We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - How to Raise Untamed Kids with Dr. Becky Kennedy
Episode Date: September 15, 20221. How to embody your authority while also validating your kid’s experience. 2. The #1 strategy for building resilience. 3. Why consequences and punishments backfire and don’t work. 4. How to sit ...with your child on the “benches” of their emotions. 5. One thing you can say to your kids to build connection in any circumstance. About Dr. Becky: Dr. Becky Kennedy is a clinical psychologist and mom of three, named “The Millennial Parenting Whisperer” by TIME Magazine. She’s rethinking the way we raise our children – empowering parents to feel sturdier and more equipped to manage the challenges of parenting. Dr. Becky is founder of the Good Inside Membership platform, a hub with Dr. Becky’s complete parenting content collection all in one place; author of Good Inside: A Guide to Becoming the Parent You Want to Be, which is out this month. And her podcast “Good Inside with Dr. Becky” – was one of Apple Podcasts “Best Shows of 2021.” TW: @goodinside IG: @drbeckyatgoodinside To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome back to We Can Do Hard Things! I am so excited because we have Dr. Becky
back here who is solving our lives. And we're gonna answer some of the pod
squadders questions today about parenting kids but also about just
repairing ourselves and how to human differently and with a little less shame and more compassion and joy.
Sister, you were talking about something pretty cool that you wanted to ask Dr. Becky about to start us off with.
Yes, I am fascinated, Dr. Becky, by your complete reframe on consequences and punishment and the way that you talk about actions being
moments and consequences versus skills.
Can you just walk us through that because it was mind bending to me?
Yeah.
So let's take a situation like my kids, I don't know, jumping on the couch and maybe it's
like a couch in my house that I wouldn't let them jump on.
I actually don't have that couch, but many people have nice couchs.
So they're jumping on the couch and I'm like, get off the couch or maybe I say it nice.
I'm like, hey, can you get off the couch?
I'm laughing thinking about the will Ferrell's kid of saying get off the shed.
I don't know if it's right.
Can you please get off the shed?
Or that can be get off the couch and they don't. Right? So please get off the shed or that can be the couch. And they don't. Right. So my
four year old like even looks at me. You know the way I
four year old look at you and then go back to like. Yes.
Like I double dare you. Yes. Exactly. And they keep going great.
So what would consequence punishment would be something like
you don't get dessert tonight. That's it. You don't get
dessert tonight. Right. Something like kind of random that I'm making away.
Yeah, of course.
Right?
Which also, I'm gonna regret later,
even now I've been dealing with them all down about dessert.
Right, exactly.
Or I'll be like, does this count as dessert?
Maybe it doesn't find you get this,
but it's not really dessert,
because you said no, you get a waffle.
You get a waffle for such a mess.
Or we're always taking away screen time,
which by the way is the only good time.
100% sort of times your self.
You're the best parents when your kids are watching screen time, which by the way is the only good time. 100% times your best parents when your kids are watching screen.
So your best parenting moment you're taking away.
That would be consequence punishment for a quote bad behavior.
There's so many problems with this.
Number one, I feel like there's just a logical problem that people haven't
thought about in like the space time continuum.
Something led to my kid jumping on the couch
and then led to them doing it,
even after I said stop.
Something there was an antecedent.
Okay.
I believe that by adding something after
like a consequence,
that that's gonna be the most effective way
of changing the behavior.
Next time I kid, my forearms would be like,
wait, the last time I didn't listen,
I did get to dessert, taken away,
and get a waffle instead.
So as such, I am not going to smack my sister in the arm.
It doesn't make any sense, like forget how you treat humans,
which is actually the thing that drives me.
Just logically, I'm like,
that's not how behavior change works.
We don't change behavior by inserting a different behavior after. We change behavior by changing the
process that would happen before. Like, do we want to focus on the before? And that doesn't make
sense by focusing on the after. So that's the biggest thing. So what would help? Well, I wonder
what my kid, my good kid, would need
to not jump on the couch after I asked.
If I assume he's a good kid having a hard time,
not a bad kid doing that bad things,
I might also relate to myself,
well, what would stop me?
Because there's a lot of times
I'm like, I shouldn't have chocolate before dinner.
I know that.
My husband might even say, I'm making an iced dinner,
try not to eat chocolate before dinner.
I might still do it, but not because I don't respect my husband,
because it's hard to want something and not have it.
It's just a hard state.
So I wonder what it's like for my son to want to jump on the couch
and not be able.
Well, that's probably pretty hard as a four-year-old
to get off the couch instead of jump.
So if I take consequences and punishments and just be like,
number one is probably not effective. Beyond layering shame and adding the message of you're a bad kid, which only makes
change harder because you're further identifying in the role you want your kid to move away from.
So that doesn't make sense either. But instead of that, I might number one embody my authority.
So many times with parents who give consequences and punishments, the real issue is we're asking kids to do the job we should be doing.
My four-year-old, if he's dropping in the couch and I say, please get off and he
doesn't, it is my job to go over and say, look, I'm only gonna say this one
last time and as soon as I'm done talking, if you don't do the thing I say, I am
gonna pick you up because if you can't get off the couch, you're showing me
you're having a really hard time, I will pick you up and take you off the couch
and show you the areas you can jump.
Like, that's my job.
My kid is showing me, he can't put up a boundary, right?
We would never watch a kid run toward the street
and just say, if you run at traffic,
you're gonna lose dessert tonight.
We would just pick them up.
Like, I can't imagine that is effective parenting technique, right?
We just be like, I'm just going to grab them not because they're a bad kid,
but because they can't inhibit the urge because the urge is greater than
their ability to manage that urge. So what would I do then in a calm moment?
I'd probably in a calm moment say, Hey, I have a funny idea.
And how sometimes you want to do things that I say you can't do?
I know.
I want to do things that people tell me I can't do too.
That's so tricky.
We're going to practice because anything we want to learn, we have to practice.
This is weird.
I'm going to have you get on the couch.
I know.
I always tell you to get off.
I'm going to have you get on the couch.
Get on the couch.
