're on social media, you know,
our primitive brains, what I mean by primitives, they evolved where our minds
made judgments based off of what we were around. And we placed ourselves in
hierarchies and we saw how, okay, I know how tall I am compared to
everybody else in the tribe or I see how wealthy everybody is or whatever. But then when you're on
social media, now it's like going to, like have you guys ever seen in real life a seven-foot tall person?
I think I have once. My cousin is like six nine or six eight. It's super rare. But if you
want to see NBA all the time, you think you think you were tiny if you were six foot free, right?
And so I think what happens is you know, you know, kids are seeing news
happening all over the world
And they're exposed and so their brain perceives it is this is my neighborhood. Yes, I know I'm this is what's going on
Oh my gosh. This is really scary when you actually, they did a study, it's a famous study years ago when jaws came out and public perception of shark attacks, skyrocketed,
everybody thought shark attacks. And newspapers were reporting shark attacks, everybody thought,
oh my gosh, everybody's getting attacked by sharks. Shark attacks are extremely consistent,
year over year. They don't go up, they don't go down there, but our perceptions made us feel
terrified. And I feel like that that may be happening a little bit with kids,
just because they're like over-informed with stuff
that's really complex.
Well, I think they're over-informed with stuff for sure,
but it's also social media has done this incredible thing.
It's reduced the size of the world.
Totally.
We're all right in the thick of all of it together. What's going on in
Syria, what's going on in anywhere in Europe, I mean, all over the world, places that were
just so far removed from our life and our, you know, our lens are now on top of us 24
hours a day. So it's like we're kind of carrying the weight of everything
that's happening around us, and our kids are doing that, and they're internalizing that.
And I think our generation, for instance, Debs in my generation, you know, you're hyper
in tune to it, and then your kids are hyper in tune to it.
And there's a total trickle down effect in parenting.
And that's another thing we talk a ton about in the book is that we're modeling all this stuff.
Like you guys are modeling this for your kids. We're modeling for our kids. And, you know,
how they see us handle conflict and adversity and, and the good stuff. And, you know, our
relationship with our spouse, I mean spouse and our friendships, they're watching
everything. They don't miss a thing. It's like that old saying, whatever you think your
kids are capable of, they're actually capable of so much more. It's the same thing goes
for what they're observing. They take everything in.
What's the most, I guess, would you consider being more and more important chapters in the
book, one where you think that it's going to really make kind of the biggest impact on
people?
Well, for me, when I look at the book towards the end, it's
walk the walk and talk the talk.
Yeah, talk the walk.
You get the point, talk the talk and walk the walk.
I think to go off of what Lisa was just saying, which is, I do think that you need to be
really careful about pointing a finger and saying, my child, when people call me and say,
oh, my eight-year-old is having a problem.
And that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that,
that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that,
that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that
that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that,
that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that,
that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that not listening to me, I often sit with the parents first. What is going on in the home?
What is the behavior management like there? Are there rules? Are there limits? Or is this
child is showing you that they're having a hard time because there aren't any clear
expectations or rules? And so it's really, in my opinion, really important.
Is it ever the kid? Is it ever, right? Honestly, is it? Sure it is. So what if then turns into is parents putting in place, behavior,
management, in ways that the child understands, there's expectations. It's
concise, and there's a system in place. So for me, I do feel as though for
parents, if you don't want your child on your phone 24 or 7 you can't be on your phone
Lay it down. You've got to walk that walk and and the other thing one of my favorite well one of my favorite
Lines in the book is we've got a hold the line
That's what we have to our job as parents. It is so difficult to, you know, to hand out that consequence or to maintain
that presence when you just want to be soft and you want to give in. And the most, I think,
one of the most important things that we can do in the way that we model our behavior is to follow through,
be consistent.
If X happens, well, then why is it gonna happen?
And you're responsible for that.
So we have to follow through and kind of lay it down
and keep it consistent.
Talk is cheap.
This kind of means you have to be careful
when you set the consequence.
Yeah, yeah. You know, hey, if you do that, careful when you set the consequence. Yeah, yeah.
You know, like, hey, if you do that,
you're grounded for a year.
Right, right.
I can't tell you how many times that I,
like, your kid really pisses you off,
especially when they get older.
And they just, like, nail you from all sides.
And you just, you get so far fed up.
And you just lay it down like,
you're not using the car for two months
and then they're like, well, I guess you're gonna get up and drive me to work.
Just pick me up at the train and then you're like, damn it, damn it.
Dave, look at me.
What did you just say?
That is a picking, I call it the good stuff list.
My parents are like, what do you mean?
Well, you create a list of stuff that's your child likes,
you know, some good stuff going out with friends,
buying something off of the internet,
whatever their good stuff is, screen time.
And you look at that good stuff list
and sadly, you use it to your advantage
so that when something does happen and you set the
term, you set the expectation, and then if it's not met, then, you know, when they're
little, it's then you're going to lose a story.
You're only going to get two, not three.
