The Daily Stoic - Jessica Lahey on Self-Efficacy and the Virtue of Temperance | Whatever Will Be Will Be
Episode Date: May 5, 2021Ryan reads today’s meditation and talks to Jessica Lahey about her new book The Addiction Inoculation: Raising Healthy Kids in a Culture of Dependence, how a Stoic should measure their succ...ess, the discovery of our genetic predisposition to addiction, and more.Jessica Lahey is the New York Times bestselling author of The Gift of Failure: How the Best Parents Learn to Let Go So Their Children Can Succeed. She has written for The New York Times and The Atlantic and has taught middle and high school for over a decade. This episode is brought to you by GoMacro. Go Macro is a family-owned maker of some of the finest protein bars around. They're vegan, non-GMO, and they come in a bunch of delicious flavors. Visit gomacro.com and use promo code STOIC for 30% off your order plus free shipping on all orders over $50.This episode is also brought to you by KiwiCo. KiwiCo believes in the power of kids and that small lessons today can mean big, world-changing ideas tomorrow. KiwiCo is a subscription service that delivers everything your kids will need to make, create and play. Get 30% off your first month plus FREE shipping on ANY crate line with code STOIC at kiwico.com. This episode is also brought to you by Talkspace, the online and mobile therapy company. Talkspace lets you send and receive unlimited messages with your dedicated therapist in the Talkspace platform 24/7. To match with a licensed therapist today, go to Talkspace.com or download the app. Make sure to use the code STOIC to get $100 off of your first month and show your support for the show.This episode is also brought to you by Ladder, a painless way to get the life insurance coverage you need for those you care about most. Ladder makes the process of getting life insurance quick and easy. To apply, you only need a phone or laptop and a few minutes of time. Ladder’s algorithms work quickly and you’ll find out almost immediately if you’re approved. Go to ladderlife.com/stoic to see if you’re instantly approved today.***If you enjoyed this week’s podcast, we’d love for you to leave a review on Apple Podcasts. It helps with our visibility, and the more people listen to the podcast, the more we can invest into it and make it even better.Sign up for the Daily Stoic email: http://DailyStoic.com/signupFollow @DailyStoic:Twitter: https://twitter.com/dailystoicInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/dailystoic/Facebook: http://facebook.com/dailystoicYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/dailystoicTikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@daily_stoic Follow Jessica Lahey: Twitter: https://twitter.com/jesslaheyInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/teacherlahey/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/jessicapottslahey/See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Hey, prime members, you can listen to the Daily Stoic Podcast early and add free on Amazon music. Download the app today.
Welcome to the Daily Stoic Podcast where each weekday we bring you a
meditation inspired by the ancient Stoics, a short passage of ancient wisdom designed to help you find strength and insight here in everyday life.
And on Wednesdays, we talk to some of our fellow students of ancient philosophy,
well-known and obscure, fascinating and powerful.
With them, we discuss the strategies and habits that have helped them become who they are
and also to find peace and wisdom in their actual lives.
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Hey, this is Ryan Holliday. Welcome to another episode of the Daily Stoke Podcast. I don't,
I give a lot of talks, but I don't go to many talks. But about two years ago now, I made sure I went
to go see today's guest speak. When she was speaking to parents and administrators
at a small private school here in Austin.
And Jessica Leahy was spectacular.
I love her book, The Gift of Failure,
How the Best Parents Learned to Let Go,
so their children can succeed.
And she talked about something that I think is sort of
part and partial of stoicism, which is that stuff happens and
We have to figure out how to respond to that and life is you know
Can you respond well to the adversity and difficulty of life?
And the problem is a lot of parents a lot of people
Never learned how to respond well because they actually don't have that much experience with failure or
difficulty because they had
snowplow parents or helicopter parents. They had people who got in the way of that learning
opportunity. So I've had Jessica on to speak about the gift of failure, but her new book,
the addiction andoculation, raising healthy kids in a culture of dependence just came out and I actually think
is perhaps more relevant to stoicism and relevant to you whether you're a parent or not.
We started to figure out that addiction, there's some
Inheritability in addiction. We can inherit a predilection for addiction. There's maybe it's a gene
Maybe it's a genetic. I don't know how it works, but the idea is that if your parents were addicts or there's
some history of addiction in your family, you are much more likely to become one yourself.
And yet this isn't, it's not like a death sentence, right?
It's not a guarantee.
So what separates the people who don't go down that road versus the one who does?
And a lot of it has to do with things you pick up early on, but also just general sort
of coping strategies.
And this idea, I love this idea of a notculating oneself against addiction or the culture of
dependence that we live in.
So I wanted to have Jessica in to talk about this
and we really get into it.
And again, although I'm a parent of young kids,
mostly I was talking about things that I'm struggling with
and how I apply this stuff in my own life
because this stoic idea of temperance, moderation,
but also abstaining from things that really
shouldn't be consumed in any quantity, or for those of us, because of our certain
predilections, just don't have the luxury of consuming those things.
To me, it's very relevant.
I really enjoyed this interview.
Every time I talk to Jessica, it's very relevant. I really enjoyed this interview. Every time I talk to
Jessica, I learn so much. She's awesome. And I think you will really like this interview.
Check out the Gift of Failure and the Addiction Anoculation. I carry the Gift of Failure in my
bookstore here, The Painted Ports, in Vashem, Texas, because it's great. And I believe we will soon
be carrying the Addiction Anoculation as well. So you can check out Jessica's books.
You can also go to jeskalahi.com.
She co-hosts the Am writing podcast
with two bestselling authors.
She lives in Vermont.
There are two sons and a lot of dogs.
Check out my interview with Jessica Lehi.
How is putting out your second book?
What's different for you emotionally,
spiritually going into a second book?
I think this one's much more personal than your first one.
So I'd be curious how you're feeling about it.
You know, what's really interesting about this
is that it is a lot more personal.
Some of the stuff is a little scary.
I've been trying to be protective of some of my family members, and that's part of it.
I did hire a publicist this time around, Nicole Dewey of Dewey Desmol Media, and she's
ridiculously amazing.
I just, you know, I space things out differently.
I've been doing interviews for five months about this book, and they all sort of landed
at the same time.
There's a little bit of a difference this time around
because the New York Times bestseller lists
that allowed me to be a New York Times bestseller
last time around don't exist anymore.
So.
Is there a parenting section before?
Education and parenting.
I was on both of those lists and they're both gone now.
So, you know, making it on the straight up
nonfiction bestseller list is just, you know, making it on the straight up nonfiction
bestseller list is just, you know, it's so difficult. And so-
And actually would you be on the best- would you be on a nonfiction or would you actually be in advice-
Yeah, advice how to, yeah probably advice and how to, yeah. And you know, the good thing, however,
that's been really good because my goals for this book,
you know, as much as I loved Gifted Failure and as much as that really was for my kids and my students, this is, feels just a lot more urgent to me. I have really specific goals about changing
the way we teach some of the material in this next book. And it's really, it feels more urgent and yet a lot less important for me to have
the accolades of the lists and stuff like that. Plus, you know, I'm in this wonderful situation.
