Dr. Becky Kennedy: #1 Parenting Mistake Fueling Your Kid’s Anxiety! Follow THIS Proven Framework to Raise Emotionally Strong Adults
What’s the hardest part of parenting for you?
Do you think kids today are more anxious than before?
Today, Jay sits down with Dr. Becky Kennedy, clinical psychologist, best-selling author, and founder of Good Inside, a global parenting and mental health platform. Named the “Millennial Parent Whisperer” by Time, Dr. Becky is known for her compassionate, practical approach to raising emotionally healthy children while maintaining strong, sturdy leadership as a parent.
In this eye-opening conversation, Jay and Dr. Becky explore why modern parenting often swings between dismissing children’s emotions and letting them call the shots, sharing practical ways to find the balance in between. Dr. Becky shares why parenting is a skill you can actually learn, the surprising power of repairing after conflict, and how boundaries and validation work together to help kids feel safe, understood, and supported.
Dr. Becky shares how to shift your mindset from “my kid is giving me a hard time” to “my kid is having a hard time,” creating a more compassionate approach to conflict and connection. She explains why constantly optimizing for happiness for your kids can actually create anxiety later in life, why letting kids struggle is key to building resilience, and how to release the heavy burden of “mom guilt” by recognizing which emotions are yours to carry and which belong to your child.
In this interview, you’ll learn:
How to Repair After Rupture and Strengthen Connection
How to Set Boundaries Without Power Struggles
How to Validate Feelings Without Over-Coddling
How to Build Capable and Resilient Kids
Why Not All “Mom Guilt” is Actually Guilt
How to Balance Empathy with Leadership as a Parent
Parenting isn’t about getting it perfect. It’s about showing up, repairing when things go wrong, and modeling the emotional skills you want your children to have. As Dr. Becky reminds us, the most powerful thing you can give your kids is the confidence to face life’s challenges knowing they are both safe and valid.
With Love and Gratitude,
Jay Shetty
Join over 750,000 people to receive my most transformative wisdom directly in your inbox every single week with my free newsletter. Subscribe here.
What We Discuss:
00:00 Intro
02:49 Should Kids Dictate Parenting Styles?
06:03 Building Tolerance As A Skill
10:43 How To Overcome Mom Guilt
18:27 Becoming a Mom Shouldn't Be Endured Alone
21:50 What is the Best Parenting Strategy?
29:30 The First Step Of Repair
34:18 How to Reconcile with Your Kid
36:54 How to Reconcile with Your Kid
39:17 Your Kid is Just Having a Hard Time
42:04 The Myth Of Always Being Available
44:30 How Do You Set a True Boundary?
48:36 The Communication Skills Every Parent Needs
52:34 What is Your Job As A Parent?
56:48 Your Kid’s Feelings Are Valid
59:12 How Boundaries & Validation Make for Resilient Adults
01:00:40 Should you be Optimizing for Happiness In Childhood?
01:09:45 The Power of Patience & Time
01:12:56 Teaching Kids How To Build Tolerance
01:19:44 Fostering Independence
01:24:36 Teaching Children Self-Reliance
01:30:33 The Value Of Discipline
01:37:56 The Pressure Parents Experience
01:41:52 Independence Vs Dependence
01:50:46 The Fear Of Patterns Repeating
Episode Resources:
Dr. Becky Kennedy | Website
Dr. Becky Kennedy | Instagram
Dr. Becky Kennedy | Facebook
Dr. Becky Kennedy | YouTube
Dr. Becky Kennedy | LinkedIn
Dr. Becky Kennedy | X
Dr. Becky Kennedy | TikTok
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Listen and follow along
Transcript
This is an iHeart podcast.
This episode of On Purpose is brought to you by Chase Sapphire Reserve.
I believe that travel is one of the greatest gifts that we've ever been given, and Chase Sapphire Reserve has been my gateway to the world's most captivating destinations.
When I use my Chase Sapphire Reserve card, I get eight times the points on all the purchases I make through Chase Travel and even access to one-of-a-kind experiences, experiences like music festivals and sporting events.
And that's not even mentioning how the card gets me into the Sapphire Lounge by the club at select airports nationwide.
Travel is more rewarding with Chase Sapphire Reserve.
Trust me, discover more at chase.com forward slash Sapphire Reserve.
Cards issued by JP Morgan Chase Bank NA.
Member FDIC, subject to credit approval, terms apply.
Growing up, one of my favorite things about going back to school was picking out a new school supplies.
It wasn't just about notebooks or pencils, it was about starting fresh, setting intentions and feeling prepared to grow.
Now as an adult, I still love that feeling.
And thanks to Amazon, it's easier than ever to help the students in your life feel the same.
Whether it's backpack, tech accessories, or classroom essentials, Amazon is everything you need to start the school year strong, all in one place, place, at prices that just make sense.
Preparing for a new school year is more than a checklist.
It's a chance to build confidence, excitement, and a sense of purpose.
And with Amazon, you can make sure every student is ready to step into their full potential.
Shop back to school at Amazon.
Oikos presents 15 seconds of strength.
Here we go.
Steve's got a trunk full of groceries and no one to help him.
Oh, that's tough, Jim.
Looks like a five-trip load at least.
He grabs the the first bag, the second.
Bob, it looks like he's trying to do it all in one trip.
He shimmies the door open, steps over the dog.
Oh, and he stumbles.
Oh, right into the kitchen without missing a beat.
Jim, now that's a man who eats his protein-packed oikos.
With 15 grams of complete protein in each cup, Oikos Triple Zero can help build strength for every day.
Oikos, stronger makes everything better.
We've gone from not caring about kids' emotions to being scared of kids' emotions.
The more you optimize for happiness in childhood, the more you actually wire for anxiety in adulthood.
Dr.
Becky Kennedy.
Dr.
Becky, the go-to voice for mother.
Helping parents break cycles and build connections.
What actually makes a good parent?
Repair without a doubt is the most important parenting strategy.
What's the worst thing a parent can say to a child that's going through a difficult time?
I don't care about your feelings.
I'm not listening.
I'm not really connecting.
I am telling you what to do.
I'm leading with control.
Can you be your kid's best friend and still set boundaries?
Kids need us to embody our authority.
Boundaries and validation when paired together, that's what makes for really resilient adults.
What's the cost of being a good kid who never caused problems?
You can't learn to manage emotions you feel like you're not allowed to have.
If we can't tolerate the challenging feelings our kids have and we look for a quick distraction, what they learn is, I'm a kid and I find my feelings overwhelming, but oh my goodness, my parent finds my feelings overwhelming.
You've said it's not your job to make your kids happy.
Yeah.
I mean, what is a current struggle?
The number one health and wellness podcast.
Jay Shetty.
Jay Shetty.
The one, the only Jay Shetty.
Hey, everyone.
Welcome back to On Purpose, the place you come to become happier, healthier, and more healed.
I'm so grateful that I get to talk to today's thought leaders and experts about the things that matter, that make a difference in our daily lives.
And today's topic is something I'm fascinated by.
It's something I talk to my wife Radhi about a lot.
And it's something that takes a lot of my mind space, even though I'm not one of these yet.
But today's topic is parenting.
And today's guest is Dr.
Becky Kennedy, clinical psychologist, best-selling author, and founder of Good Inside, a global parenting and mental health platform.
Named by Time as the Millennial Parent Whisperer, Dr.
Becky is known for bringing practical, compassionate tools that help families and individuals thrive.
Dr.
Becky's best-selling book, Good Inside, has helped over a million people feel seen and supported through life's toughest moments.
And in today's episode, we dive into how to honor hard emotions, set healthy boundaries, and grow through the everyday challenges of parenting and connection.
In all honesty, I've sparked so many of the best conversations I've had around becoming a parent because of Dr.
Becky Kennedy's work.
So I'm so excited to have her on the show today.
Becky, welcome to On Purpose.
Thank you.
I'm so excited to be here.
It's so great to have you here.
I want to start off by diving into just
things that you say that really stick with me.
And I go, oh, yes, that's, I feel like that resonates.
You said, we've gone from not caring about kids' feelings to letting kids' feelings dictate what we do as parents.
Yeah.
And when you said that, of course, I'm looking at this as someone who wants to be a parent, but I'm looking at parents around me.
That idea that We all feel we grew up at a time when our parents didn't care, they weren't present, they didn't know what was going on with our feelings and emotions.
We've now gone to a place of our kids' feelings dictating what we do.
Yeah.
Talk to me about that.
Yeah, I think naming this over correction is really helpful because, yes, decades ago, I mean, probably still some families now, right?
It's, I don't know, let's say some version of, I don't want to go to Aunt Sally's house.
I don't care if you want to go to Aunt Sally's house.
Put on a smile, put on your shoes or else, and then some consequence, right?
Okay.
That would be, I don't care about your feelings.
I'm not listening.
I'm not really connecting.
I am telling you what to do.
I'm leading with control.
And I think there's a generation of people who are like, that didn't feel good, you know?
And we also know that emotions and learning how to understand your emotions, how to manage your emotions.
You can't learn to manage emotions.
You feel like you're not allowed to have disappointment.
as a kid.
How could you ever manage disappointment as an adult?
So it's not really the pathway to strength and resilience, right?
But yes, what I've noticed is something completely overcorrected that I would say is equally as bad for kids.
Same situation.
I don't want to go to Aunt Sally's today.
It's so boring.
I want to hang out with my friends.
Okay, you know what?
And then fill in the blank.
I'll get a sitter.
I'll stay home.
Let me call three different people and, you know, see what you can do.
And there's so many examples of this.
I don't want to leave the playground.
Okay, well, I guess we'll stay at the playground longer.
And it's not to say I'm against parent flexibility.
Sometimes, of course, we can be flexible, but we've gone from not caring about kids' emotions to being scared of kids' emotions.
That's why we let them run the show.
That's why we give our kids' emotions kind of the steering wheel.
And I think what we stand for, a good inside, is something remarkably in the middle.
It is very important to see your kids' feelings as real.
That's really what it is.
That's what validation is.
It's the process of saying to someone else, kind of, I might not be feeling what you're feeling, but what you are feeling is real.
And I am interested in learning about it.
I think that's very important.
Oh, you don't want to go to Sally's house.
I get it.
You'd rather be sitting home and watching the basketball game on TV.
Totally hear you.
And then I think there's a well-placed and, because that is part of our job.
Empathizing with a kid's feelings is only half of your job as a parent.
The other half is setting a true boundary is what I think of as authority without aggression.
which is rarely modeled, but is important, which is some version of we committed to going to Aunt Sally's as a a family.
And the truth is, there's a good amount of things we all have to do that aren't number one on our agenda, that are even a little bit boring.
This is one of those things.
It's okay if you whine on the way there.
I know when we get there, you're going to be able to pull it together.
It's not going to be your most fun Saturday, but we'll get through it as a family.
All right.
What kind of music do you want to listen to in the car?
Yeah.
Why do we find that so tough?
Why is that so hard to do as a parent?
I think there's so many factors.
So I think part of it is actually just a lack of confusion and teaching, right?
I think we can get into this bigger conversation.
I'll just name it and not go into it now.
Parenting is the last job in the world where we glorify instinct alone.
We haven't been taught, well, how do I connect to my kid, but also hold a boundary, right?
It would be like telling a surgeon to do surgery without medical school.
That's kind of what we do to parents.
So it's really hard.
Send them home with a baby.
Yeah, literally.
Right.
And I remember going home with a baby.
I looked around, really?
Like no one's
just a car seat?
Like I remember looking around and no one was coming.
I was like, guess I'm good.
Okay.
That's what we do.
And it's the hardest job in the world.
So I think part of it is how can you employ a skill in a difficult situation when you've never been taught a skill and that skill wasn't modeled in your own childhood?
So I think that's number one.
Number two, and this is like a really big one for kind of why right now is this so powerful.
So much of parenting is inconvenient.
It's just the word that's not talked about enough for parenting.
When you have to get out your door to go to Aunt Sally's 50th luncheon, which my guess is maybe you're not really even dying to do either, there's a lot of frustration.
Like your kid is whining.
Your kid is saying why they shouldn't go.
And if I think about where parenting is today versus decades ago, I think us adults, we've become less and less tolerant of frustration.
We have our phones.
We have our dopamine.
We have so much more ease ease in our life.
And one of the things I always think about is our kids can't learn to tolerate feelings we don't tolerate in them.
So if I have an increasingly lowered frustration tolerance because of all of the ease and dopamine hits in my life, I am inherently less tolerant of my kids whining.
Wow.
And then The reason I let my kids whining take the driver's seat and I say, fine, you know what?
Just go to your friend's house.
I actually think it doesn't even have to do with making our kid happy, which I don't think is good as a predominant philosophy either.
I actually just want to stop feeling frustrated myself.
I just don't want to deal with it.
So if we can't tolerate our kids' disappointment or frustration, they are not learning to, which is why then it looks like their emotions are making all the decisions.
Wow.
That's extremely powerful, which is why because they can't tolerate their feelings because of our reaction to their feelings, they now don't actually develop resilience or grit or all the things we want them to develop because tolerance and knowing how to accept and sit in the feeling is such an important skill set.
I mean, this is everything, right?
I think I'm a visual person.
So I've done this before, but I think it matters that, you know, if we think about kids, they're born into the world and they're born with all the feelings and none of the skills to manage feelings.
There's a gap.
All the feelings, none of the skills.
Bad behavior, whether it's a four-year-old hitting their sister, whether it's your teenager saying, I'm not going to Aunt Sally's, whether a kid is saying, I hate you, you're the worst mom.
I don't want to be in this family, lying to your face.
Every single acting out behavior is a sign that feelings are greater than skills.
But the problem isn't the feelings.
The problem is the lack of skills.
So the answer to over time having a lot better behavior or something more powerful than behavior, it's building skills, building emotion regulation skills.
Kids are not born with those skills.
And we as parents, we are kind of the coaches.
But I think as our life gets so busy, right, as we're more distracted, and just to be clear, let me say right away, I'm not like above this.
I'm not like, you should all watch me.
I'm a perfectly present parent all the time.
No, right.
Modern life is so hard, right?
But yes, if we can't tolerate the challenging feelings our kids have and we look for a quick distraction or a quick exit for them right away, then what they learn is something really interesting.
What they learn is, I'm a kid and I find my feelings overwhelming, but oh my goodness, my parent finds my feelings overwhelming.
The things that feel scary and toxic to me, maybe they really are scary and toxic.
And then, you know, things can kind of go from there.
Yeah.
And I think one of the challenges with that is that not only do the kids not have the skills, we potentially as adults have never had time to develop the skills ourselves and no one taught us.
And so that pattern continues.
How do you overcome mom guilt?
Ah, such a good question.
So let me paint a scenario because I want to know if we're talking about the same thing.
So I'll hear, and what I kind of referred to before is a situation, like I'm going out to dinner with my friends.
And it's often, I haven't seen a group of my friends without kids around in, I don't know, however long, a long time.
But then I have my dog or my son clinging to my leg.
Mom, you never put me to bed.