I'm going to say, hey, can you please get off the couch?
Then you can jump off the couch.
And I want to see if you can do five ridiculous silly jumps, funnier than my jumps on the
floor, right? My kid's going to do this because it's a game because it's fun. Now, maybe
I do jumps with him and I fall and now it's funny, right? I'm teaching them a skill when
you can't do one thing, you probably could do another thing. I'm practicing that skill.
I'm actually infusing connection
into a moment that usually feels full of shame and aloneness.
The next time it comes, could I guarantee my kids
gonna get off?
No, but I also know if they don't right away,
I'm gonna do it myself.
But I guarantee the likelihood is higher,
because I've actually worked on the skill
that they've needed instead of layering on aloneness
and shame
and distance and punishment,
which actually freezes a child.
That's what a shame response is.
It's a freeze animal response.
Freezing doesn't lead to change.
Right, so.
And it reminds me of grown up stuff.
It reminds me of people who are trying to get sober
or why we drink or why we binge or whatever.
So what happens is we're at the end of a long day.
And then we're trying to not drink or trying to not binge.
And then we do.
And then afterwards we're just freaking be rate ourselves and are so full of shame
and so full of self-loathing and often give ourselves consequences.
I will never, I won't eat for eight days.
I will not do whatever.
But really what we have to do is look at the before.
Instead of being mad at ourselves afterwards,
we have to be 10 times kinder to ourselves before hand.
Instead of being like, I'm a bad person, you binge.
I'm a good person, you binge.
So why did I binge?
Because this day, I did not take care of myself.
Yes.
I eat Dr. Becky, need like a lot of tender self-care all the time.
And it's taken me a long time to be like not ashamed of that.
Because you can get to the place where you're like,
well, it's not normal to need that much tenderness and self-care.
So I'm just not going to do it to be like everybody else.
And then why do I keep binging?
So it's like the looking beforehand to what led to that thing that I didn't want to do,
and shoring up all the antecedents with like more tenderness, more love, more rest, more
what I want to do, more fresh air, whatever is true all the way through for grown up,
for whatever we do, something that we don't think
we want to be doing.
A hundred percent.
And I think for any kid's behavior,
and if everyone here is thinking about
a behavior in their kid or behavior in themselves,
start with yourself, like what is a behavior
that I want to stop and I'm struggling to stop?
I think a question we often skip,
even though it's the most important question,
is what is this thing I'm doing?
That's not working for me anymore.
What is it doing for me?
It's serving a function.
I'm an animal.
I'm oriented by evolution.
My body would never be trying to work against itself.
So what am I looking for?
So that kid jumping on the couch, maybe they have an urge they can't inhibit or maybe
they're looking to feel independent.
Kids feel controlled all the time.
So a kid will jump on the couch when you say no
to prove going back to realness. Also, like, on my own person, on my own person.
So so often with my kids when they're in that stage, I might say something like,
I don't even know why I'm telling you this. If you say ugly, woogly, woogly,
like five times, like it literally drives me crazy. Like, there's nothing I hate more than that.
Please don't ever say that. Like, I'll give them something proactively that I quote, hey, that's kind of funny.
And guess what?
The next time I ask them to do something they don't want to do, they're more likely
to do it because if that behavior rejecting me was really serving the need of
feeling like their own person and feeling independent, well, if you get that
need that elsewhere, then you're going to be less attached to that behavior
because the need has already been filled.
So with kids and with us, it's recognizing and regulating our emotions,
validating our emotions, and making a plan. That's how we help ourselves, and that's how you just said to help the kid.
I am, and if it seems weird, your swimming example is like the perfect crystallization.
We wouldn't say, okay, our kids need to learn that there are consequences for not knowing
how to swim.
So I'm just going to yell at my kid, you have to swim.
If you don't swim, are you going to get in so much trouble?
You would never do that.
You would say, let me teach you how to swim.
We don't scream at them for not knowing how to swim.
We just say, here's how you swim.
Exactly, right?
I think that's exactly right.
And the swim example I think does crystallize it.
We feel like people are judging us
and maybe parents judge other parents,
but I think it's more in our head than anything else
because, oh, if I don't punish my kid
is having a meltdown at the party.
Every parent is gonna think, I don't know, whatever. But again, if I don't punish my kid is having a meltdown at the party, every parent is gonna think,
I don't know, whatever.
But again, like if you were teaching your kid how to swim
and they didn't know how to swim,
or now you were in harder waters
and they couldn't swim carefully there,
and you didn't punish your kid.
Like if a parent came up to you and is like,
you know, you're really reinforcing
this whole not swimming thing
by the way you're responding
to their inability to swim,
you would just be like, you're not someone who makes sense and we're not going to be friends. That doesn't make sense.
And so looking at kids' struggles, looking at our own struggles, has like, this is a sign of a
skill I need to build. This is a sign also, like you were saying Glennon earlier, like,
what state do I need to be in to access my skills? Right? They're both really relevant. That's what our kids need. And I think so many
approaches to parenting really have looked at kids is like, it's like animal
training. Yeah, right? Like rather than like kids are closer to us than they
are to, you know, other animal species. What we need, you know? Yes.
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All right, we're going to get to some amazing questions
from the Pod Squad.
Let's just hear from the first one.
Hey, y'all, I have a question about listening here
in our guide and parenting and obedience
because I feel like I was raised with like a very typical kind of second-wave feminist
mom who was like, dad, strong, be yourself, but then also really expecting me to do everything
she said.
And then I got a lot of trouble listening other people and doing what they said.
I was in a very decent relationship and because I just thought falling
the rules is so important. So I guess how do you, as parents, balance, you know, you're
getting your child to listen to their, their own voice and doing their own thing versus the needs
of like having to get them out the doors so that they can get on the bus in the morning.
the doors so that they can get on the bus in the morning. I'd really love your advice on threading
this obedient parenting needle. So thank you all so much. You're amazing. Bye.
That's an awesome question. I think these things can come together more easily than we think, not from the place of obedience, because we usually obey someone we're fearful of or someone who
has control over us.