And when it's 10 years old, it's sorry, you're not going to get your Xbox time, you know,
and when it's 15 and 16, 17, sorry, you're not going to be able to go out Friday night
or, you know, you're not going to be able to go out Friday night or,
you know, you're not going to be able to take the car. And so it's learning what matters to them.
And I always have a saying with kids, you earn a reward, but you also earn a consequence.
So you pick, if you don't want to do it, you earn this. And if you want to do it, then you earn that.
My parents were horrible at this.
They thought they were supposed to be consistent with the discipline on all of us on what they
took away or how they punished.
And so like the overarching thing for the whole family was, you know, you do something wrong,
you're grounded to your room.
Well, that fucking tortured me because I'm a social kid and I could hear the kids playing
outside.
And it was just like nails on the chalkboard,
and I'd cry in my room all day.
My sister on the other hand is extremely introverted,
loves to sit in her room and play their dolls all day long.
So punishment was like it fucking,
it was nothing for her.
But that's a really good point,
because every child needs something different.
And we talk about that in the book,
that I have three boys, they are very different.
What motivates them is different
What is meaningful to them is different and so when you're thinking about a consequence or a reward
It's gonna you need to tailor it to each child because it really is like you said perfect example like you being locked in your room
It's a wasted on the complete way she said herself. Oh Maybe she said herself out. Yeah, she'd be grounded.
She'd be grounded for a day.
She's staying there for another day.
Yeah, exactly.
And so it is important to treat each kid differently
because they all need something.
Now, you guys go around and you lecture a lot.
And so you obviously get a lot of feedback
from other parents.
What do you think is,
what do you think the hardest thing for you guys
to communicate is to these parents?
Like what do you keep hearing and it's like we try it, we say this and I feel like I have to like a broken record.
For me, it's the be gentle to yourself. I think that the title of the book is so important to look at because our children aren't perfect and neither away. And if we, and more importantly, when we make a mistake,
it's not awful.
You have to loop around and find a way
to repair the mistake.
So if you said something, you did something,
you behaved in a way that you're less than happy
with the outcome, you have every opportunity
as long as you take it
to loop around, come back to your child and explain. I'm sorry I raised my voice, I'm sorry I swore,
I'm sorry I you know dumped your drawers out on the middle of your bedroom floor,
but this is what got triggered in me. This is what happened in me. I'm sorry. However, I got to this
point because. And so it's repairing that. And so for me, I just can't impress upon parents
enough that you are human. You will make mistakes. We drop balls. We drop balls. We're supposed to drop balls.
It's such a good point. Self-compassion is really important.
Sal shares a story on the podcast.
He's talked about a couple of times, one of the first times that he came on and glued
in front of his, in front of both of his kids.
And it was because somebody threw a basketball at the back window of his car.
He's driving by and his daughter was in there.
And he pulled over and got out and fucking chased the kids, slammed the basketball hoop and just grill a dad
came out protecting his daughter, right?
Which I think every-
That sounds not a small guy.
Right, and everybody probably-
So that's intimidating.
You know, thinking of that goes like,
fuck yeah, I would do the same thing too,
but then he gets back in the car and, you know,
his son is kind of scared and, you know,
why did you do that dad and dad explains
that will they endanger daughter or whatever?
And son goes, well, don't you think you put us
in more danger by pulling over and doing that?
And I think that the biggest lesson in that story
is when at the end of it, he talks, he apologizes,
you were right, I did make a mistake and I acted out.
And when he tells that story,
when he tells that story, I think what hits home for me
is I remember my parents probably making a lot of mistakes. I don't have a lot of
memories of them coming to me and admitting that they made mistakes. And I feel like so
many parents have that ego issue where they, you know, they say something and it's like,
oh, because I'm the parent. And even if they fuck up and they go over line, they don't
think that they can come back and say, you know what, even though you're the child, you're right. I was wrong.
But that's one of the most important things that we can do for our kids is to show them
that we're fallible. Like we can screw up, we can drop balls, we can rally and recover
and apologize and acknowledge. That's one of the things things is to own it. That's that's a big chapter in the book
That's one of my favorites is that we we need to own these behaviors
ourselves the good ones and the bad ones, but you also want to nurture in your kids to find their voice as well
So if you do or say something I remember a big lesson. I learned my oldest son. I think he was probably about 17
I was a big lesson. I learned my oldest son.
I think he was probably about 17.
He had left a laundry down in the laundry room and I asked him nicely once.
Can you just bring it up to your room?
After about the third time, I flipped and I was like, bring up your damn and then you're
gone.
It's a good daily thing in my house.
You know, and so he looked at me and he said, Mom, when you yell at me, I really don't
listen. It really is upsetting.
And I looked at him and I took a deep breath
and I walked away and I caught myself.
And then I loop back around and I said,
you know what, thanks for letting me know that.
But I'm yelling because I've asked you three times.
Is there any value in that for you to understand that?
Yeah, no, I get it. But thanks for apologizing because it really, I don't like when you scream at me.
Now pick up your fucking laundry.
But what it teaches kids is mutual respect, which as they grow older at that, you know,
when they're older teens, you need to have mutual respect.
And if you don't have it, they're not going to listen.
