Episode 191: How to Deal with Friend Drama with Sheri Gazitt

In this episode of The Balanced Parent Podcast, we dive into the world of teen friendships with coach Sheri Gazitt, CEO and founder of Teen Wise. Together, we explore the nuances of friend conflicts that often arise in children's and teens' lives, shedding light on the emotional impact and practical strategies for resolution.

Here are the key topics we covered:

  • Dynamics of drama and cliques among school-aged girls

  • Skills for nurturing healthy relationships in young children

  • Engaging children in social and emotional learning without lecturing

  • Supporting children who feel excluded and rejected

  • Why parents feel the need to fix everything for their kids (and what to do instead)

  • Connecting your own experiences as a teen to your child’s situation in a helpful way

  • Impact of screen time and gadgets on teens' mental health

  • Social media and online interactions

  • Addressing exclusionary or mean behavior in your child

  • Incorporating parent-supported resources into school curricula

You can connect with Sheri Gazitt, through her website at teen-wise.com. For more parenting insights and resources, join The Parenting Lab on Facebook or follow Teen Wise on Instagram @teenwise.


TRANSCRIPT

Parenting is often lived in the extremes. It's either great joy or chaotic, overwhelmed. In one moment, you're nailing it and the next you're losing your cool. I want to help you find your way to the messy middle, to a place of balance. You see balance is a verb, not a state of being. It is a thing you do. Not a thing you are. It is an action, a process, a series of micro corrections that you make each and every day to keep yourself feeling centered. We are never truly balanced. We are engaged in the process of balancing.

Hello, I'm Dr. Laura Froyen and this is The Balanced Parent Podcast where overwhelmed, stressed out and disconnected parents go to find tools, mindset shifts and practices to help them stop yelling at the people they love and start connecting on a deeper level. All delivered with heaping doses of grace and compassion. Join me in conversations that will help you get clear on your goals and values and start showing up in your parenting, your relationships, your life with openhearted authenticity and balance. Let's go!

Laura: Hello everybody. This is Doctor Laura Froyen. And on this week's episode of The Balanced Parent Podcast, we are going to return to focus on teens, especially our teen girls and how we can help them have thriving healthy relationships with one another and navigates the some of the the drama that comes along with raising our girls and reflecting on our own teen years. So to help me with this conversation, I have coach Sheri Gazitt. She is a passionate advocate for young girls and teens. She wants to empower them to conquer girl drama and create healthy and fulfilling relationships. So she's an advocate for teen mental health and uh works in foundations is on the TV shows and radio appearances. And I'm really happy to have her here. So Sheri, why don't you tell us a little bit more about who you are and what you do and then we'll dive in and figure out how we can support these wonderful girls in our lives. 

Sheri: Yes. Thank you for having me. I am super passionate as you mentioned about what I'm doing and, and so I'll just tell you kind of a little bit about what I do and why I do it. So I have a company called Teen Wise. It was a long road to get here. I've been doing this about 15 years though and I've been in the psychology field for about 30 years and the area that I settled in on is a place where girls need a lot of support and that's friendship issues and peer to peer relationships. And what I noticed is there was a lot of things out there for when they got to crisis mode, when they got to clinical mode. And I'm like, hey, let's get to them before this because every girl needs help. Every girl needs support on interpersonal skills. And it's stuff that doesn't just affect them now, but for the rest of their lives. So I thought, hey, let's get in there and start working in this area so our girls can lift each other up and when they lift each other up, the world's a better place. 

Laura: Okay. So I feel like my, so I have two daughters, they're 11 and 9, and they go to a very small private school and there isn't a lot of drama right now at the school, I'm sure there will be. But when my oldest went to public school before the pandemic, there was already drama happening then and they were in first grade. And so I'm kind of curious about it, see, it feels like that's just the way that it is. Do you know what, what is going on for girls that there, that there is? I don't know, this undercurrent of snarkiness or clickings and that happens, is it a fair assessment to say that it happens more for girls and for guys or does it just look different and we talk about it differently culturally? You know, I just feel very curious about this phenomenon. 

Sheri: Yeah, it's a great and I work with schools in preschools around this, right? Not when we talk about drama. I want to, first of all say that there's a stigma we have around this, you know, we call it girls are just mean and I hear that so much as parents are trying to support their daughters and we don't want that message out there because girls aren't just mean. They're naturally nurturing it kind and compassionate. So this drama that we see really is girls knowing how important it is to have these close personal relationships. They just haven't learned the skills yet. So in preschool, you see them beginning to do the snarkiness as they're trying to protect this friendship over here. They're, they're, you know, snarky to protect the one over here and, and so it's very complicated. So as we're watching this unfold, we have to remember, they just don't have the skills to bring out that nurturing kind side of them. They're protecting these relationships in a way that's not necessarily healthy and, but they haven't learned yet. 

Laura: I really appreciate that reframe so much. I'm seeing that as lacking skills. Okay, so then what are the skills, lots of my listeners have younger kids. And so if we're hoping to have our kids navigate the teen years with front and chips, I'm guessing we start now, we start early and teaching them what are some of the skills that can help kids navigate some of those, you know, protecting their relationships and their friendships, nurturing healthy relationships with their peers and classmates. 

Sheri: So they have to understand what a healthy relationship is first, a healthy friendship. And by the way, this leads into healthy romantic relationships as well. Right? So they need to know like, what do they want out of a friendship? What are they getting from that friendship? How are they making that other person feel? So, what are they giving in the friendship? So they need to know that Gavin gets and then it's ok to have feelings of jealousy. Um that in and of itself is not bad. It's about what do you do with those feelings? Is it then that you try to talk badly about this other girl or that you um you know, get really possessive about your friend. So understanding the emotions that go into these friendships as well. But I think one of the keys, one of the biggest things that I like to teach girls is conflict conversations. They don't know how to have conflict and we, as females were wired for whatever reason. And society also gives us the pressure to not be in conflict with people. And so how do we do that nicely? And the teen girls that I work with, they think if they approach their friend and talk about a disagreement that they're going to lose that friendship or that they're being mean and it's really not like that. If you want a deep friendship that's connected, you've got to know how to say, hey, this is bothering me and let's find a solution together.

So it's really, you've got to come and tell this person. I appreciate you so much. I love having you as my friend. I feel really bad when you don't let me play with Annabelle or whoever it is. And you know, next time just let's have her in with us. Let's let her play with us. You know, it sounds very up level for little kids, but you can bring it down to their level and say, here's how you talk to your friend about that and do a role play at home and work through that. So she knows it's okay to disagree, but in a kind and compassionate way, So she can feel like she's got control and power in situations that otherwise may feel like she just has to go along with the flow. 

Laura: Yeah, I love that. You know, one thing that I'm thinking about too is that I'm, I'm guessing in modeling those interactions within your own family teaching them how to have collaborative problem solving conversations with siblings or even with your yourself as the parent. Those are also good ways to teach those skills. 

Sheri: Yeah. For us to use that method as a parent to say, hey, I love you so much. I'm feeling really frustrated that you haven't put your laundry away. 

Laura: Yeah, exactly.

Sheri: How can I support you so we can make sure this gets done every week. You know?

Laura: I love that.

Sheri: It’s made simple. 

Laura: Okay, so I feel like I can see a six year old being open to, you know, doing a little bit of, acting something out, practicing an interaction, you know, being open to more of those things. I, I'm guessing that as kids get older they're less and less open to. So those sorts of things. How do we do this? How do we teach these kids who maybe aren't as open or maybe who, you know, don't want to feel like they're being lectured at or? You know what I mean? 

Sheri: Yeah, for sure. Yeah. I always say it's about a conversation, not a lecture because they're going to tune you out, especially if you're the parents, right? And I have to say that's one reason why parents will bring their kids to me, to coach with me because they know they're at the age where, hey, they're not listening to me anymore. So they actually are listening. First of all, they may just not be accepting and saying thank you so much mom for giving me that information. There's a little part that is listening and taking it in, but lectures are not the answer. It's, you know, like we said, the role modeling, if you start doing that at home, they're going to start seeing how it feels to them and, and mimicking that behavior. The other thing is print something out, leave it on the table, just leave it there, you know, and have them look at it and they may say, what's this? They may take it in the room. You know, so it can be some indirect ways also. 

Laura: Okay. So I'm kind of curious about the, I feel like we've been talking a, a little bit from the perspective of the kid who is maybe being left out, being excluded. What are some way, some more ways that we can support a kiddo who's feeling like, you know, like they're being excluded. I, I guess I, I'm just trying to think about, you know, those kiddos who are maybe struggling and feeling that way, but don't necessarily express it outright to us, but we know something's off like what are some of the, the ways that we can get them talking about it without trying to go in and fix it for them. 

Sheri: Oh, I like that. One of the big things I talk about all the time is we don't have to fix it. And in fact, if you're trying to get your kids to open up to you, if you go in with the mindset of, I need to find a solution. I need to fix it. That's going to repel them. It's gonna, they're not gonna want to come and talk to you because they're like, oh my gosh, you know, mom's always trying to fix that and you know, a lot of times I just want to talk. So I think one of the things if our kids aren't opening up instead of thinking I need to go and I need to say, hey, what's wrong? I need to, you know, get the details so I can get in there and fix it. Think about connection instead if you think about I need to connect with my daughter, I know something's going on. I'm gonna take her to get boba or I'm gonna play a board game or take her for a walk or help her clean her room. There's gonna be conversations that come up more naturally that way than coming straight in and saying, how are you? I notice you're down doesn't mean those conversations should never be had. Sometimes you gotta just straight up, say that, but that's gonna work better if you have the kid who opens up all the time with the kid who kind of shuts down a little bit. It's all about connection, connection, connection. And if they are having a hard time connection is the antidote to loneliness. So that's gonna be very helpful. 

Laura: Good. And I think it's so important always to state, you know. So I think parents get bombarded with this idea of connection. It's, I really like the way that you were phrasing it here because it's so important that we, we don't use connection as a means to an end. But we understand that within connection, that conversation will flourish, right? That relationship flourishes and more will come out of it, you know, but the connection itself is the is the end in and of itself. 

Sheri: Yeah, and I want to say about that Laura, like as, as kids get older, our connection is often transactional. We've got to get them to practice. We need to make sure their homework is done, you know, we need to make sure their chores are done. So all, you know, our kid walks in, what homework do you have? Or they come out of their room for that one moment? And you're like, did you get your chores done? So we have to think about that connection is so important and then the to do list the transactional stuff is second. 

Laura: Oh, I really, really love that, too. And, and I, I mean, choosing our timing well and seeing our kids. I my my daughter who's 11 has started taking, very meticulous and special care and preparing her guinea pigs a nightly meal. You know guinea pigs?

Sheri: I love that. 

Laura: I mean, if you are thinking about getting guinea pigs, like we've heard that they were very easy pet, they're not easy. They eat a lot of vegetables, they eat more vegetables than my kids put together, you know. But, she's been really like meticulously and carefully taking care of preparing a delicious salad for her guinea pig. But she does it at like when we say like, okay, it's, you know, dinner is ready, come to the table. And so then we're all just like sitting there watching her for 10 minutes while she makes this salad and it is so hard for me not to like in the moment say like, I wish you had done this 10 minutes ago. I, you know, like this is something that needed to be done before we're all waiting for you. Versus like really seeing her, seeing the care and the love and the diligence that she's showing for her, her little being, you know, that she is, has responsibility for and I think it's important that we do that, that these kids feel seen and heard before they're corrected, you know?

Sheri: Yes, for sure. Yeah. 

Laura: You don't always do the best because, you know.

Sheri: Oh, we're none of us are perfect, right? 

Laura: I was kind of curious. I, I thought popped up as you were talking about this drive that we have for fixing. And of course, as may as women, we know what that's like to go to maybe our partner and have our partner try to fix our problems. And when, when we really just want to be seen and heard and yet with our kids, we do the same, we wanna get in there and fix. And I'm kind of curious, what do you think is driving that desire to fix to get it all working smoothly for our kids? 

Sheri: There is a, there's a lot of different reasons, but I think one of the reasons is we're uncomfortable when our kids are suffering in any way. So if we see our daughter crying, you know, sobbing, the girls were mean to me. They didn't sit with me at lunch or, you know, whatever it was that day. We're just like, oh my gosh, this is not okay. 

Laura: Those little jerks, I’m calling their mom.

Sheri: Exactly. We get in the mama bear mode. We get in the mama drama, you know, and we need to just stop and realize first of all the other girls are also learning and they're also, you know, have their own perspective and, yeah, we see them as little jerks sometimes but you know, their mom. 

Laura: But they’re not, they’re children.

Sheri: Yeah. Yeah, those moms of those, those kids are also dealing with what we're dealing with. So, but I think it comes down to not being comfortable with seeing our kids being uncomfortable and going through difficult things. So we want to push them through that suffering they're going through, we want to avoid it in the future. And our kids really feel that when they come to us and they want to vent and they want to talk about it. They're in the feeling conversation. When we go to the fix it conversation, there's a complete disconnect. We're out of attunement and they don't feel seen and heard even though that's what we think we're doing when we're going to fix it. This is what we're going to do next and they just don't feel seen and heard. 

Laura: They don't, you're so right. One thing that I always ask my kids when they come to me with something like that. I ask, okay, is this a time where you want me to just be listening? Is this a time where you want suggestions or is this something you want me to get involved with? 

Sheri: Absolutely.

Laura: You know, and most of the time they just want me to listen. So I've been asking them that since they started preschool when they would come home and talk about the little dramas. Oh, gosh, I was thinking too as you were just talking that our own experience in the teen years has to come in and impact us. Right? So one thing that I've noticed throughout my work with parents and my own growing up with my, alongside my kids is that as they reach new ages, kind of what I was going through at those ages resurfaces and there's this mirroring and reflecting that starts happening. And I'm, I'm guessing that also, you know, it's definitely present in the teen years for kiddos. I'm not there yet. But, I'm guessing it maybe even is more amplified because things can be, could have been really hard for us as teens. Do you see the parents teen experience coming back and impacting or hindering on their parenting in the moment with their, with their teens, their current teens?

Sheri: Yes, for sure because and like you said at all ages, right? Maybe something big happened to you in preschool or maybe it was in fifth grade. But what it does is it creates a filter in how we're interpreting what's going on with our own kids. So in the teen years or tween years, whatever years it is, right. Let's say they come and they tell you this girl at lunch said something mean to me. If you're bullied as a teen, you're going to see it through that filter and be thinking, you know, get triggered those emotions from your teen years again, like how dare someone bully my kid when you know one mean comment is not bullying, right? So the response that we have to that and how we guide our children is definitely seen through this filter of our own teen years if we haven't processed it and we haven't worked through it. So that's kind of the key and these things can sneak up on us. It can be something that like maybe your daughter is not invited to a birthday party and you don't even think about that time when you were 12 and you didn't get invited to the big birthday party. But all of a sudden you're up in arms, you want to call the other mom. You just can't believe this is happening. So we've got to check in with ourselves. What is it? Why am I more upset than my daughter is about these things? And we need to realize that when we're guiding and supporting our kids, we have to think about the whole picture the here and now our kids journey and make sure we're not parenting our own journey. We often are parenting ourselves. So we need to consider that. 

Laura: Oh Sheri, I really appreciate that. You know, I think that the um the be getting clear. So I just want, I'm highlighting what you're saying so that just to bring it out so that we are all really hearing this getting super clear on who owns the problem that's happening, right? So when something happens with your kids, not taking ownership of it, right? Not taking over it, allowing them to own it, allowing it to be their lived experience as you support along the side, right? Is that what you're saying? 

Sheri: Exactly. And you know, many times we step in, in the fix it mode and we're so proud of ourselves. We took care of that. We called the other mom. But the unintended message we're giving our kids is honey, you can't handle this. Let let mommy deal with this for you. And so it's very disempowering even though we're feeling good as parents. Hey, we, we did that. 

Laura: We protected our kid. 

Sheri: Exactly. We said to our kids, you just don't have the skills to deal with us. 

Laura: Oh, none of us want to convey that message. 

Sheri: No, no. 

Laura: Oh gosh. In the vein of, of things from her own childhood coming up and needing to process them when we notice that happening. Do you have any, any tips or guidance for parents for like what to do? And when they're noticing those, those echoes just as an example because I think they're helpful. My my youngest is in third grade and third grade was a really hard year for me. My best friend, I really only had one dear friend in early elementary school and she moved away that year. So I spent, you know, my third grade year, very lonely. And my, my daughter who's almost nine and in third grade is also experiencing a lot of loneliness. So there's lots of echoes and I'm kind of curious about, you know, how do we go about processing that and you know, I, I think it's easy to say that get that separation, you know, see it as your kids versus your stuff and those things are separate, but it's hard to have any like things you do to help parents get, get grounded in the present moment. 

Sheri: Absolutely. Yeah, when you know that that's coming up for you, like everybody has their own method, but one simple method is to journal about it, to write about it or just to think about it to take the time to go back into that space. What was it that you were going through? Just to kind of experience it again and then to release it in whatever way you can. But even more importantly, I think is to when you go back into that and feel it again, think about, oh what does my daughter need? What did I need? So you can use that experience as a way to help your parenting versus hinder it and, but to process it in your own time. A lot of times what parents will do is, oh, I went through this and then they tell their big long story and for the kids, it's like, well, this isn't about you. This is about me. You know, I got that from my own kids who are older now. 

Laura: Oh my gosh, yeah.

Sheri: But you were like, we're going to connect because we're and tell our story. 

Laura: There is an instinct to tell that story. 

Sheri: Absolutely. 

Laura: Yeah. 

Sheri: Yeah. And it doesn't mean to never tell it if we do. We just need to make sure it's at the right time. Not when they come and they voice it and we're like, oh, let me tell you about my experience. And when you tell it, try to make it kind of short, you know, to be like, I get it because this, you know, instead of a 30 minute thing and they're like, oh my gosh, she's not listening to me anymore. This is all about her. Yeah, it just really, it's, I, I had this one time when I lost a dear, loved one of mine and I, somebody asked me, how are you doing? And I said, and then they told me about this, somebody who distantly was related to them that passed away and that like 10 years ago. And I'm like, okay, and then all of a sudden I'm in the mode of comforting them. I'm like, oh, wow, that, that kind of wasn't what I needed. But, you know, and that person was loving and they did it out of kindness and it was just, you know, but we as parents do that sometimes.

Laura: I think we totally do. I feel like that's a really good, you know, lesson for us to take on that in an attempt to seem relatable or to let our kids know that we do know what it's going, you know, what they're going through what it feels like. That it's timing is important and it matters and that in this moment it's not really about us and that we can convey that understanding without having to tell our whole story. 

Sheri: Yeah. And usually what we, you know, we tell our story and then we say, but it's all going to be okay. I was, I'm fine now or whatever, which seems very dismissive when you're in the middle of it, right? 

Laura: Yeah, yeah. Okay. So you were asking me to think about what I needed in those moments, you know, so I was really lonely and I don't know that we think very much about young kids being lonely. I, I know that my, my youngest daughter has had waves of loneliness over the school year. Noticing that other girls seem to have like a best friend. She's a very popular child. Everyone wants to play with her but she feels lonely. She feels like she doesn't have like that one person who's clicked with her. I'm kind of curious. I, I think that that's pretty common even though we don't think about it because we see our kids out and playing, having lots of friends and yet that feeling of loneliness is still there. 

Sheri: Yeah. We think that if people are with people, if they're not alone, then they're not lonely. But it's really about that deeper connection, which a lot of kids are missing these days. And I saw a real, with the pandemic, you know, with the social isolation and with the kind of stunt in their social development, loneliness is at the forefront and I see it in the kids that I work with, they'll come in and they just, they don't feel great about their social life and I'll start asking them about their friendships and they've got some of them have, you know, a group of 15 girls, they're part of a big friend group. But when they start kind of trying to tell me how they feel, it takes them a while. But they get to, I just feel lonely and it comes down to not having relationships that feel like they can be vulnerable. They can truly be themselves, they can open up that they're, they're trusting these girls. So you can see in how someone who has a group of friends, but they don't feel really connected to any of them, how being with that group of friends makes them feel even more lonely. So when you're a little one, let's say third grade, you're on the playground, everybody's playing at recess, maybe you're even playing Foursquare or tag whatever they're playing these days. And, you know, they're, but they don't feel connected to anyone and they see these two talking over here and another two over on the other side and they just feel that lack of connection is really what that loneliness is. So we have to kind of teach our girls, especially after the pandemic. We have to teach them what it means to have a deeper friendship, to be vulnerable, to spend more time to reach out to people and to ask them to hang out, especially outside of school. And, they may have some rejection when they do that and that's ok too, but we can support them through that. 