And meanwhile, in this situation, if it's like my house, I've like put my kid to bed for the last 37 nights.
Okay.
But still in that moment, it's like, you never put me to bed.
And then what a mom will often say to me is, I feel so guilty.
Like I feel so guilty, it's not even worth going out to dinner.
Like it's not even worth it.
I don't know.
Is that kind of along the line?
Okay.
That's fine.
Okay.
So
the way I see this,
I actually don't think we're talking about guilt here.
I don't.
I think this is a misunderstanding of what guilt is.
So I'll start with that.
To me, guilt is a feeling feeling you have when you act out of alignment with your values.
And in that way, it's a very important feeling.
Like all of our feelings are important for information, because it helps you have enough discomfort to reflect on like, well, what are my values?
Like if I no-showed to this podcast and didn't even text you, I'd feel guilty.
It is not within my value system to no-show on people, right?
That would be helpful.
And I think, why did I do that?
Right.
But what I hear all the time from moms is going out to dinner, my kids clinging, I feel guilty.
So I'll say, okay,
really, is it within your value system?
And only you would know this while you're a mother
to see your friends some of the time.
A hundred percent of moms say, yeah.
So I say, okay, so this is interesting.
This is definitely a painful experience, but this is not guilt.
This literally isn't guilt.
And here's what I think it is.
I think as women, especially, but it's not only for women,
going back to that good girl idea, we've developed the tendency to scan our environment and see other people who are upset with us.
And we kind of do this.
We're like, you're feeling uncomfortable.
I will take that feeling out of your body.
I will take it into my body.
And I will call it guilt.
And I will change something I'm doing so you don't have to feel that way.
That's not guilt.
That's actually emotional confusion.
And I find visuals helpful.
So to me, if you picture yourself in a tennis court, let's say I'm on one side and my daughter who's clinging to me is on the other side.
But instead of a tennis net, let's say there's a glass wall.
What will happen is I'm like, okay, I'm on my side.
I know I want to go dinner to my friends.
I haven't seen them.
It's important.
It's within my value system.
I'm grounded in that.
Over there is my daughter who's upset.
Number one, two things are true can help here.
Two things are true.
I'm allowed to go out to dinner.
My daughter's allowed to go upset to be upset, period.
But if I picture that tennis court, the reason it's helpful is I now picture my kid.
Oh, he never put me to bed.
I'm so upset.
It's actually really powerful how many people have told me it's true.
It's like somehow those feelings in her body start to come out and start to come to my side of the court.
And all of a sudden, they're on my side.
And I'm saying things like, don't you want me to be happy or fine?
I'll cancel.
And actually, the interesting thing is, I'm not even doing that for my daughter at this point.
That's why it's not guilt.
Yeah.
I'm doing that to rid myself of this feeling that wasn't even mine in the first place.
And you can't even empathize because you can only empathize with someone's feeling when it's their feeling.
As soon as you've made it your own, you're playing your own game.
So if we, if we go through this scenario, and I do this to so many women, I'm like, okay, so you're on this core.
I want you to literally imagine doing this.
And if anyone's listening and can't see me, I'm putting my hands by my chest and I'm like pushing it out.
The visual matters, like my kids.
sadness, I am pushing it out of my body and I'm giving it back to them.
I'm not pushing it away and I'm not doing it violently.
I'm just kind of giving it back to its rightful owner.
Okay.
Because then I can actually empathize.
Because once it's back in her body, I can say, Oh, you really wish it was me putting you to bed and not daddy.
I get that.
Yeah, I really wish it was you.
Listen, this is one of those nights I'm going to dinner with my friends.
It's okay if it feels hard.
You're safe with dad.
You're allowed to be upset.
I will see you in the morning.
Now, when I do that, again,
my child has never said to me, have a great dinner, mom.
Or that was sturdy leadership, or you use that guilt tennis image, didn't you?
That never happened.
They keep crying.
Again, we're not our good interventions.
They're just simply not rewarded by kids' calm behavior.
And the sooner we realize that, you know, the better, even though we keep wanting it me to be true.
And now I go out.
And the truth is, I'm going walk to dinner.
I feel a little uneasy.
And I'm like, I'm so guilty.
But I say, Becky, that's not guilt.
It's actually literally not guilt.
I am acting in alignment with my values.
That is my daughter's distress.
And actually my job is to help her build tolerance for distress.
And I actually
just did that while I kept my dinner plan because I know if I canceled, you think I'm not resentful of my daughter and not screaming her head off at the time she asks for a second book at bedtime because I wish I was at dinner with my friend in the first place.
And I know you've also said that Women in particular feel a pressure because there's always been this idea that women should have a maternal instinct.
And you talk about parenting being a skill as much as the kids needing these skills as they're growing up.
And women have this unfair pressure of, well, it's natural to you.
I mean, I think that that's the thing when I became a mom that was so personally striking.
This idea of maternal instinct, I think, has had a profound impact on our culture, right?
Because I'm not saying there's nothing about parenting that's instinctual.
I think we instinctually love our kid or there's certain moments that come naturally.
But yeah, when your kid is having a grocery store meltdown and the mom you're trying to become friends with is kind of watching you in the store, right?
When your kid says, I hate you, you're the worst parent in the world.
When your kid is delaying, I don't know, at bedtime or brushing their teeth, when your kid lies to your face, I didn't take money.
And you like see the Nescam of them taking money.
We're saying we think our instinct is going to lead to good decisions.
No, most people I know would say, my instinct is telling me to scream in my child's face.
You know why?
Because your parent probably screamed in your face because they didn't have the resources they need, right?
And over and over, I'd be meeting parents.
It was so interesting.
It was mostly moms who would tell me always some version of the same story.
They'd come in a live event, they'd say it's something nice, and then they would unload.
And it was kind of some version of, I go to bed feeling awful about myself.
I don't know what I'm doing.
I'm yelling at my kids all the time.
I feel like I'm a monster.
I feel like I'm messing my kids up forever.
Right.
And then I would kind of contain the situation.
I'd listen.
And then I'd dig in because I always want to know when someone's struggling so much, what resources do they have?
And I'd always hear the same thing, resources.
Like, this shouldn't be this hard.
It shouldn't be this hard.
I should be able to figure this out on my own.
I don't know.
It's just, it was striking.
If I think about the best athletes in the world, even the ones who have amazing athletic instinct, right?
I don't know, Steph Curry, LeBron James.
Like, I'm pretty sure they had a lot of coaching.
Yeah.
Like, I'm pretty sure they weren't like, coaching's not for me.
I should be able to figure out this basketball thing on my own.
It's really interesting.
I think people in almost every other field, they take pride in coaching.
I even think the best CEOs now,
it's almost embarrassing if you don't have an executive coach and you don't just get your advice on Instagram.
Like you really have knowledge and learning and you dig in and you feel good about it.
And so, yeah, if something is supposed to be done by pure instinct, then the only explanation for why you're struggling is that you're broken.
Yeah.
And I feel very passionately about changing that narrative.
Yeah.
And I believe you are.
And to that point that you're saying, I mean, I had the fortune of interviewing Kobe Bryant before he tragically passed away around three months before.
And he was so clear about the fact that he just put in more time.
So he was exactly what you're saying.
It's reaffirming your point.
He was actually doing double the coaching that everyone else was.
So he was in the gym before everyone got in the gym.
Then he did what everyone else was doing in the gym.
And then he'd go home and work out again.
And so you've got this person investing and doubling down into coaching as opposed to saying, oh, I'm actually naturally gifted and I don't really need that even after winning two, three, four, and then eventually five championships.
I wanted to ask you about that point because you talk about this idea of parents not being perfect, but being good at repairing,
which I really, really value as an idea.
because I do think we all want to get it perfect the first time and that's our instinct.
And like you said, the natural instinct, even though we want to get it perfect as a desire, the natural instinct in any of those circumstances is to act out, is to shout, scream, yell, instruct, direct, dictate.
And you gave a few really great anecdotal examples there, but very real ones as well.
Talk to me about what parents instinctually do.
So that we just normalize the fact that it's okay because no one's going to get it right the first time.
And then talk to me about how you've repaired that given one of those types of scenarios of going to Aunt Sally's or screaming in the playground.
Great.
Repair, without a doubt, is the most important parenting strategy.
I would say repair is the most important relationship strategy because I think everything we talk about at Good Inside is as relevant in a partnership or at work with yourself.
any relationship.
So let's start with this desire to be perfect.
I think this is especially true with moms.
I don't hear it as much from dads, honestly.
And I think this goes back to a lot of gender roles.
I think a lot of us were socialized to be good girls, which I now put in quotes because I realize being a good girl just means being trained to gaze out and notice what everyone in the world wants from you and to become as distant as possible.
from gazing in and noticing what you might want for yourself.
That's really what it means.
How can I please you?
Yeah, how can I please you?
How can I, how can I meet your need before you even have a need?
I notice you're twitching.
You're about to get mad.
I also know you kind of like this kind of drink.
So I'm going to go make you an iced tea and bring it to you, right?
You're You're looking everywhere and meeting everyone's needs all the time, right?
And I think a lot of girls, they learned that that's where their value was.
And I think that's where they, therefore, they feel safest, right?
Is when I'm getting it right for everyone.
Yes.
So now we have parenting, right?
I mean, people often ask me, like, is there a perfect parent?
Are you a perfect parent?
I am definitely not a perfect parent.
There's no such thing as a perfect parent.
And I just even want to say, I don't even think it would be a good thing for a kid to have a perfect parent because the dynamic you establish with your kid, the relationship with your kid is the foundation for every relationship they'll have after that.
And I know it's heavy, but it's true.
So I'll say it.
The nature of a relationship you develop with your kid is also going to impact who they're even attracted to in adulthood because we're attracted to what feels like home,
right?
For better or for worse as a natural attraction.
So I don't think any of us think it's adaptive for a kid to go into the teen adult years.
Like, who is that person out there who's perfectly attuned to my needs all the time?
Like, I'm sure you and your wife, that's not the way your relationship works.
Definitely not me and my husband, right?
Definitely not.
The best it gets is someone attunes to your needs a lot of the time.
And they take ownership when they don't, and don't gaslight you and don't kind of throw you under the bus or blame you for their reaction and they repair.
And so, if we like play that out, right?
Yes, we are, we're humans, not robots.
We have our own emotional life, our own triggers.
And whether it's Aunt Sally's party or being lied to, or even, you know, it's like the end of the night.
I think a classic one, and I know this happens for me.
Oh, chicken for dinner.
This is disgusting.
And it's like everything you've done for the day and all the moments when you felt invisible and the other things that happened that have nothing to do with your kid, it all completely overflows in your bucket of difficult moments I've had to hold together.
And you explode at your kid.
You're so ungrateful.
You know, what do you mean?
Kids around the world would be, you know, whatever we say.
We lecture.
You're spoiled.
And it comes out often in a voice that's legitimately scary.
And it's scary in part because our kids need us to survive.
So they're like, wait.
Parent I need for survival just became scary parent I'm distant from.
It's a lot to manage.
So that I would just say is the rupture moment.
And I know this is the moment people listening are like, yep, that's it.
I'm a monster.
I've I've messed up my kid forever.
Those are two different things.
Having a rupture moment is not who you are and it's not your future and it does not dictate your entire relationship.
Yelling at kids messes kids up far less than yelling at kids and not repairing after you've yelled.
It's actually the not repairing that's really hard because then kids are left alone with this intense set of feelings.
They're confused and they have to figure out like, how do I feel safe again?
What do I do to move on?
And if kids aren't given a story by us to repair, they often make up a story.
And it's often a story of self-blame because that's the only thing they have.
I'm a bad kid, must be my fault.
When you repair with your kid, you actually get to do something magical.
I always tell parents, you actually get to rewrite the ending of that chapter.
Because instead of that one chapter of your kid's book being, I complained about dinner and unleashed the scary voice from my parent.
And I went to my room and I felt alone and I felt really shaky.
If you picture that as the ending of a chapter, you then get to go in and write, and then my mom came in and she said, I'm sorry I yelled.
It's never your fault when I yell.
I'm working on managing my feelings.
So I respond more calmly even when I'm frustrated.
I love you.
It actually changes the way the memory lives in their body.
Those simple words, that approach.
Memory is an event.
And every other time you've remembered that event which is why something like therapy is helpful so interesting why is therapy helpful my childhood didn't change but remembering certain things in the context of a new relationship changes the way the original memory lives in your body you change the story around the memory yes and so every time you repair whether it was a quick hey i'm sorry let me try that again i'm sorry for yelling you know, at you earlier, or, hey, I listened to this podcast.
I heard a couple of things.
And I think there were a a lot of years I just sent you to your room.
I think there were a lot of years I never heard your side of the story.
And I'm guessing that just felt really bad.
I'm sorry.
And look, we definitely might need time to cool off when things are hot, but I'm going to really try to come to you and better understand instead of judge.
And I want you to know I care about that.
I mean, the way that lands in someone's body to reopen a file and kind of give it a different ending.
Yeah, I believe it's the most powerful thing we can do.
Yeah, even if they don't react well in the moment.
Yes.
And this is what I want to undo the fantasy.
Like I go to my teenage son and I'm like, I'm so prepared.
And, you know, and I picture my teenage son saying, mom,
I've been waiting for you to say, no, my teenage son is going to roll his eyes and be like, you're being so weird.
Get out of my room.
But in a way, a lot of us, when we hear something emotionally resonant in our best kind of moments, we say to someone else, I just need to digest this.
Yes.
That's what most kids are saying.
Whether it's a toddler saying, I need a snack, or it's my teenager saying, you're being weird, get out of my room.
I really think they're saying that was a lot.
And I actually just need to kind of push it away for a moment so I can ingest it in my own time.
So I would say, don't take the bait.
Trust that it mattered.
Move on.
Don't force the conversation.
And I have a feeling you'll see evidence of the impact later.
Yeah, the point about repairing really lands well because I was thinking about when we were all learning how to drive, it was inevitable that at some point we'd have an accident.
So you wanted to be mindful.
You didn't want to be neglectful when you were a driver and when you were trained.
I've had car accidents and I think I'm a pretty good driver.
I'm assuming with your nodding,
you've had a car accident.
My wife's had car accidents.
Thankfully, nothing too dangerous for any of us and anyone I know.
But the reality is you're going to have some sort of an accident.
And the biggest mistake you can make is to not repair your car when you have an accident and just keep driving that car around and getting into more accidents.
And so that lands really, really well.
Because it would be really strange if someone had told me that I was never allowed to scratch my alloys or a rim or a hubcap or a side of my car.
And I had to like drive with that level of, I would probably have an accident simply because I was overthinking the whole thing.
That's right.
Or stay in your room all day.
Yeah, you won't even go out.
Right.
I mean, a life worth living has inherent risk, right?
And so, yeah, I think that's a really good metaphor.
You're going to make mistakes as a parent.
And if you see that as kind of a feature, not a bug, then you can change the focus to, okay, what now?
And look, while we're talking about repair, I think it's important to get in that one of the biggest things that gets in our way of repairing with our kid is that most of us haven't learned to repair with ourselves.