Oh, I think you got to let your kids hold you the same standard. I had a time when, you
know, I was taking my daughter somewhere and I did something and I said, shit, and I get
in the car and she's like, you know, oh, you know, I heard you say a bad word. And I'm
still kind of upset. And I'm like, well, yeah, I'm an adult. I can say bad words, you're
a kid, you know, you shouldn't be saying those are, you know, required for the while she
goes, yeah, but you probably still shouldn't say bad words in your kid. You shouldn't be saying those, you know, required for the while she goes,
yeah, but you probably still shouldn't say bad words
in front of little kids.
And I said, you're right.
It's great for her.
Yeah, I said, you're a hundred.
I said, I apologize and you're a hundred percent, right?
Yeah.
I think that's real important.
My parents were both pretty good at that.
My mom would do that.
She'd sit me down and apologize for doing something.
And I'd only increase the amount of respect
that I had for her. Right. That's the thing.
It does breed respect because you're admitting that you're human.
You're admitting that you can't get it right 110% of the time.
And you're acknowledging your own behavior and how it may have impacted the people around
you.
So I know it's important too for kids to understand.
I'm all about empowering them and helping them find their voice.
But when you ask them what they're thinking or how they're feeling, it's wonderful that
they share it.
But it might not impact the outcome.
I still wanted them to take Dan LaLaunjie.
Dan LaLaunjie.
Sure.
Dan LaLaunjie.
I really appreciate that you don't like when I yell at you.
But what?
Let's stop.
Let's go back to the issue here and that is go get your laundry.
And so kids, I want them to, you know, let them say,
I didn't like that or that upset me
or I got hurt by that.
It's really important for them to feel heard.
But in your practice, Deborah,
were there, did you see common challenges
that moms would have versus dads?
Did you see, because we're all fathers in here?
And I, you know, there's a lot of,
I mean, let's, to be quite honest,
if there's far more single moms and single dads out there,
and we're all very involved with our children's lives.
We find a lot of advice given to parents,
not a ton of advice to dads.
Are there common, like, challenges you see
with moms and dads, or is it all kind of the same?
I think for the most part it's the same but I think each situation can be very different. I work
with a lot of dads and moms and I think one thing that I find dads challenge with the most
with the most probably is the communication, the communication styles and how they kind of navigate their way to loop background and apologize or to stop and gain a perspective.
Just intuitively, I think women and I, I mean, generalizing, but we're a lot more
emotional and we wear it on our sleep most of the time.
And I'm gonna tell you there have been plenty
of empathetic dads in my office as well
that are just incredibly intuitive and capable.
But I do find in general terms that for dads,
I help them slow down and listen.
I think just because of how, um, and living in a
house full of madness, all I've ever done, I have brothers. She, she, oh, she speaks boy,
I, I, I speak boy. I mean, I, you know, I do, and I get it. And I think, um, built differently,
you know, testosterone brings as agitation and frustration, reactivity in a different way
than maybe a mom, a young lady.
And so it's learning how to manage that
your makeup a little bit differently.
I wanted to talk a little bit more in that direction
and we had Dr. Warren Farrell on the show
and he talked a lot about the benefits
and of rough and tumble play.
Yes.
And of, I actually had the fortunate ability
to put my kids in this like play school,
where they actually like instituted this whole area designated
to rough and tumble play and with boys and girls.
And they all had like somebody managing it,
so I didn't get out of control,
but I just thought that was such a great outlet for them,
because I just don't find that physicality, you know, being allowed anymore in schools
and to really like get that energy out.
I, you're talking to someone who was put in a full Nelson by your little brother.
Right.
I mean, you know, I got it.
Right.
I think that it also is an opportunity for kids to be able to say enough.
Exactly. Just to say enough.
Exactly.
Drop a line.
And I understand how to say it.
Right.
And so I'm all about whether it's rough and tumble play or any kind of play.
I do.
I think it's just breeds an opportunity to be able to say, hey, look, you know what?
I don't like when you do that.
Or you know what, my brother held the pillow over my face for too long.
You know, could you please say, take it off my head.
But yeah, I agree with that.
And I think it makes it okay to be rough and tumble.
Boys are rough and tumble a lot of them.
And so are girls, which is the worst, you know.
Oh, I think it's great.
I wrestle with my daughter all the time.
And I think it's good. I wrestle with my daughter all the time.
And I think it's good because, like you said,
she knows when she's going too hard,
I'll tell her, hey, don't poke in the eye
or don't hit too hard or whatever.
Don't bite it.
Or we're not gonna keep doing this and she'll stop.
So she learns that.
But she also learns that she can be physical with a man
and it not be inappropriate.
She knows her body.
But, you know, dad, don't push me here or don't
twist my leg or whatever it's between her you know me and her and it helps her be comfortable
with herself.
I think that a man can be physical with a girl and not be sexual.
That's right.
That's right.
Absolutely.
And she can develop that voice that allows her to say no that was that was too much.
Totally.
Totally.
That hurt.