Laura: And what does that look like? What does its supporting them look and sound like when they're feeling rejected or, or asking questions? Like, you know, why does no one want to play with me or why don't I have a best friend? 

Sheri: Yeah. Yeah. And this, we don't have answers to this, right? Our kids don't have the answers. We don't have the answers. We just have to support them as they continue to get out there to connect. So ask them what they're looking for in a friend, remind them that their friends are out there. They just haven't found them yet to remind them that they are likable and lovable. And oftentimes if they're going through these periods of loneliness just to listen like we're talking about before it makes them feel heard and seen. For girls usually not in elementary school, but as they get older, there's some girls who will go to school and not be like no one will talk to them the entire school day. Some of them, the teachers didn't even talk to them. So how invisible does that feel like you feel like you're walking through and nobody sees you. And so we, if we take the time to listen to our kids put distractions away our cell phone to the side, sit there and listen to them that does a world of good to help them feel a little less lonely. 

Laura: Okay. I, since you said the word cell phone too, I'm thinking about how this, how connected we are and how, like we're more connected than ever and we're lonelier than ever. Parents are lonely or kids are lonely for, for teens who are getting their, you know, I, I guess, I don't know what the average age for getting their first device is now. 

Sheri: It's younger, I'd say tweens,tweens. 

Laura: Yeah. I mean, so like the, like the, the small little bubble that I'm in, it's 12 or 13 is when kids are getting their first phones. But I know that it's younger in, outside of that little bubble because they go to a technology free school. But so how does, how do screen cell phones factor into this? 

Sheri: This factors into it from a very young age. It's not just if our kids have cell phones, it's if we have cell phones, like, if you go out and I'm not judging parents at all because I understand it. But if you go out and you look at parents with young kids like babies in their, their, strollers, you'll see a lot of parents on their phone. Whereas if you think, you know, 30 years ago the parent would be goo goo gaga shaking a toy, you know, holding her baby. And so even from a young age, the cell phones get in the way of connection and, you'll see it as they get older, they're on the ipads, at dinner instead of talking, you know, when they're out. And again I get it like, it's like, ok, they're not gonna be fussy. They're watching their favorite, cartoon. So we're kind of setting the stage as parents if we do allow that technology to become a disconnection between us and our kids. So when they do get their phones, how like all of a sudden we're going to say, no, don't get on your phone. Even though we've been role modeling that we got to really think about that. Now, on a different level, talking, peer to peer, what I see is it's a very interesting, same thing because they connect with each other more frequently. It tends to be as the day goes on, they actually connect on a more intimate, vulnerable level. But then when they get together, person to person, it's like that's a different conversation over there and now we're here, face to face. Very interesting seeing this happen. You'll see a lot of dating going on in the younger kids because they're having those nighttime conversations. That's when all of our biology is like, it's set for connection as they get later in the day. 

Laura: Interesting.

Sheri: So, yeah, that's why like pillow talk with, when you're trying to put your kids to bed and all of a sudden they want to open up. One reason. Right. Always take advantage of that. But, so what happens is they reveal a lot of stuff about themselves when they're chatting through Snapchat or through, you know, whatever method they're using. But then they get face to face and that's like a total disconnect sometimes from that. 

Laura: Interesting. How can we, I don't know, teach our kids then how complicated that is because that feels very complicated, you know, I mean, and how like, and how to navigate that. I mean, so gosh, to date myself, you know, no one had cell phones in my high school, you know, but we did, we had a similar phenomena happening with like AOL chat, you know, messengers, you know. And you know, no one was supporting me and figuring out like, you know, what do you share? How do you keep your, you know, that vulnerability? Like how do you forge that in person? You know, like all of those things is, is there a way for us to support our kids with that? 

Sheri: I think we just have to, first of all, going back to role modeling, right? Are we texting our, our family are we texting our friends, are we calling them? Are they seeing us on the phone? But also talking about energy and emotions and when we're in person, it feels very different than when we're on a device, right? And if your kids were on zoom or learning online during the pandemic, we can go back to that. How did that feel when you were in a classroom on Zoom versus a classroom in real person? So they can understand and that there is a bond when you see people in person and, and really encouraging that, that they reach out to people through facetime even is better than a text. And so you can see the person's face so you can feel their emotions a little bit, right? So just encouraging that actual in real life connection versus just online. 

Laura: Okay. And okay, so I, I feel kind of curious too. So I feel like we've talked a lot about kids who maybe are on the receiving end of, of disconnection or maybe not being treated well. What if we suspect our kid is the one who's doing the excluding or doing the maybe not so much, you know, not just not being nice, you know, doing the mean girl stuff, instigating the drama. 

Sheri: Yeah, this is the thing they need the exact same thing as the girl that's on the receiving end. There's something that is not connecting for them. They're probably feeling insecure in their friendships and relationships, they need skills. It's, again, that person who is, is displaying the mean behaviors, it's all about, they don't know how to get the connection that they need and want. And so we have to go in not like, how dare you be mean or? Oh, my gosh. I can't believe my daughter is doing this. I know I raised her better than this, which is all these thoughts that come up. Right? 

Laura: Of course. Yes.

Sheri: Yeah. Yeah, like how did this happen? You know that your kid is kind, you know that she wants to connect, you know, she wants to nurture and so you've got to talk to her about those things and support her and love her and listen to her just like you would if your daughter was on the receiving end and the hardest part of that is releasing judgment, not just about our kids but about ourselves because then all of a sudden if we're judging ourselves, we're going to be really harsh on our kids. 

Laura: So if we are afraid that we're being perceived in a certain way or we're thinking about the, the moms all talking bad about our kid and about us and what kind of mom we are. Oh, that's the mama drama. 

Sheri: The mama drama kicks in and you're back in your teenage mode. You don't want people talking about you, you don't want them talking about your kid. So you can actually start displaying some of these mean girl behaviors towards your own daughter but also towards other moms and you just get in your head you overthink. 

Laura: Okay. So it sounds to me like the remedy for in both instances is compassion, compassion for the self and compassion for your daughter. Seeing them as, as hurting in individuals who need support and love. You know, it's not too different from when our kids were toddlers and we because we know that if one kid is hitting, you know that a hitting kid is a hurting kid, right? So yeah, of course, you've got 10 to the kid who got hit and you also have to remember that the kid did. The hitting was also hurting and needed need support and guidance on not harshness and and judgment, right? It's so similar.

Sheri: So similar and oftentimes what will happen is if we find out our kid does something mean we're like, oh you're going to march over there and you're going to give them an apology. Is that appropriate? Probably so in some way, but not in that way. That's in a like shame and blame and judge mode. We're gonna be like, what did you really want to say to her or why did we get to that? What do you think you could say to her instead? And how, how do you want to do that? Do you want to write a letter? Should we go over and visit her? So collaborative, not like this punitive. You totally screwed up and now you're going to go apologize because then that creates, it's almost, it becomes part of her identity that she is a mean girl. And we don't want that either. 

Laura: No, we don't. We want them to think of themselves as good and worthy and lovable. Right? 

Sheri: Yes. For sure.

Laura: And imperfect kids make mistakes. All humans make mistakes. Okay. Oh, so I think, I think this has been a really helpful conversation. I'm curious about if, if folks have one of those kids who just are not in a place where they can have the conversation with their parents and they need more support. Who do they go? Obviously you do this but like it in their community is where do they go to? Like, where do we should parents go to find support for their kids? 

Sheri: Yeah. It really depends on what kind of support they need. If they are in a clinical mode, then it's probably more of a therapist. 

Laura: Okay.

Sheri: But I would say like I see a lot of kids, I have a master's in psychology, but I'm practicing as a coach. And so a lot of kids come to me after they've seen a therapist because they need specific skills around the social skills, understanding the dynamics of friendships and understanding how they're contributing to some of their friendship woes. Like, I do friendship analysis, for instance, if a kid's been excluded from a group and the next group and the next group, not, we're not blaming them, but we're like, hey, let's look, if there's anything you can change up, if there's something that's happening along the way. And oftentimes we'll find something that's relatively small that they can change and that's so empowering. So, to answer your question, I don't know exactly what resource I'm going to say. Of course, myself because I'm the friendship expert. And I think that that's important when you're looking for support, look that that person is going to give your daughter what she needs. And that takes a little bit of detective work to figure it out. But I would say the first thing, make sure that she's not depressed and that she's not, doesn't have extreme social anxiety. Those would be the first things to look at. And then, if she just needs the skills to make sure that she's got someone that is, um, expert in that. 

Laura: Okay. And are school counselors or school psychologists, like often good sources or good first places or,  are they sometimes embroiled in the drama themselves because they're in the system? 

Sheri: Oh, that's such a good question. And I am not going to make a blanket statement either way.

Laura: Of course not. I don't want to get you in trouble with any school counselors. We love all teachers in school. 

Sheri: Yes, exactly.

Laura: We know you're doing your best. 

Sheri: I’m going to say know you're a counselor because what you said is very true. That often they're embroiled, they can often make it worse if they don't know how to deal with it. Which is one reason I'm trying to get in the schools more to give the school counselors more help or.

Laura: More training. I’m sure.

Sheri: More training. Yeah, because it, girl dynamics, friendship dynamic dynamics are extremely difficult to understand and it's not just a matter of go in and doing one thing and fixing it. It's about a culture and I often get calls from schools like my whole sixth grade. I don't know what's going on with all the girls in this grade. Is there something that's off with the patterns between the girls in that grade? And so yeah, it's I would say if you have a relationship with a school counselor that may be a good place to start. But also going in to get some clarity from the teacher. The the things I say, if you're gonna go in and looking for support from the school, go in with no judgment because I know a lot of parents are like, how do you let this happen in the classroom? 

Laura: Yes, yes.

Sheri: Relational aggression, girl drama issues are very hard to detect and deal with. First of all, the second is you want to have compassion to understand the teacher or the counselor is dealing with these things all day long and they have lots of kids and then also seeking a solution because if you're going to the school and you're saying these girls pointing the fingers at everybody else are causing an issue, fix it. Or why did you let this happen? It's not going to become a collaborative process and they're gonna, they're gonna push back as most people do when they feel defensive. 

Laura: Of course, I think that makes so much sense. Are there resources that parents can support schools in bringing into their, into their curriculum too? I know that. So, like, as an example, my, again, my kids go to a, a little bit of a strange school but they have friendship class every Friday. 

Sheri: I love it.

Laura: Yes, so they are learning to be good friends with each other and when there's conflict, my, um they have, it's called a candle ceremony. And they, the kids who are having conflicts, sit down with the t, you know, with the teacher, they light a candle and they get support in having those conversations, you know. But are there other, like more, you know, not, I know, not everybody has the privilege of being able to be in a situation where there's a lot of mindful intention in that way and it's a very small school. So there's resources available. Are there, are there things we can bring to our teachers, you know, the teachers of our, our kids that we can bring into our school communities that can be more supportive. 

Sheri: Yeah, so.

Laura: Or any ways we can do that in our own homes. Like having a friendship circle, like, in our, like, anyway. Go ahead. Sorry. 

Sheri: Yeah. No. So, first of all I would say me, like, they can always reach out to me. I'm always happy to help support schools and parents and kids who are dealing with friendship issues. But I also know there's an organization called Beyond Differences. I was just reading about that. That is about a system within the school and I, I'm not an expert on it. I just heard about it and I'm like, oh, that sounds interesting. I need to look into that. So, and I think it's about, there's another one too. I can't remember the name of it, but the whole idea of these is that the school culture is what they're working on and teaching kids about inclusion and how, what that looks like. It doesn't mean everybody has to be friends, but it means that like, what does that look like if somebody is sitting alone, can you invite them in to sit with you or do you go sit with them various things. But it is definitely about the culture of kind of pushing back on the clicks and exclusion and how, what does that look like but empowering the kids rather than just making them feel bad about it, telling them what it looks like and how they can make a difference in their school? 

Laura: Oh, I love that. Thank you, Sherry. So will you tell everybody where they can find you and find the work that you're doing and reach out to you?

Sheri: Absolutely. So, my website is teen-wise.com. And even though it says teen, it's really for anybody who has girls, you know, of all ages. And if you go there, there's a girl drama webinar that I do. That is about the ways that we typically support our girls that have unintended consequences. So we want to look at those and be like, oh, we need to stay away from those. And then we talk about the ways we do want to support, which is kind of what we were talking about this whole time. I use the love framework. So L is for listen O is for offer advice, if they don't want it, they don't get it. V is for validate their emotions and then E is for empower. 

Laura: Oh beautiful. And you have a Facebook group too, right? 

Sheri: Yes, I do. And it's, it's and I think you'll put the link up for everybody. 

Laura: I will. Yes, I'll put it in the show notes.

Sheri: If you search The Parenting Lab. But it's actually called a group for Moms with daughters who have girl drama or friendship issues, so.

Laura: Okay. I will put the link in the show notes. 

Sheri: Thank you.

Laura: Of course. Well, thank you so much, Sheri and thank you for the support that you're giving to our global community of girls. I really appreciate it. 

Sheri: Yeah, they need it. 

Laura: They do.

Sheri: And like I said, at the beginning, if we can teach them to lift each other up, they become women who lift each other up and the world is just a much better place. 

Laura: Yes, so much. Thank you.

Sheri: Thank you.

Okay, so thanks for listening today. Remember to subscribe to the podcast and if it was helpful, leave me a review that really helps others find the podcast and join us in this really important work of creating a parenthood that we don't have to escape from and creating a childhood for our kids that they don't have to recover from. 

And if you're listening, grab a screenshot and tag me on Instagram so that I can give you a shout out um and definitely go follow me on Instagram. I'm @laurafroyenphd. That's where you can get behind the scenes. Look at what balanced, conscious parenting looks like in action with my family and plus I share a lot of other, really great resources there too. 

All right. That's it for me today. I hope that you keep taking really good care of your kids and your family and each other and most importantly of yourself. And just to remember, balance is a verb and you're already doing it. You've got this!

Episode 190: The Ins and Outs of an ADHD Diagnosis in Kids with Dr. Yael Rothman and Dr. Katia Fredriksen

On this week’s episode of The Balanced Parent Podcast, I am joined by two amazing pediatric neuropsychologists, licensed psychologists, and the author of the book Different Thinkers: ADHD, Dr. Katia Fredriksen and Dr. Yael Rothman. We will dive into ADHD, how it’s diagnosed in kids and how to get the right support for your family.

Here’s an overview of what we discussed:

  • Exploring the process of initiating conversations with children about the need for evaluations

  • Understanding ADHD, including its misconceptions, manifestations in childhood versus adulthood, and the diagnostic process

  • How to determine the appropriate age for considering ADHD evaluations in young children

  • How parents can navigate feedback from teachers or other adults about their child's development

  • Benefits of getting a child evaluated and possibly diagnosed with ADHD and access to services and supports

  • ADHD struggles at home and providing tailored support for children with ADHD

  • Screen usage in children with ADHD

  • Gender differences in ADHD presentation (and why girls are often missed!)

  • Choosing between child psychiatrists and family doctors/pediatricians for medication prescriptions for children

  • Is ADHD in children overdiagnosed?

If you enjoyed listening to Dr. Yael and Dr. Katia’s insights on ADHD in children, you can visit their website Neuropsych Moms, and follow them on Instagram @neuropsychmoms, Facebook @neuropsychmoms, and Twitter @neuropsychmoms.

Resources:


TRANSCRIPT

Parenting is often lived in the extremes. It's either great joy or chaotic, overwhelmed. In one moment, you're nailing it and the next you're losing your cool. I want to help you find your way to the messy middle, to a place of balance. You see balance is a verb, not a state of being. It is a thing you do. Not a thing you are. It is an action, a process, a series of micro corrections that you make each and every day to keep yourself feeling centered. We are never truly balanced. We are engaged in the process of balancing.

Hello, I'm Dr. Laura Froyen and this is The Balanced Parent Podcast where overwhelmed, stressed out and disconnected parents go to find tools, mindset shifts and practices to help them stop yelling at the people they love and start connecting on a deeper level. All delivered with heaping doses of grace and compassion. Join me in conversations that will help you get clear on your goals and values and start showing up in your parenting, your relationships, your life with openhearted authenticity and balance. Let's go!

Laura: Hello everybody, on this week's episode of the Balanced Parent podcast, we are going to be talking about ADHD how it's diagnosed in kids and how to get your child the support that they actually need, that's gonna benefit them and help them be successful and have a really fun life moving forward. So, to help me with this conversation, I have Doctor Katia Fredriksen and Doctor Yael Rothman. They are two amazing neuropsychologists and they're gonna help us learn all about this. So, Doctor Katia, Doctor Yael, welcome to the show. I'm so happy to have you. Why don't Doctor Katia, why don't you go first and tell us a little bit more about who you are and what you do and then we'll, we'll go to Yael. 

Dr. Katia: Absolutely. So, well, I can sort of do a little bit for both of us because we both work at the same group practice in Maryland. It's called The Stixrud Group, it's in Silver Spring in Maryland. And so we're both pediatric neuropsychologists, which means that we are, we are trained in clinical psychology. We are licensed psychologists and we have a specialty with, specialized postdoctoral training in neuropsychology and in particular for us with the pediatric population, which is sort of anything childhood through early twenties. Really. So sometimes when we have young adults come in, I'm like, yep, sorry, you're still pediatric. Even if it's probably not something a college student wants to hear. Right? But yeah, so, and so what it means to be a neuropsychologist is that we are, when we're speaking with younger kids, we'll sort of say we're thinking doctors, right? So we sort of help kids and families figure out how the kids brain works, what comes down to them, what are natural, sort of areas of strength, what things might be more difficult, whether that implies anything diagnostically and regardless of whether it does or not, what would be helpful at home, at school, et cetera, just as you sort of said in the beginning of your introduction to help make their lives as happy and productive and, you know, meeting their goals, right? And so in order to do that, we administer a battery of all different kinds of tests and activities to sort of see, you look at, we look at cognitive skills, language, fine motor attention, executive functioning, academics, socio, emotional functioning. 

Okay. And so we're looking, we're wondering about things like, you know, always based on, of course what the parents or teachers or whoever brings up the concern, whatever the concern is that informs our referral question, but we're also just casting a broader net so that we can a come away saying, hey, little Billy is really good at XYZ. We want to come away, speaking about strengths as well as areas of concern and we want to cast a broad net so that we are sure we can catch anything that's underlying and subtle that people may not be aware of. So we're looking at things like ADHD learning disorders, autism, executive function difficulties, psychological anxiety, sort of vulnerabilities, those sorts of things. 

Laura: Thank you. 

Dr. Katia: Yeah, sure. Sorry, I went on a bit there but.

Laura: You’re great. No, you’re so good.

Dr. Katia: This is what we do. Okay, good. 

Laura: I feel like.

Dr. Katia:  I think that like for both of us. Yeah. 

Laura: Yeah. But do you want to tell me a little bit Yael about your background at all or kind of what you, what drew you to this field, what you're interested in and why we're talking about ADHD specifically today? 

Dr. Yael: Oh, sure, sure. I became, I, I think I've always been, I grew up with a family of medical doctors, a lot of medical doctors in my family. And I've always been interested in physical and mental health. As I went to college, I pursued a degree in biological psychology and thought I was going to medical school and then took a course on neuropsych and I had never heard of this profession before and I thought it was so fascinating. I remember hearing about the case studies that and studying the brain behavior relationships and I just really felt passionate for it. So I went on to do some research with children with different developmental differences, like epilepsy or like autism and then medical differences like epilepsy and continued to grad school and it was just I, I really love getting the chance to get to know a child so much more than other medical providers really do. We get to be with the child for seven hours? 

Laura: Yeah. My.

Dr. Yael: Interview. 

Laura:  Oh, I was just going to say my 11 year old went through the neuropsych process over the this past summer. So almost a year ago now we started in it. So I definitely sat in a neuropsychologists office for those seven hours. She had two days. She's on the autism spectrum. We had a wonderful experience with our evaluator. She loved the process, loved the tests. And so I guess maybe this, that's a good place to, to start because I've gotten a lot of questions since. So my daughter has, is very open about her diagnosis. She really wants me to talk about it because she thinks it'll make it easier for other kids to talk about it and easier for other, you know, parents to get support if they need it. So when I started talking about it, I got a lot of emails from people asking me how we explained what was going to happen to our daughter, why we were doing it and how we handled it in a way that made it ended up making it very positive for her. And I felt like you guys were the perfect people to start that conversation with. So I, I'm kind of thinking about the parents who are, you know, maybe their bells are starting to ring that maybe an eval is, is necessary. Maybe they've gotten that feedback from teachers or other adults in their child's lives. So how does that conversation start going with the kiddos when you decided, you know, to call, get on the waitlist because they can be long. We were lucky. And, and start having that process get started for your kiddos. Do you have any tips for parents?