Because what happens is we do this thing.
I yell at my kid.
I say they're spoiled brat, whatever happens in the kitchen when my son simply says, maybe it's even just chicken for dinner again, but it's just enough for, you know, know, feels like he's telling me I'm a bad mom, you know, or something like that.
So I've done this thing.
And for so many people, they might have someone in their life or like, this person is so stubborn, they never apologize.
They're so cold-hearted.
I see it a little differently.
I tend to use like a most generous interpretation, MGI perspective.
I think people who really don't apologize, they have a really hard time separating identity from behavior.
And that idea of separating who we are from what we do, identity from behavior, is like a core principle of good inside and a a core way we teach parents to see themselves and their kids, right?
It's the difference between I yelled and I'm a monster versus I am a good parent who had a moment I'm really not proud of.
And I actually find doing that with our hands really powerful because you can see the difference.
I'm a good parent, identity, one hand, who did something I'm not proud of, another hand, versus, oh, I yelled, I'm a monster, something's wrong with me.
It's an immediate, there's no separation.
We can't repair from this place.
We can't even function from this this place.
The saddest thing is we can't learn from this place.
It's shame, right?
Shame is an animal defense freeze response.
We all should know, right?
When you are frozen, you can't make movement.
And so people who don't apologize, they usually have to hold this thing they did so far away from them, they can't even look at it because it feels so eviscerating to their identity.
So I actually think a first step for repair, I just yelled at my kid.
I mean, very practically for me,
if I'm in some shame spiral, I I sit somewhere quiet.
It's often, you know, my bathroom, I close the door, I sit in the toilet, I put my hand on my heart, put my feet on the ground.
And I do say to myself a bunch of times, five, 10, sometimes 20, okay, Becky, I made a mistake.
I'm a good parent who did something I'm not proud of.
Even I'm a good parent who yelled.
Like I'm a good parent who forces us as a sentence structure to separate those two things.
And then it's interesting.
I'm in a place where I can think about it more.
Also, even before I repair with my kid, what was going on?
I had a really bad day.
I honestly haven't worked out in a while.
I know that's something I need to do for myself.
I was really frustrated from work and I honestly just did not take a moment in my lobby to sit down and talk to myself about it.
And you know what?
I was probably just a ticking time bob.
I need to, a couple of things.
I need to look at my calendar and do something for me.
I need to take some deep breaths in the middle of the day.
I need to sit in my lobby.
before I go upstairs and say, what was the most stressful part of my day?
Let me write about it.
Let me do something to manage my emotions.
The only reason I can go through that learning process is actually because I've been able to separate what I did from who I was.
And now I can go to my son or my daughter, whoever it is, and actually give them a repair.
And the other thing is when we don't repair with ourselves, we do weird repairs with our kids.
And they're not repairs.
They're either, I'm sorry, I yelled, but if you didn't complain about dinner, it wouldn't have happened.
That is not a repair.
Or we say something like, I'm sorry I yelled.
It's okay, right?
It's okay, right?
You forgive me.
Like we ask our kid to do our job for us.
Like I picture like this five-year-old kid who's like, you're, you're asking me to take care of your emotions after you yelled at me.
That is not a relationship pattern we want to establish, right?
That resonates so strongly.
I feel like if you don't go back and do the separation of the identity and behavior on your own, the kid actually just goes, I'm just not going to say how I feel around mom or dad.
Or mom's just angry or dad's just mad or whatever.
And then that becomes the label.
Whereas when you actually get to go up to them and say, hey, I had a really tough day at work today, that doesn't excuse how I behaved with you.
Yeah.
I'm really sorry about it.
And,
you know, yeah.
And, you know, that kind of ability to even get them to have some context without making it their fault.
I think what you're saying, when we repair wrongly, we may give them the context, but make it their fault.
Like, hey, I had a really tough day today.
So if you didn't say chicken wasn't terrible, I would have been fine.
Right.
So I hope you understand I had a bad day.
And it's like, oh, well, wait a minute.
Like, that's too much for me to handle right now.
That's exactly right.
Like, and the thing that always creeps me out in a good way, because it makes me not do this, is I picture my son.
I don't know, now he's 30, 40.
Let's say he's partnered and I'm at his house visiting and he like screams at his partner.
I don't know, in a nasty way.
And then I hear him say, Look, I'm sorry I yelled, but if you had remembered toilet paper, like I asked you, I wouldn't have yelled.
I'd be like, oh,
this feels like I don't want to be here.
This is a bad situation.
But if I've always repaired in his childhood by saying, I'm sorry, I did a bad thing, but look, at the end of the day, your behavior caused me to do that thing.
Why would I be surprised that that's what he takes into the world?
Right.
And then I just want to answer a question that's, I know, not actively being asked, but it comes up every time because parents are like, but can't my kid ask if we could have a different dinner in a nicer way?
Or, okay, maybe I didn't yell because my kid didn't listen about putting on his shoes, but if my kid put on his shoes, it wouldn't have happened.
Help me reconcile.
Separate the two things.
I would say do a real repair and then give yourself very practically like 24 hours.
Have a very different conversation, which might be, look, there's going to be some days you don't like dinner.
Is there a way you could tell me you don't like dinner that's equally as true for you as it is respectful for someone else?
Or my four-year-old won't put on his shoes or her shoes.
24 hours later, after I say sorry, hey, mornings have been really tough for both of us.
I wonder if there's anything we can think about together that would make putting on shoes easier.
I totally understand.
That's realistic, but just don't don't collapse them together.
Yeah, that's that's the point.
Yeah.
Usually, again, we do extremes.
We either disappear and hope that tomorrow is a new day, which doesn't work, it sounds like, or we try and do everything in that first go at it and then it, then it collapses too.
Before we dive into the next moment, let's hear from our sponsors.
This episode of On Purpose is brought to you by Chase Sapphire Reserve.
I believe that travel is one of the greatest gifts that we've ever been given.
And Chase Sapphire Reserve has been my gateway to the world's most captivating destinations.
Every time I travel, I find a part of myself I didn't know was missing.
I remember being in this small town, completely unplugged, and for the first time in a while, I felt still.
Travel does that.
It grounds you, expands you and connects you to something deeper.
That's why I'm always looking for for experiences that go beyond the typical.
Chase Sapphire Reserve makes traveling a breeze, earning eight times points on all purchases through Chase Travel and granting access to Sapphire Lounge by the club at select airports nationwide.
No matter my destination, travel is more rewarding with Chase Sapphire Reserve.
Discover more with Chase Sapphire Reserve at chase.com forward slash Sapphire Reserve.
Cards issued by JP Morgan Chase Bank, NA, member FDIC, subject to credit approval, terms apply.
This back to school season, spend less on your kids with Amazon.
I was talking to one of my closest friends the other day.
He has two kids, and every year it's the same routine.
One kid wants a very specific backpack.
I'm talking not just blue, but navy blue with a neon green zipper and a galaxy print.
The other lost their lunchbox before the first week of school even ended last year.
He's like, Jay, I swear they get more expensive every time they grow an inch.
And I get it.
Kids grow, seasons change, and somehow they always need five new things they didn't need last year.
But what doesn't have to change?
How much you spend on them.
So remember, with Amazon's low back to school prices, just spend less on your kids.
Because every dollar you don't spend on them is a dollar you haven't spent on them.
Shop back to school at Amazon and spend less on your kids.
It's always bittersweet when summer winds down.
You've had this beautiful, free-flowing time and now there's this subtle pullback into routine.
But I actually love this part.
It's a chance to reset.
And one of the best ways I've found to ease into that rhythm again is refreshing my space with Wayfair.
Whether you're organizing your home office, upgrading your cookware for weeknight dinners, or just wanting to make your space feel more you, Wayfair has everything.
I found this really cozy armchair and a few floating shelves for my reading corner, and now it's one of my favorite places to unwind.
And not only did they arrive fast and hassle-free, they've completely changed the vibe of that corner.
It's cozy, calming, and exactly what I needed to feel grounded again.
Wayfair's got furniture, storage, bedding, kitchen essentials, you name it.
And the best part, delivery's free, even on the big stuff.
So if you're thinking about how to ease back into the season ahead, this is the perfect time to do it with Wayfair.
Get organized, refreshed, and back to routine for way less.
Head to Wayfair.com right now to shop all things home.
That's w-ay-y-f-a-i-r.com.
Wayfair, every style, every home.
Thanks for taking a moment for that.
Now, back to the discussion.
You've said this before, which I really like, this idea of they're not giving me a hard time.
They're having a hard time.
Yes.
And that differentiate is really powerful because I think our language is they're giving me a hard time.
Yeah.
I mean, look, I'm sure you think about this in so many other contexts, and it's the same as parenting.
But to me, when you're in conflict with anybody,
you have one of two mindsets.
Okay.
The first mindset, and let's say it's us, where it's like, I'm on one side of the table and Jay is on the other side of the table.
And I'm just looking at you like you are the problem.
And we wouldn't have a problem if you just came to my side and did something more like me, right?
The other mindset is different.
Instead of me against you, where you're the problem, it's me and you on the same side of the table against a problem.
I actually think in business, in marriage, with your in-laws, definitely with your kids, you literally shouldn't have a conversation about something conflictual until you can get yourself in the me and this person against a problem mindset.
My kid is giving me a hard time is such a good example of me against you.
My kid is having a hard time is me and you against a problem.
And I love strategies and scripts.
I'm sure we'll get into more of them.
I love all those things, but they all fall flat.
at the end of the day, if you're not operating in an effective mindset.
And to me, the most important thing a parent can do when they're they're in a tricky situation with their kid, oh, mornings are so tough.
My kid is giving me a hard time.
They won't get out the door.
Oh, I hear that phrase, giving me a hard time.
How can I get into a me and my kid against a problem, me and my kid on the same team perspective?
Because then I can think about it very differently.
What might be getting in the way of my kid getting out the door?
I guess they're going to school, maybe getting out the door.
They're a smart kid.
They kind of know as soon as they put their shoes on.
They're saying bye to daddy.
Maybe that's it.
And all of a sudden, something happens when you get in the same team mindset.
I think we always love our kids, but when we're in an opposite team mindset, nobody likes to say this, but we stop liking them in the moment.
And there is nothing that is a strategy that will matter more than the fact that your kid just feels that from you.
When we're on the same team, like something amazing happens.
You start liking your kid again.
Now it's like a problem to solve together and everything becomes more effective from there.
What's been the hardest personal situation for you where you feel like you've just been in that zone where you yelled or you didn't like them or you were just repairing?
Like, what was the hardest for you personally that took you the most time to get back to this?
I mean, it happens.
I just want to say,
I feel like parenting is more like yoga than anything else.
Like people who are really into yoga, like it's, it's the practice, like there's no destination.
So I'm happy to share some stories and I will, but I don't want anyone to think like, oh, that was then and this is now, right?
Like this is a constantly evolving muscle and and our kids are always changing, right?
So, you know, one of my kids, my, you know, my deeply feeling kid, where she feels things more intensely, the explosions are more intense, and there can be huge reactions to things that seem small on the surface, going to a birthday party, not having the chair she wants, not watching a family movie that everyone else wants to watch, right?
And it can feel in the time like, why are you being so difficult, right?
Versus, hold on, she's having a hard time with something.
By the way, I want to say, that doesn't mean I need to cater to that.
Like, it's not like she doesn't want to sit in this chair.
So, hey, everyone, get up so your sister can always have the chair she wants or, oh, we're going to watch the movie she wants.
I actually don't believe in that.
But again, if that's the boundary part over here, what can be hard?
Yeah, is getting back to, hold on, she's a good kid who's having a hard time.
I think that phrase to me that I put out in the world is.
is like one of the most important phrases just to like practice at random times in your head.
I have a good kid who's having a a hard time.
It becomes like a little song.
In the same way as I'm a good parent who's having a hard time.
You know?
And then I, I mean, I think I have a kid who's getting older, who's a teen.
I mean, it's tricky.
You feel, you feel rejected.
It feels like it's on their time schedule.
Like, I want to talk to my kid all day.
And, you know, he doesn't.
He's doing his things.
He's with his friends.
And then it's 9.45.
And I'm actually tired.
And maybe I'll get to bed early.
And he's like, mom, I want to talk.
And, you know, my first reaction is a little like,
yeah, I've been around all day.
Yeah, like what?
Like, oh, now that you want to talk, like, you know, and I kind of want to retaliate for something.
Yeah.
Right.
And then I try to take a deep breath on my good days and say, this is adolescence.
His job is to separate from me.
He's trying to figure that out.
It's messy.
He is supposed to be exploring the world.
But I always think with adolescence, like they need to be explorers, not nomads.
But when.
we take them so personally and then refuse to connect, we're actually just leaving them as nomads, which is someone without a home base.
It's like, great, he's a teen.
He's doing his job.
Let me take a deep breath.
I have five minutes.
Let me go to his room.
Right.
I think that's what it kind of looks like in real life.
Yeah.
If I, as a dad, when I have a child, if they came up to me and they really were excited about something, they wanted to share it, and I was busy with worker, and I said, Hey, I just can't talk about that right now.
Yeah.
What impact does that have?
First of all, I think there's some, I don't know, narrative out there.
Like, as a parent,
we should be some some type of always martyr, right?
Like you're in the middle of a project.
I'm making this up.
You're like,
you're, you know, we're similar.
Like, you have some idea.
I got to get it down and it's going to, whatever it is, you know, you're creating something.
You're working on something.
A good parent is someone who drops that at every second to look at my kid's art project.
I don't know, whatever it is.
I don't buy it.
I don't buy it.
Now, do I think a good parent is someone who would never do that?
Obviously not.
Again, there's a middle ground.
I think like most relationships, it's about about the how.
Can't you see I'm working?
This is ridiculous.
This is a Lego tower.
It's kind of stupid.
I have a big job.
I wouldn't recommend that.
And that's not going to feel good.
Okay.
But if that's one extreme and the dropping, you know, all the time is the other, I think what's in the middle, like kind of the sturdiness we talk about is, wow, it looks like you're working on something really interesting.
I really want to see it.
You know what's crazy?
I'm working on something really interesting and I need five minutes to finish it.
I'm going to need those five minutes actually in silence, which is going to be a little annoying.
I'm going to ask you to leave my office and close the door.
And And I promise you right after that, I'm going to come and I'm not going to have my phone.
And I want to see this thing you built and hear all about it.
There's this kind of almost washed, rinse, repeat that I think in these moments where boundaries and empathy and connection.
They're really not an either or.
So many models of parenting have been one or the other.
And I think at Good Insight, we bring them together.
And I think, you know, I don't know, I think about people who work in an office and they want to talk to their CEO.
And that's what you want to hear from someone.
I actually don't want a CEO all the time.
It's like, I'm going to drop everything.
Of course.
Right.
Or, you know, you're on a plane.
Right.
And, you know, you want to visit the pilot with, you know, with your kid or something.
Right.
And they're getting the plane ready.