Once you've got it, they can't take it away from you. So that sticks on your name no
matter what, the New York Times bestselling thing. So it's there and I don't ever lose
that. So that's good. But it is interesting. So is interesting. So I think people who are on the outside of any profession,
whether it's being an author or being an artist
or being in finance, from the outside,
you can have this impression that things are very clear-cut,
that they're very merit-cratic, that it's sort of very fair.
And then I think, and even when you get started,
a lot of your goals are attached to those things
because you think like, oh, to be the best seller
means you sold the best.
And if I'm gonna do this thing, I want to be the best, right?
Nobody's like, I wanna be a Olympic athlete,
but I wanna come in 16th, right?
So you have this sense of it,
and then this is something that Stokes
talked about. The more you sort of are exposed, the more you see, and the more you experience,
you realize actually a lot of this criteria is not only completely arbitrary, it may be fundamentally
unfair, and a lot of people who do garbage work in one form or another regularly make it
to the top of said system. And so I think the healthy response to that is to care less
and less about these externals that are outside of your control. And more and more on what
you said, which is like this book is important to me. This is, you know, I already, I've already
I've already won. So I'm playing with house money money, but that is a hard place to get to. And people, I think people also think it's the logical
place to get to, but a lot of people just, you know, they just, they just stay on the treadmill forever.
Yeah, what I host a podcast called hashtag ab writing and all three of us can put have best
seller next to our name. But one of my, one of my co-host Serena Bowen,
she is a Yale-trained economist.
She has worked on Wall Street.
She is so brilliant.
And she writes contemporary romance.
And she's so good at it.
Like she really raises the bar.
And she self-publishes.
And she has sold so many more books
than probably I will ever sell.
And she will never in a million years be a New York Times bestseller.
They just don't, they just don't, those things aren't included in, and, and yet,
so her vision of success, you know, comes down to as a writer and a publisher comes down to,
yes, numbers.
But it's been really interesting to watch her and look at the her metrics for
what she considers something to be successful and fulfilling and all that sort of stuff.
So, you know, it's been a good education. I think I've learned so much over the past eight
years, so much, so much that I did differently this time. I'm also, you know, now I've also
figured out, thanks to you. I mean, reading perennial, um, seller has been so good for me because the gift of failure, my first book, is selling as well
now as it did in its first year. And there have been periods of time, especially, you know,
if I get like a celebrity shout out where it's selling better than it did at release. So as long as
that continues to sell, and as long as this book continues to find a place in communities and with schools and with people who have a hand in changing the way we educate kids around substance abuse, I think I think I think I'm in good shape.
No, it's a tricky, it's a tricky business and there's I always try to tell authors when I work with authors, so I don't do it as much anymore. I sort of go, what race are you trying to run?
And what does it take to win that race?
And making sure that you're not,
because what you can't do is simultaneously run multiple races,
especially multiple races that require
totally different skills, right?
So like Michael Johnson can run the 400 in the 800,
but I remember they did
that as someone was asking like, what what kind of mile time could could you say in Bolt two? And his like coach came back and they said, I don't know. But what I can tell you is that
you say in Bolt has never run a mile. Like, and it's like, oh, right. It doesn't require these are
totally like he is for all intents and purposes playing a completely
different sport even though they're all running around the same track. And so yeah, your friend who's
who's doing, you know, self-published romance for someone who's doing nonfiction,
for someone who's doing children's books, for someone who's doing, you know, e-books or audiobooks,
it's all different and you have to ask yourself,
what are you trying to accomplish?
How do you measure your success?
And I think ideally, you always want that to be rooted
in the elements of it that you control the most.
Yeah.
And it's just, but it's just very seductive
because with human beings, we want things to be clear cut,
we want numbers and we go,
well, where am I on a list compared to other people?
But it's like, what if I told you that the person who's two spots ahead of you on the
list used to go strider, purchased 40% of the copies themselves, or what if the success
in that book ruined their marriage or to connect with the topic of your book?
What if they relapsed on opioids in the process?
Like you have no idea what it took
and what raised these people are running.
And so you have to only compare against yourself.
Well, and the thing that's been really helpful for me
is the reason I wrote this book is that I found
that the more I talked about being in recovery
when I was on stage talking about gift of failure,
the more people talk to me about their concerns, worries, going into
recovery, being in recovery. So now what I'm getting is emails every single day
thanking me for having written this book. And for me, now that's my greatest
measure of, you know, helping. And I'm doing some work on the side that really
is about talking to people one-on-one and helping with their education around their kids and stuff like that. And I really have come
to terms with the fact that that's why I wrote the book. And the frustrating thing, the hard,
and I don't, the speaking of running different races, I don't think people understand fully how
we talk about it all the time, but how intense the publicity and marketing of a book is. And this is all I have done for the past six months.
And I have a book proposal that's pretty much done.
I have not been able to touch it in months.
And so I'm just getting really excited
to work on my next book,
but I have to continue to do this
as long as people will have me
because that's a part of what it takes
to get your book out there into the world.
And I think, you know, gone are the days when you can sort of, you know, book releases.
And you're like, okay, what's next? Let me write my next book. And it's been really interesting
to talk to other authors, especially through our podcast about the decisions you have to make
about how far you're going to go with your publicity because you can go all in two years straight. You could spend
all your time for years just doing that. And it's hard. It's easy to get lost in that.
It's really, really easy to get lost in. Wait, I have to do all the podcasts and all the
interviews and everything that anyone will ever let me open my mouth in front of a microphone
for, I have to do that. And it's really hard to pull back from that and say, no, I need
to get back to work and write some more.
Well, this is where the ego thing comes in again, because on the one hand, it's a chore
and everyone complains about it. But it's amazing.
But it's amazing. Right. Doing a podcast is inherently more ego-gratifying and validating
than sitting in front of a blank page. It's always easier to bask in the glow of your existing project than to sit in the shade of your future project.
I don't know. I don't fully agree.
Like for me in terms of not so much the ego stuff, but the stuff that really gets, turns my crank, is like the research.
I mean, I get excited. I can feel it. I start to, you know, my heart starts to race when I'm like, oh, a new book I haven't started yet. And this is really going to give me some ideas for this topic.
And I'm so excited about the next book that I'm just rare and to go. And yes, facing the blank
page is hard, but the thing that gets me really excited is, um, is learning new things and not talking
about stuff I already know. No, no, it's more, it's certainly more rewarding and enjoyable.
But what I'm saying is it's like, you know, one thing is hype, but like when you're like,
okay, you were planning on writing this morning and then the, then you look, you know, you
get the, hey, do you want to come on, you know, this NPR affiliate, yeah, yeah, yeah, middle
of nowhere that probably seven
people are listening to, it's very easy to go, of course, I have to do this other thing.