Absolutely. I think it's you now
what about partners because raising kids oftentimes involves to people
You know or more what about the communication between partners and in doing so because I think sometimes there's different ideas of where
Structure should be placed or where there should be lines. How important is the communication between? It's huge
I think I think having open lines of communication and and being kind of structure should be placed or where there should be lines. How important is the communication between? It's huge.
I think having open lines of communication
and being kind of symbiotic in the way that you communicate.
If you're gonna lay it down about something your daughter's
not allowed to do, and then all of a sudden she creeps over
to mom and she kind of plays the role and tries to get mom to flip.
Like, there has to be a cohesiveness.
Like, you're not supposed to agree on everything.
We're never in no relationship.
What's important to my husband and his priorities
are oftentimes different than mine.
So he wants things done a certain way or a timely way
and me, I parent differently.
And we parent very differently.
And it's through the years.
It's a lot around communication.
But also with your kids to be able to say, look,
if dad told you to do that, go do it.
Now, I might not think it's an important thing
that they have to go and do.
But you know what?
Your dad asked you to go help them in the yard.
Go help them in the yard.
And now he wants you now.
So I do think I work with, it's a large part of what I do.
It's family work, communication, parenting.
And I think one, the biggest issue is that we all bring our legacy into the room,
how we were parented,
what we witnessed, what we experienced,
and that then develops a lot of how we parent.
And so I think it's important.
I did not go up in the same home as my husband.
So he brings different styles and techniques to the table.
And I think as long as they're safe and respectful,
you need to create
space for each of you to parent the way that it's a collaboration. It's like any relationship
is whether, you know, whether it's a work collaboration or a friendship, you're, you're
always going to do things in a slightly different way. And sometimes in a more obvious way
that's different from your partner, but it's understanding how to
create and maintain respect for each other.
And we've always had something in our house, my husband and I, where if one of us was
kind of neutral about a situation or a decision, and the other was like really, really adamant,
and we could kind of, you know, back that up, and we had a very strong opinion. We, the other one would kind of defer to that and, and, and vice versa. And, you know, you're not always
going to be in complete sync, but it's, it's, you won't, I mean, you're, I mean, you're lucky if
you're almost ever in complete sync, but you, you do your best to hear what the other person is
saying and to understand what's important and to, and to understand what the other person is saying and to understand what's important and to understand what the other person, your partner's strengths and weaknesses are.
There are certain things that I know, Dave, is way better at doing than I am.
I've learned so much from him because he's the one who will see the cues when my daughters,
one of them in particular needs me to leave the room or needs him to leave the room like we've we've hashed something over and over and over again and and
Dave's really great about saying okay, I'm gonna come back and and we'll talk again when you've come down or you have a different state of mind
And it's taken me a long time to do that because I'm the one who just wants to just wants to get in there and let's pick it apart and let's find out what's going wrong and let's put it back together
and make it work and fix it.
And sometimes you can.
And so, you collaborate with one another and you kind of bring each other's vessels.
I think it's important to show like a united front.
My kids live in two households.
I'm divorced, but their mom and I work together
quite a bit in raising the kids
and I also have a partner that I live with.
And so we work together.
And so it's like, it makes it more difficult, you know?
My kids, you know, and so I'm constantly checking like,
hey, you know, our son said that he goes to bed at this time
with you, is this true? No, it's not.
Four hours later. Yeah, and so it's like, because I want them to see, but then we have
a disagreement, I try and do it away from the kids, because I want them to think that
we're united. Blended families, I work with more than ever now, and I think that it is
hard. I help parents back up and draw a line and know where their boundary is. So when
they're over at moms, or they're over at dads,
yes, there are things you need to be in sync around,
especially when children are very young
because they don't know any better or any different.
And so when they're hungry, they're hungry
and if they're used to eating at this certain time
or around this certain time,
see if you can make it work.
Of course, it's not gonna be perfect.
But as kids get older, they do, they can,
oh well dad said it was fine if I did that.
Mom's saying, oh really.
They don't think we talk, is it thing?
That Dave and I will crack up about it all the time.
And as old as our kids are,
they literally think we don't communicate with each other. Yeah. And we're clueless. Yeah, the other day, my son's 14. He's a good kid, but he had one of
his teenage moments and he... Got him, love him. Him and his mom got into it. I don't remember what
it was over. Oh, he didn't do his chores and so she took away his electronics and so he was really,
really upset and they're going back and forth. And he said, well, I'm just going to go stay with
that because he lets me do whatever I want, which isn't true. But it really,
really hurt her feelings. And so she told me, and when he came to my house, I took him aside,
and I had that conversation. And they said, you know, it really hurts your mom's feelings to say
something like that, because I want him to know that I support her. And her and I are the greatest,
the friends or anything. But for the kids sake, I want them to see that I support her. And her and I aren't the greatest, the friends, or anything,
but for the kids sake, I want them to see
that we're working together.
Is there any information that you hear being communicated
in terms of raising children that is considered true
or common knowledge that you think
is probably not that true?
Is there anything that the counter may be actually the truth?
I think it's right around making a mistake.
They're ruined.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Parents come in and go, oh my God.
I, you know, and especially in blended families, right?
Oh, their father's ruining them.