I think kids end up listening to parents for two reasons.
Either they feel very connected to them
and very kind of close to them
or they feel very fearful of them.
And like you were saying,
there are consequences to wiring fear next to love.
Like there are.
I could cry thinking that there's a lot of consequences
to that early on.
Like what?
And like the people we end up being attracted to later on
are the people who evoke that earliest attachment.
And so being fearful of someone,
having someone having control over us,
someone dictating who we are and what we want,
our body's like, oh, I know how to do this.
This is what love is.
Yeah.
Yeah, that one, that consequence.
Just that one then.
Just one.
Small one right there.
Always able to be rewired and reworked as I think so many people know.
And it's hard work, you know?
So, why else do kids listen?
The same reasons we listen.
If my husband asked me for a glass of water
when we were both sitting on the couch,
you know, and that day we felt really close
and he listened to me and I don't know he didn't have his phone out.
When we were talking, I'd probably be like, sure. I'll do that even though I don't want to
And if the opposite was true, I'd probably be like get your own water
And if then he said to me you don't respect me and you're not a good listener
I'd be like that's really not what's happening
Like our relationship is you know not feeling as close as it could be and the manifestation of that is not listening when you want me to listen to you Hmm, not feeling as close as it could be. And the manifestation of that is not listening when you want me to listen to you.
So how can we manage that with our kids?
First of all, I think we just wanna differentiate again,
like a behavior from validating what's happening to a kid.
So saying to a kid, hey, we gotta put our shoes on
and you know, go out to school.
Like, work so much better at first, you say,
oh man, are you playing with those blocks? Oh, that out to school. Like, work so much better at first, you say, oh, man, are you playing with those blocks?
Oh, that looks really fun.
Oh, putting away blocks to go to school.
Oh, I remember being forward, that's so tricky.
Or even with a teenager, same thing.
Hey, look, we're gonna have to leave in a minute
and I know you're in the middle of blank,
whatever they're doing.
I know it's gonna be annoying to finish blank
and go do this thing I'm asking.
Just wanna let you know, I know that's gonna be a, you know, annoying moment in your day. Period.
Then when I go back to the room and a minute later and say, hey, now's that time we really
got to go so we can get to X on time. They're going to be so much more likely to do it, not because
they're obeying you, but because they feel seen by you, because they feel close to you. Now,
having said that is as a pragmatist,
there are always moments,
especially how I'm thinking with my age kids,
where I do all these things,
or I think I do these things, maybe I don't,
and still it's like, we gotta get out the door and get to school.
And I might say to my five-year-old,
hey, look, it's really hard for you to listen right now.
I really don't wanna do this,
but I'm going to have to.
I'm going to pick you up and strap you in the car,
and it's not gonna feel good to you or me. And you're
just kind of telling me we have to figure this out in a different way next time.
Okay, here I go. And then I might do that naming again for my kid. Oh, you
don't, you're not liking this. You didn't want this to happen. This doesn't
feel good. Even in that moment where I'm kind of again embodying my authority,
I am still validating their experience.
And then it's a flag to me.
Like I get through that drop off.
I'm like, oh, God, that was horrible.
I call a friend.
And then I'm like, okay, what was going on here?
It's my kid anxious about going to school.
It's my teenagers.
My kid anxious about going to school.
Do I not know about the tests they have?
Could peer stuff be going on?
Is this their way of showing me?
I'm an independent person.
How could I work on that in other places?
Maybe I'd say to them when they get home.
Hey, this morning, this morning was a shit show,
and we don't want it to go that way either of us.
I'm sure you have ideas about how the morning
could go more smoothly.
Let's work on this as a team.
What could I do better?
Your kids gonna be more likely to cooperate
when they feel connected to and real
and part of this, and of part of decision making.
So you see not listening, not as a sign of disrespect, but a sign of not enough connection.
I think it's not a person problem.
It's like a relationship.
And that doesn't mean it's a parent's problem either.
I don't think the parent caused it, but I think if it's a relationship struggle, again,
just like as parents, we're the leaders. Like it's just, you know, you would never tell relationship struggle, again, just like as parents,
we're the leaders. Like it's just, you know, you would never tell a CEO,
hey, go to your associates and have them change the company culture. You'd be like, no,
your leadership team has to change.
Okay, I would assume this kid is a gaze inward type.
How do you help those kids gaze outward?
How do you help those kids gaze outward?
And how do you help kids who are constantly gaze inwards to gaze upwards?
Gaze outwards to gaze inwards.
Because a lot of kids, we want both, right?
I mean, we want them to gaze inward first, as you said.
What are some strategies we can do to help kids
start trusting their inner guides.
Like quick ways, how do you do that?
And vice versa.
Which one you want to start with?
The kid who's more a little more self focused or other focus.
Yeah.
Which one?
Let's do self focus.
Yeah.
Okay.
So this is the kid who it seems like empathy, like they don't have it.
You know what I mean?
Like they're always focused on themselves.
I think the place we have to start with those kids, which is always a hard pill to swallow,
is we have to tolerate there's a stress
for a lot longer than we do.
Because with those kids, when we want them
to do things they don't wanna do,
they put up a fight or they just complain, you know,
or they ask over and over.
And then we often invoke,
why can't you just do the thing your sister wants?
As opposed to saying, look, we talked about it.
Your sister's picking the movie tonight.
Your choices are to watch.
Or you could go read in your room.
Those are your only choices.
And then my kid has to learn to tolerate the distress of other people kind of getting
what they want.
And for my kid is able to have empathy for other people around what they want.
Right.
You have to, I always think regulation precedes empathy.
It's always a prerequisite.
You have to regulate your distress before you have empathy.
For someone else, we know this,
whenever we are super overwhelmed with the feeling,
none of us have any empathy for anyone in those moments
because we're dysregulated, right?
Right.
So I think we skipped that step with those kids a lot.
I think we skip it because it's a pain in the ass.
Well, because they're scary.
Those kids are scary and they always have such big feelings.
And then the whole family starts to just accommodate for them.
They're family hostage takers.