Dr. Yael: Of how the parents can tell their children about? 

Laura: Yeah. Yeah. Yes. Yeah. 

Dr. Yael: I, I think that, it can, the conversation can often go in a positive direction when you use the child's words. I like to direct parents. Like, what has your child noticed and that they're frustrated with, oh, you know how math has been like a little harder lately, we found someone who's going to look at ways to make school a little bit easier for you and, or you know how you've been saying how you feel really frustrated that, kids aren't playing the same games you want to play all the time or you know how you've said XYZ. And I like to really pull in and that's why we found doctor. So, and so, and they're going to see how you think and learn best and then we'll figure out ways to make this situation easier and more positive for you. So I like that to pull in their words. I like to say that we are not medical doctors that give shots or take your temperature and things like that. So children know they're not walking into a lab, kind of, you know, a doctor's office, it's more of a thinking doctor. You're going to do different activities that maybe you've never seen before, like puzzles and draw some pictures and answer some questions. So, but Katia, do you want to add to that a little bit? 

Dr. Katia: I think that's great. I mean, the only thing I would add is that it's, it's a useful vehicle when the child is already participating in or has previously participated in either therapy or ot or speech because then you can say, oh, you know, when you go and see Miss Jen, it's gonna be kind of like that. So it just normalizes the whole process. And I like how you said activities. Yeah. I, I, I like to use the word activities. I don't know, I feel like testing just sounds kind of threatening. And, you know, I'm in need of anxiety provoking. And so I tend to say activities, although it does sometimes backfire because sometimes at the end a six year old will be like, well, those didn't seem like games to me. And you're like, oh, I'm sorry.

Dr. Yael: I, I try not to use the word game. 

Dr. Katia: You can play games, say activities. 

Laura: That's interesting.

Dr. Katia: That these are not games. 

Laura: My 11 year old had a lot of fun. She thought they were games. So I can understand why maybe a six year old wouldn't. 

Dr. Katia: Well, a lot of kids do, a lot of kids really do. I mean, especially kids who are comfortable with adults and who are sort of curious and interested in things that are new or might be a little challenging or, yeah, I mean, really kids will and some, and sadly, I mean, some of the kids who don't particularly like school very much, you know, obviously that's not a good thing, but it does make them happier to come and see us because they're quite excited about getting a little break from the school day. 

Dr. Yael: So I would also tell parents, if there are any concerns about their child's engagement or anxiety about kids meeting someone new, you could, I would recommend talking to the professional about that and sometimes in some occasions we schedule another day just to meet and say, hey, and here's who I am and this is my office and here's my shelf and here's a book that we might be looking at together if you really think, that there's any concerns there, please tell the professional and they can come up with a nice plan too. 

Laura: That's lovely. Thank you. Okay, so let's hone in a little bit on, on ADHD. Can you tell me a little bit like I, so I feel like there's ADHD is having a moment, right? It's very big and out there and I feel like there's maybe some misconceptions about what ADHD is, how it shows up in childhood. And so can you talk to us just start off from the very beginning of, you know, what is ADHD? How is it diagnosed? Maybe? How does it look different in kids versus all of the adult stuff that we're seeing on TikTok these days? Can we dive in there? I saw, I saw a smile on Katia's face when I talk to TikTok.

Dr. Katia: Oh my gosh. Yeah, I know that there's such a,  I mean, there's such a wide variety of material there that is often questionable. Yeah. So, not always but, but often, so, ADHD and I'll, as you said, I'll start at the beginning. ADHD stands for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. There are various, there are lots of different ways that this can look. Right? So you've heard the old, you know, if you've met one person with X, you've met one person with X. Well, this applies to ADHD  as well, right? It looks very different in different people based on gender, age, just individual characteristics. But so the broad strokes are, there are three sorts of things that you as a clinician are looking for as you consider this as a potential diagnosis. One is that the person in question has difficulty focusing and sustaining attention, particularly when they are being required to attend to things that are not interesting to them that are either hard or perceived as boring, stressful, et cetera. 

In case, so that's one piece you're looking for. You're looking for difficulty inhibiting impulses that could be observed in the person's behavior. So this is the kid who's always cutting line or, you know, that sort of thing or it could be observed in their approach to tasks. So they're always rushing through their work and wanting to be the first to finish. So it can look different in different people. And the last thing you're looking for is difficulty regulating their sort of their activity level, their motoric restlessness fidgeting, sort of always on the go that sort of difficulty sitting still. So you're looking for some combination of those three things. And, and it's gonna look different in different people and there are different subtypes of ADHD that can encapsulate those distinctions. So there is the pre predominantly inattentive presentation which refers to the kids who are more of the inattentive destructible daydreaming zoned out kind of presentation. There is the predominantly hyperactive impulsive presentation which, yeah, and I was saying we've never actually, I, at least I, I've never actually diagnosed because it, it tends to you at once. Okay? Because it, it's like it tends to be accompanied by the attention piece as well. And then there's the combined presentation which is all of the above, right? And so there are specific diagnostic criteria that you that you look at and there are certain numbers of traits that you need to see. 

And you need to see them in more than one place, right? So if we have a kid who is looking quite sort of fidgety and inattentive at school, we need to also be hearing concerns about those sorts of characteristics, either at home or at soccer practice or at religious service or while they're sitting with us in the office. Because if you're just seeing it in one setting, that could be something related to the setting more so than the actual individual child. So just to do due diligence and the the diagnostic criteria require you to see the traits in different settings and also they require you to see the traits be sufficiently significant that they're impacting the person's life. Right? So, there is this, everybody, sort of, you know, a lot of people say, oh, I'm so ADHD  this, I'm so sort of like, oh, man, I real ADHD moment the other day and it's like, well, that's, oh, well, and good. And certainly I, you know, empathize with your experience but it's not necessarily ADHD the, you know, quote unquote proper diagnosed ADHD. 

Laura: A meeting the criteria, right? These are, these are human traits, these are just human traits. You have extra choices. Yeah.

Dr. Katia: Exactly. On a spectrum. And so it needs to sort of surpass the level of, you know, typical day to day experience for people where it's actually having a significant impact on the person's functioning. And so, you know, you had asked about sort of how it looks different at different stages. And so you, we know that ADHD is associated with the frontal, the development of the frontal lobe of the brain, which is developing well through our sort of mid twenties, late twenties, I feel like each time they look at it it's longer. And so, yeah. Right. And so, as those areas of the brain develop, we, you know, we hope and expect to see associated menstruation when it comes to those ADHD  traits. So, of course, again, as we've been saying, everybody's different and you can't really take out your crystal and prognosticate. But that being said, I mean, often what you continue to see in adulthood is more of the higher order executive functioning, vulnerability, sort of the inattentive, forgetful, disorganized. The piles of papers, the missed appointment, the late for lunch with friends, that sort of stuff. And again, I'm just, I'm speaking in generalities, but this is what you, you may often see lingering into adulthood. 

Laura: Okay. I, I have a question on the age thing. So I, a lot of what we think of with ADHD  when kids are young is pretty developmentally normal, right? Not being able to maintain focus trouble with impulse control. So can young kids? I be diagnosed with ADHD like at what age should we start we think, like start thinking about moving into an evaluation pro pro process because I think that lots of people get their, you know, their, the ping in their brain and gets on their radar at quite a young age, probably too young. What do you think? 

Dr. Yael: So, giving a diagnosis can happen even at very young ages. But you would see pretty extreme behaviors. If you're thinking about like a preschool student to get a diagnosis, it can happen. I've never given a diagnosis to a preschool student before, but I do know of people who have and it was because of extreme behaviors that were happening. However, keeping an eye on behaviors, if you're hearing from the preschool teacher about things that make, behavior more complicated in the classroom. If you're seeing things that make life very challenging at home. If your child is complaining about certain things, I would bring it up to people. Maybe you're a pediatrician and, and talk about it a little bit. The answer is often to monitor, and maybe put in place some supports to make life a little bit easier.

 Oh, here's some, structured plan that could be helpful. A routine at home if you think that could be helpful for your child. But an, an evaluation may not be the first thing that people would recommend at that time. But I, I think both Katia and I really believe that if you have worries, ask, I, I think you don't have to keep those asking people asking the teacher. Hey, I see this at home. Do you ever see this in your classroom? And having a conversation about that or asking the doctor and then, and, and kind of writing it down? Katia always has a beautiful thing that she says, think about it in like four, put a note on your calendar, four months. Did this behavior go away that I was worried about or has it changed something? So to remind you because in the moment, it's hard to see what's been going on in the moment. All I see is how frustrating this behavior might be but is this just today or is this something that I see every day?

Dr. Katia: Right. Is this a phase? Right?

Dr. Yael: Yes. Yeah. And that is why most professionals I would say do diagnose a little bit later. There is not as many diagnosis in early childhood because behavior is so variable. I don't know if anyone listening or if you have observed a preschool classroom, it's going to be totally different from one child to the next.

Laura: And one day to the next.

Dr. Yael: Like one day to the next, the kids in the classroom range from 3 to 4 and that development is so different. I love watching my own child and seeing that and, and experiencing that. So I a lot of it is kind of monitoring and then supporting what's going on but asking for help or questions to be answered for sure. And some people call us just to do a consultation just to ask a question or two, which I think many professionals would be open to as well, but Katia would, you want to add to that at all? 

Dr. Katia: Well, I'm just, well, I think that's that's a really thorough answer. I mean, the only thing I wanna add is just, I think sometimes and I'm and I've been guilty of this as apparent. I think sometimes we are afraid to ask the question because we're afraid of what the answer might be. Right? So we have a worry and it's almost, there's this magical thinking, well, if I don't ask about it, maybe it'll just go away and nobody else will notice it and it's not a real thing. Right? And, I can completely understand that. I think we've all been there at one point or another. Just again, like, yeah, I was saying, give it, give it some time. But if it's still there, I mean, it's really worth following up on because the more you wait and see and wait and see and wait and see. You know, you may miss out on some some windows when it would have been really useful to put intervention or support of some sort in place. So I would just, you know, try to ask the question. 

Laura: I really love that. I love this very specific recommendation to you of putting a note in your calendar four months ahead to kind of check back in. I really love using our modern, I think our modern tools and technology can sometimes take things away from us in our parenting. But this is a time where it can really add to us, you know, add be a benefit for us. I, I really love that suggestion. I love that kind of wait and see, but with intention and consciousness approach, as opposed to just kind of waiting and seeing and ignoring, I think it's hard for parents when they're getting feedback from an adult or their you know, in their child's life, like a teacher or they're seeing things, I think it's really hard for the average parent to piece out. Okay. So what is typical, developmentally appropriate stuff? And what is extra, what is more than what's developmentally appropriate? And I feel like there's not a lot of confidence in like, okay, so when do we actually need to make that decision to go and get support? Do you have any tips for parents who are in that place? 

Dr. Katia: Well, I mean, I think so, I tend to say, well, a speaking to the teacher, right? Because the teacher has, is in the exact perfect position to compare the child to children of their same age, not just in that classroom, but in the years of previous classrooms the teacher has had, right. So I think the teacher is a wonderful resource. Excuse me. And I would also, I mean, I would go to the pediatrician because,, you can just set up a consult check in with the pediatrician. Say, hey, these are my concerns and they'll give you a standardized questionnaire to fill out and then they can score that questionnaire. And again, it will compare the way you rate your child at that age to the way other parents rate their child at that age. And so that'll give you an idea of, of whether something is quote unquote nor normal or not. 

Dr. Yael: And, and we talk a lot about how parents really know their child the best out of anyone. Right? So, trust your, trust yourself and, and ask for help if you really feel like something is not quite right. And if a professional tells you, hey, actually that's a behavior that we commonly see in development. What, how awesome that you sought out that and got that answer. And that's great. And that's still really good to find out. It is really hard to piece apart, especially in early development. What is developmentally, typical and what isn't because they overlap completely a lot of behaviors in developmental diagnoses like autism ADHD, do have very typical beginnings. We expect children to have repetitive motor mannerisms as toddlers like that is something that is commonly seen in little ones. But as you get older, you don't see that. Right? So these are rooted in typical behaviors that become atypical as time goes on. 

Laura: Yes. Yeah. Like my, my 11 year old when she was around four, she became obsessed with dragons and she was a dragon most of the time from 4 to 6 and that was fine from 4 to 6. And then she continued to be a dragon through seven and eight and then it started causing social problems, you know, and those are things that, you know, like something that started out, you know, very, very developmentally typical, you know, and her special interests have moved on past dragons now she's got Taylor Swift going. Which again is, you know, not a problem for her. She's, you know, like, but the, I, I see what you're saying that those things can, you just have to keep an eye on them?

Can I ask you? So kind of on the flip side there, a lot of parents feel worried about getting a label or a diagnosis for their kid. They feel worried about getting their kid pigeon holed in a certain way. They feel worried about some kind of stigma. And I'm curious about what you would have to say around what are some of the benefits for getting your kid evaluated and possibly diagnosed? Especially when we're talking about ADHD. What does it give access to for your child? What kind of support does it allow parents and their teachers to, to give to a child? What are, what are the benefits? 

Dr. Yael: Yeah, so I would first step back and as a parent try to figure out where the worry is coming from from you. So a lot of times parents come to us with a worry that if I give a label to my child, it will make them feel less than or lack self-confidence, feel different. Unfortunately, what happens is mo so first of all children are more self aware than we give them credit for. 

Laura: Yes.

Dr. Yael: So I think everyone should be thinking about that, that kids, if you think something's not going quite right. The child knows that something is not going quite right. But when we don't have a word or understanding of why something isn't working out for us, we often will go to a negative self attribution. And so a child could be, oh. kids don't want to play with me. I must be stupid. I must be weird. I must be a problem. I can't do math the same way that my classmates can. I must not, I'm never going to know anything. I so something negative go into their head. So instead we could give them this, this idea, this profile. Hey, actually you're a really bright kid who knows so many things and this is one thing that's a little harder for you, but we know how to help you. So that would change. It's not, instead of giving them the poor self esteem, it would actually increase your self esteem, make you a better advocate for yourself. Help connect you to other people and understand how your brain works and thinks best. So if that's where the worry is coming from instead, it would actually be a more positive label than the one that they probably are thinking about themselves in those moments when they have no understanding. 

Laura: Gosh, yeah.

Dr. Yael: Another worry. I’m sorry, yeah.

Laura: I just really love. 

Dr. Yael: I’m sorry, yeah.

Laura: No, no, I just really love that reframe. I think our kids are going to make sense of what's happening to them in the world around them and having having that as something that helps them make sense of it. Having it kind of an informed perspective to come from is really beautiful. So thank you for sharing that. 

Dr. Yael: Definitely. And, and all of these worries are so understandable. I mean, and expected, I mean, these are your children, you want to protect them and, and support them. Sometimes parents also might have worries from when they had uh a diagnosis as a child, which does happen a lot. We know these are genetic components, there are genetic components in these diagnoses, but we've come a long way, the stigma has reduced over time. We understand how our brains work better. We understand interventions and supports better. So their experience might be, I am expecting will be quite different than their child's experience will be with this diagnosis. So that's another thing. So what are the benefits for a child to hear about their diagnosis are just what I mentioned before? It's to empower them.

We want children to understand. Here's how I think and learn best and then be able over their lifetime to advocate for those needs. Hey, I do really well when I get to sit in the front row, is that okay? Is that where I can be today or I really am gonna need to write this down or take a picture of the board if I need to remember what we're gonna talk about today. So I, I'm gonna need that accommodation and it, it, it helps them as they move through life to become their best self advocates and, and and feel empowered and learn about the gifts that come the diagnosis as well and we can talk about those in a little bit, but it's not all challenges when you're a different thinker. It also is some beautiful gifts that can be attributed to the diagnosis as well. 

Laura: I would love to hear what some of those are?

Dr. Yael: Sure. Should I keep going or Katia do you want to take? 

Dr. Katia: I'll jump in and you can take a breath. Sorry.

Dr. Yael: No, I, I know I can go on. We both know. 

Dr. Katia: I know. Me too. Oh my God. We, we like we are boxes man. 

Laura: It's so fun to hear it. People geek out on a topic that they love. So it's good. 

Dr. Katia: Oh, yeah, totally. Oh my gosh. Geeking. Them here. Yes. Well, drinks. Yes. But there was one other thing you had asked about. I don't know if you want to continue with strengths or, or go back to that, but you asked about like access to services and I think that sort of benefit that is confirmed diagnosis. Which direction do you want to go in? 

Laura: Let's go with the, the access to services and supports and then we'll go into, you know, into.

Dr. Katia: Okay. Well, so that's a secondary piece. So the first there's the I mean, there's the child's just personal insight and understanding and sense of self worth. And, and, and, and the parents, insight and understanding, right? And, and I think it's so important for many parents is this idea of distinguishing between what a child is not yet developmentally ready to do versus something the child is choosing not to do in order to be aggravating to the parent, right? So we refer to it as the the can't do versus the won't do, right? And so an aspect of it's very helpful with diagnosis is helping parents under it really sort of helps parents understand. Oh, wow. There are certain things that you know, my kid may just not be ready for it yet. I may need to sort of modify this demand, put more sort of structure scaffolding in place, et cetera. And that will create a less frustrating experience for everyone in the house, right? So, so for the the children and the parents knowledge and benefit, but then also as regards services at school, for example. So it's, I mean, you know, it really varies from school to school. Whether they're independent, whether they're public, whether they're in this district or that, I mean, it doesn't matter, it just varies from school to school. There's no hard and firm rule. But so some schools will offer accommodations informally. 

So we come across that a lot in the course of our work where parents will come in and say that the kid is already receiving some sort of accommodations like preferential seating or access to headphones or whatever it is something. But nothing has been formally documented. And so in some cases that may be adequate in other cases, it may not be. And again, it's a very case by case sort of situation. But so in general, though the idea is that in order to trigger essentially the special education laws, your child needs to have a formal diagnosis and you use that as a platform or the evaluator or whoever pediatrician or whoever clinician uses that as a platform to request specific interventions or supports accommodations for the child at school. And so, you know, you alluded to the IEP. So there's the 504, which is the accommodation plan, which means that the academic instruction, the curriculum things are being delivered. It's the same content. 

But there may be a difference in the method of delivery or the way the child is treated or in, in other words, where they can sit and you know, they can have the fidget or they can have extra time, those sorts of things, it's the same content. And or there is the heavier duty IEP which refers to when a child is being given a direct service of some sort or another at school. So it's you know, some sort of pull out for learning support or portion for learning support for speech, for ot for counseling, whatever it is. Okay. Or, or there could be, you know, obviously you can, well, obviously, but you can also access these sorts of plans via medical disability. So there may be some physical sort of gross motor or maybe something else that the child can support with that will also access you those sorts of plans. But so that's the other another reason why it's useful when there is a diagnosis to call it what it is and to spell it out because then you can you, you, the child has certain legal rights based on that diagnosis. 

Laura: Yeah. And so I, I feel curious, I, I guess I do want to talk about kind of the positive attributes of ADHD the gifts that, that come along with the diagnosis. But I feel curious about and something that parents who have a kid with an ADHD  diagnosis struggle with is what does that actually mean for their kids functioning and how to make accommodations, how to shift things? And I know that they will, you know, every everybody, you know, like you said their ADHD is very individual. And very, you know, the approach needs to be tailored to the kiddo that has, has the ADHD but what are some of the general things that kids might struggle with, let's say, let's just keep it, you know, let's let school be school, let's just keep it at home. How my, my ADHD struggles show up at home and what are some of the things that parents can be thinking about at home to support their kids? 

Dr. Katia: You wanna do struggles? Yeah. And I'll do interventions or vice versa. 

Dr. Yael: I, I was thinking yeah, we, we can keep adding to each other. I was thinking about how these can, again, they'll look different from one person to the next. Let's say it's about following directions and that's really hard to keep all of these directions in mind. One thing that we often preach is about making things more visual, writing things down having routines and structure at home in the written form. I've had fun conversations with families about how a young child spends 30 minutes in the shower, but never uses soap, right? They're just playing in the shower and enjoying it and daydreaming and feeling the water on them and then they put a laminated schedule in the shower that says first you wash your hair, then you wash your whatever it is. A whole list of parts that are going to be washed and that child had more independence there instead of the parent opening the door and yelling. Did you wash your hair yet? Did you do this yet? Did you do that yet? It now was a checklist that was, there for the child to get to know and, and, gradually get comfortable with. Katia, I realize I'm saying an intervention as well. Sorry. 

Dr. Katia: Oh, my goodness. Speaking of following instructions. 

Dr. Yael: It's true. I'll need that support.