You don't want a pilot who they're getting everything ready.
They're like, sure, come on in.
You're like, were you just fixing that engine?
Like, you know, hey, I'm in the middle of something.
This is really important.
I see your interest.
That's awesome.
I'll let you know when it's ready.
And then we'll do that.
That combination, boundaries and empathy, to me, that's always magic.
Yeah, it was funny.
I was thinking, I was thinking of my kid coming running up to me and be like, go away.
I've got to interview Dr.
Becky Kennedy on the podcast about
how to be a good parent.
Like, I was like, that's the, no, and I, and I appreciate that because that to me is just, and I, I'm, that's really reaffirming to hear because I feel like.
That's just having good, healthy adult conversations.
That's what it is.
And it's giving context and it's providing a perspective on why and what and where we're at.
It's not just like, hey, I don't have time right now.
I'm doing something really important.
There's, there's a validation of them, but there's a validation of yourself.
And again, they may not react well to that.
They may, when you come back downstairs, they might be like, I'm not doing it anymore.
Right.
Like, that's right.
I don't care anymore.
Like, right.
It was, it's done.
It's broken.
Like, I don't know.
That's right.
Or again, like, when I set some of the boundaries I feel really proud of with my kid, take a different example, right?
Like, my kid is watching TV and the show is over.
And I told them they could watch that one episode and it's over.
And I have the remote because that's a thing.
It's like, we leave our kid with a remote and we're surprised we have power struggles.
They shouldn't have the remote, right?
Because of course, they're going to want to watch more.
There are good kids who are addicted to TV like the rest of us.
But let's say it's at the end, and my kid's like, one more, one more.
Maybe for whatever reason, I've decided it's really over tonight.
Okay.
This is like sturdy leadership in action.
I may say, look, I get it.
It's so hard to stop watching TV.
Honestly, it's hard for me too.
It's kind of designed to feel like it's not enough.
You want to watch the next episode, something like that.
Or, hey, you wish you could watch another one.
Keep it simple.
Next part.
And TV time is is over.
I actually have the remote.
I'm going to turn it off.
I get it.
That's annoying.
If I do that in my house, I fear, and it's a fear that people hearing me think I do that.
And my kids like stand up and applause.
And they're like, that was A-plus parenting.
Mom, I'm so lucky to have you.
You're keeping me safe from technology and you're validating my feelings.
That is,
that has never happened one time.
Actually, what's important for parents to know when you set a true boundary, and I'm happy to talk about this because I think people get boundaries all wrong, what they are.
But when you set a true boundary, especially if your kid isn't used to it, your kid always responds in the same way.
A tantrum.
Every time.
That is your big reward as a parent.
Like you're like, I just did the thing and this is the next thing.
Like,
where is the confetti?
No confetti.
Okay.
But if you actually know that your kid's tantrum is a sign.
that you did actually set a true boundary, you become a lot less reactive to it because unconsciously, we think our kids' tantrum is a sign we're doing a bad job as a parent.
Our kids' tantrum is often a sign we set a boundary and they're upset about it, which then means we can just do the next part of our job.
We can validate.
Oh, I know.
You wish you were an adult and could decide whatever number of TV shows you wanted to watch.
But you better bet, even as I'm saying that, I'm not, I'm not turning on the TV again.
I'm not.
That's not happening.
Boundary, they get upset.
We can validate.
We hold the boundary kind of over and over.
And where's like any emotional?
Is there any hugging?
Is there like affection?
Like, or is it?
Yeah, I think everyone's kid is different.
One of my kids might really want that.
Oh, I know.
It stinks.
Come here.
Yeah.
You know, and I'm hugging, right?
Cause that's what happens in the best relationships, right?
Where if I, I don't know if, if I was making not so good decisions for myself, even as an adult, I don't know, I'm at a party and I'm like seeing you and I'm like, Jay, I hate you.
Your podcast stinks.
And my husband was there.
I would hope he'd like pick me me up and carry me out and sit with me in a room, not because that's something he did to me, because it was something he would do for me.
And then maybe even there, I'd be like, I had a bad day.
And he'd be like, I know.
Yeah.
You had a rough time at Jay's party.
I was not your best.
Right.
So yeah, maybe I'm hugging another one of my kids.
I'd be like, get away from me.
And I might just kind of stay where I am and say nothing because my calm presence.
is the version of connection she might want.
Right.
So I think that's where what I really love about Good Inside and what I see from like our members is they're like, I love that they've taken the principles and then they take their unique knowledge, their unique values, their unique awareness of what's happening and they apply it in a way that feels totally them.
Yeah, I agree.
I think the challenge we've created is that we think effective communication is when you get the perfect reaction.
Yes.
And I don't think that's true as a parent or as an adult or in any capacity because you could communicate something really exceptionally effectively.
And the reaction is not the direct response to whether you communicate it effectively or not.
We think if the kid did applaud or there was confetti or they turned around and said, okay, mom, I'll go to bed.
We think that's a good day, right?
So it's almost this idea of, and this again applies to marriage too.
You almost feel like when the person's just responding to you saying, you're amazing, well done.
Or even if it's not that forward, the idea idea of I'm doing everything you tell me to, we see as a sign of good communication.
I see something very similar with so many parents.
And I think this is maybe the biggest thing we love to help shift.
We use our kids' behavior or their reactions as a barometer of whether we're a good parent.
And we lose ourselves in the process because we're so busy gazing out.
versus gazing in.
What's a version of gazing in?
Is this a decision I believe in?
Do I feel like I'm I'm actually being a good leader?
Do I feel like this is a decision maybe not only for today, but for, you know, every once in a while when we have the energy, a decision that really helps our kid become the kind of teen and adult we'd want them to be?
You know, so I heard this story from a parent the other day.
It was really interesting.
It was kind of this classic public meltdown, right?
Birthday party.
Her kid only wanted to sit next to the birthday party kid.
I get this.
It's a big thing.
Sitting next to the birthday party kid is a big deal.
Pizza time came because everyone has pizza, their birthday parties.
Her kid had to go to the bathroom and she's like, this is,
this is not going to be good because I know after the bathroom, that seat next to my kid would elbow, it's going to be gone.
It was gone.
Okay.
Major public mouthbound.
Oh, you know, I have to have that seat.
I need that seat.
Meanwhile, I was like, this kid's birthday party.
So many times I see this lack of sturdiness.
I see making up this name.
Nora.
Nora, we don't yell at other people's birthday parties.
I mean, it is, it is actually so sad to witness because kids need us to embody our authority.
I would say, I couldn't say it's authority without aggression, which almost feels like an oxymoron these days.
It's rarely modeled, but it's authority without aggression.
Now, this mom was telling me this story and she goes, you know, it's interesting.
A number of months ago, I had a family dinner.
My child had this major meltdown.
It was, it was the worst day of my week.
Like I felt like it was my biggest parenting fail.
She said, here's what's crazy.
I knew exactly what to do.
I picked her up.
First, I pulled her to the side and I said, oh, this is a hard time.
Look, this is a birthday party.
That seat's not available.
These others are.
It just escalated further and further.
And as a parent, sometimes, you know, this is past the point of no return.
This is not going to be a good situation.
So I knew what to do.
I picked her up.
I said, Nora, I'm picking you up.
I'm carrying you to the car.
We're just not going to be able to finish this birthday party today.
You're a good kid having a hard time.
You're not in trouble.
I'm going to help you through this.
Her kid, no, give me another chance.
But she was far gone, carried her to the car.
They drove away.
They got home.
And she said to me, Is it weird that that was my parenting win?
I just thought it was so beautiful.
I don't think that's weird.
I don't think that's weird at all.
To me, the biggest wins we have in parenting and in so many parts of life
are when we shift from my job is to avoid all turbulence to, I actually know exactly what to do in the turbulence.
And when you know what to do in the turbulence, which takes practice and learning and support, and never being perfect, you actually feel stronger having piloted a plane through that storm and safely gotten to ground rather than the anxiety of like, I just need to avoid it.
Yeah, that's so, we feel so fragile when we're doing that.
You've said before that it's not your job to make your kids happy, which applies to what you're saying right now.
Yeah.
Then what is a parent's job?
So I think I want to talk about both those things.
I'll start with the parent's job and then why not only isn't our job to make our kids happy, but why it's actually a really bad thing for them.
The idea of a parent's job has actually come up for me because over and over, I'd see people in my private practice and, you know, now through Instagram, different things, and they'd be like, My kid is having a tantrum.
My kid is so mean to her brother.
My kid won't do his homework, whatever the situation was.
And I'd say, okay, look, all parents want to do a good job.
I know that.
But I'd always say to a parent, just tell me, what is your job?
Forget if you can perform it well.
What is your job?
Every parent would look at me like,
I have no idea.
Yeah.
And then I think about just offices.
Like I picture someone coming to their job the first day and their boss saying, do a good job.
And the person saying, but I don't have a job description.
By the way, I also don't even know what that dude does over there.
I kind of need to know what that person's lane is.
I definitely need to know what my job is if I'm going to do it well.
So I think any parent listening is like, it's true.
What is my job?
If you don't know,
then there's immense clarity.
Forget trying to do it well.
We just have to have the clarity and the foundation.
Absolutely.
So I think a parent always has two jobs.
It's almost every situation.
And I'll defined one of them, which we didn't get to yet.
So setting boundaries and validating your kids' emotions, and they go hand in hand.
Setting boundaries is widely misunderstood.
I'll share what my definition of boundaries are, which is as applicable to adults as it is to kid.
Boundaries are something you tell someone you will do, and they require the other person to do nothing.
We often say,
this person doesn't respect my boundaries.
To me, with respect, it's often a sign that someone has an inaccurate definition of a boundary because you're giving all your power to the other person.
So I often ask a parent, well, what do you mean your kid isn't listening?
Yeah, I live in New York City.
This is like my kid.
And I always say when we go into the elevator buttons, don't press the buttons.
Don't press all the buttons.
And then my kid goes and presses all the buttons.
He does not respect my boundaries.
He has a listening problem.
Now,
If you have a kid like one of my kids who is 0% people pleasing, it's going to take a little bit longer than other kids to manage urges.
Okay.
A boundary isn't, don't press the button.
Is that something I'm telling my kid I will do?
No.
Does it require my kid to do nothing?
No, I'm giving all of my power to my four-year-old.
A boundary would be saying, hey, when we go into the elevator, I'm going to be between you and the buttons.
I know it's fun to press the button, sweetie.
It's just not something I'm going to allow.
And yep, even if you lunge for it, I'm going to block you.
That, it's true.
It's like, you got to get like your
like karate guy.
Like there's some moves in
there and I'll teach you them.
Remarkably like kind of, you know, some interesting dance moves going on.
But that's a boundary.
It's not something I'm doing to my kid.
I'm doing it for him.
So I don't let him feel like an out of control kid.
And this is important.
So I don't let myself get so frustrated that I end up yelling random punishments.
I have no intention of keeping anyway.
No dessert tonight.
And then I'm like, Actually, you can have dessert.
I don't, I don't even care.
I don't want you to have a tantrum.
Like, this is what we do.
So that's part of our job, setting true boundaries.
Another great example of this, my kid takes the iPad when it's not iPad time.
First thing to a question, I'm like, how?
They're like, what do you mean?
How?
He just takes it.
If it's not iPad time, why does your kid even have access to where the iPad is?
A boundary without words would be what I do.
It's not, hey, don't touch the iPad in the kitchen.
I'm sorry.
I'm just going to speak for myself.
If my phone is in a room.
and someone tells me not to look at it.
Yeah, you're looking at it.
Yeah.
I'm just not that.
I don't have a great hit rate there.
Those things are very addictive.
Okay.
And I have more self-control than my five-year-old, right?
A boundary would be saying, hey, from now on, just so you know, the iPad is going to completely out of reach, out of sight.
It's not because I don't trust you.
It's because those things are actually built to draw your whole body to them.
It really wasn't fair for me to put it somewhere and ask you not to get it.
So it's just going to be away until it's iPad time.
When it's over, it will shut off and then I'll put it back in that place.
Done.
That's part of our job.
The other part of our job is connecting to our kids' feelings, is seeing our kids' feelings as real while not allowing those feelings to overpower us.
That is so important.
People think validating a kid's emotions means agreeing with their emotions.
It does not.
My kid is having a grilled cheese.
They always like it cut into rectangles.
These things matter.
And I cut it into rectangles.
And today is the day the kid's like, I need it in triangles, right?
Whatever it is.
Now, to me, I know intellectually, I'm like, this feels crazy.
I actually thought about how to cut it.
I cut it in a rectangle.
That's how you usually like it.
But I don't have to agree.
Who knows what this is really about?
Validation would just be, you really wish it was in a triangle today.
Or, oh, this feels really bad.
Oh, it feels like the grilled cheese isn't even going to be yummy when it's cutting this way.
People often think if I do that, that means I'm making a new grilled cheese.
Depending on the day, if I want to, maybe I will, but maybe I won't because I'm holding the boundary.
But validation is simply seeing someone else's experience as real for them.
And I think when you think about those two jobs, boundaries and validation, the reason they're so important is I kind of profoundly believe that kids are always asking two questions.
Am I safe?
And our boundaries answer that.
And am I real?
Because kids have such intense feelings.
I mean, you and I have intense feelings.
And the thing about feelings that's so fascinating is when you fall and skin your knee, you see blood.
So you're like, oh, that's painful.
But then you often have some representation of how it's real.
Well, I'm bleeding or I have a black and blue.
Feelings are very unique.
They are such visceral sensations coursing through your body without any
external manifestation.
And there's no blood test to like tell you you're having anger.
So that's very confusing for kids.
And so part of what happens for kids when they're feeling intense emotions is we sometimes take the bait too much about the concrete thing they're upset about what they're really trying to figure out which is really the basis of confidence is are the things that i am perceiving feeling in my body are those things real because i have to know if they're real before i can learn how to manage them i feel like a lot of people think that their job is to make their kids good people or to be successful yeah or to do well or be able to survive the real world when they grow up
Would you say that, am I safe and am I real?
Which I love those questions.
Would you say that boundaries and validation almost will help do all those things?
I think that's a beautiful question because I guess I'm zoomed, zoomed in to often like, well, what is my job in the moment?
And I think what you're saying is like, what is my goal for my kid?
I have those goals for my kids.
I want them to be resilient, which really means I want them to be able to handle challenges and know that they can bounce back from hard things.
I want them to be able to tolerate discomfort, not avoid it or look for the quickest exit from it.
I want my kid to feel really at home in their body.
I want my kid to feel confident, which to me has nothing to do with feeling good about yourself.
It's actually about self-trust, which is why it goes back to feeling like your feelings are real and feeling like you are a better perceiver of your feelings than other people are for you.
Yes, I do believe, of course, there's a lot more nuance, but in general, setting boundaries, staying connected to your kid.
by validating their emotions.
There's other things too, right?
Supporting them in their struggle, not rescuing, asking yourself pretty often, am I still doing things for my kid that they can start to learn how to do for themselves?
And how can I slowly back away?