Those are the family hostage takers.
Yes.
And I think that's where again, that authority.
And again, some kids, and I think about the word entitlement
around this, right?
Because like, there's this entitlement to things I should get to pick the movie or I think
about a family who came to me years ago and it was hard, they were hard fight.
They were very wealthy family and they're like, we got to this, we got to the airport.
And my kid found out, I guess we didn't tell them we weren't flying first class my 16 year
old.
And yeah, like it was a scene.
Oh, first fucks sake.
What the hell do you say to those people?
Hashtag relatable.
Hashtag, Jesus.
So that kid's a good kid having a heart attack.
Okay.
Here's what, like that kid is so fearful of their own frustration.
That kid has probably had frustration taken from them
as soon as it appears for 16 years of their life.
Math is hard, here's the tutor right away.
This is hard, we'll get a private.
This doesn't happen, we'll get your own nanny.
Like they did, right?
It's just like, and let's just say,
money can buy your way out of frustration.
And if you have a 16 year old
who's never really tolerated not getting what they want,
then they're gonna have a tantrum,
just the same way, a kid, what an store,
when they're not getting a toy they want at age two.
It's no different.
Right.
So we're really talking with kids of how do we teach kids, especially those who gaze in,
maybe also in a way if there's an extra layer of having means, how do we teach kids
to tolerate frustration?
We have to tolerate feelings in our kids before they learn to tolerate them in ourselves.
So those hostage takers, they need a little
bit of strength. And if it's not natural, I always say people like say it into a voice recorder
and play it back to you. And if it doesn't and like ask people around you, like, does this sound
sturdy? Okay. I'm going to up it again, like, like, actually, like play around with it. Like,
they didn't say, look, you don't want to watch the movie. I'm only saying this more time. You don't
have to watch the movie. Your feelings about the movie are important and they're not going to dictate what our family does. It's important
in life to not get the things you want and learn how to deal with it. This is one of those moments.
Let me know if you want to be in your room reading or watch the movie because we're about to start.
Like those kids need that. Okay. And it comes from, we're going to just record what she just said.
So you can just play in your living room for your kids.
I'm gonna use that one to wake for sure.
Well, I think it's important too,
because when there's so many different dynamics in a family
that oftentimes one of these kind of kids in a family
will dictate what the other kids are like.
Yes.
And I think that that becomes problematic
as TV nights become an issue, as opinions about
what we're going to go do or eat or listen to for music in the car ride.
These things all... Oh god, yes. Really matter.
You can't use that. That's right. And those kids also, they need a little prep.
So it might be before the car ride. Look, I know you often as a lot have the loudest voice
about what music we listen to.
And actually most of us tend to like the music.
You listen to it, I get that.
Here's the thing.
It's really important, whatever it is for your brother,
or for your sister, to also have a time
where they're able to get the things they want.
And that's gonna happen side by side
to you being really annoyed and frustrated.
And I just wanna let you know
in this card, we're gonna do something different.
I'm gonna let your sister choose.
And even if she says, oh, actually I don't really care.
He can choose, I'm actually gonna make her choose.
Just like you need help tolerating frustration.
She needs help speaking up and actually watching herself
get what she wants.
So this car ride's gonna be a lot of that.
And then prepare yourself for a not fun car ride
going, it's gonna pay off down the road.
So good.
No one's gonna be happy. So this is road. No one's going to be happy.
But this is building resilience instead of happiness.
Yes. Right. That's your Becky. I did pay attention to that part.
That the goal is not happiness for these kids. Resilience.
The goal is resilience, which is defined by you as, I think just like our ability to tolerate
distress. When I think about resilience, it's like, I'm able to feel like me in a very wide range
of emotions, in a very wide range of experiences, I can kind of find myself.
I don't just find myself in happy.
I don't just find myself in getting what I want.
I also don't just find myself in making people happy and helping other people get what
they want, right?
And that comes from being able to tolerate distress.
And I think, again, the biggest paradox is the more we help kids feel resilient and tolerate
a wide range of emotions, that's actually what allows for the emergence of happiness.
I think we all know searching for happy, where's the happy, where's the happy, that only
is a lifetime of anxiety.
It doesn't bring any happiness.
That's right.
Right. And so it's the idea is that
there's the resilience, but it's not alone. We're doing it with them. They're not feeling all
of these scary and sad and all the feelings by themselves because we haven't abandoned them
by telling them those things aren't real. So we are constantly saying how you feel is real
and I believe you and we're together on it
and the thing still stands,
which by the way feels very familiar
to the we can do hard things idea
because it's like accountability,
but connection also.
100% I think resilience as we get older, really it comes from
having felt like someone else, probably earliest caregivers, but other people too,
we're really there for you in your hard moments. I feel like how a feeling ends up feeling in our
body is the feeling plus how alone or not alone. Historically, we felt in that feeling.
That's really what it is.
And so every time we essentially say to our kid,
I'm adding presence, right?
And I feel like I'm a big metaphor person.
So if you picture your kid wandering around a garden
that has hundreds of benches, millions, right?
And the garden is life and they're wandering around.
And every bench is just an experience or a feeling. I was left out, I wasn't invited, I didn't make the soccer team, I was valid
Victoria and happy ones too, right? Our kids come to us like kind of, we find them on a
bench. Maybe it was, I wasn't invited to this person's birthday party. Can you believe
I'm the only girl and our group of friends wasn't invited? Okay, they're on the, I was left
out, I wasn't included bench. Guess what, they're gonna be on that bench a lot,
like in life, right?
We all are on that bench.
And then I often think like resilience building
as you as their parent, sitting next to them.
Like that's actually what it is.
It's not, I think our instinct is either
to kind of tell them their bench, isn't their bench?
It's not that big of a deal.
You were invited last year, it's one night,
or our instinct is to yank them off the bench
and bring them to some sunnier, happier bench.
Oh, well, we'll have our own summer party
that day with all the other friends, whatever it is, right?
So, and then what we're really doing
is the next time our kids on that bench,
they're like, oh, let me get off.