You can always end up, it's like you get $100 in your paycheck, you know if you invest
it, it will be worth more, but you're like, but I have it now.
So it's kind of this marshmallow test of your of your willpower. I would say the other interesting thing because you
make up, you make a good point about marketing, which is its attention, right? Like I remember someone
sent me like a, I don't know why they sent it to me, but they sent me a very unpleasant
internet thread about me. And someone was saying, I don't know what I'm saying. Why?
Why do people do these things?
I don't understand.
I know, I know.
So someone was like, the person was like,
Ryan Holiday, he's just a popularizer.
He's a marketer.
So all he does is know how to write his book
so they sell the most amount of copies.
And I was like, okay, number one, why would that be bad?
Like that's literally the whole point of writing is to reach an audience. If I was like, okay, number one, why would that be bad? Like that's the whole point of writing
is to reach an audience.
If you weren't trying to reach an audience,
you would never publish it.
But two, it was silly because it's like, look,
if really I was just in this for the money,
I wouldn't be writing books.
And I definitely wouldn't be writing books
about an obscure school of ancient philosophy.
Like I remember, I did this New York Times interview where she
was saying something about stosism in my marketing background and I said something like,
look, if I was just into using my marketing skills, I'd be marketing cryptocurrencies.
And I think I said this in 2016. So it's true. I'd be a multi-millionaire from cryptocurrencies alone
if that's what I'd focused on, but I chose this.
But there's this tension right where people pick a thing
and they think just being right about it
and caring about it and doing a good job,
writing the book or launching the company or whatever it is,
that that's enough.
In fact, if you don't go pound the pavement,
if you don't bring it to an audience,, if you build it, they will not come. So there is this,
maybe in the ancient world, when philosophy or whatever was occupied by the elite few who
had slaves to tend their estates, you could get away with just having interesting ideas and hoping
they spread it to the ether. But in this day, like, it's a street fight to get attention.
And if the author or the creator or the business person isn't willing to do that hustle,
to me, that's a sign that you don't actually believe in what you're talking about.
You think you're too good for it.
Well, the other thing that's really, I also have made some interesting choices.
I mean, I'm writing about a topic that like, who wants to talk about, you know, substance abuse and kids? It's scary. It's, you know, it's not, and this was actually,
when I first started writing the proposal for this book, and I knew I was writing this book,
no matter what, even if I had to self-publish it, and, you know, luckily, I have an expert
nearby to help me. And my agent said, are you going, do you really want to write this book if you're
at, if they are at your editor says no?
And I said, yes.
And she said, because there's a chance she's going to say no.
And I said, oh, I get it.
It's a really hard topic.
But yeah, we're doing this.
So I wrote the full proposal, the full 85 page proposal, knowing that if she said no,
we were going to turn around right away and send it out to other publishers.
And knowing that and, you know, I know that I can write an article about,
I said this on Twitter recently, I can write an article about rich white kids
and it can go viral.
But the minute I write an article about like how states are failing kids
because they're not following the rules about the, according to the Prison Rape Act.
And so kids are getting raped in prison, like seven people read that article.
And yet, what I'm saying in that article,
I think is a little more important
in terms of my interests and what I wanna say
in my writing.
So, you know, the fact that I have a three page spread
in People magazine to talk about kids in addiction.
I mean, that's, I've hit the jackpot.
I mean, it's really hard to get pressed
to talk about some of the more difficult topics.
And so I'm grateful for all of it.
So I guess, you know, if I really, really wanted to
have it a little easier, I've read about things
that weren't like, you know, substance abuse
and prison rate.
Of course.
No, no, it's work, right?
When you pick the thing, like, you have to,
of course, you have to find where your interests
and, you know, some vague interests from the
world overlap, but very rarely is the thing you're passionate about or the truth that
you think needs to be said, very rarely is that willingly accepted.
I forget what scientists said, but it's like, don't worry about people stealing their
idea.
If your idea is at all good or revolutionary, you're going to have to ram this down people's
throats.
And that requires sort of perseverance and commitment and intensity and creativity.
And yeah, if you just think like, you know, oh, I'm a writer.
I get this literary life and I, you know, I bang out on my typewriter and I release it
in the world and then I go to my book party.
Like, you're going to be sorely disappointed.
Well, we always say on the podcast, unless you're really excited
to spend two years with your project at the very least, then
don't write your project because, you know, there's just,
it's not worth it. It's so much work. But it's, you know, when
it's, oh man, when it's, when it's clicking, oh, it's so good,
it's just so good. And, you know, it's, it's just, I can't,
and I think it's a little like
the childbirth thing. You know, if I had to you wouldn't go through it again. If you remembered
exactly what it was like the last time around, but I'm I'm raring to go. I can't wait to
work on the next thing.
Got a quick message from one of our sponsors here, and then we'll get right back to the
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Yeah, the Stokes talk about rationality,
but there is a certain
benefits to the irrationality of the human mind, which is,
yeah, you're, I remember when I sold,
maybe it was ego, or maybe it was stillness,
my editor just emailed my wife to apologize.
She was like, congratulations also I'm sorry.
Because it's a grind and it takes you to a place
and you have to be a little bit foolish
and a little bit silly thinking like,
it's gonna be different this time
because it's never different.
It's like it's as hard. It's you know, you
always think it'd be great to go for a run and then you know, three quarters of the way
through the run. You're like, oh, this is so hard. I also have an attention issue anyway.
And so when my husband knows I go to this place where I've got that middle, middle gaze,
sort of middle distance gaze. And he knows I'm not hearing anything, I'm not hearing
that the dogs are barking to come in because I'm thinking about, oh, how can I get chapter two to work
with that narrative angle that I've got going on there? And, you know, he just, he has to sort of
give me space there and then also pub week, you know, pub month is just insanity. So, you know, I don't
know, it's pretty great that we get to do it. And yet,
when you look at it up close and sort of go through it, it's just a weird existence.
My plumber asked me yesterday how book publishing works. And I'm like, look, dude, I'm paying you
by the hour. And we do not have the time to talk about how book publishing works.
While I need my faucet fixed. Because all the answer to that question is the answer to that question is just not well. It doesn't work.
It's really a weird weird business. It is very strange business. So let's talk about addiction in the new book because I was thinking I was actually thinking about your book.
I was listening. It's maybe two weeks ago. We can have a go. I listened to Mark Maren's interview with Hunter Biden.
to Mark Maren's interview with Hunter Biden. And I don't think we need to get in the politics of it,
or all the insane reactions that people have
when they hear that name.
But what struck me about it was interesting.
And it made me think of your book
because basically what Hunter ends up saying is that
Joe Biden has never took a drink in his life.
He's been a T-Toteler's whole life.
Actually interesting that with two presidents
in a row that were T-Totelers,
but that basically
what Biden had saw was he saw how alcoholism had ripped through his Irish family for generations
and he chose not to drink, but it struck me as where we are now.
That was that was that's a relatively recent understanding.
The idea that addiction is hereditary and that,
you know, maybe you inherited a certain predilection and that
you got to be careful, right?