How can I set my kid up for capability, not fragility, right?
There's other things, but in general, yes, I think boundaries and validation when paired together, they do.
That's what makes for really resilient adults.
I would agree with you.
And I've never heard it that way before.
And I really like that because I think sometimes when we think, oh, well, I want to have kind kids.
And then we're trying to model kindness for them.
But the problem is if kindness is free of boundary and free of validation, or kindness looks like validation with no boundaries to us.
That's right.
And then they're not getting kindness because they don't know what self-kindness looks like.
And they only see the martyr or the self-sacrifice version of kindness, quote unquote.
And then that isn't an accurate form of kindness.
Now they think kindness means I'll do things for people, even if they exploit, abuse, or don't have any set of understanding with me.
So they don't become a kind person.
They become someone that people take advantage of.
I think, I think that's really poignant, right?
And look, it's true.
I think this thing people say flippantly,
like I'll be at a dinner or something, you know, and someone's like, Don't you just want your kids to be happy?
And I always, I always picture my husband being like, Becky, please don't ruin.
That was just a throwaway comment.
Like, don't this is amazing, don't be a bummer, you know.
And then, like, half the time I listen, half the time, I'm like, Actually, it's not what you want.
Everyone's like, What?
And I'm like, Sorry, I just can't help myself.
Um, but and again, we love as humans, we hear someone say, No, that's not true, and then people will say to me, you want your kids to be unhappy?
Obviously not.
There's again, so much in between two extremes.
But here's the thing about optimizing for happiness in childhood.
I firmly believe, and I've seen it over and over, that the more you optimize for happiness in childhood, the more you actually wire for anxiety in adulthood.
Explain that.
Let's take a situation that happens often and then I'll zoom out, but I think the stories matter.
I'm the only one in my class who can't read.
My kid comes home and says this.
This is, first of all, let me just say, this is so painful.
Like seeing your kid in pain as a parent, it's so painful.
I think a lot of our instinct is, let me make my kid happy.
Right.
And we all me too.
I will say the craziest things.
I'm like, well, Bobby isn't even good at lacrosse.
At least you're good at lacrosse.
That's going to matter more.
And I'm like, why am I throwing Bobby under the bus?
How did Bobby do?
He's like a totally nice kid.
Whatever it is, we say nutty things, right?
And so I'm the only one in class who can't read.
Right.
And so I think an image helps here a lot because it explains why we don't want to make them happy and it explains resilience and anxiety all at once.
So the way I think I want someone to imagine this is your kid is kind of wandering around a garden and there's benches in this garden, a lot of them.
And right now they're on the bench of I'm the only one who can't read.
But I think you and I, Jay, we know that's not really the bench.
The bench is, I see people who are able to do things I can't do or I feel jealous or I feel less than.
And the truth is, that is a bench you will sit on at various times for the rest of your life.
Yeah.
That feeling of everyone else can read better than me is something you're going to feel at college, at work.
Or maybe it's, I wasn't invited to, you know,
whoever's birthday party.
You know what?
You're going to, I'm not included in something.
I don't have that popular belong the rest of your life.
So if I picture my kid on this bench, I think as parents, we often have two instincts.
Number one, we try to, we try to convince our kid that their bench isn't their bench.
That can't be true.
You can't be the only one not reading yet, even though our kid is kind of like telling us, right?
Which over time, if that's the pattern, creates a ton of self-distrust.
Oh, maybe other people know how to perceive my world better than I know how to perceive this world, all in the name of trying to not make my kid uncomfortable.
Or we see a sunny bench on that side of the garden and we're kind of like, just, come, you're an amazing lacrosse player.
You're the fastest kid, but you're an amazing artist.
And all of that can be true.
But if you think about to me, what anxiety is, I don't think anxiety is a feeling as much as it's a running away from a feeling.
It's kind of the experience of, I don't want to be feeling the way I am right now.
So a kid is wiring up their body.
They're understanding how the world works and they're understanding in childhood what feelings and experiences are tolerable and what feelings and experiences are intolerable.
The latter become anxiety.
So mom, I'm the only one who can't read.
And I'm like, oh, that's not true.
Or, you know, I just kind of fix it right away, or I throw them a party to make them distracted.
So, what does my kid learn in their body?
I was feeling disappointed, less than.
And what kids wire next is our response.
And what comes next is
escape into happiness, escape into distraction.
And if we think about this bench, my kid is sitting on this bench.
And I think we're all in those moments just looking for someone to sit down next to us.
Because the thing is, if my parent can sit on this bench with me,
it can't be as awful as I think it is.
It literally can't.
If they yank me from it or try to convince me it's not true, what they're really saying is, you're feeling upset, but
I can't really connect to the part of you that feels this way.
I can't do that.
That is so
scary for a kid because they're like, I guess this really is bad.
And so, in the name of kind of making our kid happy,
what we really do is we develop a whole range of emotions our kids learn are intolerable.
And if we think about what anxiety is later on, kind of, okay, so let's say this kid later on, and again, I'm not, this is not one intervention.
This would be many, many patterns, right?
But whenever a kid is upset, optimize for happiness, optimize for happiness.
I think the thing we realize at a certain age, it's different for everyone, 14, 18, 30, 50, whatever it is, is when I'm really upset about something and something doesn't go my way,
there actually isn't always an off-ramp to happy.
Like when I get fired from my job,
I'm not going to be happy in an hour.
I mean, and I mean this, I mean, but seriously, I guess maybe if I go to drugs, I'll be happy right away.
I mean, maybe if I have something else, but feelings don't work that way.
Yeah.
And there's no one, I don't think, who's just given me a new job.
Like, and so by the time I get to those hard moments in adult life, either I've developed the ability to cope with feelings or I'm so accustomed to always expecting happiness that ironically, the way I feel my distress is even more intense because the gap is so big, right?
It's kind of like the light goes on of distress and I've always expected it to go totally off.
I don't even have a dimmer switch anymore.
It's just on is horrible and I need it to go off.
When I think about what that means, and then I like to give parents like an alternative, my my kid says, I'm the only one in my class who can't read.
I actually think there's three lines like, because I like to hear concrete.
Yeah.
That can like really embody the idea of what I say.
Like, we always say a good inside the feelings bench, sit on the bench, sit on the bench.
And you become a bench warmer, right?
So the first one is just,
I'm so glad you're talking to me about this.
This is so powerful in marriage too, like, or work, you know?
Hey, I feel like you've been on your phone a lot.
And I don't know, I feel really disconnected.
Imagine if the first thing your partner says back is, I'm so glad you're talking to me about this.
What you're actually saying in a deep attachment way is the part of you who feels this way is attachable to me.
I'm sitting with you.
I'm so glad you're talking to me about this.
Yeah, they were handing out books and everyone got chapter books and I got this baby picture book.
Oh,
the second line, ultimate confidence builder, is just, I believe you.
We can talk more about that.
I think those are the three most important lines in parenting.
Often, just, I believe you.
And then the third is going to feel remarkably unsophisticated, but it's so powerful.
It's just tell me more.
Tell me more.
Oh, yeah.
And then, and then it was like me in a reading group of one, and my friends were on this other reading group.
And the amazing thing that happens 99% of the time, I'm so glad you're talking to me about this.
I believe you.
Tell me more.
Your kid then tells you the story.
What you're really saying is, I'm on the bench with you.
I'm not afraid of this bench.
I don't need to take you to a sunny bench.
I'm here.
How bad could a bench be if I'm willing to sit on it?
I'm not going to let us both both self-destruct.
I am here.
And then what happens 99% of the time, truly, in this visual is your kid gets off the bench before you do.
They literally, like, I've seen this a million times.
My kids are like, oh, can I have that snack now?
And I'm like, I'm sorry, what?
Oh, okay.
Like, you just wanted to know.
that I could tolerate this, that I could be with you in this.
And then what we do in their body is not with a story, because the story is just a representation of a feeling, disappointment, jealousy, embarrassment, whatever it is, has a little bit more of a container and a home.
So the next time a kid feels that feeling, it's not as panicky as a home.
And if you think about your body as all these jars of feelings, and this is the irony about happiness, the more jars we have to contain different parts of our distress, the more space there is
for happiness.
Anyway.
Yeah, that's that's a beautiful visual as well.
It's a really nice thing to think about.
But first, here's a quick word from the brands that support the show.
This is an ad by Better Help.
These days we're flooded with advice.
Take a cold plunge, start a gratitude journal, do a dopamine detox.
And while all of it might be helpful, sometimes it can get overwhelming.
You start asking yourself, what actually works for me?
That's why it's so important to have trusted resources.
Sometimes talking to a real therapist, even just once, can help you feel less overwhelmed.
It's not just about dealing with big trauma.
Therapy can help you build healthy coping strategies, set better boundaries, and grow into the version of yourself you want to be.
BetterHelp makes it simple to get started.
With over 30,000 licensed therapists and more than 5 million people supported globally, you're not alone in this journey.
You can connect with a therapist in just a few clicks and if it's not the right fit, you can easily switch.
As the largest online therapy provider in the world, BetterHelp can provide access to mental health professionals with a diverse variety of expertise.
Talk it out with BetterHelp.
Our listeners get 10% off their first month at betterhelp.com forward slash jaystop3.
That's better.com forward slash jaystop3.
This episode of On Purpose is brought to you by Chase Sapphire Reserve.
I believe that travel is one of the greatest gifts that we've ever been given and Chase Sapphire Reserve has been my gateway to the world's most captivating destinations.
Every time I travel, I find a part of myself I didn't know was missing.
I remember being in this small town completely unplugged and for the first time in a while I felt still.
Travel does that.
It grounds you, expands you and connects you to something deeper.
That's why I'm always looking for experiences that go beyond the typical.
Chase Sapphire Reserve makes traveling a breeze, earning eight times points on all purchases through Chase Travel and granting access to Sapphire Lounge by the club at select airports nationwide.
No matter my destination, travel is more rewarding with Chase Sapphire Reserve.
Discover more with Chase Sapphire Reserve at chase.com forward slash Sapphire Reserve.
Cards issued by JPMorgan Chase Bank, NA, member FDIC, subject to credit approval, terms apply.
This back to school season, spend less on your kids with Amazon.
I was talking to one of my closest friends the other day.
He has two kids, and every year it's the same routine.
One kid wants a very specific backpack.
I'm talking not just blue, but navy blue with a neon green zipper and a galaxy print.
The other lost their lunchbox before the first week of school even ended last year.
He's like, Jay, I swear they get more expensive every time they grow an inch.
And I get it.
Kids grow, seasons change, and somehow they always need five new things they didn't need last year.
But what doesn't have to change?
How much you spend on them.
So remember, with Amazon's low back to school prices, just spend less on your kids.
Because every dollar you don't spend on them is a dollar you haven't spent on them.
Shop back to school at Amazon and spend less on your kids.
All right.
Thank you to our sponsors.
Now let's dive back in.
Is there a part of that, do you then address the reading challenge?
Or what do you do from a practical standpoint on that after that moment?
Love it.
So, right.
So let's say this is happening and then you're thinking like, does my kid need a reading tutor?
Do I just need to spend
all of that can happen.
Now, I think what kids really feel in our first response, oh, I'm the only one in class can't read.
Okay, one second.
I'm calling the reader tutor right now.
In a way, the visual, again, is like, my kid is still alone on the bench.
Like, where'd my mom go?
Yeah.
Where did my dad go?
She is like, you know, I just, yeah.
So I would say, again, just like stay for a bit.
I think one of the most underutilized things in parenting is time.
It's like, and I think we don't.
Maybe we don't have, yeah.
Yeah.
Or maybe we do have.
You know, I can call that tutor.
Why don't I just give myself to the night?
Let me sleep on it because my kid is going to pick up on kind of my panic and my own anxiety around it.
So absolutely, if that was me, I might think, ooh, maybe I need to sit with my kid.
Maybe I need to teach them some phonics.
Does it have anything to do with phonics?
Are they a kid who's kind of perfectionistic and they're just not wanting to try because they're failing?
Do they have a sibling who's really gifted?
And so they've labeled themselves as the not smart kid.
Again, there could be a million things.
It might not even be an academic tutor.
But I think when you sit on the bench, you give yourself also a little bit more time to tolerate it.
You can access your curious mind and then absolutely of course i'm i love taking action but it but it would be from like a sturdier place
and in a way that's actually going to be more helpful to your kid yeah that's i i couldn't agree more i mean i know when i've done the healthy thing or the unhealthy thing in my marriage like it's really common i remember the other day my my wife approached me and she had this new business idea that she just shared with me randomly in a moment i was like yeah we can't do that right now because we're doing this thing over here like we're already building this.
And that's going to, and she was like, just give me an opportunity to just tell you about it.
Like, and she, she said, and she called me out in a nice way.
And she was just like, I literally just wanted to share something I was really enthusiastic about.
And I was like, oh, God, I'm totally.
She's like, sit on my enthusiasm bench for a moment.
Literally, that's all she wanted me to do.
And, you know, she was, she was more than willing to hear my logical reason as to why it's not the right time or maybe it was or maybe I, and I was, and, and again, it was a complete reflection of my own insecurity or anxiety I was having around something else yeah and I was reflecting that and projecting that onto her and she was kind enough to call it out to me in a in a way that didn't lead to an argument which it may have in the past like yeah you know which maybe maybe five years we've been together for 12 years but five years ago maybe we would have dealt with that very differently but her being able to say that to me I was like yeah you're right actually like you just were excited to share something with me and I had the time I was there with you I was just giving you I wasn't even listening yeah I wasn't present And I, and I just want to be clear, like, I talk a really good game.
This whole sitting on the bench thing, it's, it's hard.
Of course, I don't do that all the time.
We're, we're all like, we're in a crush.
We just want to fix and move on.
But these ideas and doing them a little bit more often or trying them one time.
Yeah.
It's really cool to see what happens.
Well, I think you hit the nail on it.
The fix and move on.
It's like that's, we want to remove the pain of the people we love, right?
We want to be able to extract the pain in that moment and we see that as success.
For us, healthy parenting or healthy relation is if you share a pain with me, if I can take it away right now like magic, then I've done my job.
And therefore, we call the tutor.
We, I say, oh, well, here are all the logical list of reasons.
Don't worry about it.
It's this fix and move on.
And what you're asking us to do is not fix until later.
It's almost like don't move, sit right here.
Yeah.
And then think about fixing it maybe in 24 hours, 48 hours and trying to figure out what the problem is.
But it's completely the opposite of what we think success is.
It is.
And I think kind of having that idea in your mind really matters to start the different actions.
Like, wait, even if I just say it, like we all have to try on ideas before we believe them.
It's not my job to remove my kid's distress.
It's not my job to make my kid happy.
If my kid has a really hard day,
That is not a sign I have failed.
Now, I like to take hard ideas and turn them like so far on their head that they become hyperbolic.
And so I'll share it here because it might be useful.
Cause now that I work the amount I do, right, I think about the time that I have with my kids, right?
I'm like, I really want to make the most out of it.
And there was this period when my kids were younger, where I was like, man, I come home.