This is like, my mom wouldn't even say that,
especially if she's scared.
It's just like the tension of the bench.
She's so scared of this bench. And to make. Yes, she's scared. It's just like, it's just like, it's just like, it's just like, it's just like, it's just like, it's just like, it's just like,
it's just like, it's just like, it's just like,
it's just like, it's just like, it's just like,
it's just like, it's just like, it's just like,
it's just like, it's just like, it's just like,
it's just like, it's just like, it's just like,
it's just like, it's just like, it's just like,
it's just like, it's just like, it's just like,
it's just like, it's just like, it's just like,
it's just like, it's just like, it's just like,
it's just like, it's just like, it's just like,
it's just like, it's just like, it's just like,
it's just like, it's just like, it's just like,
it's just like, it's just like, it's just like,
it's just like, it's just like, it's just like,
it's just like, it's just like, it's just like, it's just like, it's just like, it's just like,
it's just like, it's just like, it's just like,
it's just like, it's just like, it's just like,
it's just like, it's just like, it's just like,
it's just like, it's just like, it's just like,
it's just like, it's like, it's just like,
it's just like, it's just like, it's just like, it's just like, it's just period. It's like an opening to a door. I think that's an attachment language. Our body feels this part
of me is attachable to my parent period. Hard stop. I wasn't invited to this party. I'm the only one.
I'm so glad you're talking to me about this. This is really important stuff. And then often, what happens
after you open that door, as kids do say, like, I'm so embarrassed, or they're going to be all of our social
media. I mean, like everyone's going to know also,, like maybe I'm not friends with them. Oh, like I believe you,
or I think another version of I believe you is,
you really know you feel that way.
You're really sad, you really know you feel that way.
And then the third line is just tell me more.
Mm, hell, that's it.
And then I think what happens,
I'm gonna cry, I think about this,
like I feel like then what happens
is your kid gets off the bench before you.
They're going to move on when they're ready.
And then you'll find them, you know,
at the next spot, they need you.
And then what their body remembers,
the next time they feel left out,
they're whatever age and they have their first kid
and they see like all the moms at the preschool had coffee
and they see them, they're like,
no one invited me to that coffee.
They're not going to feel happy, of course not.
That sucks. But their invited me to that coffee. They're not gonna feel happy, of course not, that sucks.
But their body next to that feeling is gonna remember
the warmth of your presence.
And because of that, it will be survivable
and it will be hard, but not spiraling.
Oh my God.
Can you say this again?
Thank you so much for telling me.
I'm so glad we're talking about this. It's so important
Then after that some version of I believe you or you really know you feel that way. Yeah, I love that and then tell me more
Okay, let's hear from Emily. My name is Emily, and there's so much great information about parenting nowadays about
how to break cycle.
Basically, there's not enough talk about how we're still going to screw them up.
Like, I feel like my generation of parents is going to get to the cities when they're
kids in their 20s and the kids are going to say, hey look, you still, you did this, this,
this, and this screwed me up.
And I just feel like we're not going to be ready for that.
And I feel like we need to hear more often about the natural process of learning and unlearning
that we all have to do, no matter what great parent you were, how it's not really about
being a good or bad
parent, but I feel like we all need to be ready to have that conversation with our kids and not take
it personal. Let's talk about how we're not going to be perfect and how we are going to fill our kids.
And let's just all be ready to hear how we screw them up one day.
So poignant and so important. So yes, yes, yes, and also I just like hear myself talking to this
podcast and I'm like, oh no, I feel like people think I like say these things to my kids all the time.
I hope they don't think I like actually say these things to my own kids all the time.
I definitely say like you're making a big deal out of nothing. This is a work in progress for all
of us. Like Dr. Becky is not the parent of my kids. Nor should he be like having someone who's
perfectly attuned to your needs sets you up to be looking for a partner who is always perfectly attuned to your needs?
Like that's not a good set up, right? So actually, I think that speaks to what you're saying here, which is the process of like misatunement and and repair.
Like, oh, you got that wrong about me and that didn't feel good or you did this thing and I didn't like it.
Repair I actually think is like the single most important
parenting strategy.
Like I always think it's like the thing we should get really
good at, which is both hearing from our kids
about the things they're mad about and proactively saying
some version of I'm sorry.
And that was me, not you.
For the things we know, we kind of were reactive around.
The point of working on parenting and things like that
is obviously for our kids.
And we know the way we interact with that matters. I think though that doesn't mean that the
goal is to like create perfect kids or like do it perfectly. And I think the goal is like
the more and more we learn about ourselves in the process, the more we grow, we just feel
like sturdier people in the world, which ironically makes us much more capable of any point
hearing, mom, I really didn't like that you did that way.
And then when we feel sturdier, right?
Again, when we feel our identity isn't as much attached
to any single moment or behavior, we're actually
able to see that with our kids is, wow,
this is like a moment of like really deepened connection.
My kids letting me know something that's important to them.
It kind of makes me think those same lines apply, like they always do.
They always do. I'm so glad you're talking to me about this.
That's really important. Oh, that didn't feel good to you.
You really know you feel that way. Tell me more about that.
And so I think the goal with our kids is not to have perfection in parenting.
That is like a creepy, creepy goal.
It's, you know, just to feel sturdy or ourselves,
to feel like we're interacting more often,
not all the time in a way that actually feels grounded
and in line with our own values.
And then yes, to be ready for those moments,
to hear where things were off,
and to offer curiosity and compassion and openness,
because that's actually part of that pathway of deepening our connection with our kids.
Yes, it's like preparing ourselves, like doing the personal work on ourselves now.
So that in 10, 20 years when our kids come to us with the inevitable issues that we've
caused, we will be able to handle it and hold it and be with curiosity about it.
And say, tell me more.
I love that.
The sturdiness is such a good word because I do, Glen and I with curiosity about it. You say, tell me more. I love that. The sturdiness is such a good word
because I do, Glen and I were talking about this the other day.
It feels like there's this parental fragility
where this idea that if you bring anything to your parents
that you wish were different,
it's like the whole house of cards tumbles
and it was like doomed.