Yeah. And it's, yeah, me that he had, it's like he had gotten
halfway and your book is the second half, which by never
seemed to think of or, or, or, or, or, we're still now this
generation of parents is thinking about, which is, he didn't think, well,
and how do I prepare the next generation?
It's not just about abstaining from alcoholism,
or from alcohol,
but how does one try to break the cycle permanently
by creating practices and a framework
and parenting in a way that sort of counter,
like if you're a kid, if you're a kid at a reading disorder,
you would take the following steps.
It's not just a lottery, like you get the gene,
you don't get the gene and you're an addict or you're not.
To me, the premise of your book is like,
look, whether you're predisposed or not,
you have no idea where this sort of dice is gonna of dices going to land. You got to actively be thinking as a parent, how do you set your kid up,
not to be an addict. Yeah, it's, and there's so much that goes into that that, you know,
the book sounded fairly simple when I started and realized that how complicated it got as I got
into it. And part of it was, you know, look, I was raised by an alcoholic.
And one of my parents was also raised by an alcoholic and so on and so on.
And in my husband's family as well, it's all over his family tree as well.
My husband drinks like a normal person and I can't.
Although I did try to do, you know, I was mostly abstinent until my 40s,
and then it just snuck up on me.
And, you know, my story's a little different than a lot of them,
but it snuck up on me, and suddenly,
I realized just I had a real problem on my hands.
And the minute I got a hold,
the minute I admitted to my problems got into recovery,
immediately all of that energy gets focused on,
okay, well, crap, we've had generations
that over and over again, that not just go either, okay, well crap, we've had generations that, over and over again,
that not just go either end up as alcoholics, but end up like trying really hard to not go the
same path as the parent and yet somehow ended up there anyway. So this has to stop here. And
my kids are predisposed or have this genetic predisposition, which is we think around 50 to 60% of the risk for substance abuse. So
I can't afford to ignore it. And at the same time, I was teaching in an inpatient rehab for adolescents.
And so I'm constantly thinking about how on earth did you end up here? How like what could anyone
have done differently? You know, what's going on with you and your life and where you came from
and what you experienced that you ended up here in my classroom.
So all of that sort of, you know, became, as all of my writing usually is, is something
I become really curious about and I need answers to.
And so I have the best job where I get to just spend two years being a complete recluse
and reading everything I can about it and then writing it for other people,
but really I'm writing it for myself. Right, so walk me through this moment, because maybe
someone is there, how does one get the understanding that, hey, like, I do have this predilection,
I have lost control, I love that expression that addiction is when
you realize you have lost the freedom to abstain. Like you are no longer able to abstain
and you got to do something about it. Well, and the problem is you can, you know, there's that
here's the problem. So the reason that Holly Whitaker's book Quit Like A Women, Woman has done
well is that the first section of it really is about the fact that if we stop needing to attach a name
to it, like, okay, I took the test, am I an alcoholic, am I not an alcoholic, that kind
of thing, that that's not useful, that if we just worry about whether or not it's getting
in the way of our lives, then that would be a lot more effective than having, you know,
it would help more people get to that place maybe of whatever. So, you know, and I guess that work, Chrissy Teigen, you know, is
tweeting all over the place about the fact that she read that book and now she's gonna, you know,
stop drinking. For me, it was, I knew I had a problem for like a decade and, you know, whether
there were a bunch of places in there where I was like, you know, this has just
slipped loose.
It is, it's no longer under my control.
And for the last couple of years, it was getting pretty ugly.
But then 2013, I sold gift to failure.
This huge auction, you know, it was a huge deal.
Like 14 publishers bidding for the book.
It was a ton of money.
And it was my chance. It was my shot.
And I knew I was gonna blow it if I because I can't drink and write at the same time. I just I can't.
I can write short things, but I can't write a book while I'm drinking. And then I um, and then I went
to my mom's birthday party and I got really sloppy. I don't remember it. So I guess that's good or bad.
I don't know. Um, but my dad came up and you know, to the
guest room the next morning and sat at the end of my bed and he was raised by an alcoholic.
And so he said, quote, I know what an alcoholic looks like and you are an alcoholic. And at that
point, there was no saying no, you're wrong or it was no big deal or whatever. It's just,
I had nothing. I immediately said, you're right. And I went straight to meeting that night. But I don't know, you know, if he had said that to me a year before,
I probably would have said, you don't know what you're talking about, I'm fine. But whatever it was,
that moment was so, I was so done, I was so tired. I was so exhausted from all of the stress of it,
of drinking, that it was just a relief to let it go.
Yeah, I think that self-awareness is a key element
and maybe it's a key part in either avoiding it entirely
or just, you know, it's also maybe it's a little bit
like the response to COVID, which is like, put it off.
Every day you put it off is a day you're not.
Like for me, like, I got some sense early in my life.
I don't remember exactly what it was,
but it was just like, I just can't do certain things
the way that other people, or I can't have the same
relationship to things that other people can have.
Like pretty much anything you give me, or I do,
particularly like anything, I don't wanna say anything fun,
but let's say anything in the sort of vice category,
I will do compulsively and I'll do a lot of stuff
that's not in the vice category compulsively.
So if it's soda, like, they're actually a podcast sponsor,
but I got these minst that have caffeine in them
and I just all just take them all the time, you know
like I
So like I just have had to sort of go like look this is
Like someone who's like look I don't handle heights well or you know
I don't like closed spaces. I think there needs to be your your point that like
Just because you there's no name for, doesn't mean it's a problem.
And he said this, I realize this about temperature, like just because you don't have an anger problem,
doesn't mean anger's not a problem for you.
Right. You actually sound a lot like Pendulate in presto. And in some of his podcasts, he's
talked about the fact that he never drank ever, not because either of his parents did.
They were T totalers. It's just that he knew
that he would, and he actually made the analogy to masturbation, that like he, he knew that that's all he was going to do if that was his thing. And so drugs and alcohol just,
he just knew himself really, really well. I think that's an incredible insight into yourself.
And I think that's something that most people don't have.
I'm really amazed by that.
Yeah, and it requires, I'm not patting myself on the back,
I'm saying, but it requires a certain amount of courage
and restraint to be able to go like, to say like,
I'm gonna trust myself on this one.
I'm not gonna extrapolate it out to its natural conclusion
and only when I have the overwhelming evidence, am I gonna listen to it? extrapolated out to its natural conclusion,
and only when I have the overwhelming evidence, am I gonna listen to it?
Do you know what I mean?
I've probably missed out on a bunch of wonderful experiences
and tastes and things that, if I decided to get into wine,
or if I smoked weed with friends,
or I've been in cool situations
where that would have been a lubricant or a window into something
that I, trusting that impulse, had to go no to.
But the upside is it also prevented me from going down the darker trap door that I think
inevitably it would lead to because that's just the set of genes that I was given.
Yeah, it's something that really hit me. It was well before I got sober.