Dr. Katia: Speaking a following instructions.

Dr. Yael: But structure and routines and visual schedules are great for all kids. A lot of kids do really well with these and can be really nice interventions for children who are struggling with you repeating yourself over and over again at home about following an instruction making this like the morning routine as well. You can print it out in the mirror and again, this gives the young person more independence. So it's not the parent constantly reminding they can go through it eventually on their own. And you can do this with everything. Packing the bag can have a little visual schedule,making a lunch can have a little routine for that and that can be a really nice piece there.

Dr. Katia: Right. Because it increases independence, which in turn increases self confidence and also is increases the parents or decreases the parents blood pressure, I guess. So it's positive all around. Yeah. And we also so there are various sorts of, you know, we often talk to parents about strategies to use at home. And so that's a big one is the visuals. We talk to parents about health behaviors about sort of maximizing sleep. We talk about sort of what the National Sleep Foundation and these sorts of places there are set. Well, a range of sort of hours recommended for each age range. So that, and, you know, obviously they're gonna be outliers, but just it gives you an gross idea of, you know, elementary school age children, 9 to 11 hours nightly are recommended. So, so it gives you sort of a gross idea of. 

Okay, so, if we have, you know, if I want bedtime, so Jimmy has to get up for school at 6:30 or whatever. So I want bedtime to be 8:30 maybe. So then I can count back and figure out, well, I have to start the routine at this time and we have to eat dinner at this time, you know, and so you can sort of work that out. And so we, we really encourage uh the sleep is a huge component for so many things ADHD  included. And so tough these days with the screens and the phones and all of this business. So we talk a lot with parents about sleep hygiene about getting just the basic common sense stuff, getting some sort of regular physical activity. Common sense, nutrition and hydration. So those sorts of things are very important as well. For, you know, things that parents can work on at home. 

Laura: Can you talk to me for a second about screen usage? And kiddos with ADHD  are kiddo, like I feel like there is this kind of sense out there that kiddos who have ADHD are more drawn to screens. And I'm kind of curious about that. Do you know any of the like the research or data to support that or why that might be? 

Dr. Yael: So one of the things that can be a, a gift along with ADHD  and also can be a complication is a tendency to hyper focus on areas of interest. Which is really fascinating because you, you don't think about that in ADHD. You think more of the attention deficit versus the attention hyper focus and screens are a very common one in the population. I do think there was some research showing that there was a higher use of screens in ADHD . However, it's probably coming from a lot of different reasons. Some being family life, like we parents who might be dealing with a child who needs more attention for their hyperactivity and impulsivity might need those moments to get things done and, and have that screen time. So it, it might be for some uh family systems to get by. It, I, I think that it can also be, you know, just a very strong area of interest for most children right now, a social peace as well that goes along in, in it here too. When we get concerned, I think about the use of screens is really when it's getting in the way of other activities being completed. 

So, we don't say I, I don't think I've ever said like you have to remove every screen. I've never given that recommendation. It can often even be a soothing technique for some that I have quiet time at the end of my day. But if you, your child is using the screen so much that they're not able to do other activities, they're missing out on different activities. That's something to now reassess and understand and to make sure it's not impacting sleep. We know that we would recommend just as Katia was saying before about sleep hygiene that screens not be used before bedtime because it can actually activate us instead of get us tired. So are probably the, the main things we think about with screens unless you wanted to add anything to that, Katia. 

Dr. Katia: No. And I mean, we often talk to families you know, when kids are a bit older and have their own phones or ipads or whatever, we, we tend to recommend that those not be in the bedroom at night. Right? And I, I have had, you know, very sort of, rigid teenagers who have really rebelled against that recommendation. And parents have said, well, she, she says that her friends might have an emergency and they might need to contact her in the night. And her friends have, blah, blah, blah and, and she just won't let go of that phone. And I always say, well, tell her to just give the friend the, do you have a landline? Tell the phone? Tell her to, give the friend the landline number if it's really an emergency. Surely, surely you won't mind the friend. No, I mean, then, you know, it will only be an emergency under which circumstance the house. I mean, you know, so I feel like, kids have very strong feelings about this and you really need to sort of think through. Okay, is there a way I can reassure you, to get you on board with this? So I don't have to battle with you on it every night. Without sort of giving up, without over amod you and giving up on what I think is an important thing for your well being. 

Laura: I think too for those of us who have younger kids starting now with ourselves, like keeping screens and phones out of our bedrooms ourselves is probably good, right? So modeling that ourselves. So that when the kids do get phones in the future. They already know that everyone leaves their phones in the kitchen. Mom and dad included. You know? It's a good idea.

Dr. Katia: It's good to model the behavior. I mean, it's so hard but we need to try to practice what we preach. Right?

Laura: Yes.

Dr. Yael: And another thing that, screens don't have to be the enemy. They can be a helpful tool. These individuals as an, young, as a child becomes an adolescent, it actually there can be really cool apps to help with scheduling and organizing and different things that you can use these to be beneficial for everyone as well, I think can be helpful. 

Laura: Yeah, you can use them to offload some of the executive functioning. 

Dr. Yael: For sure. 

Laura: Beautiful. Okay. So you mentioned Yael the kind of hyper focus, what are some of the other positives and benefits to having ADHD? 

Dr. Yael: So research has actually shown that individuals with ADHD are more creative than individuals without ADHD more out of the box thinkers. And that's really interesting and awesome. And you can see that there's a high proportion of a high number of CEO s who have ADHD which you think about people who have created and come up with an idea and then started a business about it. So that's really cool. Some things like being spontaneous. It can be a beautiful asset at many times. And that's something that goes along. A risk taker, I there, can definitely be some beautiful things that be, uh, being a risk taker can support in, in your life. And, and being really interested in a topic, hyper focusing can actually lend itself towards different careers later on. I think there's been some famous athletes who have talked about how being hyper focused because of their ADHD on their sport lend themselves to become, you know, in the Olympics. And, and it's a really cool trade as well. 

Laura: Katia, did you have anything to add? 

Dr. Katia: No, I was just thinking about just the benefits of the hyperfocus. I mean, again, almost like a bad thing hyperfocus. Like it just sounds like a negative term and it can be when you're trying to get your kid transitioned off. 

Laura: I was gonna say the transitions can be really difficult when a kid is in hyperfocus.

Dr. Katia: The transitions can be pretty hard, but it's so often things, there are two sides of a coin, right? I mean, so energy level, I sometimes I just chuckle, watching the kids in the waiting room at the office or watching my own kids and thinking my goodness, I wish I could bottle your energy and sell it and I would be a gazillionaire you. But like, I mean, these things, all these things, they have their side which can be more difficult to manage and then they have a side that's actually really quite positive. It just needs to be directed properly. 

Laura: Great. Okay. And so one of the other things that, I wanted to make sure that we talked about is the differences in boys and girls and how ADHD presents and why we seem to be missing ADHD in girls so much. 

Dr. Katia: Should I go ahead? 

Dr. Yael: We need like a wink. We needed that.

Dr. Katia: You need a signal. 

Dr. Katia: Yeah. So, yeah, because they can't see this if we look like, make weird winks, nobody can tell. So, right. So this is, this is one of those you used the word earlier Laura misconception, I mean, right. So there are lots of misconceptions out there about ADHD and one is essentially that it's like a boys issue. That girls don't have ADHD and that misconception arises from the fact that again, speaking in generalities, girls tend to present more frequently with that inattentive presentation that we discussed earlier, which is more subtle, it's less readily evident. So if you imagine yourself as a teacher sitting in a classroom with 30 kids, and there's the one kid who's sort of sitting on the side quietly doodling or looking out the window or just, you know, just seeming to be a lot, that person will not catch your attention it's really gonna be the kids who are, there's some sort of, behavioral manifestation who are gonna be more, who are going to be more readily observed. Right? So, and so that can happen at home too, right. I mean, so same sort of principle in all sorts of different settings where these girls can just slip under the radar. 

And again, I am speaking in generality, so there's certainly, boys for whom we use a predominantly in inattentive presentation diagnosis, subtitle or subtype. But just again, speaking in generalities, that's often the case for girls. And so it can lead to a situation where very often these girls are quite bright, they wanna do well, they manage to sort of mask either intentionally or unintentionally. These symptoms are masked when they're younger and then they at some point or another, though most kids will start to hit some sort of wall as the difficulty level rises, the level of output demands and complexity rises. So middle school, high school, college and adulthood, women were diagnosed with ADHD and I mean, it was there all along, it just wasn't, people weren't aware of it this much. And so that's one of the reasons why sort of rates of ADHD diagnosis have increased over time is that we've gotten better at noticing these kids. And it's important to do so because even though you know, the repercussions may not be obvious there are repercussions, there are effects on learning, there are effects on emotional well being social functioning. And so it's really important to catch these kids so that we can give them the supports they need. 

Laura: Yeah, there's even studies that tie, you know, ADHD to differences in lifespan too. So, the range is between 7 to 10 years of shortened lifespan for undiagnosed ADHD which is really interesting to think about. Like that is a, you know, that's something sorry, untreated. ADHD not undiagnosed. It, it, it's something that in any other diagnosis we would not, would be, it would be a big deal, you know. 

Dr. Katia: Well, and when you allude to, I mean, you mentioned untreated. I mean, so one thing we haven't mentioned is medication, right? So that's a first year treatment recommendation that we make to families. So there are lots of things that can be done at school that can be done at home in terms of parenting strategies, health behaviors, et cetera, accommodations. And then we always recommend learning about and, you know, learning about medication because that is.

Laura: So what’s the parents are really nervous about that? 

Dr. Katia: For sure. Oh, for sure. We have that conversation all the time. I mean, and so we're not MDs, we're not medical doctors. We don't prescribe, but we do know a fair amount about it just based on our experience and training and so forth. And yeah, it's scary. It's scary to medicate your child for sure, for sure. And, you know, so parents, rightly so have lots of questions about it and the efficacy and the safety etcetera. And, I mean, fortunately we're able to tell them the stimulant medication, which is the first order medication used in the treatment of ADHD is, has been used with children, I think since the sixties. Right? I mean, it's been around for a long time. So there's a lot of long term research on the safety and efficacy of the medication. So we can really point to some good data, which is not always the case with medications that are used with children very often. It just gets piggybacked onto adult research. 

Right? And so with this one, there's a lot of long term, and there's a lot of sort of long term data that you can point to. And yeah, so I, I totally understand that. It's scary. I mean, the other thing I, I always point out to parents too is that really, it's something that is in and out of the bloodstream in the course of a day. 

So it's not like one of these medications, like if your child is taking an SSRI, I like an anxiety or depression. You know, it's like a Prozac or whatever it is where you have to work up to a therapeutic level and you have to be at that level for a certain amount of time before you see an effect, et cetera, et cetera. It's really just you will see what you will see over the course of that day. And if there is something that you really don't like or your child is not comfortable with, you are not obligated to read, administer the medication the next day. So I think having that feeling of control and, and we will say, and often times it is trial and error, the first thing will not always fit. And so, you know, if you see something you don't like, that's fine. That's okay. That's normal. You know, your doctor can prescribe you another one to try. It's just everybody is different and everybody one size does not fit all right? So, I think that having that control over it helps parents feel more comfortable. The more informed we are and the more control we have when we're doing an an intervention like that with our child, I think it really helps us feel more comfortable. 

Laura: Yeah. And do you recommend that parents take their kids to see a child psychiatrist to get medication prescribed or is your family doctor or pediatrician an appropriate place to go? 

Dr. Yael: It's a great question. Almost all pediatricians, all the ones I've ever worked with are very comfortable with the class of stimulant medications. So that could be a totally great place to begin. I, I would say psychiatrists are also very comfortable with this. They are special. The pediatrician is more of a generalist. So if you are comfortable with your pediatrician, you feel like this is someone who knows you and understands you. I think that would be a great place to begin if you would feel better. Seeing someone who only sees individuals who have, differences and who need medication versus the pediatrician who sees probably mostly well visit, well visits, uh, kids who are doing pretty development, who are developmentally typical. So that, that would be the difference. Psychiatrists,often, at least in our area are hard to get into and see and they can have long waitlists and sometimes don't take insurance. So that often will push family to see their pediatrician who again is usually very well versed. 

Dr. Katia: Yeah, I would, I tend to same thing. I tend to think it's, it's best, you know, provided you're comfortable and you like your pediatrician, although you wouldn't continue to see them otherwise, if that were the case. Yeah. So, I would start with your pediatrician and, and more I think of, I, I would send someone directly to a child psychiatrist or adolescent psychiatrist more if it's a very sort of a complicated picture, like there are multiple things going on that the child is depressed and they have ADHD and, you know, there's just more of a complicated picture and we just want to be absolutely sure we're crossing our Ts and dotting our I's, but if we're looking at ADHD on its own, I always just say head off to the pediatrician, it's much easier and more cost effective, and time wise, much more efficient. 

Laura: Okay. And are, you know, so I know here in the US and in Canada there have been some shortages around ADHD medications. Is that ongoing? And is that affecting kids? 

Dr. Katia: It is ongoing and it's no fun.

Laura: I'm sure it's not. 

Dr. Katia: Oh, yeah, it is ongoing. And, so, yeah, it's just so hard because everybody is so busy in their lives and it's just an added stressor it's an added demand and, you will find yourself in certain months, like on the phone. I, I mean, I have a, one of my daughters has ADHD and is medicated. And I was, I had, I feel like I post it on my laptop with all the local pharmacies and their numbers. And there were months when I would just be going down the list, call, call, call, call, call and there were months when we needed to change her medication to accommodate what was available. And it's very frustrating. But you,, you know, it's just one of those situations where you just have to do the best you can under the circumstances. And, it's, but, yeah, it's hard and it's ongoing. But it does, seem to wax and wane so certain medications that were once difficult to get are now. So it just seems to see. 

Laura: Yeah. 

Dr. Katia: So it can be easy one month hard the next month. Just unpredictable. 

Laura: Okay. Have you seen any changes in being for families being able to get the diagnosis or resistance within other fields to accept that diagnosis? Because I, I feel like there is a, there is a kind of a vibe in the air that ADHD is being over diagnosed all of a sudden. And I, I highly doubt that that's the case, but I do think that some, you know, I've heard from some parents that some doctors are skeptical of ADHD diagnosis coming in. I'm curious if that's something you've experienced and how parents can kind of deal with some of that skepticism around. Perhaps it being over diagnosed. 

Dr. Yael: I think that this is coming from a few different places. One is that there are more diagnoses over time because we become more aware and better understanding of these more subtle presentations, the more inattentive presentations. And so it is becoming more accurate that way that we are the the diagnosis we missed were getting better at spotting. We are evidence based practitioners. We follow the guidelines and, you have to talk, we talk to multiple sources to see if symptoms present in different settings. And we are lucky to work amongst people who would do the same if there is a professional who is just saying yes to everybody who walks in their door and saying yes, that's ADHD ADHD without doing any sort of question, to different, sources or finding, making sure that all symptoms are all criteria are met, then we'd have a problem with that. And if, so I, I question these doctors who are skeptical, where are they coming from? What are they skeptical about? Is it that they, are saying? Oh, this child is so smart. So it can't be ADHD, hey, that's true. Right? And let's talk about that actually.

Laura: And kind of able us. Yes. 

Dr. Yael: So I, I would just question the provider and say, what is it about this diagnosis that I just got from a professional that you are skeptical about? And, and then find out a little bit more, maybe it is that they don't realize that ADHD can present in these more subtle ways or look a little different in or something. And because we all have, you know, a thing, things we don't know completely about in the and so.

Laura: Of course, yeah. Thank you so much. Okay. So is there anything else that you guys would like to share with my audience about the ADHD process? I know you have a book out for kids, introducing ADHD to to children. Right?

Dr. Katia: Right. Yeah. Yeah, we as part of our work, part of the process is helping, guiding parents for resources. Right? And so parents will often ask us and, or we will just proactively provide resources so that parents can learn more about you know, their child's sort of how their child's brain works and how the, you know, we talked earlier about the importance of children understanding their own diagnoses. And so, we also like to provide resources that will help parents with that journey, right? And so we keep a pretty close finger on the pulse of what's available in terms of the resources that are out there. And we were, we were consistently finding a hole in the, in the literature when it came, right, when it came to books that will specifically lay out a diagnosis in a developmentally appropriate and sort of like visually appealing manner. And that has a good sort of balance of concerns versus strengths and different ways in which the diagnosis can present, et cetera, et cetera. And so we, we were having trouble finding that sort of resource and it's really something that I think a lot of parents really wanted. And so we we decided to, to create it, it was a COVID project when we were needing our brains to get a little exercise. Right? And yeah, and so our so we so we wrote this book and we got this lovely publisher and this great illustrator who we think we think the world of. And the idea is that it presents ADHD diagnosis for an elementary school age population. 

And it's a book that a parent could read with a child or a teacher or a therapist or a grandparent or whoever to help walk them through the process. And it's an interactive book. So that I don't mean it has flaps. That would be cool though. It has questions and so I got, I love flap books when the kids are younger. Oh my gosh. Anyway, it has questions and you know, so and so has this issue, has this ever happened to you or, you know? So it just, it's supposed to be an engaging sort of vehicle for conversation. So it presents three, the book presents a brief description of neurological development again, highly visual and sort of developmentally appropriate level of discussion. Three vignettes of different ways in which ADHD can, can present because of course, we have discussed the many different ways in which ADHD can present we're trying to sort of hit the hit the main basis. Sort of what that means. Fun facts, strengths, things that can be done to help with the things that are harder in a workbook to sort of go through and individualize the book for the child. Yeah, and so we're working on, we got a couple more in the pipeline but we want to start with ADHD because that's such a big one. 

Laura: Yeah, I will say that I read the book with my, my daughter who's eight, almost nine. and for whom ADHD bells ring for me. And so it was fun to read through that and she's like, oh, that's kind of like me. Oh mom, that's a little bit like me. And, you know, it's just interesting and so, I mean, and we, you know, we talked and I was like, well, you know, is that something that you would want to, you know, go and talk with someone who, you know, knows how kids think and then she's like, no, it's a problem. Yeah, but you know, if we need it, sure. You know, so it was a very lovely book just to, like, proactively have with my, for my kiddo too, which was really nice. 

Dr. Katia: All right. Oh, yeah. And we've totally had friends and, uh, who have read the book,, with their kids who, there's no suspicion of ADHD and the kids have. Oh, wow. Yeah, that makes me think of so. And so in my class and maybe that's why they have trouble with bar or whatever, you know. And so we, that was not our, our direct intention but such a nice sort of vehicle for explaining neurodiversity to kids.

Laura: And acceptance, you know, not and not just acceptance but affirmation to, you know, my, both my girls go to a very neuro diverse school. And lots of their kids are kind of out and proud with their ADHD and autism diagnoses. And so yes, reading it. My daughter's like, oh, that's like friend and, oh, this is kind of like my other friends, you know, and that's why my best friend needs fidgets. And I mean, it was just, it's a lovely book. Thank you for putting it out in the world. 

Dr. Katia: Thanks. Gosh. Thank you. Yeah. Thank you. We appreciate your feedback and I love to hear that you read it with your daughter. 

Laura: Oh, I think it's so much, it's like so important for our parents to have access to those books, you know, that they can share with their kids. Even if they're like a again, like, even if things are on the radar, it's one of the perks of my job when I get to have amazing guests and authors on the show, I get to have those books in my house. And I just, I love that my kids get to have access to diversity in that way. So I really appreciate that so much. 

Dr. Katia: Oh, well, we're glad to happy to help. Well, that's the, like you were saying, having the books in the house. I mean, that's part of the idea of this is just to make it more accessible. I mean, we love our work and think it's a really useful thing to do, but so we know it's not accessible for everyone. There's going to be a neuropsychologist hanging out on every corner who you can get in to see in a, in a, in a, you know, time efficient manner. And so the idea of the book is just to put it out there in a cost effective and accessible means.

Laura: Yeah. Well, we really appreciate it and I know you also do a lot of work on social media. So where can our listeners sign and connect with you and learn from you? 

Dr. Yael: Thank you so much. Yeah, we are also trying to make it evidence based information accessible to individuals. So you could go to our website, which is Neuropsych Moms. You can also follow us on Instagram, Facebook and Twitter again, Neuropsych Moms and and psych as people know psy. So, neuropsych moms.

Laura: Wait, is that Neuropsych Moms or is it Neuropsych Mom Docs? 

Dr. Yael: We, oh, thank you so much. But we recently have just changed it. So okay. Yes. So we dropped the docs hoping to make it a little easier, but it's still a little complicated. 

Dr. Katia: Yeah, it was, so, it was clunky. It was clunky. But you know, what can you do? 