Whereas that doesn't make any damn sense. And I feel like
we perpetuated to by not admitting when we made a mistake. It's like if we can just never admit
we made a mistake, then we can preserve this kind of infallible image for our kids, which is
utter horset. It's that same fragility. And yeah, so much of what we try to do is break a cycle and then breaking cycles
is so hard that we inevitably screw it up and then we feel like, damn it. Well, I can apologize
for that, but I'm still not breaking the cycle, but you say that when you are repairing,
you are cycle breaking. Yeah. Repair is everything. Like, repair is everything, right? Because,
again, our bodies register everything that happened. we yell at our kids when I yelled at my daughter this morning.
Her body felt that and I don't it's just how the body works get registered that experience, right?
So either my options, whether she brings it up or not, either my options are that kind of somatic memory
Lives floating around her body is kind of the end to some chapter.
Or I get to go back to that moment.
Like, I actually get to go back to that chapter.
I reopen the book to that moment in the chapter and I actually get to write a different ending.
Like, that's so empowering.
We don't often realize, like, repair is not a sign of, like, being a bad parent.
Repair is like this amazing opportunity to add in all the elements that were missing in the
first place. Right? So when I say, Hey, I was I was distracted this morning. I was stressed about something at work.
I ended up yelling at you. I'm sorry, it's never your fault when I yell. And one of the things
I'm going to work on is the few hours you have before you go to camp. I really can't put my phone
away so I can be more present and calm and there for you. I'm going to really work on that. Her
body then feels that, right?
And that's a huge opportunity,
whether I do it today,
or repairing for things even years ago, right?
Like if you have teenager and adult child
or you're disconnected from, and you look back
and you're like, you know what?
Like, yeah, I did yell at them a lot.
I definitely don't think I did all this,
like, oh, your feelings are real thing.
Like, okay, like still a good person inside.
Didn't do that.
What would it be like if I called up my 25 year old?
And I was just like, hey, I've been thinking,
and I don't even know all those specifics,
but like I just know time after time,
I probably engage with you in a way
that felt really bad to you.
And like you probably felt this understood
or like I was never trying to understand you.
And I think you were right to feel that way.
And I'm not sure exactly where we go from here, felt this understood or like I was never trying to understand you and I think you were right to feel that way.
And I'm not sure exactly where we go from here, but I'm thinking about it and it matters.
And I think I could actually hear about that from you if you ever are willing to talk
about that with me.
Like, who wouldn't be moved by that?
Like talk about reopening of a book.
Like it just repair.
It always matters.
And it's what starts that rewiring process.
Because you say that when you going back to your kids
and repairing and saying, what I did was not acceptable,
you are teaching them to expect that love looks like
when they are treated poorly,
love looks like circling back to repair that.
That is an inherent, invaluable part of love.
Yes.
Yes.
That love isn't perfect.
It's not the absence of mistitune.
It's not the absence of conflict.
But also, when we don't repair with our kids,
and this is always what also like spurns,
I'm like, I gotta go to my kid's room and own it.
Because again, if that experienced registers in a kid's body,
they're like, oh, wow, I got yelled at.
That was scary, whatever it was.
If I don't repair, kids really only have two ways
of explaining distress to themselves
when they don't have a narrative,
kind of a coherent narrative from a parent,
and it self-doubt and self-blame, right?
Self-doubt is, I don't, maybe I overreacted that.
That wasn't a big deal.
That really happened.
Someone would have talked to me,
and then that looks as an adult, like, am I overreacting? Would. That wasn't a big deal. If that really happened, someone would have talked to me, and then that looks as an adult. Am I overreacting? Would someone else have reacted
this way? Would all my friends, that self-doubt and self-blame is if I was only a better kid that
would have never happened, is my fault. Something's wrong with me. I'm too much. I'm not enough.
And if we wonder why adults are such prevalence-wiring for for self-plain and self-doubt, it's because in those moments,
that's what we were left with.
If we can, you know, we can really help our kids, you know,
and we can help ourselves in those moments too.
I always think the first step to repair
is repairing with yourself, right?
Before you go to say to your kid, I'm sorry for yelling,
you have to say to yourself, I'm a good parent who yelled.
They're, right, I'm a good parent who yelled
that does not define me.
In fact, I have an opportunity as soon as my body calms a little bit and I feel a little parent who yelled that does not define me. In fact, I have an opportunity. As soon as my body calms a little bit
and I feel a little bit of a release
and I find that goodness inside me,
I'm gonna go to my kit and I'm gonna do something.
And the macro of that is pod squatters.
So there is this moment where if you have raised children
who feel a connection to you
and who have been doing work on themselves and have
evolving, have been evolving past as they should be into a future that you were
not from because you raised your kids in a different time. They are going to come
to you and talk to you. If you're lucky, this is already happening to us. They are
going to have some epiphanies about the way you raise
them and they are going to come to you in different ways and tell you those things.
If you're lucky, what I am seeing through some of my friends, through my parents, through
whatever, is that there is a reaction to that, which is freeze it out.
Do not go back there.
Do not explore. And we have to get past that. That's
what sister and I have labeled parental fragility because it reminds me so much of white people
and race. It's like, I'm not racist. I'm not racist. Let's be quiet. Don't ask me this
question. Don't bring it up. If I just keep saying it, if I deny it, then I'm not racist.
It's like this idea that we are so afraid
that we weren't good parents,
that that fear of not being good parents
keeps us from being good parents,
because good connection and parenting in that moment
is to, I think, is like, holy shit, tell me more.
Like, I believe you, tell me more.
I believe you, tell me more, tell me you. Tell me more, tell me more.
Our oldest has told us some things that I'm just like,
wow, I'm a good parent.
I can't believe that I did that shit.
And the kind of repenting that it actually has created in me.
Glenin told me years ago, I made a mistake.
She said, why don't you just talk to Emma about it.
I apologize.
It was the first time I've ever heard somebody tell me that a parent apologizes to a child.
I was 40 years old.
And I did it.