Gretchen Rubin had just come out with her, she was writing her book about the,
her foretendency's book and she was talking about the difference between someone who can be,
who is a moderator and someone who's an obstainer. And for her, what she does is once the fall starts,
or once the holiday season starts, she says no sugar until the new year because for her, what she does is once the fall starts or once the holiday season starts, she says no sugar until the new year because for her
It's easier to just let it go completely
It's like and for me that's what it's been as well to know that alcohol is off the table is such a relief to me
It is such a relief. It's like oh my gosh. I don't even have to think about that anymore
It's such a relief to me and it a Gret in fact, I told Gretchen after I got sober, I said, I have to credit you with part being
a very big piece of this puzzle for me.
That was one of the last pieces that dropped into place, which was, I think I'm that kind
of person.
I think it would be easier for me if it was just not an option at all.
And that's absolutely been the case.
Yeah.
And I think generally just being suspicious of, and like, I'm even, I was talking to
Stephen Pressfield about this, I'm suspicious even, like, I can't not write, and I think the
Stokes talk about, like, sort of question anything you're a slave to, right? And the fact that I
can't stop writing, like, look generally of the sort of things to choose from. That's one that, you know,
if you had to pick your poise and I'll take that one. But anything you can't not do
compulsively, that's something I think you need to explore. And then I was going to say, and then
I think this segway is nicely more into the book directly, one of the problems, like, so I just kind
of had this vague sense
and then maybe it worked out this way
because I had this role model or that role model
or I, you know, was it, you know, happened to just,
this is just the random people I bumped into
and so I never, I went this way instead of that way.
But I think one of the things that parents don't do,
it sounds like your dad did it, but a little late,
is like it was only been in the year since
that starting to understand my,
a little bit more of my family history
that you're like, oh, you know,
what's that expression in recovery
like you're sick as your secrets?
Yeah.
Families do a really bad job not giving their kids,
particularly when they're young, when this decision
can really make a difference,
not explaining all the context that would,
like I remember as a kid,
and so obviously didn't give me the full story,
but I remember my grandmother telling me
like that her brother went out swimming one day
after lunch and drowned,
and that's why you shouldn't eat.
You shouldn't go swimming after you.
It's like, I would bet my life,
like that sounds like a drinking accident.
You know what I mean?
And then as other examples,
a different members of my family extended,
and otherwise you're like,
I wouldn't say we have like a pronounced family history
of addiction, but like we have more than not having it, right?
And, but the desire not to talk about it, not to judge,
not to make it a big thing,
prevents, it would have been a clear,
easier decision for me to make earlier on
if I'd been more aware of the context in which I was making that decision.
Yeah.
In the book, I talk, I quote Susan Chiever, who talks about the elephant in the room
that, you know, you've got to spend all this energy avoiding talking about this massive
thing in the middle of the room.
And that's how I grew up, you know, not being allowed to talk about the fact that one
of my parents was drinking too much.
And I have to say, I have to give my dad a ton of credit.
I think one of the reasons his words landed the way they did
is that he was raised by someone
by two people who never, ever, ever spoke about the drinking
problem in his house when he was little.
And then, as a major enabler himself,
the fact that he was calling me on this thing
had 10 times the impact that it would have
had if it was someone who's in my face about stuff all the time. This is someone who is conflict
diverse, hates conflict so much, and the fact and hates criticizing me, and he adores me,
and he hates it when I'm upset with him. So the fact that this person was the one who had the
courage to come and say something
to me made a huge impact. And that shame and secrecy stuff, I think that is something that
we have absolutely banished from the house. You know, we talk about everything in this
house. We talk about substance abuse constantly. It's just not something I, we can afford
to have the a part of our family simply because it's what I think
made me sick in the first place.
No, and that that goes to that that line I quoted earlier
like you lose the freedom to abstain. Yeah. Yeah.
You've lot like because of your background and decisions
and things that have happened. You've lost the luxury of
not talking about your family because the car just in Just in the way that certain families have to be worried
about heart disease, other families have to be worried
about certain kinds of systemic injustices.
Like, whatever, no one's saying it's right,
but the reality is you don't get to not talk about it.
Right.
A friend of mine has a kid,
they have diabetes all over their family,
and so for them, sugar is a very different topic
than it is in our house where there isn't a history of that.
And, you know, it's just, I think the thing about this book
that I don't want it to be,
and also what I didn't want gift of failure to be
was that sort of like, oh great.
10 more things I have to do in order to be a good parent.
Or the thing that's hard about this book
is that, you know, what I'm talking about are
risk factors and protective factors.
And the more risk factors you have, and I picture it like one of those old, tiny scales
of justice, the heavier your risk side, the heavier your protection side is going to be,
and some is going to have to be.
And some of those risk factors are things that are really hard to hear, you know, divorce
and separation, adoption, a whole bunch of stuff that is difficult to
talk about, not only is substance abuse hard to talk about, but then you got to deal with
the fact that, okay, well, among girls, for example, sexual abuse is one of the biggest
risk factors for, you know, their eventual issues with alcohol or drugs.
And so we're talking about a whole bunch of stuff that's really scary to talk about.
And somehow I have to make people want to read about that.
So it's a bit of a challenge, but it's also, I hope, empowering because I managed to look
at a whole bunch of stuff that I inadvertently did to my kids that I did because I was acting
on the best information I had at the time.
You know, I'm raising two kids right now, actually with very different attitudes about substances.
My 22 year old, we had a permissive sort of,
you can have some sips of wine,
you can have your own very small glass of wine.
And my 17 year old, we have in our house
a very clear and consistent message of no,
not until you're 21,
because the research shows that it's that messaging
that it makes it much less likely that it'll have an issue
with substance use disorder during his lifetime.
So that must feel really unfair to him.
I happen to know it does,
but I'm modeling for him exactly what I want to see in him,
which is that you do your best based on the information you have
and if you get better information
that you do a meoculpa and you change
based on that better information. Well, and that adults aren't afraid to have adult conversations.
Like I talked about this on the Daily Dad podcast where I noticed that one of the things the pandemic
has been good for me is like, I'm not like really a confrontational person like in person.
And like I'd rather like if something's uncomfortable or weird, I'd rather just endure it and then like never subject myself to
that again. Like let's say, let's say someone's like, I don't know, I would just I would just like
put up with it for as long as I have to put up with it and then never again. But but COVID is so like, no, no, what matters is like right now, right?
Because like, so you don't get a, you don't get a like a doover, right?
And so it's been like, I remember, so I have this bookstore here in Austin and in in
Bastrop. And this. I am so excited for you about that. By the way, I am so excited for you.
Like some, some person had came all the way out.
I was very honored whatever, like right when we opened.
And they came up as a stranger and they're like,
can I, they like went to give me a hug.
And like, I don't want to hug anyone
under any circumstances that I don't know.
That's just who I am.
But like I would, I would imagine like a year ago,
I'd just like have put up with this unpleasant thing
and then like that was weird. Don't do that. I don't want to do that again. But it, you know, is I just like, I've put up with this unpleasant thing and then been like, that was weird.