Laura: Okay. So, neuropsych moms. Yes. Okay. Good. Well, I hope everyone will go and give you a follow and I appreciate you joining me on the show and I hope you'll keep me posted as more books come out. 

Dr. Katia: Oh, for sure. Thank you for having us. We really appreciate it. It's always, we're, it's like what you said. Geeking out, we love just sitting and chatting about all this fun. Yeah. 

Laura: Same. All right. Well, thank you so much. 

Dr. Yael and Dr. Katia: Thanks. 

Dr. Katia: Take care. Bye bye.

Okay, so thanks for listening today. Remember to subscribe to the podcast and if it was helpful, leave me a review that really helps others find the podcast and join us in this really important work of creating a parenthood that we don't have to escape from and creating a childhood for our kids that they don't have to recover from. 

And if you're listening, grab a screenshot and tag me on Instagram so that I can give you a shout out um and definitely go follow me on Instagram. I'm @laurafroyenphd. That's where you can get behind the scenes. Look at what balanced, conscious parenting looks like in action with my family and plus I share a lot of other, really great resources there too. 

All right. That's it for me today. I hope that you keep taking really good care of your kids and your family and each other and most importantly of yourself. And just to remember, balance is a verb and you're already doing it. You've got this!

Episode 189: Tiny Traumas and How They Affect Daily Life and Parenting with Dr. Meg Arroll

Welcome to another episode of The Balanced Parent Podcast, where today we are talking about “tiny traumas” and how they affect daily life and parenting. We are joined by Dr. Meg Arroll, a psychologist and the author of the book called Tiny Traumas.

Here are some of the key takeaways:

  • Understanding Tiny T Trauma and how it affect daily life, especially parenting

  • Navigating parental impact and maladaptive consequences

  • Effective action steps to heal from past experiences and coping mechanisms

  • What is the ASK Process (Accurate, Sensible, and Kind) for healing

 If you’re looking to connect with Dr. Meg Arroll and learn more about her work, visit her website drmegarroll.com, Facebook @drmegarroll, Instagram @drmegarroll, and Twitter @drmegarroll.

Resources: 


TRANSCRIPT

Parenting is often lived in the extremes. It's either great joy or chaotic, overwhelmed. In one moment, you're nailing it and the next you're losing your cool. I want to help you find your way to the messy middle, to a place of balance. You see balance is a verb, not a state of being. It is a thing you do. Not a thing you are. It is an action, a process, a series of micro corrections that you make each and every day to keep yourself feeling centered. We are never truly balanced. We are engaged in the process of balancing.

Hello, I'm Dr. Laura Froyen and this is The Balanced Parent Podcast where overwhelmed, stressed out and disconnected parents go to find tools, mindset shifts and practices to help them stop yelling at the people they love and start connecting on a deeper level. All delivered with heaping doses of grace and compassion. Join me in conversations that will help you get clear on your goals and values and start showing up in your parenting, your relationships, your life with openhearted authenticity and balance. Let's go!

Laura: Hello everybody. This is Doctor Laura Froyen and on this week's episode of the Balanced Parent Podcast, I am going to be talking with a guest, Doctor Meg Arroll about tiny traumas. These are small, little traumas that can accumulate over the course of your life and really affect you, especially your parenting. So I'm excited for this conversation. I'm hoping it will be really help you bring out some insight and actually help you move forward in some of your own inner work. So Doctor Meg, thank you so much for being with us. Welcome to the show. Will you tell us a little bit more about yourself? You know who you are, what you do and then we'll dive in. 

Dr. Meg: Laura, thank you so much for having me on your amazing podcast. I feel very honored Yes. So I'm a psychologist, British, but also American. So I started my life in the United States but trained in the UK. And my initial work was actually in long term health conditions because I focused on health psychology in the UK. And I specialize, so I like all those little nooks and crannies that perhaps people overlook people dismiss. So I was fascinated with what we termed at the time, medically unexplained conditions. So things like chronic fatigue syndrome, fibromyalgia, irritable bowel syndrome, and sometimes they're called functional disorders. And that's because there's still not really agreement over the etiology over the course. But what I was interested in as a psychologist was how people were affected by really struggling to gain a diagnosis. But also when they had a diagnosis, it kind of felt like a little bit anticlimactic as well because a diagnosis was just based on a collection of symptoms and the pathways for treatment were sort of unclear. So there were so many obstacles, so many obstacles for individuals. 

And also I had some of these obstacles myself and my own health. And that sort of led me on a path to look at some of the types of experiences that profoundly affect us and they're not the big T. And when I say big T, I mean, capital T in the word trauma, they're not sort of the things that we all really recognize as trauma sort of living through a natural disaster or early childhood abuse, those sorts of things. But they are experiences that do deeply impact us. And some of those things can be going through a medical process like that and feeling very fobbed off, feeling ignored. Even, oftentimes being told that your physical symptoms are all in your head and of course, the mind and body interact. But I mean, just imagine going from doctor to doctor to doctor and just being told what your, what your feeling isn't real, it isn't real. So these sorts of things do impact the way we view the world and the way that we feel about ourselves. And it was actually later in my career when I was putting together a lecture on IBS and I stumbled upon a paper that it was one of those light bulb moments, Laura, you know, like in your research, you have them and you're like, wow, it all makes sense now. 

Laura: It all makes sense, yeah.

Dr. Meg: And these ex. Yeah. And these experiences, they were terms small tea or little tea or tiny t trauma. And it is the psychological nicks and scrapes that we can accumulate over time that build up to cause us some presentations. And then later in my career, when I worked in private practice, I really noticed that the vast majority of my clients, they would come to me and say, look Dr. Meg like, I don't even know why I'm here. I don't know why I'm here. There's nothing that big that happened to me. I can't put my finger on it and you'd almost see clients edging out of the door, that kind of self dismissal going on. 

Laura: Yes.

Dr. Meg: And so I'd coax them back, coax them back into my room and say, well, you know, let's, let's work on this and also a bit of psychoeducation there around the concepts of tiny t trauma and how this can impact us. And so yes, all these, it was weird because like all these strands in my sort of research, academic life in my sort of practice and therapeutic world and my own personal experience, they kind of accumulated. And I was like, this is just so important. I don't really hear people talking about it. Certainly not in the general public, but even within psychological circles, therapeutic circles, it's something that is under discussed under researched. And I was like, this is, this is really important. 

Laura: Yeah, I love, I love that you're talking about this. So I, you know, as a, a parenting consultant, I, most of the parents that I work with say those exact same things. You know, I think about, you know, I asked them a lot about, you know, where they got ideas about parenting and child behavior, how their experiences influence what they're doing now, both positively and negatively and oftentimes they can't put their finger on things that were negative. There's nothing really big, they love their parents. Tthey are, you know, are, are really compassionate towards the, the people who raise them who did the best that they could, you know, just lots of dismissal of their own experiences and how hard they can be. Especially those, those little t traumas. So maybe it would be helpful for our listener to hear from you. What, what are tiny t traumas? You know. So if we know what the big ones are natural disasters, abuse that, you know, we can take a look at and say, yep, that's abuse versus the little ones. What are some of the little ones that especially the ones that affect parenting? 

Dr. Meg: So one thing first, it's, it's quite important to separate out the intention from the impact we're talking about trauma because this is something that can feel very sort of conflicting. So, you know, with clients, with ourselves, we feel like we love our parents. We, we, we absolutely adore our parents and they did the best they could. And we can see as adults, we can see some of the challenges they had. And so there really is that conflict in the sense that I don't want to blame my parents for what I'm going through or how that's impacting my own parenting. But actually it is, and that causes quite a lot of distress actually that in itself and what I would say, then if we separate out the impacts from the intention So the intention was good. You know, people are always, always doing their best with the resources they have at the time without a doubt, the intention was good, but the impacts can still be detrimental. And that can help really just allow people to explore their own tiny t traumas a bit more because then we can say, you know, we put that aside, we can put that aside because it's not about blame. But then when we do explore a lot of these things do come out. And so with regard to parenting in particular, I'll give a few examples. So a lot of the research is based on what's called miss attunement between caregivers and children. So that is something like perhaps you have just very different personality types, you could have parents that are really extroverted and perhaps a child that naturally is a bit more introverted. 

And of course, we know that both nature and nurture are important, but there's a misattunement there and you know, the amount of people that we work with, but also know, but perhaps even ourselves. So you just kind of feel like maybe I was the black sheep in my family and I just don't feel like I belonged. So again, no abuse in that sort of sense. And I would say, you know, no neglect but really misattunement, lack of communication, sometimes that comes with that misattunement and really not having that sense of belonging over the course of a lifetime because we're talking about day in day out that can lead people to be very unsure of themselves. And I would say the most common thing that I personally see is parental anxiety. So individuals who have experienced this type of tiny t trauma when they become parents themselves, they're just very, very, very anxious. And there, there's a real fear that they're not good enough and they don't know what the right thing is and of course, there's no one right thing. And also some quite illuminating examples, for instance, and again, bearing in mind to separate the intention from the impact. I had one client, who was very successful um both in her work and, and her family life, she, you know, really felt very aligned with her daughter. So there wasn't that sense in her parenting of the misattunement, but she was just so anxious and so scared of doing something wrong. And so we explored, we explored some of some of her own the care that she received and again, always starts off with, I love my parents, I love my parents. And it turns out that one of the types of experiences that had really shaped her was that when she was young, if she had a bad grade, her parents would pin up that report card in the kitchen and highlight it. 

So she would see it every day at breakfast. And over time that really made her feel not good enough, just not, not good enough, not valuable, not, not worth a lot. And the intention was to motivate her to do well at school. But actually the impact and, and, and to be fair, actually, she did, it did motivate her to do very well at school. And she really, she aced, you know, all of her, her elementary and then secondary school and then went on to higher education. She was very successful as they say in her career. But this underlying fear was leading to not just burn out work, but a type of parental burnout too. So those sort of examples and there, there are many and there are myriad and that's another thing about tiny t trauma is that we all have our individual constellation of experiences. So it can be you what I find. And it's so interesting because it shows how compassionate we are as people, as human beings. Is that one? Again, one of the things that really sort of pops to the surface is we tend to say, well, you know, what other people have it worse than me. And you know, I wasn't, I wasn't abused and, you know, we did, we did have, you know, food on the table, perhaps my parents struggle, but we, we had everything we needed. And that's a type of sort of self dismissal again,, some self stigma and when we can sort of unravel that though, we can then see how some of these patterns are playing out and have become maladaptive. 

Laura: I really resonate with what you're saying. I, I hear those exact words from so many of my clients. In fact, in my membership community, the group of us that were together for our weekly discussion, talked about this exactly yesterday, this kind of low, I mean, exactly this low level anxiety around am I good enough? Am I doing this? Right? It's one of the hallmarks for, I think the of the folks who are seeking out parenting support because they've got this underlying fear and it's within me too. So of, of, are we doing this? Right? Am I gonna mess up my, you know, it's a huge responsibility. We love these little humans so much. We don't want to repeat patterns that maybe have been handed down throughout the generations. We want to do something different. And in the midst of this, we're, we're nervous, we're anxious, we're worried that we're not enough that we don't already have within us all that we need. And so I guess my question is if a person who's listening is recognizing where they are in this, that okay, even though I love my parents, there are some things that, that had an impact on me that maybe wouldn't have impacted another person the same way, but they did have this negative impact on me. And now I'm, you know, I'm having those maladaptive consequences. What do we do next? What is the next step? 

Dr. Meg: Yes, indeed. And one thing you said there was so important, the recognition that something that has impacted us may not impact another person in the same way. And so when we are discussing this to really hold judgment aside and judgment on ourselves too, and that's hard.

Laura: We’re so hard on ourselves,.

Dr. Meg: We're so hard on ourselves and we have that inner critic and it's such a really loud voice, but that shows there's something to work on. And so again, you know, starting where do we start from that point, we start where we are and that is that awareness. And so within all my work, I, I developed a, a process, a scaffolding as it were to help to help sort of give a roadmap to how, how to work with this and how to come out the other side. And it's called the AAA approach. And the first A is that awareness, the second is acceptance and the third is action because actually we do need to take positive steps into the future as well. So that first point, so having a group like that, like your group, having these conversations just heightening, increasing this awareness. That really is the first step. And what we can do is we can, we can look and think, you know what, what was an experience that molded me that impacted me. That really made me in a way who I am today. But actually, perhaps I didn't think it was serious enough. I had some of that self dismissal going on to be really honest with that recognition that perhaps something we've experienced didn't or wouldn't impact another person in the same way, but did impact us. So to take that self compassionate stance to it and really just do some introspection there. What did impact you in an important way perhaps made you view yourself in a different way, view the world in a different way. 

And it can be something that happened over time. And that's why it's tricky in a way because we're not looking for that one big thing. There can be big things in dispersed. But really what was the pattern that started to impact you? And so having that sense of awareness, then we really do know where the starting point is and then that leads to that acceptance piece. And in parenting, it really is that peace around the intention was not bad, but the impact was, was still there and accepting our parents as human beings as we all are accepting ourselves as fallible human beings, which we are and doing some work on that and that, that can be challenging, that can be challenging because we do live in a world of toxic positivity. We really do. We live in this world that you know, we when we love someone. We, we, we mustn't, you know, critique them. But actually, we're doing this inner work for ourselves and we can see our parents as, as they were and sometimes that means having a conversation. And sometimes that's not possible but exploring the types of um stresses and impacts. There were on our parents to really give us to shine the light on the sorts of things that really led to our life course in that way. And some of them are these macro level types of pressures that our parents and we have. So when I was growing up, it was the 19 eighties best decade ever I have to say. 

But, but it was this decade where women were told they can do it all so you can have the family, you can have the house, you can go to work, you can have a career and you know what not saying that's impossible with the right support. But it was, it's very, very, very challenging. And perhaps I think with my own upbringing, there wasn't that support for my mom actually. And there was just an expectation that you could do it all without that kind of support. So a lot of people grew up like me as latch key kids and perhaps we spoke quite a bit of time on our own as it were. And that led to some at the time coping mechanisms that were useful at the time. But later in life perhaps aren't as useful. So I do see a lot of clients who are perhaps hyper independent, perhaps find it very difficult asking for support. And when it comes to our own parenting, we know how important it is to ask for support, to have those pillars of support for ourselves and our families as a whole. 

Laura: I think too, that just to add on a layer, I think for so many kids who were in a situation where they had to be so independent, they also had to suppress any needs that weren't getting met. Right? And as adults, I think we become very hard like that, it's very difficult to even recognize that we do have needs. So many parents that I work with can't even recognize what unmet needs might be hanging out under the surface for themselves. It's not just even like they don't even know what kind of support to ask for because they are so not in touch with, with what they really need, you know? 

Dr. Meg: Absolutely. And it's knowing our needs is a skill like any other. And if we haven't been taught this skill but not just taught, if we haven't practiced this skill over time, how are we supposed to know, like, how, how are we supposed to know? And it can feel so alien, you know, and it can feel very uncomfortable and as human beings we don't like to feel uncomfortable and that's totally okay. That we don't like. It doesn't mean that it's not helpful in the long term to get in touch with some of those feelings and to really pick out what our needs are and to discover them. Because what we find then is we individuals will seek support when it just becomes unbearable when we are overwhelmed. And in terms of the work that we both do, it would be wonderful to have more preventative type interventions here so that people are not on their knees by the time they come to see a psychologist, a therapist or a coach, because by then there's just been so much distress, it's been so much distress and we can, we can kind of get in there a little bit earlier as it was. So I tend to see. Yeah. 

Laura: Well, I was just gonna say it's like when you have a light, come on in your car, you go and get it, checked the lights, checked out, you know, whatever the indicator is telling you before you're broken down on the side of the road. Right? But we, and we know that for our body, but we don't always know that for our hearts and our minds and our relationships. Yeah. Sorry. Go ahead. I interrupted.

Dr. Meg: And, and no, indeed. And I think because psychology is actually a really young discipline, it hasn't been around for very long. We are still discovering so many things. We are still developing so many ways. To help people and help ourselves really. But to recognize that we are doing quite a lot of, of catching up and that in a lot of healthcare models, we don't really attend to emotions and to psychology, to our minds and to our hearts, as you say, nearly as much, even though we know that the mind and body interact and that we are just one system. So without a doubt. But yeah, absolutely. What you know, and this goes back, actually, this is really interesting because this goes back to that point of perhaps not knowing our needs and also not knowing our indicators. So, again, on a car, you'll see when the fuel, when your gas is running low, but if we've never really had the experience of knowing what our needs are and how to judge that, how would we know? And so one thing we can do is we can set our own dashboards and we can look, we can look at our behaviors, we can look at our thoughts, we can look at our emotions and we can actually do a little bit of investigation here on each of these dashboards. 

What are the indicators when my tank is running low? Is it that I become really irritable because I'll tell you what that's really common. And we, you know, fly off the handle and then feel an immense amount of guilt at it. Is that an indicator? Is it, you know, a physical symptom that, you know, I work with a lot of clients that will have sort of immune type reactions. So perhaps they have, you know, a skin condition that will flare up and that's a really obvious one. But things like sleep disruption again is your sleep out of whack, which is hard when you're a parent because your sleep is always out of whack. So, but there are indicators and again, they're individual for each person. But in saying that what tends to happen is that it will get to a point that if we don't stop and really look at the indicators, our bodies will stop us. 

Laura: And I think that most listeners have heard about burnout is that kind of where you're going? 

Dr. Meg: Yes. That is a common presentation that, that I do see. Yes. 

Laura: And so what I guess so we've been talking, we've talked about awareness and acceptance. I feel very curious, especially as we approach the conversation of burnout that lots of people are experiencing, especially as we as a world recover from a very difficult four years. What are some action steps that can heal some of those past experiences that we've had and the coping mechanisms that maybe started out good and are now not so much serving us. What can we do to start healing from some of those things? 

Dr. Meg: So I think that there, there's this saying isn't there about putting on your oxygen mask first. And there's a lot of debate about it because it is parents that feels so alien alien to put on your oxygen mask first. And I would say just remember to put it on. It doesn't have to be first because actually you're going to take care of your kids first. I know that I know that just make sure that you're thinking about it to put it on. And what does that mean? That means some basics and we tend to use the word self care, but I would use the word self maintenance because self care often, like it just makes us feel ick. It's a little bit of an ick. So what are the basics of self maintenance? And it is the sorts of things to get out into nature is so important if possible with family, with family to challenge that inner critic psychologically is a really, really important one. So that sense of not being good enough to really challenge some of those thoughts. So I use a process that's based on CBT on Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, but it's a bit, I think it's just a bit a bit more gentle. So it's called the ASK process. 

So say we're having a thought like I'm rubbish, I'm rubbish. I can't do this. I'm I'm absolutely rubbish. So the A is, is that accurate? Is that really accurate? Where is the evidence that you're rubbish? Where's the evidence that you can't do this? Because you are, you are doing it. So to go through these three letters and then the the S is sensible. Is it logical? Does this thought logically in your life make sense? And then to challenge it in a third way with the K, is it kind, are you actually being kind for yourself? And once we start to challenge some of these maladaptive thought patterns, it takes away a layer of pressure, a layer of worry because along with burnout and these two things feed into each other. It is the anxiety, the parenting anxiety, if not a whole level of high function anxiety that really goes on. Yeah. Yeah. And that plays along throughout the day. 

Laura: I really, I really love that layer of kindness that K in your ASK acronym. So it's what is the A? 

Dr. Meg: Is it accurate? 

Laura: Accurate, sensible and kind. Accurate, sensible and kind. I really like that. Okay, so listeners write that down what a lovely way to check in with yourself, I think, you know, so CBT um cognitive behavioral therapy is one of the most heavily researched approaches to kind of changing thought patterns and behaviors and improving well being. But I always feel whenever I'm doing it with a client or teaching it that it's lacking in compassion and self compassion, I think adding that layer of self compassion because the research is prolific on the benefit of self compassion too. I, so I'm really, I, I mean, Doctor Meg, I really love that edition of kindness. Is it kind? Oh, you know, I think we are so strong with our kids on the importance of kindness and yet we're so unkind to ourselves. Yeah. Sorry. Go ahead. 

Dr. Meg: No, I mean, I, I work within a framework of compassion focused therapeutic techniques without a doubt because it is, it is the, the, the biggest thing, the biggest thing that I see in a day to day basis. And I've also seen it in myself and we are terribly, terribly unkind to ourselves. And it can be interesting to, to see sort of perhaps some of the avenues that, that have led to that. And some of them are, are there are these more macro level, socio cultural things for instance, like social media. So there's so much parenting, perfectionism on socials. 

Laura: Oh my gosh, Dr. Meg, I, I have been off of Instagram for almost a year now where I've really not been posting. 