It made me have like this experience of being able to repair it the little kid and me
that
Never got apologize to for many mistakes and so I think that there's this beautiful
Healing that can happen to our own selves through this process. Oh, when you're older
You stop feeling like you're walking on a tight wire. You're just being human and then when you mess up you get to talk about it and
grow more connected
And in terms of grow more connected.
And in terms of grow more connected,
I think, you know, for anyone, like everyone is listening
and thinking like of their older kids,
like our relationship with anyone's strengthens
the more parts of them we get to know.
Yes.
So when your kid brings forward a part that's surprising to you,
it, you know, for so you can always say,
like, this is important, I need a moment
so I can be there for you, right?
You can say that to a kid if you're like noticing defensiveness or you notice you want
to say like, you're accusing me of being a bad parent, whatever it is.
But if you think about being a good parent as defined by my job is to learn more and more
about my kid.
My job is to learn as much as I can.
And so all data is good data.
Yes. All data is good data.
Rather than when my kid does something,
seeing it as a reflection of my goodness,
they're totally different interpretations.
That's why parents get so fragile.
That's right.
Anyone gets fragile is because they think their goodness
is under attack.
When our goodness is under attack,
our body shuts down from an evolutionary animal defense state.
Okay, I'm a good parent who's kid is sharing new information, right?
And if you know your kids going to come, okay, I'm a good parent.
And actually I have such a good parent moment here.
My kids going to share the information and my only job is to learn.
I'm like a naive scientist to learn, learn, learn.
And that really, I think, redefines how I can feel good as a parent right in a almost like complete 180 type of way.
Okay, let's hear from Liz.
Okay, let's hear from Liz. Hi, my name is Liz, and my wife and I are raising three fabulous, amazing, awkward children
that we adore.
Our daughter is nine years old.
She recently at school has been having some issues with kids using inappropriate or what
we would deem inappropriate language at school directed at the girl.
She spoke up and she has told them that this is inappropriate and it makes her feel uncomfortable
and she came home and told us and we then went to the school with the issues but the problem
continued.
She was then kind of moved and therefore, because she was the one being
moved, she took that as her being the problem. So my question is, how in this world are we
supposed to raise a brave and courageous child in a world that seems like it's teaching her the opposite.
So great question. I feel like there's so many extensions of this. So my first
reaction is this, when our kids come to us with something that's really upsetting
in their environment, we often look to change their environment instead of
centering their experience. It's a really different reaction.
Centering a kid's experience is some version of, wait, so where were you when that happened?
Oh, you're in the lunchroom.
Tell me more what happened after.
Oh, okay, and then what?
Wait, these people all did that and you said this.
I'm focusing.
I'm zeroing in their experience.
Wow, my kid's like, yeah, it's horrible.
Yeah, I believe you.
That sounds so bad.
I wish I was there with you, right?
I wish I could have changed that situation for you.
That sounds awful.
I'm really centering their experience, centering, changing their environment.
It looks like, I'm going to call the principal.
I'm going to call the principal.
I got to change this.
And we don't have to choose one or the other.
Obviously, in their situations, of course, where we have to work on, you know, shifting
something that's not safe in a kid's environment.
But I would argue that first we have to center their experience and we often skip that.
And it's often what kids need first.
And then when we just change their environment, they're very alone with their experience.
So your bigger question was like how do we raise brave grounded
bold children in a world that feels really bad. I think brave bold children like have a lot of
self-trust and self-trust really comes from having your experience, having been seen as real
and important, not from having your experience to be made to be better, right?
That's where I would really, really start.
And I'll share a little more details.
There's something when my kids have a hard time away from me that I do that I feel like
it almost seems counter-intuitive, like why would it be helpful?
But if you picture your kid, let's say it's in the lunchroom, they're in a playground.
These words are happening or maybe for someone else, it's like they were on the bench at
recess, like having no one to play with, infusing your presence into that memory is the single
best resilience building strategy. And you do that by asking really specific questions.
Like, oh, so you were on that bench, which the one on the top of the hill, oh, the one on the bottom.
Who was around you? Oh, oh, so you're on the slide.
Did you stay on the bench?
Oh, no, I got up.
Oh, where did you go?
If you actually think about what's happening
in your child's body, you're now like walking with them.
Like if you go back to that idea of a loneliness
as the enemy, you're now infused your supportive presence
into this experience that was hard because of what happened,
but it was also hard because they felt alone. And you can't change the hard, but you actually can't even retrospectively
change the alone.
Oh, that's so good. And then also there's this whole other idea that like institutions
are fucked up. Sister, I remember when we were you were called me after the row decision came up and you were so overturning row and we were just, you know,
in shock.
And you said, Alice is going to be raised in a world
where she believes she's a second-class citizen.
And then we got to the point in that conversation
where we were like, no, Alice is going to live in a world
where she knows she's not a second-class citizen.
But she knows that her government treats her not a second-class citizen, but she knows that her government treats her
like a second-class citizen, and they are wrong.
Which is different.
It's inherently different.
I'm married to a woman.
I have a queer son.
He's living in a country that is wrong.
He's not wrong.
So there is an element of this question that's like that, right?
Yes.
When a student, when a girl speaks up and then she gets punished for it in class, how do
you explain to her?
No, no, no, they punish you, but you did the right thing.
How do we instill in these kids that sometimes authority will be wrong.
I think that starts with like that centering
on their experience,
because if you want your kid to also be like,
wait, I spoke up and I got this reaction
and the teacher let's the boy call out and not me,
let's say it's that.
Well, you actually first have to start with the fact that,
okay, so your kid called out or whatever it was, Okay, your kid was upset about how the teacher reacted. You
have to actually help your kid hone in on the fact that that was that experience. Or else it's
just like an intellectualized experience, which is actually not what helps kids day to day. They
have to embody those feelings. And then I think you can go to, wait, so now that we've gone through
that totally get why you felt that way. Okay, so now that we've gone through that, totally get why you've felt that way.
Okay, so this happened in class with this boy
and you're also noticing that over here.
Like what is that?
That is fucked up, isn't that?
Yes, we are right to notice that.