It's just like a tantrum and whining.
And it's really easy.
I hear this from friends too, like, that's what I come home to.
I bust my butt to leave work early, to come home to the tantrum, to the whining.
Okay, but here's, here's the way to shift it, right?
Or to hear about my kid being left out of these painful things.
I know a lot of people, and I definitely would put you in this category, who are driven by impact.
And I actually think as humans, we have a lot of needs.
I actually think impact is a need.
Like, I think we need to feel impactful in the world.
When our kids are perfectly happy, oh, mom, you came home from work.
Thank you.
Also, I got 100 on my test and three of my friends are planning parties.
I was invited to all of them.
And in general, just feeling 10 out of 10.
Okay, that's never happened, but let's just say that did.
I would love to witness that moment, but I promise you, I'm not impactful in my kids' life in that moment.
My kid's fine.
Moving on.
I don't even know how many of us need anybody when that's happening.
But I started to do this reframe to myself, and it was very extreme because that's the only way it caught for me.
Where I was coming home, my kid was having then that tantrum about whatever it is, the blue cup wasn't blue enough today.
I don't know, something like that.
And I started to say to myself, Becky,
this is my bang for my buck moment, Literally,
this is the moment if I'm driven by impact
that I want to be home for because my kid is probably just releasing the stress of their day or the blue cup is too blue is a way of saying there's so many little things in my day, mom, that didn't go the way I wanted and I haven't released it until now.
And if I can be there in that moment, don't get me wrong, I'm not going to say it's like purely enjoyable, but oh my goodness, is it impactful?
And that really, really matters down down the road.
And it motivates you too in the moment.
It kind of does motivate me.
The other thing that motivates me too is, you know, I think about this thing that happened with one of my kids where they have this, these projects in a school.
And some of the projects for this week are really good.
They're like amazing.
We live in New York.
They're like these amazing opportunities.
And I'd say three or four of them are like, everyone's like, those are the bad ones, like life.
So there's how good of a project you get.
And then also they split up kids into groups.
So kids want to be with their friends.
So there's always factors.
How many of my friends am I with?
Did I get the good project?
First project we came out.
My son got, and it just was the worst project with not a soul he knew.
It was like,
right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So this is the moment I think, and my kid, my son, obviously, he was like really upset.
Again, I don't know if kids were like, this is a learning moment.
No, he was like, really upset.
Why is this the case?
Right.
Okay.
So the phrase I've developed that I do think is powerful just because it gets me a different mindset is sick joy.
And I'll explain what I mean.
Okay.
Okay.
I know what really matters in life going forward
is being able to stay grounded when things don't go your way.
He might not get into his college of first choice.
He might not get the job he wants.
He might, you know, whatever it is, go buy a car and he thinks he's getting a certain car and they don't have that one in stock.
I mean, not getting the thing you want is,
it happens every day in adult life.
And I think you and I know adults who are no more prepared to deal with those situations well than they were when they were two.
Absolutely.
It's just adult versions of tantrums.
We can't build skills for experiences we don't have.
We can't buy that skill.
We can't verbalize it.
We can't lecture it.
You have to feel it.
It's just the unfortunate truth.
And I think, especially if you live a life where there's a decent amount of privilege, which my kids have, like, there's a lot of ease in moments.
And so, look, I did not say to my son, because I don't want to, I'm not going to walk myself into a bomb, this is a good situation.
No, I'm not going to say that, okay?
But in my head, I really mean this.
Instead of being like, my urge is to take that away, I'm like, you know what?
Like, I have a little sick joy.
Like, this is, this is not going to be fun for the next three days.
First of all, he needs to borrow my belief in him.
If I can't believe he can get through this, if I'm like calling the school right away, you need to change.
What I'm really saying to him is I see you as a very fragile human.
And kids form their identity.
through us.
We are their mirror.
We show them who they are.
I'm basically saying you are fragile.
You can only operate successfully when things go your way.
Ish, entitlement, all the things we don't want.
And so part of it,
yeah.
The part of me is like, this is so good for him.
It's actually funny.
There are, this is this dynamic you'll see when you, if you have kids, where people call the school a lot and they're like, I need my kid to be with this teacher and these three best friends.
One, I was telling the story to one of my friends about, you know, the middle school project.
And my friend who knows me well goes, did you call the school and ask him to get the worst project with no friends?
And I was like,
no, I didn't go that far.
That is like,
like, if you really totally shift your mindset, because how we respond, as you know, is mindset.
It's our framework.
The events are the same, but when your framework changes, everything changes.
So if you're like, my kid didn't make the soccer team, holy moly, not enjoyable, painful for both of us, but I can really have an impact that probably when he's 25, he's not going to thank me for, but I know he's going to function better because this happened and how I showed up.
And I think that's so amazing to hold on to.
I love that for two reasons.
The first is that I think we have a warped view of what care is.
So we think care means, let me call, let me figure it out.
Let me get you a better friend group.
Let me get you a better project.
So we're thinking that that's what care looks like.
And now my kid knows I care for them.
But actually, what you're saying in your words is, I don't believe in you.
I'm not sure you can get through this and I can fix everything.
And so instead of them thinking, oh, mom cares about me, it's mom or dad or whoever it may be can fix everything because they don't trust in me.
And then the other part why I love that answer is because you're also not doing what I think we often do with our family and friends.
And because I'm not a parent, I've not done it with a child, but you're trying to teach the lesson before living the lesson.
Right.
So you're trying to teach the lesson where it's like, this is a good thing.
And your kid's like, no, it's not, mom.
I hate this.
And you're like, no, it's a really good thing.
You learn in the long term that this is the best thing that happened to you.
And the kid's like, what are you talking about?
And so rather than like, let's just do it for three days.
That's exactly right.
Like, I'm not a marathon runner.
I'm not in terribly good shape.
But if I was and I was running a marathon and someone's like, this is an amazing thing.
Are you loving everything?
I'd be like, I'm sorry.
I'm going to feel really good about myself the day after the marathon.
I don't know.
Like, no one feels great.
I don't think climbing Mount Everest.
You do it for an experience.
You bear down.
You know, it's going to be really hard.
And at some point, you look back and you're like, that was good for me.
Yeah.
So I think that, and what you said also that just made me had a new thought.
When we call the school, when we do the puzzle, when we fix the friendship issue, right?
Assuming it's not some really intense abusive bullying.
Okay.
We might end up feeling capable, but we steal our kids' capability.
We steal it from them.
We, I called the school, I fixed it.
My kid is now deprived of an opportunity to watch themselves do something They thought they couldn't do Yeah, I don't I I don't think we want to take that away from our kids.
Yeah, my wife's talked about that all the time She talks about how like when she was a kid if she wanted to not go to the dentist or not go to the doctor whatever it was she'd get her or even as a teenager at this point She'd get her older sister to make the call and she wouldn't want to make the call and so as she's got older it's got harder and harder and harder to make these calls or to cancel something or whatever it may have been and it took her so long
even probably in through to when we first started dating because then she'd ask my opinion or ask me to do it and i'd be like no you do it right because i grew up the other way where i always did everything like paid for my car insurance paid for my first car my phone bill so i was very comfortable doing those things and i was like no but i don't want to be seen as a savior in this situation i also don't want to be seen as like i'm i'm the hero of this scenario because i don't want to make you dependent on me for you know for those things and it was really interesting for her and now she'd look back and she'd be like oh my gosh like i was just never given the opportunity
to really, no, and I'm not going to, those things feel hard at the time.
And so I don't want to take that away.
But yeah, if you never get given the ability and the opportunity, later on, it's going to make you really unstable.
Yeah.
And I'm, I'm really big on helping parents teach these kids because again, I think there's a lot between two extremes.
One extreme is, well, think about it.
Okay.
Like your kid can't make their sports practice and they have access to a computer for an email to their coach.
So easy.
Just write the email, right?
Okay.
So one extreme is write the email to your coach and your kid might be like, I can't do it, right?
It's not a big deal.
Write it.
And over here is I'll write it for you.
I really believe in a middle ground.
Your kid is nervous, right?
But there's a lot between it's not a big deal.
Do it yourself and I'll do it for you.
And I think that can start with, look, I get it.
It's a new thing to write your own email.
Yes.
Here's what I can do.
Yes.
You know, give me a couple of minutes.
I need to finish this worst project.
Then I'm going to give you my full attention.
Let's sit at your computer together and let's start writing the email together.
Scaffolding.
Yeah.
Right.
Just like we, kids don't go from not knowing how to swim to swimming in the ocean.
Yes.
They're scaffolding.
Okay.
Well, how could you start?
Okay.
Dear, whoa, okay.
I'll teach you.
You often start dear.
Dear, what's your coach's name?
Coach.
Okay.
Oh, yeah.
Dear.
Okay.
Yeah.
And then you do a comma.
Do you see what the comma is right there?
But I make my kid press it.
Great.
Then you press return.
What is something you could do?
You can lead your kid to the water.
How could you tell Coach Mike something like, I'm not able to go to practice today?
And your kid's going to say, I guess I could say, I'm not able to go to practice.
That's yes, yeah, that great, but let them have the win.
Yeah, help them type it, right?
Maybe the next time you check in on them, like that's, I think, the middle ground.
And if we think again, kids aren't born with the skills, and then you think about yourself as a coach, good coaches in any sport don't usually say this isn't a big deal, yeah, but they also don't make the layup for someone, right?
No, that's such a great way of putting it.
It's and I, and I like the whole how good insight is based on this middle ground.
Yeah.
Because we all get lost on the edges and on the corners and the extremes, and we keep oscillating between these two ways of being rather than realizing, well, it's a bit of this and a bit of that, and probably not all the way on either side.
And it's so much more easier to think about it like that, because I think our brain does this thing where it goes, well, should I be assertive or should I be affectionate?
And it's like, well, be assertively affectionate.
Like, you know, rather than
rather than, yeah, do I be kind or do I be like, you know, do I challenge them?
And it's like, well, figure out a way to kindly challenge them, like, which is what you just did in this email writing, which was like, it was a challenge, but you were kind about it.
And all of a sudden, and it's so real that that's what we all want.
If I think about anything my parents failed at teaching me, it was because it was just expected that I should know how to do it.
And anything they want at teaching me was because they sat down and did it with me or someone did.
And I remember I worked at a company where I learned how to cold call when I was like 15 years old.
Probably one of the best lessons I've ever learned in my entire life.
But it only worked because this guy called Joel sat next to me, who was a pro edit.
And he sat next to me for my first like 10 calls and would write out the words for me and script and coach for me.
And then I did 290 phone calls after that without him.
And it was just those 10 calls that made me feel so confident.
I didn't know what cold calling was.
And now everyone's listening going, what the hell is cold calling?
But it was when you were trying to sell stuff over the phone to people you didn't know.
Back in the day.
Back in the day.
And it was just that kind of an experience of, yeah, having someone hold my hand and have a script and kind of could see me stress out on the phone when someone said something I didn't expect and kind of put a word in front of me.
And it was like, oh, okay, that's how you do it.
Yeah.
And look, I think this stuff, it's so old in our body, right?
Like I think about an issue I was having with one of my kids a year or two ago, a small issue, just like, why is this towel on the floor?
Why is it always on the floor?
I actually am not someone who cares about my kids having like a very neat room.
I don't know why.
I'll look into it in therapy, but like the towel, the wet towel on the floor is just, it's a thing my kids know I care about.
And there's not that many things like that.
So it's on the floor.
And every time, how hard is it?
How hard is it to take your towel and put it on the hook, right?
Like there's so many ways.
And if we go back and you think about your equivalent in your childhood of towel on the floor, right?
I think that's what a lot of us were met with.
Just like our parents' frustration, again, they were doing the best they could with the resources they had, right?
But the best bosses in the world, if they get a report from someone that's not good i can't imagine they're like how did you do it like this like well i don't know how to do it differently then and so i thought about this and i find a helpful question with your kid to to start with be like okay wait i have a good kid let me remind myself i like my kid i have a good kid what is a skill my kid would need to develop to be better able
to even pick up the towel on the floor.
And when I asked myself that question, something crazy happened.
Just, I had a thought I'd never had before because of the mindset shift.
I said, I wonder if he notices it.
Like when I look in his room and the towel's on the floor, I don't notice anything in the room except that towel.
But I know this, there's so many times that me and my husband, where he's like, did you not see this?
And I was like, oh, it just wasn't capturing my attention.
So I realized that.
And then I realized he probably walks by it.
He goes out.
It's not in his mind.
So we talked, I talked to him about this.
I said, hey, this has become a thing.
I don't want to keep fighting.
What would you need to do
to remember to pick up your towel?
And of course, he's like, I don't know.
And I was like, well, where do you walk like in your room before you go out?
He's like, I always go by my door.
So, well, what would you need to do or even put around your door to remember?
And literally he goes, I don't like a post-it note.
It was, it was so simple.
My heart's chasing.
It felt so deep because of the process.
And I was like, oh, like, what would the post-it note say?
And he's like, I don't know, towel.
It's like, okay.
And then this was an interesting moment.
He goes, could you write it for me?
I was like,
No.
I'm not, and kind of, again, I'm not going to do it because I know that's something you could do for yourself.
And I think it will be more meaningful if you do.
And in our family, you know, we take care of our things.
And this is one small thing I ask.
And so, you know what?
We're together.
You have post-it notes right where you work.
It would be great if that's something you could do now.
Or if you want to do it your own schedule, maybe some point before tomorrow.
And then I do the thing where I think this really matters.
I walk away.
Nobody likes to listen or do something someone asks when you're like breathing over their phone.
Right.
So there's like an element of trust.
And truly, the next day, I saw a note.
And
I would say after that, it was like a maybe a 50% hit rate with a towel.
50 was better than zero.
I learned so much in this process.
I use it with so many other things from my kids.
Like, oh, you always forget to take your water bottle.
Okay, like I can get frustrated about that, or I could help them build some new skill.
Because again, what's going to transfer is when my kids are in college, there's going to be something that happens.
Oh, I keep forgetting to study for my tests on time, or I'm late to class either they'll hear my voice saying what's wrong with you this isn't that hard or they'll hear hold on a second yeah i'm a good person what's going on what would i need to do to be better able to do this thing i want to accomplish that's the process you're really modeling that process into adulthood as we know that's a winning process yeah it's going to pay off yeah
and even if it takes time that's right and you know what i don't want when my kids in college like i always say there's certain jobs i always want my kids going through a hard time something tricky always happy for them to call me like water bottle rememberer alarm clock setter i don't need my kid in college to be calling me that they forgot their water bottle or that they you know don't know how to pick up their towel or that they forgot to set their alarm clock so if i'm not helping them scaffold those skills yeah i shouldn't be surprised i don't know when they kind of still lean on me for them yeah at that later age yeah no it's it's such a i wonder whether it's i felt like my parents felt very comfortable comfortable getting us to do chores early on that were in my life and so I remember ironing my shirts for school since I was probably like 13 maybe
and then my my sister and I had a routine after dinner where we'd either one of us would wash the dishes or clean the table and the other would clean the table and wash the dishes and I felt like those were healthy routines that we just knew that were locked in and we hated doing them I never liked doing it ironing I got some pride in and still like a very proud we used to iron not steam and I've learned how to steam since moving to this country but this idea of i didn't like washing up the dishes or cleaning the table it was just part of our routine yes what is the value of discipline even when you hate it and what early chores are healthy and useful i i think this is such an important conversation and and you actually said something that i often say you beat me to the punch first of all there is just immense value to kids spending time doing things that are unenjoyable.