Dr. Meg: Congratulations.

Laura: Yes. And, and it really has come down to not wanting to participate anymore in a system that creates more anxiety than the problems that it solves. I think that like, well, you just hit on a, a very like a part, a thing that I'm so passionate about. But I think that, you know, those the 13 2nd sound bite, things that seem so easy, make it seem like you're doing everything, you know, they, they have the potential, certainly no intent, right? But the impact can be huge, making us feel like we're failing, making us feel like, you know, if it was as simple as saying a script that you learned on Instagram and then you can't even do it. What does that do to yourself? Right? Because it's not necessarily teaching you all of the deep inner work that needs to happen so that you can, can say the words that, you know, you're supposed to say. Most of the parents I work with know the words they're supposed to say and can't actually in the moment get them out because they're so dysregulated. And that's the word, right? That's where the work is, is on yourself. Not necessarily the words that are coming out of your mouth, you know? 

Dr. Meg: Absolutely. And that in terms of the AAA process, those action points, we, because we want to, we want everything to be good and we want, you know, we want our kids to be happy, we want our families to be happy and, you know, it comes from a really good place and some, some of the techniques online, we're not, we're not saying that they are per say bad. But actually this is a long term game and it takes, it takes more than 10 seconds, you know, it really does and it is effortful. It's not easy, it's effortful, but it's worth it. And it's having the willingness to accept that and there is in parenting that willingness. But when everyone else seems to be able to do it in 10 seconds and why can't I feed into that? 

Laura: Exactly.

Dr. Meg: Not good enough mindset. And to, again, just have the awareness which we all know, we all know that Instagram is filtered in all these different ways and everything. We all talk about the algorithm. But the algorithm really is important because it does trigger that fear response in us. It triggers that oh no, no, you you're not good enough, you're not doing it right actually. And so it becomes addictive, it becomes a type of behavioral addiction that we get drawn into. And that level, that level of pressure there is something that we actually can control though because we can't control everything in life. But there are some controllable. What is our circle of influence? So Laura for you to, you know, say no to Instagram for a year brilliant and to really control the social media consumption and it is a personal choice. So we can choose to say, well, you know what I'm going to treat it like fast food maybe and you know, have a little bit to know that it can be detrimental, but that's my choice. Yes. But to really have that awareness and be mindful that the way that these types of media work, it is to trigger a fear response and that is what it's doing. But some of, you know, some action points and we always want to move to action. But that can be problematic because as you say, without doing that deeper work. And so in my, in my model, it is the awareness and acceptance work. When we go straight into action, it's like putting a band aid on like a stab wound. 

You know, it's just like it may stem it a little bit for a minute. But then we're gonna start seeing the problems and that process in itself of, well, I put the band aid on and it's not working, again it's me. I'm not good enough. I, I can't even do it. So these sorts of things. So the action is there to moderate social media consumption and, and also news consumption a lot of time for parents because, you know, it really became such a big thing during the pandemic, that type of vicarious trauma. And that is a type of tiny t trauma and we can still bear witness to what's happened in the world without being constantly drawn into it in the sense that it is triggering that fear response again and again and again, because when we get into that chronic stress day, we are so hypervigilant. So then when we come to parenting, we are hypervigilant with our children then as well and we perhaps don't let them explore. And there's that term and I'm, I'm a bit sort of I think labeling, we, we know about labeling theory. And so we just use it for discussion, but that type of helicopter parenting, it's not surprising that people became so hypervigilant with their families because we were triggered in this way to constantly be in fear. Again having that awareness to br to draw ourselves back. And also to, to know that, you know, there, there wasn't one right way to parent, there isn't.

Laura: There isn't.

Dr. Meg: Because we're all different and our kids are all different and we as individuals are all different. So anything that says like this is like the, the exact one way, one size fits all, it's not realistic.

Laura: It's not realistic, it's not. Yes, 100% and learn. Like I think, you know what I, what I try my best to teach is to teach parents how to know themselves and how to know their kids and how to adjust based on the type of relationship that they want to have. And so that you're right, there's no one size fits all and there isn't for this healing process either. Right? It's about being very curious with yourself and what's happened to you and, and moving with slowness and with care and kindness. 

Dr. Meg: Absolutely. And that curiosity piece is so important and I call it be more cat. So, you know, be, be fiercely curious, fiercely curious about yourself about yourself. And again, you know, we are compassionate to others and we're so curious about others and we're always looking for the kindest way to understand others. But we don't do that so, so much with ourselves in that way. So, yes. And and I do think that it can feel confusing because even ourselves with our siblings, it's like they can have a completely different experience of growing up than we did. I mean, completely different. And I do see so many clients to say that. Yeah, but my, my sister doesn't feel this way so I shouldn't feel this way. But that acceptance around that is a completely different dynamic. Your sister is different. We're all different and your parents are different and actually you with your kids, it is gonna be a different dynamic there. So to be very what we would call person or child centered in that way and to use that information to develop, develop that relationship with that individual child. And I just love your work so much that it's all about this core of love, but with boundaries and that is so important. 

Laura: Oh, I appreciate that so much. I, I think, you know, this is something that we all have to do together and I'm so glad to have my listeners have the opportunity to meet their teachers through my podcast. You know, I think our teachers come into our lives at just the right moment. And I have a feeling lots of folks who are listening are going to want to be learning from you on how to do some of this work, whether it's with themselves or with a therapist. How can they find you, how can they learn more? You have a beautiful book that's out. 

Dr. Meg: Yeah. So, my book Tiny Traumas. It is out in the US, but also around the world. So it is in 33 different languages. So, if English is your second language, then, then you, you might be able to find it in your primary language too. So all the usual, all the usual sort of booksellers, Amazon, bookshops as well, physical bookshops. My website is drmegarroll.com and last name is Arroll because it is a very unusual name. And take in mind what we said about socials with, with that pinch of salt can find me on socials @drmegarroll as well. 

Laura: Well, Doctor Meg, I so appreciate your time and your wisdom and your kindness and your support for, for parents and, and actually, honestly, just all, all humans who are doing this work, I hope that we are able to kind of as a team as a, a global human community, do some, some good healing work for ourselves so that, I don't know, maybe our kids don't have quite as much work to do. They'll still have their work as it's theirs, you know. But yeah, thank you. I appreciate you. 

Dr. Meg: Thank you so much for your time and thank you. To your listeners for, for sharing this with us also.

Okay, so thanks for listening today. Remember to subscribe to the podcast and if it was helpful, leave me a review that really helps others find the podcast and join us in this really important work of creating a parenthood that we don't have to escape from and creating a childhood for our kids that they don't have to recover from. 

And if you're listening, grab a screenshot and tag me on Instagram so that I can give you a shout out um and definitely go follow me on Instagram. I'm @laurafroyenphd. That's where you can get behind the scenes. Look at what balanced, conscious parenting looks like in action with my family and plus I share a lot of other, really great resources there too. 

All right. That's it for me today. I hope that you keep taking really good care of your kids and your family and each other and most importantly of yourself. And just to remember, balance is a verb and you're already doing it. You've got this!

Episode 188: The Mental Load Is a Whole Family Problem But One You Can Solve with Samantha Kelly

In this episode of The Balance Parent Podcast, we will dive into mental load and how this is a whole family issue. To guide us through this insightful conversation, we have Samantha Kelly, a therapist turned feminist coach for mothers, helping them beat burnout and involve the whole family in managing the home. 

Here are the topics we tackled in the episode: 

  • Explore couples navigating change, responsibilities, and gender norms without “nagging”

  • How families navigate challenges when one partner experiences pushback

  • Teaching children mental load and responsibilities

  • Managing children's reminders for tasks and teaching them responsibility without constant reminders

  • Balance between caring for children and fostering their independence

  • Balancing children's chores, belonging, and contribution without feeling like servants

  • Dealing with children’s resistance to chores and responsibility with compassion and respect

I hope that this episode resonated with you and you learned from Samantha just as much as I have learned from her. You can follow her on Instagram @samkelly_world

Resources:


TRANSCRIPT

Parenting is often lived in the extremes. It's either great joy or chaotic, overwhelmed. In one moment, you're nailing it and the next you're losing your cool. I want to help you find your way to the messy middle, to a place of balance. You see balance is a verb, not a state of being. It is a thing you do. Not a thing you are. It is an action, a process, a series of micro corrections that you make each and every day to keep yourself feeling centered. We are never truly balanced. We are engaged in the process of balancing.

Hello, I'm Dr. Laura Froyen and this is The Balanced Parent Podcast where overwhelmed, stressed out and disconnected parents go to find tools, mindset shifts and practices to help them stop yelling at the people they love and start connecting on a deeper level. All delivered with heaping doses of grace and compassion. Join me in conversations that will help you get clear on your goals and values and start showing up in your parenting, your relationships, your life with openhearted authenticity and balance. Let's go!

Laura: Hello, everybody. This is Doctor Laura Froyen. And on this week's episode of the Balanced Parent Podcast, we are going to be talking about the mental load and how this is a whole family issue, not just a couple issue and not just an issue that moms need to be thinking about. I am so excited for this conversation. We've talked about the mental load on this podcast before, but we've never talked about it from this perspective. And I'm bringing you this topic because I found this amazing creator and educator on Instagram. And you all know that I've been on a year long hiatus from Instagram. I literally only go on to check in with a couple people. Most of them are comedy accounts. And then I checked in with Samantha Kelly and she's on the show today. I'm so excited to have her here so we can learn about the this important topic and the unique perspective that she takes. So Samantha Kelly, welcome to the show. You are a licensed therapist or a formerly licensed therapist, turn therapist.

Samantha: Yeah, I. Therapist turned coach.

Laura: Therapist. Me, too. For moms and she teaches busy, overwhelmed moms, how to break the cycle of motherhood burnout and share the load of managing a whole in a family with the whole family by empowering kids to be proactive household contributors. And I just love the way that you are shifting the conversation from getting kids to do chores, to getting kids to see themselves as a valuable and important contributors to a home. Okay. So Kelly, tell me a little bit more about who you are and what you do and then we'll dive into how we can make these shifts in our own homes. 

Samantha: Yeah. So just like you said, I call myself a therapist, turn feminist coach for mothers. And we're really focusing on including like you mentioned the kids because the mental load is a whole family problem. And so whole family problems need whole family solutions and we're empowering our children to learn how to take initiative from all ages, from toddlers all the way to teens. And using a proven system and structure that allows them to learn how to easily notice what needs to be done. Anticipate needs without relying on the chore chart because the chore chart is great. But what the chore chart does is in essence, it teaches your kids to rely on you and oftentimes you is the woman in the home, the mom in the home. And what that does unintentionally is reinforces this idea that it's the woman's job to carry all of the awareness of what needs to go on in the home. And then to also be the one to assign task, which is a lot of invisible labor to do. And so we're taking the script on the chore chart and we're empowering our kids to work as a whole family team. 

Laura: I really love that. So you just kind of very succinctly covered this piece of it. But I think, you know, mental load and emotional labor and kind of all of the invisible labor that moms do is having a moment, right? So it's more visible now than it was two years ago. And I'm so grateful for that. But the conversations that I've been seeing happening have really centered around it being a couple issue being an issue of the, the man in the relationship. If you're in a heterosexual relationship, needing to become more aware of the mental load and being able to notice and see and do what's going on around the house. And I'm feeling really curious about how you started thinking about this as a whole family issue, because I'm a systems thinker and I didn't, I didn't, you know, I'm trained as a marriage and family therapist. I should, I feel like I should have seen this as a system, a family system issue. And I didn't, I didn't see it. I'm very, feel very curious about how, how you made that shift in viewing it as a whole family issue. 

Samantha: Yeah. So I started first in the way that you just described where we're like, okay, I am caring. I mean, like I woke up after like 10 plus years of motherhood one day and we finally, like, I, I can't do this anymore. I've hit a wall. This invisible labor that I'm shouldering for my whole family is crushing me. And I don't want this quality of life. I want something better for myself. I want something better for my partner because in an inequitable partnership hurts everyone. So I started having the really hard long conversations, long, meaning like it's a process with my partner. And together we started working on the equity in our relationship. So after about a year plus of focusing on this very, very intentionally, I was making, it was like a Friday night and I was making a Saturday morning chore list for my kids. And I just had this like light bulb moment where I was like, what am I doing? Like, I just spent the last year of my life teaching my husband, which is something I shouldn't have to do to begin with, right? But that's a whole other conversation.

Laura: Cause he’s a full partner in this relationship at home. Yeah.

Samantha: But this is so human how to anticipate me and do things proactively in the home without waiting for me to give him a lift or assign him things or ask him to quote unquote help. And I'm making now a list for my kids to do the exact like, if I could teach my husband how to do this, I can teach my kids how to do this. And why wouldn't I teach my kids how to do this? Because like, we can be great examples all day long of an equitable relationship. But unless we're teaching our kids the skills and having the conversation too around what like emotional labor is what mental load means. Like gender roles and how and expectations that our society puts on women versus men. Unless we're having these intentional conversations with them and teaching them how to be proactive. Like an, a good example only goes so far. The cycle will just continue in my daughter's life, in my son's life. And I don't want that for them because I've experienced for myself how hard it is to dig yourself out of that hole and we're doing something different. 

Laura: Yeah. Okay. I have tons of questions. I feel very curious about, you know, so what that year long process was like for your husband? Can we just dip in and, and for you, can we just dip into that for not, not super deep, we're gonna focus more on the kids. But I do feel very curious. My husband and I went through a very similar year, two years ago. We read the books, you know, but I feel kind of curious and it's, we don't get to see inside other people's marriages very often. So I feel kind of curious what that was like for you and your husband, what it sounded like how you managed to do it without feeling like you were nagging or harping on something, you know. Do you know what I'm, I, because those feelings bubbled up within me and even gosh, that word nagging is loaded with gender stuff anyway. Right. I know me too. Right. So can you tell me a little bit about what that was like for you? How you as a couple unlearned those things and relearn something new. 

Samantha: Yeah. So a couple of things, one of the biggest things was approaching the subject from a space of this is me. My husband's name is Chaz. This is me and you, Chaz together versus our patriarchal conditioning. This is not me, this versus you and you versus me like we're arm and arm linked up in tandem and we each got like we didn't ask for this, but we each got our own messages, our own conditioning and programming growing up our whole lives. That's just what happened. That's not either of our faults, but what we do have control over now is what we do as a result of that. So this is us fighting a common enemy together. The second thing that I did was I found two creators online that I really, really loved one is that darn chat. She's a woman and she talks about the mental load. And from a woman's perspective and then also a creator named Real Zach Thinkshare and he talks about it from a man's perspective. And I, I basically said I need you to kind of like lift some of the load off of me, of having to be the one who educates him. I was like, I need you to study these two creators. Like if you were studying like a course in school and every day, like put an alarm on your phone or a reminder and every day you are going to watch their content, whatever it is, they, they share a, a real a carousel, whatever you're gonna watch their content. So slowly over time, like this understanding and knowledge starts to sink into you because you just don't know what you don't know. 

Laura: Yeah.

Samantha: So he started doing that really religiously. We set up a weekly check in that again. He put the reminder on his phone. So he was the one to initiate it. So I didn't have to be like, okay, remember we're gonna do that weekly check and talk. So again, he's practicing taking more administrative to check in to see how he's doing, to see what could be approved to see what's going well. And that's, I mean, there was more to it obviously like it makes it sound like it's super easy and simple. It was hard. There were a lot of frustration. There were, there was, there was a lot of rage for me that I had to move through and like, that's okay, that's just part of the process. When we are dealing with, like uprooting 35, 40 years.

Laura: Yeah.

Samantha: A certain type of programming.

Laura: Or even more, you know, like, I mean. 

Samantha: Depending how old you are. 

Laura: Well, no, I mean, but even like, just the genetic transmission of this stuff, right? So, I mean, we're, it's hundreds of years since.

Samantha: Oh, oh. Absolutely. Generational.

Laura: We started agricultural, you know, society when this all started. 

Samantha: Yeah. Absolutely. Absolutely. I mean, it's, it's like the air we breathe so that it's gonna take a minute and that, that's okay too. Yeah. 

Laura: I love that. You are comfortable talking about your rage, you know? So I had a girlfriend who we were going through this with our husbands at the same time. And we both, we couldn't figure out, like, if you could do this without that anger, like, without that, without hitting that wall and without that, I don't know, I don't, I don't know if you can because I don't know if the fire would be in because it is hard to stick through it, you know? 

Samantha: Yeah. Yeah. Well, and I don't think anger is a bad thing.

Laura: No, it’s not. It’s beautiful.

Samantha: I think like there's so much.

Laura: Transformative.

Samantha: Yeah, like energy that we could put into, like, don't be angry but, like, that's what I was doing before. Like, shoving down the resentment. This is fine. I'm oayk. Oh, it's bubbling up again. No. No, no. But then of course, because you can't keep a lid on it all the way different ways. 

Laura: Cause it’s a volcano. Yeah.

Samantha: Exactly. So, it's about harnessing that rage and channeling it towards change and accepting, like, yes, I am angry because this is a really crappy situation. I didn't ask for it. I don't want it, but I, here I am. I have to deal with it. Yeah, like I'm gonna feel some kind of way about that because I'm a human and that's okay. 

Laura: Yeah, I love that. Thank you so much, Sam for sharing that the, the, the next question I have, so in your work with family is I feel very curious about, you know, I, I happen to be blessed with a partner who was willing to kind of step into that fire with me. You know, it sounds like you were too. I feel very a lot of compassion and curious about those families for whom that their partner maybe gives a little bit of pushback as they start to uncover some of this work and, and how to navigate that push back. 

Samantha: Yeah, I mean, now getting pushed back with a partner is hard. And that's something that like the relationship you have with your partner in navigating issues is totally separate and different from the work that you're doing with your children, like we for sure are not working to empower our kids as kind of like a side door approach to like sneakily get our husbands on board, you know? Those are two very separate things, teaching children and teaching an adult are different. And so if in terms of getting pushed back from an adult partner, that would be there's just so much new up to it, like, do you need to go to therapy? Are you open to, you know, other resources and means of support? We watch the fair play documentary together. There's also obviously the book, but sometimes the documentary, like a movie can be kind of like an easier self than a book. So, I think it like the very, very, very first thing that's important is having a spouse, a partner that is open because at the end of the day, like we're talking about your quality of life and if they don't care about your quality of life, then there's deeper issues at play here than just like managing domestic labor. 

Laura: Oh, yes. Yes, there are. And if they like at the end of the day, you, you hopefully love and care for one another and hopefully that love and care will be enough to move past or through defensiveness that may be there, you know. Oh, okay. So let's, let's turn if it's okay with you to talk about kids and how we do this with kids. So I just wanna kind of position, the, the approach that this podcast has taken towards teaching chores to kids from the very beginning. So, just so, you know, kind of the community that you're in. So this community focuses on non punitive approaches to parenting. And we have, I, I've always taught chores as being kind of a family activity. This is the way we care for our home. That it's a kind of you get to be a part of this family and you get to be involved not a transaction where you do these chores and you get this money, not ever forcing chores either. So if something that is supposed to be a child's responsibility is hard for them on a given day, modeling graciousness and help and care towards them. You know, being able to say, I see this is difficult for you. Let me help you, we’re in this together, learning how to make it fun together, you know, because care tasks are not always fun. And so, you know, it's so very, very collaborative and supportive and you know, community oriented already. But I feel like your approach takes that to the next level in a very planful way. And I'm kind of curious about how you start teaching kids to acknowledge and participate in the mental load of a household. 

Samantha: Yeah. So everything that you just mentioned is like gold mine foundation like that is going to be the best that jumping off point possible to have like those concepts and understanding in place. So what we're gonna do is we're going to take the familiarity of like the structure and ownership of responsibilities of the chore chart and we're going to transition into being able to notice what needs to be done without waiting to be asked or given a list first or like just checking the chore chart list and then being done. So the way that we do that is we're going to have what I call the big three and this is what feels most similar to the chore chart because when we can give kids a sense of like familiarity, then there's a sense of safety and kids learn best when there's a sense of safety, right? So the big three is, is whatever you want it to be, but obviously, we're gonna make it age appropriate for each kid's age. And I have a free guide on my Instagram that you can access that will go through the structure steps like that for people. But essentially a big three, for example, for like my kids is like making their bed in the morning, checking to see if the dishwasher needs to be unloaded. And if it does taking one section of the dishwasher and unloading it, and the third one is checking to see if they have clean laundry and if they do have clean laundry, folding it and putting away. You have a question?