Don't do that.
I don't want to do that again.
But it, you know, is much more like,
whoa, whoa, like that the fuck up, you know,
you're in a nice way.
But like, I think what COVID has reminded adults
is like, you're in charge of your family.
And just because something's unpleasant
or uncomfortable or weird or makes you look stupid
or what, like, you you look stupid or what like
you have to show your kids like no, no, no, no, if you don't take care of this, if you
don't speak to be heard, if you don't state your preferences, you're going to end up in
situations that are not good, not comfortable, not safe.
You know, I think you even see this in like it's tragic like every you know college sexual assault or story begins with
a person being in a situation that they were uncomfortable with from the minute it started,
right? And you and you have to be able to learn how to be like, I'm not going in your room.
Like no, I don't care if you don't like, you know, like, I think, I think what
you're talking about is teaching your kids, like, we lost the freedom to not have these
awkward conversations. So we're going to have this awkward conversation.
Well, and so much of that is at, you know, what's at the heart of this book is one of the
biggest protective factors for kids is a sense of self-efficacy, a sense of agency, a
sense of, you know, getting banishing all of that sort of learned helplessness, but
self-efficacy is so important because I was thinking just
I know it's too worse because I think those are very
important concepts that people do not understand.
Self-efficacy is really cool. And I like to think of it as
sort of the intersection of competence and hope.
So Shane Lopez, who died a couple of years ago
with little late, great Shane Lopez,
he worked for Gallup and he has a wonderful book
called Making Hope Happen.
And he defines hope as the belief that your world,
that your life or the world can be a better place
and that you have the power to make it so.
So there's hope, there's optimism,
and then there's the second half of it,
which what happens to be about the self-efficacy
to make it so, the ability that when you make a decision
or you take action, that things will change based on that.
And a lot of the kids that were in my rehab classroom
were kids who had no sense of self-efficacy
because they had no control as kids.
They had been either moved around a lot in foster care.
They were being hit from the time they were little
and they couldn't do anything about that.
They were raising their sibling
because their parent was drunk all the time
and nothing they did would change that.
So they've been, they've learned,
they've developed learned helplessness.
There's all kinds of cool research
on learned helplessness. There's all kinds of cool research on learned helplessness and it turns out that when you
When you feel helpless when you feel like there's nothing you can do to change the situation that the way you sort of diffuse that
Instinct is to the way you sort of short circuit that is to
Have more control like if we have a kid who's exhibiting learned helplessness
They're like throwing themselves on the ground and they're like, I'm never going to learn how
to ride a bike ever, ever, ever, ever, I'll just walk everywhere. That the way that you
give them some control back or the way that you get rid of that learned helplessness
is by giving them some control, giving them little wins, giving them some evidence of
their own competence. And the reason that self-efficacy is so amazing
is that it also assumes a whole bunch of other things
like self-advocacy and the ability
to tell people what you want and need.
And a bunch of that comes into the whole recovery picture too,
which is things like asking for help.
I was talking to, I was being interviewed
on a recovery podcast and someone said,
what if you do all these things
and then one of your kids ends up
with abusing drugs or alcohol anyway.
You know, the cool thing about substance use disorder
from my perspective is that, you know,
in terms of understanding it ourselves,
like looking back at our own problems is,
I picture it like a, picture like a 100
piece puzzle. I got really lucky and my dad was that 100th piece that clicked into place.
But there were a whole bunch of other pieces like Gretchen's comment about abstaining
versus moderation. She was like piece 98. And if one through 98 hadn't been there, I wouldn't
have gotten as quickly to 100.
So a lot of what I'm doing right now
is putting in a lot of those pieces of my kids' puzzle.
So even if they do have a problem later on in life,
they're not starting at piece zero,
they're starting at like piece 57.
Because a lot of people talk about,
in recovery, they say things like,
you're not ready till you're ready.
And about how it's so much less fun to get hammered, to get high when you've got recovery already
in your head, it really harshes your buzz.
So when people leave recovering, go back out and get drunk, they're like, man, that was
so not worth it, so not fun.
Because I had all that recovery speak in my head the whole time.
And it was really just not as fun.
So I'm hoping that even if my kids make it to 21
and then go out and start drinking too much
that they'll have some of the things
I've been talking to them about that's prevention
but also some of those pieces of the puzzle
that they're gonna need to get to where I got
with piece 100 a little faster.
Yeah, and the Stoics have this exercise that everything has two handles, right?
This is what Epictetus says, every situation has two handles.
And we have to, like, you can choose the one that says, you know, I'm an addict.
I come from a family of it, of addict. So like, it's hopeless for me.
That would be one handle. The other handle would be the, because of this, my response is this, and therefore,
I'm going to be better, stronger, break the cycle,
have something to work on, have knowledge
because of their past failure.
So to me, agency is really like, agency is,
and hope, I guess, are related in the sense that,
yeah, it's a belief in a better future
and your ability to make that.
So, and it, I think it's a belief in a better future and your ability to make that. So, and I think it's unfortunate that there's an earnestness to that that I think sometimes
people find cheesy and 12 step groups or cheesy and self help.
But to me, it's so much better than the alternative, you know, like, let's say that your
nihilism is true.
I mean, what's why I's the, why try then?
Why would you do anything?
Like that the earnestness is a key variable.
That lack of hope, that lack of self-efficacy
has very real impact on your ability to function.
I mean, I had a student once that I asked them to write an essay,
two essays, and this was at the rehab.
One essay about how they see, you see yourself
and then the second one was how other people see you.
And we were gonna have a whole conversation about that,
but what it turned into was one kid saying,
no, I'll write the one about how I see myself,
but I won't write the one about how other people see me.
And he started to get agitated.
And of course, I've had to do a lot of like trauma-informed
teaching practices where, you know, the blow up that a kid is having
is not about the thing you'd think it is.
It's about something different, something deeper.
So we try to get to like why he's being so
abeligerant with me and won't write this thing.
And finally, he just starts to weep.
And he said, well, why would I write that, I say,
because what people would say about me
is that every man in my family has gone to prison.
So I'm just gonna go to prison. Why would I write that? And that was people would say about me is that every man in my family has gone to prison, so I'm just going to go to prison.
Why would I write that?
And that was what he believed about himself.
And that had a huge impact on his life, his goals for the future, his ability to stay sober.
I mean, so many aspects of his life were just derailed by the fact that he had no sense
of self-efficacy at all, that his life was pretty much laid out
for him from the moment he was born, just by virtue of the fact that everyone else had set an
example that, and there was no escaping from that. Yeah, and I think what the stillyx would say is
that life has paired you with this strong sparring partner, right? Your addiction, your legacy of addiction,
your crappy parents, you know,
whatever the spiral you went down,
and the question is,
are you gonna get stronger for wrestling
with this sparring partner,
or are you going to let it win?