You know, he doesn't care about homework and this and that.
But I don't, I think that again, it's all about repair work.
Okay.
So if you think dad's ruining him,
what do we have to stop, look at, slow down and repair?
And what, you know, do we need to have a conversation?
Do we need a family meeting?
What do we have to do?
So for me, mine is, you know, up, they're ruined.
They're not.
We have a whole lifetime to repair
and make them the best that they can be.
Yeah, my partner, she did such a good job
of communicating this to me.
One of my kids did something and I wanted to go fix it
or prevent them from making a mistake
and she said, let them screw up now
because it's better they screw up now
than when they're adults.
And I thought, oh yeah, I guess that's the good point.
We're there to help them navigate through that.
And it doesn't, by any means, mean that we're there to come in and find a solution or implement
the solution or handle it for them.
We're there to help them navigate.
And that's why this is that time when they're under our roof and they're, you know, they're
more apt to take in our influences
and our suggestions.
It, you know, we need to be there to support that.
She's smart in saying that.
I do this that metaphor.
I learn quickly how what kind of parent I'm working with
and quickly ask, you know, if your child is standing
in front of a puddle, are you the kind of parent
that's gonna say to their child,
oh, don't go in the puddle and kind of carry them
over the puddle, or are you the parent that says,
oh, don't go in the puddle and keep walking.
And if they fall in the puddle,
you're on the other side of the puddle
to be there if they need help getting up, right?
So are you the one who's gonna prevent them
from going in the puddle,
or are you gonna be there to help them if they need it?
Yeah, admittedly, I'd be the one to pick them up.
Right.
Yeah, the dilemma that, so that's like a budding lawnmower parent.
Yeah.
Right.
So that you want them, you know, if they fall in the puddle, they're not going to die.
They're going to get wet.
But it's, I'd rather them see the impact of their choice than for you to prevent them from
having the impact because they're going to go ahead and do it again until they have the
impact of the behavior.
So, I've found that a lot of times when somebody writes a book about a topic or you've worked
in the field for so many years. Sometimes you are the ones that have
the greatest adversity or struggles in your own home and I would love to hear from each of you
what are the challenges you have with each of your kids and how have you overcame it?
Wow. Well, we can start with the most recent one. So my youngest, I don't even know if I classified it as a challenge.
I'm sure it is on the scale.
So my youngest is 19.
She had two radically different kids.
My oldest is graduated from Boston University.
It's super motivated and did all the things and took advantage of everything.
And groups and clubs and all that and has kind of everything paved
in a direction that she's really excited about.
And my youngest was never a kid from probably grammar school
on who thrived in school and enjoyed school.
It was difficult for her. She was challenged.
We discovered that she had a learning disability when she was late in the game, like seventh grade.
So she just was not an academic kid and went through high school the same way.
And you know, you want to give your child everything that you have the ability to give them
in terms of opportunity and skills and a base.
And so naturally, the way that our society perceives the growth of our children is you raise
them, they go through school, they go off to school, and then they figure out what they're
going to do from there.
And I guess for me, we always knew that she was hesitant to go off to college and didn't know if it was her thing
and wasn't vibing at it all and wasn't engaged
and really wanting to do it.
But she surprised us and she went through the whole process
and she applied to school,
she's gone into everything and went to a school.
One semester, wasn't for her, came home,
shocked us again and applied to another school,
closer to home and went there. And again,
just was like, I don't know what I want to do. I don't know where I want to be. I don't know
if school is even for me. And we struggle with that for a while. It was like, you know, you're
already in it, you know, for a year, you can move around again, find another place and maybe
suits you a little better. It's not cookie cutter. And it took a while for us to get to that point
where we were like, okay, you know what?
She said, she put it to us in interesting terms.
She's like, look, I've been in school
for 13 years of my life.
I have no clue what the hell I want to do with my life.
I know that I don't thrive in this environment.
I want to be in that space and time in my life
that comes after school.
I want to be in the job.
I want to be working. I want to be in the job, I want to be working,
I want to be producing, I want whatever it is.
That was a really big challenge for us,
for me in particular, was to say, okay,
you know what, you're 19 years old, you gave it a try,
and now I'm going to practice what I preach,
which is that it's not a one size fits all world for any of us.
Forget about the whole parenting game. I mean, in general, in life, there is not one size fits all world for any of us forget about like the whole parenting game I mean in general in life. There is not one size fits all and so for me that was a big struggle and and for Dave
Just letting her drive that bus which is we talk a lot about that too that that's
One of the biggest gifts that we can give our kids is to let them just to move over and let them kind of take the wheel and navigate.
And this was one of those times. And it was a challenge. And she found herself an incredible
job. And she's a full-time nanny for this great family and doing a ton of different things.
And now she came to us and she's thinking, maybe I might go back and take some classes.
And so she kind of came around. We let it be, and she kind of came around to it,
but it was a challenge to begin with. And we just kind of stayed unified and trusted her. And
here we are. So. Yeah. Good deal. Yeah. I think that if somebody said they didn't have a problem,
they'd be lying. Yeah. That's why I had to ask. Yeah. So I mean, I think that everyone has something. And I think for me, kind of an overarching thing for me,
as a parent, is when I see my child making a decision
or a judgment that is less than perfect,
and being able to stay on the sidelines,
and be an observer, and let them see that poor decision through
and watch it impact them in a bad way.