Laura: Not a question, but I like, like, you know, if you could, all could see me like a mind blow emoji is like all over my face because even just the wording of what you just said. So my kids have, those are two, you know, have two of those jobs unloading their section of the dishwasher. They both hate the bowl so that swaps every, every time and putting their laundry away, but I don't have them check. I or my husband equally, you know, tell them, okay, your laundry is ready to be put away or oh, I ran the dishwasher. I don't have them check. 

Samantha: Yeah. 

Laura: Okay. So that's the big shift, isn't it? Right? 

Samantha: Yeah. Yeah. And just because you, if you are the one, let's just like, say you, you're the one that um telling them that the dishwasher needs to be unloaded. The fact that you're able to tell them that means that you're the one that's tracking when the dishwasher is being run, you're overseeing, okay, I'm noticing that it's emptied and it needs to be emptied. You're going to get your kid and you're saying, hey, this dishwasher needs to be unloaded. That's like four steps right there. 

Laura: Yeah.

Samatha: So we're taking that off of your plate and empowering your kids to carry that load for themselves. 

Laura: Okay.

Samantha: So noticing when the dishwasher needs to be unloaded and also like in terms of the laundry, laundry is not something, at least for like my kids are not generating enough laundry where they need to do fold and put away laundry every single day. But there's like intentionality behind that because part of the work for them then is just going upstairs and checking to see if it needs to, if there's clean laundry and if there's not, okay. But if there is, then they're gonna pull it and put away. But really being intentional in the language and saying part of the work is checking and noticing if the laundry needs to be done that day or not. 

Laura: Okay. So that's what my next question was going to be. So the actual language. So when my kids come home from school today and I'm gonna be able to say like, okay, so I had a conversation with Samantha Kelly and I probably won't do that. But so what does it sound like when we are making that shift? You know? So my kids have these jobs and now I want to add in the mental load component of it. What does that sound like? Yeah. Go.

Samantha: So, yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So it can be very, very simple to start. And then if you want to delve more deeper into it, I have a full audio course with like scripts of how to have these like more essentially tricky conversations around like what the patriarchal mean, patriarchy means. What gender, societal expectations means, what invisible labor means, all of that stuff. And it's very age specific and very simple magic words. So it kind of clicks and sticks in your kids' minds because that's kind of like an important figure why behind us all. But to start like just today when your kids come home from school, we just sit them down and say, hey, we're gonna have a conversation about the way we do chores and we're gonna kind of mix it up a little bit. Instead of me being the one that's in charge of saying, hey, the dishwasher needs to be unloaded. Can you unload the dishwasher? I'm gonna have you guys, I'm gonna let you guys be in charge of that and this is how you can notice if it needs to be unloaded or not because we need to keep in mind that just because things are so second nature for us. Because we've been doing it forever, they're not gonna be second nature for our kids. 

So we need to break it down into a very small steps. So they understand how, so I would take them into the kitchen and say, okay, so when I start the dishwasher, I know that it's gonna run for like, I don't know, an hour or whatever and they don't really need to track that amount of details, but like it's gonna run for about an hour. This is how you know that it's done. Like is there a light that turns on or off or can, do you not hear it anymore? But it's shut. So if you're not hearing it run anymore and you notice it's shut, you're just gonna open it and take a look and see if it's clean or not. That's how you notice. Then when you notice, then you're going to unload it. The second part of that conversation in addition to their daily task and this is the part where families start to see a lot of progress is you're going to teach your kids how to do one, what we call one notice and do every day. And this can be anything that they want to do. And again, it like there's ways that we can, that we need to teach them how to notice because that's not something that they're gonna be able to just go from a chore charts like, oh suddenly I can notice everything and I have all this awareness. Like there's a simple structure and framework that we used to teach noticing. 

But in addition to their big three, they're going to every day like practice listing those noticing weights so their muscles get stronger and stronger. And like a notice and due could be resetting like the playroom, picking up a few toys, a notice and due could be putting away their shoes and jacket a notice and due could be clearing off the table after dinner, the important part is that there is a one that's taking the initiative to see what needs to happen and then doing it. And again, this is a process and so it's not gonna happen right away. And there's ways that we teach them and help them, like, be supportive in their learning, but that's the ultimate goal. And then when they feel empowered to do it and they have choice over whatever it is that they wanna notice and do that's when, I mean, I have like parents in my DMs every day, like, you know, the other day I heard the vacuum going upstairs and I had no idea what was going on. And I feel like my 12 year old son was vacuuming his room completely on his own of his own initiative. Or I noticed like my seven year old daughter coming down the stairs with like because she had emptied the garbages and she's taken them out, didn't have to ask her, she's usually super resistant, but they're just doing it because of the way that we're teaching and empowering them.

Laura:  And there's space for them to do it. I do feel like sometimes, you know, we, we kids want to be helpful, they want to be part of a family, they want to contribute to their family. And yet they sometimes I think, feel backed into a corner when we're telling them what to do all of the time. Do you know what I mean? They feel like they have no agency and ability to choose. When I first came across your page. I, that's like that same day. Like I, I think I saw a reel of yours that same day I taught notice and do to my, my eight year old daughter and she, she loves it. She, I mean, my kids have sensory issues. They strip their socks off the second, they're in the door. Often her notice and due for the day is to pick up socks and put them in the like, wash tub, you know? Yeah, I mean, so, and it, it doesnt have to be big. It can be a small, I, I really, I really love the notice and do so much. And I love that you have a course that can help families with this. So I know I have the link for your course, wait list, right? Because it's not open right now. You only open at certain times of the year. 

Samantha: Opens on May 1st. 

Laura: May 1st. Okay. 

Samantha: So just in a couple weeks on May 1st. 

Laura: Okay. And when will it close? 

Samantha: So it's technically open usually for about 10 days. I open it to the waitlist first. So if you're on the waitlist, that's when you're gonna get first access and the best lowest pricing after the waitlist enrollment closes, then it's open to the public for about a week afterwards. And you get everything right away. It's yours to keep forever.  And it will teach you everything you need to know.

Laura: Great, beautiful and you have your free guide. So I have that on that will be in the show notes as well. Okay. So the next question I have for you then is this again back to this word of nagging? Talk to me about reminders and how reminders work because there are things that my kids have been doing it since they were two and they still need a daily like it feels like they still need a daily reminder. Like, so this, this is not news to you that you have to put your shoes and then this is not news to you that you need to unload your lunch box. And yet every day she was on in the bed, the lunch box is hanging by the door instead of unloaded in the kitchen. Do you know what I mean? So what do we do about reminders?

Samantha: Yep, I do know what you mean. Absolutely. I think when like if I was listening to this as a mom, I would probably be thinking, oh my gosh, that is so fun and cute for her that her kids will do those things. But we're over here having an actual experience and there's no way my kids would like to take initiative and be proactive in the hall, right? But I just wanna like really emphasize that we've been doing this since last June. Really, really in a focused way. So we've had almost a year of practice now. And even still, there are reminders. I have a very, very likely neurodivergent kid. I have an extremely strong willed child. So we're having a very like human experience over here. 

Laura: That’s kinda so good to know.

Samantha: I think about, we are not, I do not have perfect robot children. I have amazing children but their.

Laura: We’re humans. Yes. 

Samantha: I think what's interesting about the reminder thing is when we're talking about household tasks and needing to give reminders for household tasks, there's a different level of emotional charged in it for us as women and mothers around reminders for whole household tasks than there probably is for other things. And I think the first step is being aware of where that emotionality comes from underneath for us and why there's a reason why it's so it it can, it can not always but it can be so aggravating.

Laura: So personal, it feels personal to so many.

Samantha: Personal. Yes. When we see like stuff laid out on the floor, when we see that our kids just walked away from breakfast and everything is sitting there waiting for us to come and clean it up while waiting for us to remind them again, to put away the cereal, right? That's different than I don't know what's something else that you would remind your kid about like saying thank you. You know, like there's a different level of.

Laura: Brushing their teeth like.

Samantha: Yeah, whatever it is. And the reason for that is because like you said, it can feel so personal and it can make trigger that those feelings in us of like nobody sees me, everyone thinks I'm the maid. This isn't fair. A lot of times I found for myself that there was stuff that had to do with me and my partner and our relationship and the inequity there that would kind of bubble up and seep out and like, I unintentionally onto my kids and the rage there. So I think for the first step is just recognizing that that is a really tender part of us that is getting poked. 

Laura: Yeah. 

Samantha: And there are, there are reasons why it feels so tender and it makes sense that it feels so tender and at the same time that is not our kids stuff and that those two are separate things. And so just coming back to like, okay, there's a reason why this feels so painful to me and especially annoying and it's okay and it makes sense and I could hold it without dumping it on to my kids that like the first step is just like neutralizing it in the same way that we would say, hey, remember, like, say please or whatever. This is just or like teaching our kids how to tie their shoes, like reminding.

Laura: A moment of attachment.

Samantha: Exactly, emotional neutrality there. This isn't about us and we're just in the same way I'm teaching my kids, I taught my kids how to tie their shoes. I taught my kids how to read or make friends at school. I'm teaching my kids these important life skills. And through that teaching, I am spinning this really hard situation that I've had to deal with and I'm spinning it into gold for my kids. So they are gonna go into their lives and they're going to be proactive adults and these skills translate into more than just the home, they'll translate into how they're like, how they are in the community, their ability to lead in the world and it will set them up for a completely different experience with roommates with, you know, future partners in marriages, whatever it may be. So again, neutralize it, long term goal. Gonna be okay. 

Laura: Yes. Good. I think that that is really helpful, reframe to kind of like suck the tension out of it. 

Samantha: The fire.Yeah.

Laura: Yeah. And then so, is it okayto remind? Like, so there's a part of me.

Samantha: Oh. Yeah.

Laura: So there's a part of me that like when I'm doing a reminder for a daily task, feels like I am and my kids will even say I'll do it, you just have to remind me, you know. So it does feel especially like my older one at, at 11, it does feel like there is an intention like I am carrying the role of executive function for, for them, you know? And I'm curious about how like how do we go about teaching our kids to not need a reminder? You know? 

Samantha: Oh, my gosh. That's a good question. That's a good question. So that is a really great opportunity for the kids to have an increased understanding and awareness a little bit deeper of what the mental load is and it can be, it doesn't have to be a huge lecture. And again, it's coming from a place of, instead of a resentment or martyrdom on our part, it's coming from a place of supportive empowerment. So it's like, hey, you're, you're right, you're right. I could totally remind you. Let me tell you why I'm actually gonna let you be in charge of the reminding. It's because when I'm the one that's making a mental note inside my brain to remind you that when we talked about the mental lode, remember we talked about the mental load that's part of the mental load. And when I'm carrying all these reminders in my brain, it starts to feel really, really heavy. So I'm going to let you carry that reminder literally just yesterday, I had this conversation with my 9 year old, neurodivergent kid. And she was like, mom, I just need you to remind me. And I said, cool, you're gonna be in charge of reminding. And then she said she turned to the like, Alexa in our kitchen and she said, Alexa set a reminder for 30 minutes for me to do my notice and do. Okay, I have a reminder set and then she said, thanks for carrying that mental load, Alexa. So, but like that, that happened. 

Laura: I love that so much.

Samantha: Of the conversations that we've had for over a year now where she immediately understood. Oh, yeah, it's not my mo it's not my mom's job to handle this situation. Like yes, she's being supportive and I'm also a capable kid, so I can help support myself. And this is one way I can help support myself.

Laura: Okay. I, I love, I, I love this so much. So now I'm starting to just, I wanna kind of, I'm imagining being a listener and hearing some of these things and there's, there's kind of two pushbacks that I think come up that I've thought of, you probably get all the pushbacks on your, on your on your Instagram page. But one is so and this one actually comes from my husband. There are lots of times where he very generously and graciously does things for our kids, does the notices and dues, does the things that they're definitely could and are supposed to be responsible for themselves. And most of the time it's because he cares for them and loves having this opportunity to care for them. He wants to be able to take care of them. And as they get older, there's fewer and fewer opportunities for that, you know, when they were two and we had to wipe them every time they went to the bathroom, you know, and we bath them and stuff. We, we cared for them in a very different way than we care for them now. And so he, he definitely is missing his little girls and wants to care for them. And at the same time that undermines sometimes my goals of having them be more responsibility taking, he travels a lot. And so when he's gone and they are still expecting someone to do all of those things, I'm the one who has to do it. Do you know what I mean? So, I mean, those are the conversations that I'm having for him. But there, I think that there are things that we like to do for our kids, you know, too. And, and, and so anyway, I'm kind of curious about that piece of it. 

Samantha: Yeah, I love that question. Two things I would say that's coming up. One, nothing is ever all or nothing. Like just because you're empowering your kid doesn't mean that we're completely like they're gonna do everything for themselves always like they're still children, you're still the parent, they're still gonna need care. So you can have both things like they can be empowered and take initiative and you can still care for them in different ways. Also, I think that it's beautiful that your husband is such an engaged parent. 

Laura: Oh, he’s wonderful. Yes.

Samantha: And really, and really care, it sounds like care and taking care is like a really big value for him. So I would just go through that same door or like road for him in your conversation with him and say, hey, I love that you want to take care of our kids. You can still take care of our kids. And we're actually always in some way, even when they're grown adults, there's ways that parents care for their kids, right? It just looks different as they age, as our kids are growing up, and as I'm trying to help empower them in this way, specifically, this is how we can shift some of the caring, because teaching our kids the skill of noticing and being proactive is caring for them. Because without that, like there's so many adults in my DMs or like emails or whatever that message me, comment on my posts that say I cannot tell you how much I wish I would have been taught this when I was younger.

Laura: Yes, yeah.

Samantha: Because when I'm an adult, it's so much harder to reprogram your brain and train yourself. And now all of a sudden I'm trying to like manage my adult life on my own with like crap piling up everywhere because I wasn't taught how to easily manage my life in this way. And now it's stressful and it's hard and it's overwhelming where if I was just taught before, it wouldn't be a problem. And that's just one piece of it. Let alone the whole cycle breaking piece of it, especially for your daughters. So I think it's like, let's like, really harness your partner's desire to care and say this is a really, really powerful way to care for our kids and bonus bonus. Like it, it's caring for me also because when you're gone, then I have a team, not even just when you're gone, but always, and we have a team of proactive kids instead of a one, a one month show. And so it's like magnifying his care effort. 

Laura: I really like that. I like that. Reframe a lot. Gosh, you're kind of a queen of reframes, aren't you? Nice job. I love that. I mean, I said being able to reframe things is a huge skill too. That's beautiful. Okay, so then the other thing that I, so whenever I talk about chores on the podcast or on Instagram, there's also a group of people who push back around your kids are not your servants. You know, you're the parent, you should be doing all of the things. And I'm kind of curious about how you respond to that set, kind of that attitude because I really, I don't think of my kids as my servants, but I, I think that they want to feel like full contributing members of a family they want to feel cared for. Of course, they also want to feel important. You know, we all want to feel like we belong and contribute. 

Samantha: Yeah, I mean, there's whole studies that have been done that like when kids feel like they have the capability to be a contributing member of a team that increases their self esteem, it increases their self-awareness, it increases, you know, their like all these other adjacent skills that also compound on themselves and translate into their adult lives in the future. Honestly, maybe this is an answer you're looking fo, when I get people commenting and saying you're like, you're the one that chose to have kids, they're not your servants or like I've even been like some people even said, you're abusing your children because you're asking them to notice what a dishwasher needs to be like. I in my mind, I'm like, ok, this is not for you then like we are operating on two very different realities and like that's okay, like I'm not going to put forth any effort on my part to try, try to convince someone who thinks that like I'm trying to turn my kids into slaves. Like that's not like, okay, like you go figure yourself out and I'm gonna be over here doing my thing, you know. 

Laura: Yeah. You know, I do wonder too for those folks because they're always on my posts. I, I, I don't do very many posts. But I do wonder too what they went through, you know, where they got that idea, you know, and, and how those things were handled for them growing up, you know, perhaps they were, you know, made to, to work in their home and take on labor that was inappropriate for them. And so then they're defensive for other kids, you know? 

Samantha: Totally. And I think it's a really good, like, reminder for ourselves too because I've had people say, like, I really, really love the way specifically that you are teaching this because when I was growing up it was done with a very like intense iron fist and had the opposite effect. And then in those moments, of course, I'm like, I'm so sorry, you had to experience that you didn't deserve that, you know, and I think just like even just giving a second to allow someone to be seen in their pain and also like, transmute that pain of, of good kind of like, okay, this is why like when I feel frustrated, like I'm gonna manage my own stuff, I'm going to emotionally regulate, take deep breaths, neutralize it, like all those things and all those things that you talked about the game would begin with, like we're gonna like use cooperation and connection and support and long gain perspective. Because that is so different than demand and control and threat and you talk like that level of intensity, that's not what we're doing, we're not forcing um and strong army. And it is really, really unfortunate that so many people have been that, that the way that they were quote unquote taught. 

Laura: Yeah.

Samantha: Because that's not teaching at all, you know? So.

Laura: No, it's not. So, I, I, that brings me to kind of my last question then. So for kiddos who find, you know, for parents who find themselves attempting to work through this, with their kids and there's resistance or pushback or I'm just not gonna do it. What do you, how do you work with that? Have you experienced in your own house? Push back and resistance experience like that? Like, what do you do? 

Samantha: Resistance is so normal. It doesn't mean you're doing anything wrong. It doesn't mean it's not working, it doesn't mean your kids are broken. And I think that's really important to understand is they think especially in, the information overwhelmed that we live in, especially around parenting nowadays. Like how one amazing is it that there's so much out there and so many resources for us to better ourselves as parents. And at the same time, it could be, feel really overwhelming and it can feel like if something doesn't work or if this script backfired or whatever that like I'm, I'm not a good enough mom and so I just really, really normalizing resistance is so, so, so normal and it doesn't mean anything other than human and human living together. So living and learning together, right? So I have what's called the 3 Cs. And it's very, like I talked about my course, it's gonna be a different approach if you're dealing with younger kids and toddlers versus like preteens and teens. But at the core of it, we're using curiosity,  connection, and then with younger kids, I say cooperation and with older kids, I say collaboration. 

And so we're going through those three steps to figure out what's at the root of this resistance, what's actually going on underneath the surface. We're approaching them with connection and again, that's gonna look differently depending on the age and then we're looking for cooperation or collaboration. And so anywhere our kids can meet us in the middle, especially in the case of resistance, that's where they can learn. So it's less about being like you're over here and I'm all the way over here and you need to child come all the way and meet me on my side and I'm not budging. It's like saying, okay, where can we meet together on this line on this continuum? Wherever that is where, wherever that is is totally fine because that's where the learning is going to take place. And that's where your kid is going to slowly, depending on how much resistance slowly move towards like down the road to closer and closer towards where we want him to be, you know, but again, process long term perspective, resistance is normal. Resistance is okay and it can, it still works when you go through those 3 Cs.

Laura: And it may be even as an opportunity for deeper connection and understanding at the end of the day too, right? So resistance can be so useful. It can be such a great catalyst for for understanding. Okay. So can you I'm kind of curious if you have an example or a story from maybe a client or you know, one of your own family members that can highlight moving from a place of resistance and supporting your kid through that?

Samantha: Yeah, totally.

Laura: I love learning from stories. 

Samantha: I know me too. I love, I love your questions by the way. Okay, so.

Laura: I'm putting you on the spot. So I'm sorry. 

Samantha: Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. No, I've got, well, I'm just like, I've got plenty to pull from, that's for sure. So if I have a kid who is okay, my six year old, very, very strong though. I tell him to do something 9times out of 10. He be like, he'll just look me straight in the face and go. No and walk away.

Laura: The demand avoidance is strong in that one. 

Samantha: Yeah. Love him, love him. 

Laura: Love it.

Samantha: So different things that I've done with him. And again, this is a younger kid. So these types of strategies are gonna look different for an older kid, but for a younger kid, I've found different ways that I can use connection to motivate him. One of the things that he really likes is like, hey, I'll say, hey, let's do the robot game and we're going to make your bed together and we are going to pretend like we're robots while we're doing it or even better. We're going to scan your room as a robot. And the second you see anything on the floor that needs to be put away, I want you to beat like robot, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep.

Laura: Alert, alert. That’s sounds like a fun game.

Samantha: And be, be, be beep and we'll walk over like moving our bodies like robot. I found a shirt on the floor. Beep, beep, beep. Now we're going to, you know, so again, no matter what we're doing, we're focusing even more on the fact that they did something like they picked up a shirt and put it away in the dirty laundry basket. We are focusing intentionally on the noticing part. Like what can you notice now? What can you know? You know what I mean? So it's like we're really, really teaching that skill first and foremost because it's one thing to learn how to clean a bathroom. It's an entirely different skill to learn when a bathroom needs to be cleaned. So, and then that could be enforced through the way we even praised them. Instead of saying, hey, thanks so much for making your bed. We just switch it to. Hey, you noticed that you needed to make your bed or you notice that your bed was not made and you did it. That's awesome. Thanks. Hey, thanks for noticing that that laundry needed to be folded and put away. Hey, you're so good at noticing. And so we're just really, really, really focusing on that part, first and foremost, to kind of create new channels in their brain. 