And that's how I kind of think about it as like,
I'm wrestling with whatever the bits of obstacles
or adversity that I felt, which are fundamentally different and obviously much less severe than
different obstacles that different people have felt, but that I'm going to be better for
what I've experienced.
And I think that's what I also want my my kids to to be and that's kind of how I've been thinking
You know, I think you're both your books sort of pointing me in this direction, which is like you hear all these parents are talking about how
You know, this is the last year or how damaged their kids have been because oh my god
They had a study on zoom for six months and it's like
Have you ever talked to someone who survived the Great Depression?
I was listening to an interview with Tom Jones,
the singer, and he apparently got tuberculosis
when he was 13.
He had a quarantine in his house for two years
as a kid in England.
Like, look, stuff happens and you can say
that this is disadvantaged your kid, or you can say that this is disadvantaged your kid or you can say your kid is better for having
experienced it and having you as their parent to help them with it.
There's actually a really interesting book that just came out called Thriveurs.
It's by Michelle Borba.
She's a wonderful person and a parenting expert.
And that book is all it's sort of the culmination of all the work she's ever done, which is about,
you know, what makes it so that some kids thrive
in situations that other kids wouldn't
and or that other kids can't even survive.
And I'm really wary of talking about it as strength,
you know, and I get where you're coming from with that.
But I also think that there's, it has a lot to do
with who your allies are and who's around you.
You know, there's all that research that shows that, you know, when a kid who has really,
like let's say, tons of adverse childhood experiences and big T trauma, as long as they
have one person, one adult who they can trust and who believes in them and supports them,
they're much more likely to do well.
I think that there's, yes, yes, I'm proud of myself for getting sober and I'm proud of myself for being proactive
and talking about it.
But I don't know that it's all about strength.
I think a lot of it had to do just frankly
with desperation and a need to escape something
that really had the potential to continue on down the line
in my family and I just couldn't let it do that. had the potential to, you know, continue on down the line
in my family, and I just couldn't let it do that.
I would argue it's not strength. The strength is not that it was not what allowed you
to do that.
The strength is what you have now.
I mean, done that.
That post-traumatic growth is the same, PTSD post-traumatic growth.
Trauma is the same.
The question is, do you focus on, and I don't mean it at all to make light of people
of trauma.
What I'm saying is that you can also choose to be, like, Heminway talks about how life
breaks us.
And he says, the people who will not break
life kills, but he says, but we can be stronger
at the broken places.
And I think that's what we're talking about.
And to me, that's such a beautiful way
of thinking about it is that we all go through stuff,
but then are you stronger for breaking?
I went through and have been going through a family thing
that I won't get into.
That's been really hard and really painful. But as a result, my marriage is stronger and my
relationship with my kids is stronger. So there was desperation and pain and break over here.
And this isn't just a magical trick where you go like, and it was all positive. No,
that still remains a clusterfuck that is not resolved itself, and I'm not sure it ever
will, unfortunately.
But over here where I do have some agency, that's where I've made an improvement, and that's
where I've hopefully broken the cycle a little bit.
Well, to bring this back around, I think part of what you're also talking about it, so
what this book comes down to, like if I had to still it down to one central point,
I borrowed something from Chris Heron who was a Boston Celtic and he's from Massachusetts,
same as me.
And I got to hear him speak a couple times and he just, he's mesmerizing to listen to
and kids are just captivated. all these kids are weeping.
He's just amazing.
There's a really great, a really great documentary
you can watch, you can stream online called
first day with him.
And he talks about the fact that, you know, for,
for, you know, we do a lot of talking about
the worst day of drinking, you know,
that blackout at my mother's birthday party that was just so disgusting and horrible, but what
we don't talk a lot about is the first day.
And yet the first day is really, really important because at its essence, this book, my entire
career has been about helping get kids to a place where they feel like they deserve
to take up space in this world.
They have a voice to speak up for themselves and that they are heard and seen and known for who they are. And so often with kids, what we have
as a situation was they take that first drink of that first drug because they don't feel like
they're enough as they are, or they're hurting because someone or something has happened to them
and they're they're meditating that trauma, that pain.
But that idea of helping someone feel like they can be
in a place where they can speak up for themselves,
where they can be in a place where they can be stronger
at the breaks, that is in and of itself the way
we get kids to a place where they feel like they don't have
to take part in, you know, drinking or drugging
in order to be enough in this world.
So what other things do you feel like parents need to be thinking about? Like as far as sort of setting up or at least reducing the odds,
because you're not saying that here's this magical formula that.
So this isn't like a fact, even though you say inoculation, it's not a vaccine.
This is probably closer to like social distancing and being aware of how COVID spreads, and so you don't
go into closed windowless rooms for extended periods of time with random strangers not wearing masks.
Actually, inoculation in the title comes from inculation theory. It's a field of social science that talks about the fact that,
and it's a really powerful part of helping kids build up
their refusal skills, but it's also part of self-efficacy,
which is, so, to starting at the beginning,
talking from the time a kid is really, really, really young,
and I'm talking like nursery school kindergarten,
talking about like, you know, why you spit the toothpaste out
instead of swallowing it, why we wash our hands, why we don't take pills that don't have our, you know, prescription pills that don't have our name on them from a very young age, and I like their tons of scripts in the book that tell you what to say and stuff like that.
And then it moves up developmentally with kids and there are other things you can do like, you know, research shows that families that have dinner together, the kids, the more nights you have dinner together, the lower their risk of substance use disorder
over their lifetime.
There's a causation correlation issue there, but whatever.
So talking, listening, communication, giving kids refusal skills and this inoculation
theory stuff, which is so cool, because it's an inoculation theory says that essentially when you give kids sort of a
week, you know, if kids can rebut sort of a weakened version of, you know, come on, everyone's doing
it or we can't be friends if you don't try this. Right, if you're a kid, you want to try
to drop that impression. I know. I was absolutely positive that they were going to like push me to locker and make me take
cocaine in the minute I walked into high school.
But if we if we give kids refusal skills and there's a huge list of them in, you know, things
kids can say and still say face, if we give them this feeling of empowerment that they actually
know what they could say back if they don't want to partake in something and that's any
risky behavior that could be sex before they're ready.
That could be getting in a car with a drunk driver, that kind of thing.
Then not only are they more likely to refuse that thing, to be able to speak up and refuse
that thing, they're also more likely to talk to us about it.
And research on Inoculation Theory shows that it generalizes.
There was a great paper out of Dartmouth College,
as a sociologist there, who found that when you use inoculation theory around,
for example, drugs and alcohol, it also inoculates them for other high risk behaviors like premature sex, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
So it's a really powerful thing.
In inoculation theory, it's based on the same sort of thing that vaccines are.
It's just sort of a more metaphorical version of it.
So I really do mean, there really is the idea that you can inoculate kids against high risk
behaviors.
Then on top of that, there's just essentially, I go into the research and I look at everything
that I've ever heard might protect kids against substance use disorder and look at all of
the research, turn it over,
look at all the angles.