What does that look like?
I mean, give me an example.
I heard you an example of last like, oh fuck, he's gonna hurt.
This is gonna hurt.
But I'm gonna.
Yeah.
I mean, I part part of it is
Like I think of academics for example like with my youngest
I have two of three kids one has ADHD and one has ADD and
both very brilliant kids
But didn't have the executive functioning that was matching their intellect. And so we, one of the mere behaviors
were getting in the way of their learning.
And so we ended up getting them tested and learned.
He was this very bright kid who was very bored
and distracting and distracted and had
some organizational issues.
And so at a very young age, how to begin managing that with him.
And now I think the harder part is letting him
manage it on his own.
So for example, stepping back his first semester of college,
he decided maybe I don't need my medication that I've been using.
And we, hey, he's 18, going off to college, it's a decision that you have to make.
And he went through a really tough time of academic output and it wasn't going so well and I just simply asked,
hey, have you taken your medication? No. And I was like, huh, what do you think? Huh. So, second semester, he had taken a break.
He was home.
We sent him back with his medication,
and he started taking it and noticed what it was like off it,
what it was like on it.
And so now he's really become a much better navigator
in regards to his own medication
and when he needs it and when he doesn't.
But it was really hard.
And so we're going through this with my youngest, too,
is again, a really bright kid, ADD, not ADHD.
And so he's got a little bit of a different thing going on,
but freshman year medication really impacted him.
He's my creative kid, the musician.
We were talking about earlier.
And he didn't like how he felt and who he was. And he's, this year, we started and he goes, I'm,
I'm not going to take it. I said, all right, I have to stop. I know what a medication
does for him, but I'm not a pill, pill pusher. And so, you know what? I'm going to have
to step back and all, all the things I knew organizational
Details not writing assignments down not turning them in all of these things just were flooding in
the front of my Brain and I thought you know what he's a sophomore in high school
I got to let him navigate this and so I step back and
He I think is working harder than he ever has because he
wants to succeed off it. And so, yes, has he maybe dropped a ball or two? Yes, but he's
learning how not to do that. Although again, we're perfectly imperfect. So he's going to
drop them and being okay with it. So how does it look and how does it feel for a parent?
It is hard. It sucks. You have to breathe through it. You how does it look and how does it feel for a parent? It is hard. It sucks.
You have to breathe through it. You have to remind yourself that eventually he's going
to need his own wings. And if I'm the one kind of navigating the way, he's never going
to grow them on the topic of 80D and ADHD. Yeah. And a parent. So I repeat that I wasn't paying attention. I'm just
gonna say that was good. That was a bottom bump. Dad joke and you know being a
parent that has two kids that are challenged with this. Do you come from the
camp that this is on an incredible rise right now, or has this been something
that's been around for many years and we're just now starting to diagnose kids.
And also, do you think that there's something environmentally that is impacting them
to, for this to be seen, almost exaggerated now?
It's so crazy the amount of kids that are being diagnosed with it. I think we've just found a name for a
beat for a system. So there are different parts to ADD, ADHD, and a very big part of it
is what we call executive functioning. And what we're learning in our teaching and schools is that there are ways to test and understand
when a child isn't organized or missing assignments or not rushing through their work and not
getting things right. There's names for that now. Whereas back when I was a kid, you were sloppy,
you were irresponsible, you were lazy, you were all these things. Now there's just, you know, fortunately,
ways of evaluating a child's performance and so being in schools, if a child starts flagging,
I call it red flag, that he's not turning in assignments or paying attention to detail or things
like that. We read flag it and then they go through a system of being tested to then understand. And I'm from the camp of knowledge is power.
If a child is struggling with these things, I don't necessarily worry about the label,
but I'm going to work with them to build a toolbox and a skill set to then manage what
it is we've learned as a deficit for them.
So I'm all about understanding if a child is like one of my kids has like a
really low active working memory, which means if you ask him to put his name on a paper
number at one through 10 and then you know fold it in half and put your pencil down, he's
going to get maybe one or two of those things, but not all of them.
And so knowing that I'm gonna help him understand he has to self-advocate. Like you just said,
I'm sorry, I wasn't paying attention. I didn't, you know, can you repeat that? It's helping them,
then understand. Yeah, I need to self-advocate and ask, okay, only got the first two parts of that.
What's next? And helping teachers understand it's not a child being irresponsible or lazy.
It's a child who does struggle with memory and retention.
So, is there any fear for you as a parent,
the addictive properties that come with things like
Adderall and Rilland?
So, just a little personal story myself, purse.
I never experienced Adderall, Ritalin,
any of those drugs until I got into my mid 30s.
And holy shit, they're awesome.
And why they're probably awesome for someone like me,
and I think Sal can probably speak to this too,
is I believe, well yeah, right?
And I also believe that,
so I just grew up not,
you know, being bored in school.