I think especially now, and I'm not trying to say I'm always above this, but we've somehow moved to this world where we're always optimizing for each kid.
It's really interesting, even like the weekends are split.
Like, I'm taking this kid here, this kid here.
We do that sometimes too.
It's necessary, but almost unconsciously, we don't realize I'm like always optimizing for my kids' pleasure.
I remember the time that one of my kids, like, what?
I have to go to my sibling's soccer.
Like, he's not even good at soccer, which was true.
It wasn't that good, right?
And it was the moment where I was like, that's actually exactly why you're going to go.
Like, the weekend is not about optimizing your personal pleasure at every second.
Like it's good for you to go and be bored.
It's good for you, even if you could have a play date to sit and watch.
That is such an important thing to be a good human.
And it reminds me of the time that my kid is like, Folding clothes is boring.
Why do we have to do this?
And I found myself, I said this thing.
I was just like, you know what?
To be a good human, you just have to do things that are boring and unenjoyable sometimes.
I don't know, but I think it's true.
It's true.
It's true.
I don't have a better way of saying it.
Just, and my kid was like, oh, it kind of like
struck him like, you know, no one had ever just said that.
That's like, so the fact that you had a childhood where there was this built-in routine of things that were mundane,
largely unenjoyable.
You can make them enjoyable, put on the music, do things.
We try to do that in our house.
But actually,
I think that's relieving for a parent.
Oh, I don't have to make my kids' life amazing at every moment.
Going back to entitlement, like what an individualist, relatively entitled view of the world to go forward.
Like, I should spend 99% of my waking hours doing things that I want to do and bring me pleasure.
Now, do I think you should spend some amount of time?
Yes, a lot.
But the idea that some of your childhood is doing things that are good for the family, that are more about being there for your sister, right?
I think that is so important.
But what it means is tolerating distress and tolerating pushback and tolerating whining.
There's so much whining.
Now, the other reason, though, I think chores are really important, they're a way to feel impactful.
It's one of the biggest things we take for our kids is when they're only spending time doing the things they want to do, they're not really having an impact in the real world.
Like clearing your plate and learning how to wash it off and putting it in the dishwasher, how concrete that is and how visual all the plates were there.
Then they got clean-ish.
Then they went to the dishwasher.
Then someone wiped them down.
Like you are watching yourself have purpose and impact in the world.
Your kids will not say thank you for that when they're younger, but I promise you that's critical to their mental health.
They don't want to live in their own world where they're just spinning and thinking and optimizing.
They actually do have a need to feel like they're, that's what it's feel like they're a part of something.
And I actually think chores, again, if done right, so many times chores are almost given as punishment.
Yeah, yeah.
Not it.
I think it's a really important structure for that.
Yeah.
And I love the way you broke down that process, like seeing yourself do something from start to finish and complete something and have to do it as a routine.
That is so much of adult life.
Yes.
And it's, it's hard.
It was one of the mistakes I made.
So I started working when I was like 14.
I used to deliver newspapers.
Then I I worked at a grocery store.
And so I've been working for a long time.
And I have a younger sister who's four and a half years younger than me.
And I never wanted her to work because I just wanted her to be protected
in my naivety of being a teenager myself at the time.
Out of love.
Out of love.
But we talk about it all the time now.
We're like, I started working since I was 14.
So work is very normal to me.
I get it.
I know what it takes.
It's a part of my life.
I've always had to pay my way.
And for my sister, it's like she didn't start working until she graduated.
And she likes to get away from work as much as she can because she didn't have that routine and rhythm from that early age.
And there was so much growth at that time that you made socially about having a job and being around people of different backgrounds and different ages.
My boss was 50 and there was a 60-year-old person at the checkout and a 20-year-old person and just generational, you know, experience and exposure.
And so much I gained from working in a grocery store that I could never have learned at home.
And I think about that word capability.
I bet you built a ton.
Absolutely.
I'm a person who can do hard things.
I'm a person who can go into a situation that's totally new, nuanced, has ups and downs.
And no matter what I finish the day, just the best it often is knowing I can get through it.
That's so important.
It's the other thing that it's kind of different than chores, but having our kids do real things in the real world, right?
I think it's something that we need to put a lot more attention to, right?
I know John Haidt talks about this a lot, right we kind of over protect kids online and or we under protect kids online and over protect them in the real world and he and i talk about this a lot i think i've watched my kids right we live in manhattan right and so mobility for kids is maybe a little easier they don't need to ride somewhere but when i see you know my kid who can go get bagels for the family on their own right take public transportation on their own the pride and capability they feel i i promise you i mean i think academics and school and all those things in sports are really important.
Don't get me wrong.
I just, I don't, I literally don't see this like visceral feeling in any other place than when they're in the real world feeling like a capable person who's operating like everyone else.
And so I think that, and everyone can ease into that in their own way, right?
It might be you go to the doctor with your kid and you let them check in.
It might be you let them tell their pediatrician, hey, how's she doing this year?
Let her answer first, right?
It's emailing the coach instead of you doing it.
It's maybe you don't live in a city where a kid can walk to the grocery store, but maybe you hang back and let them check out.
I mean, there's so many situations, but that communication of trust and capability, if you reflect that to your kid, and then they start to experiment with that, it's so critical.
Before we dive into the next moment, let's hear from our sponsors.
This episode of On Purpose is brought to you by Chase Sapphire Reserve.
I believe that travel is one of the greatest gifts that we've ever been given and Chase Sapphire Reserve has been my gateway to the world's most captivating destinations.
Every time I travel I find a part of myself I didn't know was missing.
I remember being in this small town completely unplugged and for the first time in a while I felt still.
Travel does that.
It grounds you, expands you and connects you to something deeper.
That's why I'm always looking for experiences that go beyond the typical.
Chase Sapphire Reserve makes traveling a breeze, earning eight times points on all purchases through Chase Travel and granting access to Sapphire Lounge by the club at select airports nationwide.
No matter my destination, travel is more rewarding with Chase Sapphire Reserve.
Discover more with Chase Sapphire Reserve at chase.com forward slash Sapphire Reserve.
Cards issued by JPMorgan Chase Bank, NA, member FDIC, subject to credit approval, terms apply.
This back to school season, spend less on your kids with Amazon.
I was talking to one of my closest friends the other day.
He has two kids, and every year it's the same routine.
One kid wants a very specific backpack.
I'm talking not just blue, but navy blue with a neon green zipper and a galaxy print.
The other lost their lunchbox before the first week of school even ended last year.
He's like, Jay, I swear they get more expensive every time they grow an inch.
And I get it.
Kids grow, seasons change, and somehow they always need five new things they didn't need last year.
But what doesn't have to change?
How much you spend on them.
So remember, with Amazon's low back-to-school prices, just spend less on your kids because every dollar you don't spend on them is a dollar you haven't spent on them.
Shop back to school at Amazon and spend less on your kids.
Embrace the energy of summer with Pandora, jewelry that celebrates who you are and the journey you're on.
From sunrise adventures to sunset slowdowns, Pandora brings a touch of paradise to every moment, no passport needed.
This season's new pieces are full of color and personality.
From ocean charms to bright tennis bracelets and easy layers you can mix and match.
It's a fun way to refresh your summer look and show off your style wherever the season takes you.
I'm always drawn to pieces that feel timeless but still fun.
And in the summer, I love something lightweight, colorful or meaningful.
Pandora has a great range whether you're into bold charms or simple accents.
And the fact that you can personalize pieces in store, it's a fun touch.
You can engrave a date, a word, a reminder, something that captures a summer moment you never want to forget.
Feel it, live it, embrace it, be love, shop in store or online at Pandora.net to discover new styles.
And back to our episode.
Yeah, I think a lot of pressure that parents are feeling right now about that overprotection is also feeling that they have to be available and monitoring and be around and entertain all the time.
And it goes back to your, this point that you've spoken about the whole time, this dichotomy of we didn't get a lot of time from our parents growing up for a lot of people.
Parents weren't around because they had to pay the bills and take care of stuff.
And now it's the opposite where parents feel like, well, I have to work from home.
I have to be completely flexible.
I have to be there all the time.
And I feel like that's a lot of pressure for two reasons.
One is you now feel like every waking moment has to be spent entertaining a kid, which is exhausting.
But we all feel the pressure societally and culturally of if you don't, your kid's going to have trauma.
And then the other side of it is we talk about about what it means to be a good parent because it makes us feel good about ourselves,
but not about what kids actually need.
So if I think about the difference between what makes me feel like a good husband versus what does my wife actually need?
Like what makes me feel like a good husband is a long list of things that my wife would pick up on and be like, yeah, but I don't need any of that stuff.
And I feel like kids might do the same.
I think that's really smart.
I haven't thought about it that way.
But yeah, I think we should dive into that.
I mean, I think we have an idea.
What makes me feel good is if, yes, I'm always available.
I'm always watching.
I'm always making sure they don't slip off the ladder of the playground, right?
What does my kid feel?
Nobody trusts me.
I don't have any space.
I don't even know anymore what's me and what's my parent.
Like it's like we live in this enmeshed world.
Now, I don't think a kid could ever articulate, right?
Again, we're not going to hear from our eight-year-old.
I'd love a little more space.
It's just not going to happen, right?
Yeah, until the teenagers.
But they might say it in other ways, right?
And I really don't think it's just me.
I think the good inside really is this movement.
It's ignited something in people.
I think there's like a lot of us who are like, yeah, this whole always being there, always fixing, right?
Always witnessing this kind of way we've confused emotional safety with emotional comfort.
Those are very different things.
I think there's like a new wave, right?
I mean, I think one of the reasons why we're so resentful, we're so reactive, we can be so rageful on our phones all the time around our kids is because we rarely have time without our kids, right?
And it's actually important for everyone.
And again, people hear that and they go to these awful extreme places.
So you're just going to slam your door and tell your kids you can't hang out with them.
Nobody said that.
I'm definitely not saying that.
That would not be a good way to operationalize this concept.
But helping your kids learn how to play independently.
If you live in a neighborhood with other kids, helping them figure out that they can play on that neighbor's lawn and you don't have to be there.
Maybe you're nervous, but maybe you have to fake it till you make it.
You're like, yeah, I totally trust you.
And then you turn, you're like texting your friend, like, oh my goodness, help me through this.
Okay, I have one window up top that actually is blackened from the outside so they can't see.
I'm watching them.
But then maybe after a week, you're not doing that.
Right.
Or for me too, letting our kids go to the grocery store without them.
It is a leap of faith.
And we all have different levels of anxiety to manage.
But I think that's right.
Kids need space.
Of course, kids need attention.
They like to be witnessed.
But I mean, imagine your wife following you around at every moment, beyond probably on some level feeling annoying.
There's a message of like, I actually don't trust you.
And I also don't trust our relationship enough to feel like we could have that be strong if you you are also your own person.
And I think, yeah, I think we really need to redefine parenthood along those lines.
Yeah, no, I'm glad.
Yeah, no, I was just thinking about it.
I was just like, when you think about any other space, it's almost like if I, from any job, if I serve burgers at McDonald's, my worth is not calculated by if I feel good doing that.
It's calculated by what the customer needs and wants.
So if the customer orders a cheeseburger and I serve them a Coke and fries because that makes me feel better,
that's not accurate.
It's about, and so I'm not saying we have to do what our kids want.
Totally.
It's probably a bad example, actually.
I take that back, but there's a sense of like, am I aware of what children actually need?
Need, I think, what do children actually need?
That's a bad metaphor.
But yeah, it's like, what do children actually need versus what makes me feel good in the moment?
I think that's right.
And look, there's this dance.
The dance between independence and dependence,
it's constant, right?
Independence grows from the safety of dependence.
It's true for us too.
I'm sure in part, you feel like you can try all these new things and, you know, be honest and vulnerable.
In part, maybe because you feel like at the end of the day, I have my wife, I can come home to, like, I have a secure base, which means I can go explore.
That's really important.
So, yes, the time we spend with our kids, the way we connect with them.
But the truth is, after those stages of intense kind of connection or dependence, the way kids actually grow is from the safety of dependence.
They do things that are new.
It's when so many parents say, like, I feel so guilty.
I'm going on a trip away from my kid and my kid's upset.
Right.
And I often ask, well, who are they staying with?
I don't know.
They're staying with grandma.
It's someone who they're like, or they're staying with their partner.
It's someone who they're perfectly safe with.
And they're like, is this, is this so bad for them?
And I always say the same thing.
I mean it.
Not only do I think it's good for them, I think your kid is going to consolidate all of the skills you've been working on them with, right?
It's kind of like if you are a basketball player and you have a coach and they're watching and they're watching and they're working on this thing, you need time in the gym without that coach to then kind of go do the thing.
And then, you know what, you're going to get back with a coach and work on the next thing.
But I just want parents to hear that.
Yes, be there, that connection, that validation.
And then the periods where either.
you're traveling or you're not there.
That is actually probably the time your kid can bring it all together and not only consolidate skills, that's when you know it's yours.
If I'm only,
I don't know, able to do a good presentation when my boss is in the room, a part of me always wonders, like, is it my,
yeah, wow, that's such a great point.
And my boss is sick and I go to my boss, I crushed it.
I feel like it's me.
Now I'm like, that was me.
So yeah, we really want to give our kids that opportunity.
That's such a great point.
I love that.
I was better than the McDonald's.
Definitely better than my boss.
We were trying to get there together.
I was trying to get there.
I was like, no, that's not working.
Backtrack before you.
It's the thing with metaphors.
You never know.
I'm like, actually, it's not.
I was like, I've never said that before.
So let's backtrack.
But no, there's that resonates strongly.
My tour manager is from London.
He was traveling with me.
We just finished a North American Canada tour.
We did like 15 cities.
And he's toured with me twice.
We did a world tour two years ago.
So he comes from London.
He has two little boys.
And he was saying that the last time he left,
he only had one, but he was telling his kid that he was like, oh, I'm really sorry I have to go away.
And this time he said he was changing it where he's like, I'm really excited to go away.
I'm going to miss you.
But I'm really excited.
I'm doing this show and we're going live and we're doing this thing.
And he was saying how he wanted his kid to.
A, feel excited for him rather than feel like, oh, dad hates going to work and he's sorry and he's feeling bad about it.
And at the same time, like feeling like his kid had space to grow and feel that confidence.
And yes, of course, his kid FaceTime there every day and missed him and whatever it was.
But there there was that sense that he was like, no, I want him to feel positive about the fact that I'm going away.
I don't want him to feel like I'm nervous that I'm going away and I'm going to be away from him.