Telling my kids, you're right to notice that
is another one of my favorite lines.
You're right to notice that.
Yep, yes you are.
And then what are we gonna do about it?
Or whatever else you might say to activate.
But I think we have to start with a kid's experience, then go to what they're noticing around them.
And then go to, okay, some version of,
what are we gonna do about it?
Yeah.
Our last question is Emily.
Hi, Gwanna and Abby and Amanda.
My name's Emily.
I wanna ask if you have any advice for raising children
from a young age with a strong sense of self worth and self knowing.
I really struggled with these things for most of my life and it contributed to a divorce at a young age and a less than ideal career choice.
My son is six months old and I would really like to help foster a sense of self worth and self knowing in him as soon as I can. Thank you.
foster a sense of self-worth and self-knowing in him as soon as I can. Thank you.
My first reaction Emily is like you're obviously on that pathway just by the way you articulated what's really important to you. So knowing what really matters to you is going to be infused
into all of your decisions. So I would just take a moment and say okay I'm probably further along
and getting to that outcome than I might have given myself credit for.
Next, self-trust and self-knowing. To me, that is what confidence is. It's not feeling good about ourselves. It's self-trust. It's trusting that we really are a good feeler of our feelings.
That's what I want my kids also to have when they get older. Naming or wondering about how a kid's feeling, assuming that there's a story underneath what you see
on the surface is what really allows kids
from the start to develop circuitry,
that's essentially saying the things inside me
are real and important, and that allows for self trust
and self knowing.
So even as a baby, when they're crying,
oh, you're hungry, or oh, you're trying to crawl, or something I said a lot when they're crying. Oh, you're hungry or you're trying to crawl
or something I said a lot when I didn't know,
is I know you know why you're upset
and I just can't figure it out, you know.
And you're really saying to a baby from the start,
you know yourself, the things inside you are real,
even if other people don't understand that, right?
That's something I think we all could use
to believe. As kids get older, I think finding any opportunity to almost name and celebrate the
ways they are different from you is hugely important. So like, I remember doing this in tiny ways.
To my daughter, I feel like, wait, isn't that kind of interesting? Like, I'm having yogurt for
breakfast. Do you see me having yogurt? And you just told me you want a bagel. I kind of interesting, like, I'm having yogurt for breakfast. You see me having yogurt, and you just told me you want a bagel.
I kind of love that you see me doing one thing,
and you know you want another thing.
Now, my child is gonna be like,
Mom, I don't even, what do you talk about?
Let me make that bagel, you know?
But that doesn't mean it's not really sinking in.
So I think validating a kid's internal story,
or even there's all these things I think we can say to a kid
even when we're not sure what's going on for them.
You know why you're upset.
Or just there's something about this that really doesn't feel good to you.
I believe you.
I always think we can validate before we understand.
There's something about this, right?
There's something about this that really doesn't feel good.
You know that.
Really kind of in some ways celebrating
their differentiation, right?
Oh, we're going to a party.
I told you, you know, everyone's wearing dresses
and you wanted to wear sports shorts.
How cool?
You know what you want to wear?
I hope you always know what you want to wear
and always throw out the things I say
that don't feel right to you, right?
I think again, you're really encouraging a kid
to gaze in first and get grounded in themselves.
Dr. Becky, people are always asking me because untamed is, you know, about like undoing all of the
messages. One follow-up question to that was always, so how do we raise kids who don't have to untame?
Because it's exhausting. Like, wouldn't it be great if we had kids who
never needed to be untamed because they weren't tamed in the first place. And I'm telling you, I just
for the next right thing, I just feel like for people who are trying to figure out that out with
their kids or for people who are trying to figure it out for themselves now. Yeah. That your work is
that. It's that's the next right thing. follow dr. Becky on social media get good inside the book
If you're not parenting or you're done with parenting or whatever. I'm telling you it helped me
with my relationship with myself and
All of the people around me. It's you're doing such important work if all of our
Self-critical self-doubtful voices come from the beginning and come from what we were hiding from our parents,
who were less evolved than people are now and will continue to be so.
If we keep doing this work and parents start not shutting down the humanity and their children,
we're not really just talking
about better parenting. We're talking about an evolved human race. Will we not
have those voices? Will we not hide parts of ourselves if we don't learn that in
the beginning? I don't think everything comes from one thing, but I've never felt
so like optimistic and hopeful. It feels very grandiose to be like we're
changing the world. I even hear myself say that, I'm like,
oh, I want to take that back.
And yet, on a minute level, there's obviously
such massive sociological change, political change,
all that, so important to have the right environment
and structures and leadership in the world.
And if people within their homes are really doing work
to feel sturdier themselves and more healed
and more confident themselves and then are able to give
not all of that some of that in a different way to their kids. I feel really optimistic and hopeful about the massive implications.
So yeah.
It's good stuff Dr. Becky.
I love you. I love you too.
I love you too. She's the best. She's so smart.
I know. We will catch you back here
next time on We Can Do Her Things Pod Squad. We believe you. Tell us more. Bye.
I give you Tish Melton and Brandy Carlisle. And I continue to believe that I'm the one for me, and because I mine, I want the Cause we're adventurous and heartbreak some map
A final destination that we stopped asking directions
Some places they've never been And to be loved we need to be known
We'll finally find our way back home
And through the joy and pain
That our lives bring
We can do a heartache
I hit rock bottom, it felt like a brand new star
I'm not the problem sometimes things fall apart and I continue to believe the best people Yes, people are free And it took some time
But I'm finally fine
Cause we're adventurers And heartbreak's on map
A final destination
We stopped asking directions. So places they've never been. And to be loved,
we need to be known. We'll finally find our way back home. And through the joy and pain that our lives bring, we can do a heartache. This world finishes and heart breaks on my mind.
We might get lost but we're only that we've stopped asking directions
Some places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be loved
We'll finally find our way back home And through the joy and pain
That our lives bring
We can do hard things
Yeah, we can do hard things
Yeah, we can do hard things, is produced in partnership with Cadence 13 Studios.
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