If I applied myself, I crushed.
I was an A student.
If I loved the class and I was into it,
if I wasn't, I could easily fail the damn class.
Even my success and work, I found really early on
that if it was something that I was into and I liked,
I crushed, if it was something that I was into and I liked, I crushed, if it was something
like organization and crossing the teeth, dotting the eyes and ugh, I mean I just would
just ignore it and not do it.
And so I spend most of my life trying to figure out ways to create better habits, behaviors,
to develop these skill sets, also focusing on the things that I'm already good at,
so I would become great at it, not worrying about the things
that maybe I'm not very strong in.
And so I've had to teach myself how to do that.
And because of that, I think that I've had a lot of success
in my life of overcoming some of those challenges.
But I have, and again, I've dabbled with using these things
and I'm like, holy shit.
If I take, if I have to, like for example,
we have to write a lot of content in this business
and we, if we gotta sit down
and I gotta write a ton of content,
boy, if I take one of those, I mean, I can,
it's, I'm on fire, but that, I'm also a very self-aware person
and go, whoa, this is so awesome
that I could see myself taking more and more and more.
Is there any fear of that?
There's always a fear of that.
I have a daughter who, you know, both of my daughters as well, have ADD and my oldest,
the one who just graduated, found out maybe only two years ago when she was in college
that she had ADD and as a result went on medication
and it was a whole journey involving that piece of her life just finding the right medication and
what wound her up or what really mellowed her out and didn't work and caused kind of personality changes.
She definitely went through a whole process of trying to find the right one.
Once she did, she got to that point where, for her, like you're saying, it was an awakening.
She was like, holy crap.
It's like I flipped this switch and all of a sudden I have the capacity to do these things
that I couldn't
do before and it's liberating and it's exhilarating and yeah, you know, you definitely, as a parent,
looking at a child, Medicaid like that, you definitely worry that, oh my God.
So my question was-
Can they function without it?
Right, my question to myself was, was this something that I couldn't do before or I'm just
challenged?
Yeah, I think that I'm a believer that oftentimes medication can drive a diagnosis, which means
that for someone who is an ADD and it's taking that medication, it has a different feeling,
a different impact than for the person who's taking it for the purpose. And so for people who are
just taking it and not technically
struggling with any of these things and a lot of college kids take it and it's speed.
Right. They're racing their brain. Whereas someone who has ADD, ADHD, their brain needs the speed to
actually bring the brain activity up to a certain level so that they don't need any
more distraction or stimulation.
So for them, it's a different feeling, it's a different experience and it's used in a
different way.
Now, for yourself, you know, it's a very...
Adderall is probably one of my least favorite medications.
I have one son who will take it periodically when there's as needed, which is my youngest
one.
And I think that you have to be very aware of the side effects.
And it's good dialogue to have.
I sat them down.
I'm like, if you're going to use this, if you ever feel these things, I want to talk about
it.
Plus, I have a pulse on that. Plus, I have a pulse on
that, right? We have a pulse on our kids. But it is scary. Like a lot of things in life,
anything is addictive, right? People have addictions to food and alcohol and sex and porn and
gambling and all, right? So it's just another thing that goes into that tool.
I think I use it as a tool in my practice.
So for me, that was it.
I gave my kids a tool to put in their toolbox
and if they thought they could benefit from it,
I wanted them to have the ability
to reach into the toolbox.
And it's ironically how they both use it now.
When you start to kind of recognize
that your kid might have trouble learning within that environment
so that that structured environment of sitting down and trying to sit still and try to memorize things and produce a good grade
how many times have you gone through with parents of like exploring other options like the there's other ways to get education in terms of, I forget the name of like some
of these different options of different schooling principles, like even if it's, and I always
have a class room and things like that. Right, or you're out, you're more hands-on,
it's more visual-based. That's right. I'm sorry. I'm sorry.
Yeah, I'm sorry. Yeah, I'm sorry. School. And, you know, I think it is so important.
If your child is at risk, if their problems get in the way
of their development, you need to think about where you're
placing them.
I work in all different schools.
And one of the big questions that come up
is, is this really the best place for your child?
And I think a lot of these are private schools.
And they're like, well, we need the body.
No, actually, the body needs a different environment.
And so they understand that.
So at a young age, I think it's up to us to help them navigate
the environment that we put them in so that they can succeed.
And when kids get to the high school level,
it's, I mean, we happen to be in an area in the world
where we have a plethora of options for education.
I mean, just ridiculous amounts of schools and
different types of learning environments. And I think it is important to find the one
that's best for your child. But it's even more than that too. That's a huge piece of it.
But if you're in, let's say, even a socioeconomic situation that you've got, you've got a public school and that's your only option.
You can't afford private, you can't afford Montessori,
you can't deviate or charter.
Then it becomes an issue of understanding as a parent
or as an educator that you're,
we all learn in such different ways, you know, some of us are
visual learners, auditory learners, you know, hands-on learners. And I know as, you know,
the mother of two daughters who had radically different, I mean, like night and day different
kinds of styles. My oldest could sit down and bury herself and immerse herself and
be there for hours and hours and hours
and was the one that could read the 200 pages and absorb it and process it.