And now he's taking on that anxiety as well.
That dad's scared that he's leaving me behind without him with mom, who obviously, you know, like
is the main carer and loves me and, you know, is always around there for me.
And so it's, he was like, no, I want him to leave feeling good.
And I think really sturdy leaders do that.
Like my language for that is two things are true.
So going back to boundaries and validation, two things are true.
I can set a boundary.
You can be upset.
Two things are true.
I'm excited about going on tour with Jay and I'm going to miss you.
Or two things are true.
I'm excited for this next step.
And I get that you wish I was staying home.
Like I actually think that phrase, two things are true, it trains our mind to then say the things.
And then the thing that's a small shift, what makes a huge difference is kind of upgrading the butt to an and.
I'm excited, but I'm going to miss you.
I'm excited and I'm going to miss you, right?
Like, and look, I think in the world, we see this like collapse of our ability to hold two things as true.
It's in
every small and big way, which again is why I think I think about good inside is really so important.
I think the one of the most powerful ways we can change the world is how we raise the next generation of kids who will become adults.
And to me, that idea of holding oppositional truths at once, and maybe this relates to what people say as mom guilt, Two things are true.
I'm going to dinner with my friends tonight.
So person X, your dad, my mom, whoever it is, is going to put you to bed.
Two things are true.
I'm excited to see my friends.
And I understand you're going to be upset.
Like, I don't have to fix the upset.
I don't have to change my plans.
I don't need to get my five-year-old.
But don't you understand?
It's really good for me to go out with my friends.
I'm a better mom.
Again,
what's happening there?
No, they can just both be true.
And when we become better able to like verbalize that, we actually teach our kids to be able to tolerate those two things at once.
I'm so glad you raised that.
It's probably the thing I've been focused on the most right now, because I love that what F.
Scott Fitzgerald wrote, which was the test of a first-rate intelligence, is the ability to hold two opposing ideas at the same time.
Yep.
And not and retain the ability to function.
And it's just so well said.
And then he goes on to say that one should therefore be able to see that things are hard, but that I have the possibility to change them.
Right.
And yeah, sorry.
Sorry.
And yeah.
That's exactly it.
It's so real.
And I'm so glad that you've taken it from parenting into parenting.
Yes.
Because that is the ability that none of us have today in any capacity.
And I think this is the stuff.
It drives us parents crazy.
So just to model how you can go from these singular truths to these, this duality.
Like, I love the heck out of my kids.
And many days I miss so many of the moments before I had kids.
I am so grateful for my kids and I feel exhausted.
And I think what's important is one doesn't have to be more true than the other.
They can just both be there.
They're like two boxes sitting on a shelf.
And it's, it's powerful to start to watch your mind try to collapse them, right?
Oh, good parents don't feel that way.
Wait, this might just be a two things are true situation.
Maybe I'm allowed to love being a mother and miss my life before I'm a a mother.
And maybe there's no resolution.
Maybe I just going back to the bench.
Maybe I just have to like sit with that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Exactly.
I'm thinking back to all the times I did that to my parents because we forget.
Yeah.
Like we forget that we did the same things.
Like I find it really funny when I was speaking to a friend or someone and they're like, yeah, you know, my teenagers just doesn't get me right now.
I'm like.
Did you get your parents when you were a teenager?
Like, I'm like, I was the worst.
And, you know, and I think about even being a kid.
And I remember my mom had to go out to work in the evening.
So she couldn't put me to bed a lot of the time.
And I remember crying until she left.
Like I'd hold on to her foot until she walked to the door and she'd walk out to go to work.
And then dad would put me to bed.
And I still remember it.
And it's just, it's so interesting that we forget that we did all of those things because it feels like such a long time ago.
But the reality is that.
children haven't changed that much.
They just have different ways.
They might have an iPad instead of a PlayStation versus the TV or whatever it may have been.
And it, it's just when you remember that, you can actually empathize with it better and realize your parents also had to do things that wasn't the reason you end up feeling neglected.
Like that wasn't it.
Like,
I don't think I, I don't look back at that memory with my mom and go, I felt neglected when she left for work because she explained it to me.
I knew where she was going.
I knew I was her dad.
Like it was, it's, and of course, there are people who have very opposite experiences where there could have been neglect and trauma.
And I think that's, that's what I wanted to ask you about is if if someone's listening going, look, I love my parents.
They weren't perfect, but I love them.
And or maybe they actually caused me a lot of pain, but
it is what it is.
How do I not be like them?
Yeah.
Because that's what I'm most scared of.
Because yeah, I am probably carrying some trauma.
And
maybe I feel positively to them, but maybe there's one of them that I never want to talk to again.
And I'm scared of becoming them.
And I totally understand that fear.
And what I'd say to that person
first is, like, I hope hope you give yourself a lot of credit for even just naming that and letting yourself see that.
There are things in my parents I love and I appreciate and there are things I want to do really differently.
I'm so scared of repeating that pattern.
That I would say that's kind of amazing and brave to even just name that.
That's step one.
Step two, I actually just want to learn more.
Tell me more.
What don't you want to be like?
Well, I would have never talked to my parent when I was in a tricky situation.
I felt like my parents were just controlling, judgmental.
Like I'd want to get more specific, right?
Okay.
So what I think is helpful to know, again, is
parenting is like a language, right?
And if you were brought up in English, right?
And you want to speak a little English, but also Mandarin, your first instinct with your kid, even as you're learning Mandarin, is going to be English.
It just is, especially in stressful moments.
And that's okay.
That doesn't mean you're failing.
It just means probably you got to go back to those Mandarin lessons and you go repair and you keep going.
So I just also want people to know that that's what change looks like.
No one goes and does a complete 180, but people underestimate if you think about your family lineage like a ship and it's going toward a certain destination, you're like, I don't want to go there.
Even a small shift in the ocean leads to a dramatically different destination, right?
And that's what cycle breaking is.
And then I think we work on one thing at a time.
Okay, let's say it's, I really want my kid to be the kind of kid who can come to me.
Stakes are even higher now.
There's stuff on TikTok.
It's sex, drugs.
I want my kid to come to me.
I would have never with my parent.
It still haunts me.
Things that happened because I didn't or they yelled at me.
Great.
I'd be like, okay, well, how old's your kid now?
Five.
Okay.
Let's start building that because I think that's a topic that comes up a lot.
The idea that whether or not our teen comes to us in tricky moments is something that like magically starts in the teenage years as if there's no history to it.
Right.
So let's think about how you respond when your kid hits.
Let's think about what happens.
Ooh, you just got an email from school that your kid stole a truck from his friend's cubby.
These things seem very small compared to sex and drugs and rock and roll, but in a way, they're the same circuit.
I did something I know you're not going to approve of.
Frankly, I did something even I feel shameful about.
How do we deal with that in this family?
Now, what do I think that parent's first instinct is going to be?
What do you think?
Yeah, like, oh my God, I can't believe you stole the truck.
What's wrong with you?
Like, exactly.
What's wrong with you?
Go to your room.
By the way, when you go to your room, I took away all your trucks.
Like, I don't know.
By the way, I guess it's just what we like just come up with this stuff because it's been so many generations, even though it's laughable.
Like, why would that help my kid?
But we all have that instinct.
I do too.
But if you know you're going to have that instinct, you're more prepared and you might.
And this is where I would tell parents: like, if you thought of it like a new language, you would never expect yourself to learn Mandarin just because you wanted to learn Mandarin.
You like, frankly, I don't know, you'd probably just download Duolingo.
I don't know.
And you'd be like, I'm going to practice as many days as I can.
If I miss my streak, it's okay.
I'm going to get back on.
And that's what I feel like good insight is.
It is a new language.
So what does that mean?
First, you have to learn how to regulate your own emotions.
You're probably telling yourself the story.
My kid's stealing trucks at age four.
They're going to be in jail by age 19.
I have a sociopath.
That is what you do as a parent.
The number of times you start thinking your kid's a sociopath when really they're just a good kid having a hard time is way too many to count.
But let's do that.
So what do I say to myself?
What is the mantra?
Where do I go?
Do I have a support group?
Do I have a friend to text?
Do I have a little chat bot that helps me these days and age, right?
That's what we have, right, too.
Okay, there's that.
Then I'm going to remember we're on the same team.
Then I'm going to remember a little of that sick joy, which is true there too.
Hold on a second.
If I know my kid sees things that they want and doesn't yet have the impulse control to not take them, if I can help my kid with that at age four,
do you know how much better that is than learning at age
14?
Absolutely.
Or 44.
Like then things get bad.
Yeah.
We all have an urge to take things that we want.
Right.
So you can actually, okay, this is a good thing.
Same team.
And then there's some, maybe I'm going to get curious.
Yeah, that would have been nice if my parents were curious.
Okay.
Then, and this is just a rule I have for any relationship.
Don't ask anybody a question you know the answer to.
Yeah.
It's not a question.
That's an accusation with a question mark.
Did you take anything from the cubby today?
You're just setting yourself up to be an adversary.
Say the truth.
I heard what happened.
This is a good line, right?
You're a good kid who made a bad decision.
That's okay.
You're not in trouble.
My job is to help understand and help you through it.
This actually happened with my kid, okay?
One of my kids, you know, he saw something he wanted.
And you know what?
A lot of us, when we see things we want, we wish it was ours.
And so We talked about it.
We did this.
And then we did a lot of other things.
I really do take coaching, I think, to the next level.
Like if you're, and I always go back to sports because I'm a sports person too, but if you are a basketball coach, you can sit down some kids and teach them how to make a layup.
But we all know you then actually have to get in the gym and like do it.
You can't just mentally learn it.
The body movements matter.
So one of the things I did with my son in this example is I was like, after, not all in the same day, we're going to play a game.
I'm going to have a truck and I'm going to put it somewhere and I'm going to walk away.
And I I want you to see it.
And let's practice this.
You're going to say to yourself, I really want that.
And then we're going to practice the thing we just talked about.
This stinks, but it's not mine.
Some like mini mantra, literally a tool.
And I'm going to actually practice that.
And then I'll, some kids are resistant, so I'll reverse it.
Okay, I'll be you.
Okay.
Oh, I want that truck.
Maybe if I take it, nobody will notice.
And then it'll be mine.
And then it'll just be my little truck.
And it's all going to be okay.
Wait, Becky,
I want it.
This stinks, but I can deal with it.
It's actually amazing when you give kids little mantras, little alternative behaviors.
And I know it sounds, I hear a pound's voice, I do, being like, that takes a lot of time.
Yeah.
I hear that, but in life, I think we either spend time preparing or reacting.
Oh, yeah.
And however you spend time naturally, you just don't account for it as time.
You know how much time it takes to be mad at your kid all day?
How much time it takes when you stay up at bed feeling so kind of ashamed of how the day went?
How much time, those things take time too.
I promise you, these little interventions can take 45 seconds.
Again, my son, we're not having some in-depth conversation.
It's just a thing and we move on.
And then they ask you, can I have a snack?
And then they literally always end with, can I have pretzels now?
And you're like, I guess they're saturated.
Regulate your own emotions.
Remember, you're on the same team.
It's good news when you see bad behavior when they're young because they're always younger than they are tomorrow.
And if you see it again as a feeling, feeling and urge gap with the skills, the answer becomes, I can be a coach, teach skills, practice skills here and there.
And then often what's amazing is not only does behavior change, it doesn't change from fear.
Because when behavior changes from fear, I'm just so scared of my parent.
That then leads to becoming a teen.
You know, when you're a teen, you don't care about the timeouts.
You don't care about your kids.
You don't care about your parents' stickers.
You're just not really having a relationship with them and you're hiding things from them yeah well said uh becky
you were very clear that there's no such thing as a perfect parent but you are a perfect coach and your advice and insight is this has been by far my favorite conversation on parenting and i've had such a great time learning from you today i've feel like i've had mind-blowing moments i've had affirmations on things that I already believed were true.
I've had clarifications.
I've had extensions of things that I thought I understood, but you've expanded my mind.
And I think everyone at home is listening and watching or on the road would feel the same way.
And so I hope everyone who's listening or watching, I hope you go and check out the app.
Good insight, check out the platform, go and grab a copy of the book, follow Becky online if you don't already.
Her Instagram and social media is full of great insights that are really simply and succinctly put for you to start making real change.
And at the same time, I really hope that you'll tag both of us and share the insights and the thoughts that have resonated with you today that you're putting into action, that you're trying out, and whether you got the reaction you wanted or not, but the win that you had of actually communicating effectively, of following some of these scripts and making them your own and putting them into your own language and words with your kids.
I really hope this helps you build the child and the life and the relationship that you're looking for with them.
And Becky, I'm just so grateful to you for having your time and energy to do this with me.
Thank you.
I had such a great time.
I had such a great time too.
I hope, you know, it's not too long till I see you again.
Yeah, you have to come back.
I have so much more I need to talk to you about.
we just spoke for two hours was it and i've and i could literally talk to you for another two hours but being mindful of time but i would love for you to come back uh because i feel like there's so much more for us to uncover i'm all in i'm so grateful thank you so much if you love this episode you'll love my interview with dr gabo mate on understanding your trauma and how to heal emotional wounds to start moving on from the past everything in nature grows only where it's vulnerable so a tree doesn't grow where it's hard and thick does it it grows where it's soft and green and vulnerable.
This episode of On Purpose is brought to you by Chase Sapphire Reserve.
I believe that travel is one of the greatest gifts that we've ever been given.
And Chase Sapphire Reserve has been my gateway to the world's most captivating destinations.
When I use my Chase Sapphire Reserve card, I get eight times the points on all the purchases I make through Chase Travel.
and even access to one-of-a-kind experiences, experiences like music festivals and sporting events.
And that's not even mentioning how the card gets me into the Sapphire Lounge by the club at select airports nationwide.
Travel is more rewarding with Chase Sapphire Reserve.
Trust me, discover more at chase.com forward slash Sapphire Reserve.
Cards issued by JP Morgan Chase Bank, NA.
Member FDIC, subject to credit approval, terms apply.
We talk a lot about alignment, mind, body, and spirit, but rest rest plays a big part in that too.
I've been thinking more about how I sleep and what I sleep on.
Avocado Green Mattress stood out to me because their mattresses are made with certified organic latex, cotton and wool.
No chemical flame retardants, no petroleum-based foams, just clean, breathable comfort.
Their best-selling avocado green mattress comes in firm, medium or plush, so you can find the feel that's right for you and wake up well.
Head to avocadogreenmattress.com today and check out their mattress and bedding sale.
Avocado, dream of better.
When we take care of our body, we make space to care for our mind.
Groons is a new daily habit designed to support both.
Each day starts with eight delicious gummies packed with over 20 vitamins and minerals, 6 grams of dietary fiber, prebiotics, greens and more.
It's a convenient comprehensive formula designed to support energy, immunity, and cognition.
Vegan, gluten-free, thoughtfully dosed.
Get up to 52% off your first order with code PURPOSE at checkout.
That's code purpose for up to 52% off your first order.
This is an iHeart podcast.