You know, there's stuff in there about,
you know, exercise or stuff in there about
whether or not you should have a pet,
what, you know, stuff in there about mindfulness,
stuff in there about the self-efficacy
and the self-advocacy, looking to allies.
You know, most people don't realize that
one of the most powerful allies around for your kids
is their healthcare provider that pediatricians, nurse practitioners, family medicine docs use these
screening tools. One of them is called SBIRT, for example, screening, brief intervention,
and referral to treatment. So, you know how like right before your kid goes, once your kid gets
old enough, they'll start getting a tablet to tap out answers to various questions on
before their appointment.
And you really need to give them space when they do that
because those are the questions they're being asked
are about, have you ever gotten in the car
with someone who's been drinking?
And this is not a test of your good parenting.
This is an assessment of what their risks are.
And pediatricians and other healthcare providers are really good an assessment of what their risks are and pediatricians and you know,
other health care providers are really good at sort of tracking those risks over the years
and talking to them as needed about some of those risk behaviors, school counselors, school
nurses, those are also allies.
So there's lots and lots of protections in there, some of which will be irrelevant for
your family, some of which will be really important to your family, but it's a matter
of knowing your kids' individual risk based on all the
risk factors and taking the preventions that work for you and your
family and trying them on for size, you know, like I tried mindfulness with
my kid and he was having nothing of it or so I thought he didn't want to do it
with me, but it turns out that he has now built a meditation space in his
room, but it's private.
It's something he likes to do by himself. turns out that he has now built a meditation space in his room, but it's private.
It's something he likes to do by himself.
So sometimes when these protections don't go the way
we want them to, sometimes they take anyway.
Well, I wanted to wrap up with this idea of temperance,
which is one of the stoic virtues
that's maybe a little, it sort of goes to your point
about Gretchen Rubin, but it's maybe
a less popular poorly understood, because when your point about Gretchen Rubin, but it's maybe less
popular, poorly understood, because when we think temperance in the United States, we
have to think the temperance movement, right?
Like, that no alcohol, no one should be allowed to drink.
How do you teach your kid this idea of moderation?
Because it feels like so uncool.
And it's in a way, I don't want to say it's hard to teach by example
because it's not, but it's sort of, it's an easy thing to miss, right? Like you, you
notice that your parent is drinking a lot. Maybe you notice that they're not drinking at
all. How do you, how do you teach healthy attitudes towards these things. So there's so many, number one, number one, most important is modeling it yourself.
So my kids have two examples.
They have an example of me who never drinks dozens of drugs, and they have an example of
their father who can drink like a normal human being.
But the cool thing about that modeling also is that we're also modeling what, and especially
he is,
modeling what a really caring and empathetic relationship
looks like because we also, if he doesn't finish
whatever it is he brought home to have with dinner,
he pours it out because he doesn't want me
to have to think about it.
You know, that's a big part of our relationship.
That's beautiful.
So, but we also talk about it a lot in regards to food.
So I know I have a kid who, I have two kids who tend to be a little bit more on the black
and white sort of like either no sugar or tons of sugar or you know that kind of thing.
So we talk a lot about it in regards to diet.
But I can tell you as a teacher who used to work in a school that had a really strong
character education program and was very grounded
in sort of classical literature.
I used to teach temperance to my students by talking a little bit about the Iliad and
about Achilles and about flying into a blind know, being able to talk about something.
So we're having these conversations all the time
about like the difference between reacting from Euromigdala
and your lower brain and the ability to take a breath
and sort of think about something before you freak out.
That is what temperance means to me, sort of that middle ground
between the extremes of all or nothing, you know, lots of sugar and no sugar,
or, you know, flying into a blind rage versus being able to,
you know, have a very logical conversation about something.
It's that middle ground.
And that's, I think, the best way to talk about it,
especially with kids, with little, little kids,
it's great, because you can talk about,
from an education perspective,
it's really great to teach kids
about how their brains work from a very young age.
So you can say things like,
sweetie, I know you really wanted to hit Stephen
for telling you that you're haired and look good today,
but can we engage our upper brain a little bit
and try to talk to him and tell him how it makes us feel
as opposed to just whacking him over the head with your book?
Those are really effective conversations to have
because it empowers kids to help them know
that they can change and learn how to control
those behaviors and have that temperance.
No, I think the ability to think about how you think,
why you think about, why you think that way,
and why you feel what you feel. Those are sort of the
ultimate skills. And yeah, I would argue proud, if not an inoculation against extreme behavior or
addiction, it's at the very least a really good line of defense.
Yeah, yeah, I hope so. I mean, again, I'm doing the best I can do based on the research that's out there.
And, you know, new research could come out day after tomorrow
that says, look, all you have to do is, you know,
this other thing.
And, you know, I will continue,
I will hopefully model for my kids
that I'm the kind of person who will listen
and learn from other people's experiences
and other people's evidence.
And that's all I can ever ask of them.
And one thing I would say, whether it's about 12 step
or recovery or sort of battling any of these demons,
I tend to find there is an impulse in smart people
to like, I'm gonna look at the research and be like,
oh, this isn't fully effective.
What, you see people look for a magical solution
to these problems, whether it's addiction,
whether it's depression, whether it's anxiety.
And look, there are definitely some,
I think, decent medical solutions to these things.
But, but even the medical solutions to these things. But even the medical solutions are usually best
when paired with therapy or exercise or other.
But I think almost the primary,
like Robert Green says, the ultimate law of human nature
is refusal to admit there is such thing as human nature.
I would say the ultimate feature of addiction is the belief that you know better or like that you know better and that's why you're not
an addict or you know you're an addict but you know better than the generations of people who have been struggling with this demon now for
decades and clawed their way back to some point of sobriety that you know better than them
and that it doesn't have to be as hard or as circuitous or complicated as what they're
doing and that all you have to do is take ayahuasca, all you have to do is move to this place
or all you have to do is,
it's fucking complicated and hard.
And if you think there's an easy solution,
you are almost certainly engaging in the same illness
that you are trying to fight.
That's why the fun part for me is
I have a lot of comfort with the gray areas.
And the whole chapter on peers, that's what that is.
You know, my son became really good friends with a kid who was struggling with substance abuse.
And my first instinct was cut him out of your life.
That's it.
It's over because the common knowledge is if your kids, if your kids friends, you know,
use them, they're more likely to use.
Turns out that there's a lot,
it's a lot more complicated than that.
And I think I'm hoping anyway that it,
I dispel a lot of myths, I hope in this book,
I help parents be a little more comfortable
with the gray area and with the fact
that there aren't any easy solutions.
But here's what we know right now that is our best practices when it comes to how schools handle their substance abuse prevention programs and how families talk about substance abuse. So, you know, again, The Gift of Failure, the addiction, inoculation.
It's always awesome to talk.
And we'll do this next one when you finish.
I think you'll like the next one.
We'll have to have a chat about it.
I'm really excited for it.
Thanks so much for listening.
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