And then my youngest, in fact, Deb and I was talking about this yesterday,
that I used to have to break down reading assignments.
Like if my daughter, my youngest, had to read a summer reading book
and you'd get like your three or four books that you had to read.
And I'd make it about math.
Like, okay, well, we've got, there are, you know, 60 days until school is back in session.
And you've got, you know, this number of books, this many pages, let's divide it out.
You don't have to sit down and read 400 pages at a time.
We can, let's read 10 pages at a time.
You know, so it's all about even if we don't have the ability to pick those options of other institutions,
we at least understand that there are so many different ways that we can teach our children how to learn
and flesh out the ways that they learn best.
What's the age gap between the two again?
Mine. My youngest is 19, my oldest is 22.
Okay, do you think that there was any sort of difference on how they used like social media tools like that? Yeah. Definitely. In fact, it's funny. We talk
about this in my house from time to time that even with a gap as short as three years,
my oldest can leave her phone on her desk, go downstairs and play the piano for three
hours or, you know, sit on the couch, read a book, do something
completely separate from social media, her phone, devices, and not think twice about
it, my youngest, she would sooner lose an actual arm than a phone.
That would be the thing that she would sacrifice the body part, as opposed to the phone.
It's just in a matter of those few years where,
even in the way that my oldest and my youngest engaged with people we talked about a while ago,
when we first sat down, we were talking about how my youngest her generation, they're the ones
that'll text all afternoon until their plans are made and instead of picking up the telephone,
my oldest will pick up the telephone and has no hesitation to just call a friend. So yeah, even though it's a three-year
difference and that's not huge, it was translated to a pretty big gap in the way that they
utilize it. Sometimes I wonder if that's what feeds into this distractability for these
kids, especially if you're somebody who's diagnosed with...
You see it in schools a lot that kids get bored very easily during lectures because they're
not as stimulating as, you know, looking at a phone, it's very stimulating and constant
and scrolling through and seeing tons of images and information being thrown at you.
And I think that it does impact the teacher.
They cannot compete with the technology.
They're up there.
They're giving their lecture.
And you know, you're learning about World War II.
You know, it's not as exciting.
And so they are up against oftentimes a lot of discussions
around how do we compete with?
And how do we engage kids in a way that we can get to them and reach them because they really, you know, they really aren't interested in the same way as they used to be because they, you know, be playing Mario Kart and catching all the
points. My boys turn me on to it. I play Mario half. Yes, I do. The other thing that I think kind of jives with that whole technology piece is the sense
nowadays that, or it's not even a sense, it's just the reality nowadays, that this generation
or my youngest generation has to have everything in real time,
immediately has to have the answer,
has to have the contact, has it.
Yeah, and it was on prime.
It was on prime, wow, that's right.
And that's been a drive-through generation.
Like, if I wanted, I'm just gonna drive up to that building
and ask for it, and I'm gonna get it on the other side
of the building.
I saw McDonald's commercial last night.
It actually made me laugh that, I mean,
if McDonald's wasn't fast enough already, right?
And you didn't have them dry.
Now they have the app.
Yeah, you can order, order pay and it's ready.
As soon as you get there, like it's like, wow.
We can't sit away.
We don't know how to wait anymore.
Yeah, I know.
And I think we all grew up in the,
you get online, right?
Took 15 minutes just to get connected to online.
Yeah, you're a mode on.
On dial up was death.
Yeah.
What's your, what is your hope with this book?
What do you, what do you hope it does for people?
You know, we want to start a movement.
I mean, too many parents, and I say this all the time, too many parents
now are just wrapped so tightly around the axle of life and of, you know, their kids achieving
and them achieving and they're paying more attention to what's going on outside their
house and their family unit. And they're so worried that if anything isn't done at the highest
possible level that their kid is screwed and their future is screwed and their failure
is apparent. So, you know, we see this. You see a lot of parenting books out there and
not to shit on any of them because they're all valuable. But, you know, there's one X factor that most books out there don't focus on, and that's the fact
that it's okay to screw up.
It's okay.
Life is messy.
That's right.
As a kid, as a parent, and that's been my ultimate goal.
The exultimate goal is to remind parents that and kids that it's
okay to be in a different lane.
It's okay to get there at a different time.
It's okay.
We don't all ride a bike.
Learn how to ride a bike on the same day.
We would love to create a movement around this notion that it's all right to drop balls.
It's okay to be imperfect.
It's okay to have a moment and then recover from that moment and move on.
So that's the effection doesn't mean it does not equal lack of success.
Parents are so worried about that. And I try and help them understand even messing up is adding
to their success that they're going to learn something from it,
which is going to make them a better person.
Right.
Also trying to find success.
You know, success for me, honestly, when people ask me that question,
I first, without your health, you have nothing, right?
They're happiness. And I hope that they get to do something that they love to do each and every day, like I do. And there you go.
Yeah. Thank you. Thanks for coming on. Yeah.
That's great. That's great. Thank you. Great time, guys.
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