Laura: I really love that. And I love too that just, I think even the simple act of saying that out loud makes that invisible load more visible to the whole family, right? You know, even just validating that noticing is a skill one that we don't give ourselves enough credit for. You know, like, I don't like most moms. If something's lost in the house, I'm the person who can find it usually, you know, and being able to like, hold that up as a skill that somebody can learn, it's not just a magic trick that moms can do, you know?

Samantha: Absolutely. And what's so interesting is even with, you know, my usually very resistant, strong little six year old son because we've had those conversations again and again and again, and we're using those words to reinforce and all those things. He can use the term mental load in a, in like, it blows my mind the way that he uses the word mental load in everyday conversation. And he's six, a six year old boy, like.

Laura: I love that.

Samantha: But they, they're so capable and he gets it. So even if like, I'm still having to give him more support than maybe I would like to sometimes one, he's a kid and he's learning and that's great. And two, he gets the underlying why behind it all the bigger picture stuff that when I imagine him as an adult man in a partnership, like it gives me goosebumps just thinking about it because he's gonna come into that relationship and be like, I know exactly what emotional and invisible labor is. I know what the mental load is. I know how to be as aware, proactive adult and anticipate me. And I know that it is not my, like, if he's in a heterosexual relationship, I know it's not my wife or a woman partner's job to do everything for me and for our family and that we operate as a team always. Like that's.

Laura: Oh, chills. That's the dream right there. Yeah. Oh, I love that so much. And I, I, I really love the, the reminder too that the, it, it's not just, it's not just for us, you know, in the here and now in the, our, our day to day is that where it's like, it's like this is a gift to give to our future, our future families, you know, as we, as our kids go out into the world and to their partners, their roommates, their friends and they, you know, one day their kids perhaps, you know, there, there's ripples to what we're doing. I really appreciated this conversation Sam. It was so fun to talk with you. I love learning from you. Why don't you tell us where folks can find you on sociasl so they can connect with you and I'll make sure all the links are in the show notes, but it's nice to hear that. 

Samantha: Yeah, of course. Sure. So I'm on Instagram at samkelly_world. And that's where you can access, you know, all my resources, free guide if you wanna hop on the wait list for the audio, of course, you can do that there as well. Lots of free content that, you know, even I've had so many parents reach out and say I just from your free content alone, like huge shifts.

Laura: Yes. I mean the same. Yes.

Samantha: Are happening in my home. Yeah, so check it out. You'll love it. And I'm just honored that you reached out and had me. 

Laura: I'm so grateful that you came on. I, you know, there's, I, I think you're doing really a lovely service for the world. So I really appreciate that so much. Thank you for being here. 

Samantha: Thank you.

Okay, so thanks for listening today. Remember to subscribe to the podcast and if it was helpful, leave me a review that really helps others find the podcast and join us in this really important work of creating a parenthood that we don't have to escape from and creating a childhood for our kids that they don't have to recover from. 

And if you're listening, grab a screenshot and tag me on Instagram so that I can give you a shout out um and definitely go follow me on Instagram. I'm @laurafroyenphd. That's where you can get behind the scenes. Look at what balanced, conscious parenting looks like in action with my family and plus I share a lot of other, really great resources there too. 

All right. That's it for me today. I hope that you keep taking really good care of your kids and your family and each other and most importantly of yourself. And just to remember, balance is a verb and you're already doing it. You've got this!

Episode 187: Disability Rights: Ins & Outs Parents Need to Know with Kelley Coleman

In this week’s podcast episode, we will dive into the topic of parenting children with disabilities, specifically looking at disability rights and the ins and outs that parents need to know. I had the pleasure of interviewing Kelley Coleman, an author renowned for her book "Everything No One Tells You About Parenting a Disabled Child."

Here are some of the topics we covered in this episode:

  • Advocating for children with disabilities as a parent

  • Legal protections for children with disabilities (Diagnosed or Undiagnosed)

  • Navigating IEPs and 504 Plans: Challenges, Risks, and Strategies for Parents and Schools

  • Advocating effectively without fear of being a 'Squeaky Wheel'

  • Nurturing parents of children with disabilities through a nervous system reset amidst challenges and stress

  • Exploring the challenges of self-compassion and self-care among parents of children with disabilities

To know more about Kelley Coleman, visit her website www.kelleycoleman.com, follow her on Facebook @kelleycoleman, and Instagram @kelleycoleman

Resources:


TRANSCRIPT

Parenting is often lived in the extremes. It's either great joy or chaotic, overwhelmed. In one moment, you're nailing it and the next you're losing your cool. I want to help you find your way to the messy middle, to a place of balance. You see balance is a verb, not a state of being. It is a thing you do. Not a thing you are. It is an action, a process, a series of micro corrections that you make each and every day to keep yourself feeling centered. We are never truly balanced. We are engaged in the process of balancing.

Hello, I'm Dr. Laura Froyen and this is The Balanced Parent Podcast where overwhelmed, stressed out and disconnected parents go to find tools, mindset shifts and practices to help them stop yelling at the people they love and start connecting on a deeper level. All delivered with heaping doses of grace and compassion. Join me in conversations that will help you get clear on your goals and values and start showing up in your parenting, your relationships, your life with openhearted authenticity and balance. Let's go!

Laura: Hello, everybody on this week's episode of the Balanced Parent podcast, we are going to be talking about disability rights and some of the ins and outs that we need to know about if we are parenting disabled children to help me with this conversation. I have Kelly Coleman who wrote a beautiful and very well researched book , Everything No One Tells You About Parenting a Disabled Child. Kelley, welcome to the show. I'm so grateful to have you here. Will you tell us a little bit about yourself? Who you are? What you do and then we'll dive in? 

Kelley: Yes. Thank you so much for having me. What do I do in my free time? I listened to your podcast. Awesome. And I love that you lean into the fact that there's no answer to all the parenting stuff that isn't messy in some way. And I love how validating that is. So, thank you for being a part of that. I, I'm an author of my book, Everything No One Tells You About Parenting a Disabled Child: Your Guide to the Essential Systems, Services, and Supports is about how to do all of the stuff and the paperwork and the planning and it stems from over a decade of my own experience. I have two amazing kids. They're 10 and 12. My boys are the best of friends and they're both unique and quirky and hilarious and all the wonderful things. And our younger son, Aaron has multiple disabilities and for him, what that looks like is and overall undiagnosed genetic syndrome. Maybe we'll get an answer on that. Maybe we won't. We've done all the tests science has available. And with that, he checks boxes of autism, epilepsy, cerebral palsy, cortical vision impairment, feeding to microcephaly, fine motor, gross motor, sensory processing, cognitive behavioral, like all the stuff. He's like, I'm an overachiever. I'm just gonna keep checking boxes and within all of that he is just and I love that you smile when you say that, I say that because it's such a marked difference between the people who are like, cool. 

Your kid sounds interesting. Tell me more. And the people who are like, oh you poor thing. And I'm like, don't like my kid is this like, vibrant hilarious human who is just like, I'm gonna go to the grocery store and I'm just gonna dance by the lettuces and come dancing and we're like, cool. So it's, yeah, it's great to be around people who are just like, you know what? You have a unique kid. And I'm like, yeah, they're both on their own path and disability happens to be on the path of one of my children. It is not always easy. I don't know that I believe people when they say, oh, everything is wonderful. And I'm so glad my child is disabled and I believe there are gifts. I believe there are lessons. I believe there are amazing humans who are disabled or not, but sometimes it's really hard and certainly the, the physical and the medical stuff, it can be exhausting and certainly all of the like mountains of paperwork that we have to do is just preposterous. But to get our son the support that he needs, it's what we have to do. And it's like this job that no one teaches you how to do and you're suddenly handed and it is a full time and forever job and good luck with that. And like, no, like it's on.

Laura: You know, caregiving for a child is a job in and of itself already. And then there's this extra set of expertise and know how and almost savvy that you have to also acquire to make sure that your child is getting the right support and access that they need and deserve and have a right to. Yeah. 

Kelley: Oh my goodness. Yes. And no one knows how to do this. Even I've talked to special education teachers, neurologists, social workers who have said, I thought I knew all this stuff and then I had a kid with disabilities and, oh my goodness, like I had no idea. And we're all just thrown into this and we are doing the parenting piece of loving our kids and empowering them and encouraging to like, be all the things and do all the things. And at the same time, like you said, like, caregiving is a job and we're handed this full time job. That's a lot of paperwork and a lot of red tape and sitting on, hold on the phone forever that we are like figuring out how to do and, you know, hopefully we all have the good fortune to be in community with other parents and to connect with other parents because that is just such a difference between just feeling like you're drowning in all of this and feeling like you are able to tackle all the things. 

Laura: Oh I, I, I imagine too that there's lots of folks who are listening, who feel very alone in, in this. So I let's get into some like maybe some specific conversations. So around if let's say a parent has just gotten a diagnosis for their kid, that means that they, and, and actually the parent doesn't really know what that means. It doesn't really know. Maybe they've been, the child has been struggling at school. Perhaps the, the school has, you know, is wanting to do things that the parents are not really comfortable with. It isn't really sure what their rights are like, what is the first step with for a parent in figuring out? Okay. So how can I advocate for my child? How can I make sure that their needs are being met and that they're supported? Was that the very first thing a parent can do.

Kelley: The very first thing that I think is so often gets forgotten is validating that parent and their feelings and recognizing if you are overwhelmed. And if you are feeling like I am inadequate and, ah, like, yes, that is how we all feel and you might feel alone in this because we all feel that way. But know that you are not and know that there are people and support that will give the tool who will give you the tools that you need. So, number one is, if anybody is like, oh, don't feel, don't be so upset, don't be so like, freak out as much as you need to because if you're just bottling all of this up, it'll just get worse and that part will snowball. And I feel like that is stop number one on protecting your mental health. Number two, and I know you've talked about this on other episodes of really knowing your child and seeing them for who they are and my child, his disabilities are visible, they are apparent, they are clear, they are genetic and part of his makeup. So no one is going to look at us and look at him and be like, oh no, your kid doesn't qualify for services like he qualifies so many families. Yeah, face a journey that is very different because perhaps their own disabilities and their childs are not visible. I have talked to so many friends who have been in this extensive gas lighting process for years in the pursuit of trying to get a diagnosis and or services and supports for their child, do everything you can to listen to that voice in your head. And even if evaluators who are educators or doctors or be like, no, no, no, no, no, that's fine. Oh, she's just a sweet kid. 

She's just quiet. She's just shy. She, oh, she would raise her hand if she wanted to. She just doesn't want to, if you are looking at those signs and saying no, my child is having tremendous anxiety. My child is not able to process the visual or written information. These expectations are out of line with the way that my child's brain is processing information or the world stick with it because you are the expert on your child and be sure that you are checking in with your child. My son is a complex communicator by that. I mean, we don't have a conversation with words where he is giving spoken words back, but his words are vocalizations, gestures, some signs and he has a communication device for him. That's an ipad with a program where he touches buttons and it's saying the words, he wants to say, many kids can and do have conversations, be sure you are checking in with them. And if the teacher is saying, oh no, they can do the work. But the child is saying I can't and I'm not comfortable keep listening to your child. If you do not have other parents, teachers or doctors who are on this journey with you and who are believing you and all of this, every state has a parent training and information center. 

Laura: Okay.

Kelley: They are largely staffed by parents who are on this journey themselves. The information is free and it is specific to your area. I'm in California, one of my very best friends is in Texas. We don't have the same laws and rules and supports and ways of going about things in place. So you need to be sure you're getting information, especially on school, especially on government and state funded sources. You need to find out what is available locally. And if you just Google parent training and information centers, you can put in your zip code and they will show you what's closest to you is a great place to start. Even under the same federal guidelines, things can be very different and there are big federal protections for individuals with disabilities, diagnosed or not. And we can all familiarize ourselves with the fact that your child does have protections, again whether or not they are diagnosed. And that's really important. 

Laura: What are some of those protections that, that children with disabilities, regardless of whether they're diagnosed or not have access to? 

Kelley: Yes. So I love this conversation and you know, whether it's in my book or in my conversation, so much of my information is coming directly from the experts, the leaders, the friends that I have gathered information from who are disabled themselves and that's where we should be getting information about disability is from disabled people because it sure sounds a lot scarier when we're just like, making stuff up in our heads and then when we talk with disabled people, we're like, oh, okay. This, this is the thing like we're good. So, learning from the lived experience and certainly look at laws like the Americans with Disabilities Act, which was only passed in 1990 which is so alarming and it defines disability very broadly. I'm not going to give you the exact proper wording. So somebody online correct me on that all you want. But it is defining disability as a physical or mental impairment that impacts the activities of daily living. That is a hugely broad definition and it is intentionally broad. It was written by people with disabilities. So there is no hierarchy of you are disabled enough or not, you are protected from discrimination under the law. And even if you do not say and identify as I am disabled, if you fit within the definition of the law and you ever need to lean on that for protections that is there for you. 

And there's the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, IDEA that guarantees everyone a right to a free and appropriate public education. How that is interpreted within each state, especially the word appropriate can vary. But that is what your child is entitled to under the law. And when you are having conversations with the school and speaking to the where do we even start with thi, saying my child has the right to a free and appropriate public education that is federal law that applies to each one of us. This is not appropriate, what's not appropriate. My child does not have the fine motor skills to hold a pencil and all of their evaluations are being based on things they write with that pencil, that's not appropriate. What are the accommodations that will allow my child to receive an appropriate education to be evaluated and to participate in an appropriate way. And I, I am so passionate about the discussion about accommodations specifically. They can be big, they can be small, they can be things other kids might never know about and it really varies from person to person and sometimes from day to day for the same person might need different things. Accommodations are not extra, they're not a privilege a kid is getting. If your kid, if your kid needs glasses and the kid next to him does not, we're not gonna give that other kid a pair of glasses just so it can all be equal. 

Laura: No, of course not. No.

Kelley: You glasses to the board. And I think I think eyeglasses are a great thing to wrap our heads around that everyone can understand my eyeglasses that I'm wearing right now are an accommodation that allows me to drive my car safely. 

Laura: Right. It's about access. Accommodations are about access. Yeah.

Kelley: Yes.

Laura: Yeah.

Kelley: Exactly. And I think it is so important to have that conversation with our children who may need or who may have accommodations because your child's comfort and safety is certainly a part of that. And are other kids or even teachers or other adults, because sometimes the bullying absolutely can be coming from the adults which is horrifying, but it happens all the time and we need to be aware of that. We need to ask our kid if they're saying I don't want to use the adaptive pencil because I'm getting made fun of. Tell me about that. I am so glad that you told me that. How are you feeling? Where is this coming from? What can we do together to make this better? And the answer might be tell the teacher to knock off the comments, which unfortunately happens. Most, most, most teachers are phenomenal and amazing and we have a great team and we're so fortunate but get to know your school team, your therapists, your doctors, anybody who's working with your kid, especially when you are not there so that they will be accountable to you. They will be accountable to your child. They will be accountable to the IEP, the IEP or the 504 plan that is in place. 

Laura: Can we talk for a second about IEPs and 504 plans? So I've had a conversation with a few families where there has been pushback from a school district from the teacher or the school around even though when the child has a diagnosis, particularly in ADHD diagnosis, around getting a formalized plan in place and just going by a teacher by teacher, you know, kind of verbal accommodation plan. And I'm kind of curious about, about that, what are the risks for families going through like a non documented process? Why are schools pushing back on that? And then what, what can parents be do? Like should parents really be pushing to get something in writing for their kiddos? Is that an okay question to ask? 

Kelley: Not really, is this okay, but like, can we talk about this every day with all the people? Oh my goodness. This is, this is a massive question. And again, my, my bias is towards teachers. We've had some, some tricky experiences, but we've had these amazing experiences and so many friends who are educators and.

Laura: I just want to also note like my entire family are teachers. Like literally, I had one uncle in my entire extended family who is not employed by the public school system. So I, I adore teachers. 

Kelley: Yeah. And we need, we need to talk about how we are supporting the teachers in all of this. So, and we've had so many friends whose like my kid clearly needs an IP for a gazillion reasons. So we haven't had, we've had plenty of push back on things within it and we've got another meeting in three days. 

Laura: So many meetings.

Kelley: So many friends who have gotten pushback and even being evaluated on getting a document.

Laura: I experienced that with my daughter. So my daughter, my oldest daughter is autistic and she continues to not, she doesn't read, you know, it's completely invisible and she, she's, you know, a talented masker in many circumstances anyway. So yes, that push back is, is real for lots of families.

Kelley: And thank you for sharing that. And I think even before we like get to the, how do we deal with this? Acknowledging the pushback is real much of the research that has been done and how the evaluations were developed and how educators were educated on how to figure all of this out is based on young white males. 

Laura: Yes. 

Kelley: So the diagnostic criteria for a young white male might not apply to your teenage daughter who has a very clear neuro divergence of her own and know that it's hard, know that race can play a huge factor in this. And I know you've spoken with be on your podcast before about kids getting shuffled off as, oh, this is willful, bad behavior and we need to punish the heck out of this. So they'll stop and black boys especially are disproportionately labeled as that rather than saying I see you and I see that you need different support than I am giving you. Let's figure that out. That's, that's what we need to do. And even if there was something willful in any child's behavior. If we approach things from a place of means, the grown up, maybe I try something different to address your needs.

Laura: With all my resources.

Kelley: And my kids would feel seen in a way that they might say my brain is not processing this class, but my heart says I trust you. Like, let's build that trust. And speaking of building trust, the reality is even in situations where we are dealing with a doctor, an educator, a therapist, whomever who is challenging or who is not being supportive, we might not have a choice but to deal with that person. And we need to remember that and that can be so hard. I have, I have had that person in our lives and in our son's life and there's an amount of paperwork before you can change a school or a classroom or an IEP or whatever. So that as hard as it is go into this knowing, you might have to keep dealing with this person and this person might be a gatekeeper. So your job and your desire is to support your child in achieving their best outcomes. If you have, we'll say teacher, it can be anyone if you have a teacher who is not supporting that. And they say, you know, we don't need an IEP. Try saying to them, I want to make your job as a teacher as easy as possible. All of this like we're gonna do this. We're gonna do this. We're gonna do that. There is no obligation to follow through with any of that unless it is in writing and not just an email back and forth of, I'm going to sit your child closer to the board because they can't, they can't see if they're in the back of the room. It needs to be in writing, if you have, if you would like any expectation that it will be followed up on. I very often say to teachers, I need to make it easier for you to support my child to do all of the things, we need to do this so that we can all be on the same page. 

Parents in the IEP process part of the process is that you are an equal team member even before or if you never have an IEP. View yourself as an equal team member. Be in frequent communication with that teacher. Ask them what is the best way for me to communicate with you? Do you like a text every Tuesday afternoon? I'll put that on my calendar. You'll get a text. Do you prefer to schedule conferences? Phone calls, like meeting at the at the gate during school pickups? What works for you? And it can be hard when you feel like you're not getting the support you need. The reality is if your child is not getting free and appropriate public education. Another term that is used in the IEP process children need to be able to access their education. If your child is not able to access their education, that needs to be the conversation if your child is turning in their homework every day, but it took them 5.5 hours to write three sentences. And that is a story from good friends who have experienced that, that is not appropriate and you need to bring that up. If you are the parent who's moving these mountains and is supporting your child and not doing the work for them, but walking them through, if it's taking you five hours to do homework that other kids are doing in 15 minutes, that is a red flag and listen to that. Listen to your teacher ask the teacher instead of coming in just saying, this is too much. 

We got to change this. Saying, hey, I'm curious what the general expectation is for how long it should take a student to, to finish the assignment and how much support students we, we should be expected to give our students in this. And then when the teacher says like 15 minutes while you're making dinner, you can just give them a high five when it's done. And if it's, then you have that information to then have a real conversation. And yes, you do need to information gather and it is exhausting back to the beginning of our conversation. If you're exhausted by all this. Yeah, you're right on track. But information gather and assume, assume everyone has the best intentions. Assumed your teachers and therapists and social workers and everyone are overworked because I'm pretty sure they are and approach things from a place of, I know you want my child to succeed. I want to make your job easier. Let's do this together. And if they push back on an IEP, say, can you tell me reasons why we wouldn't do that? 

Laura: And if they said, I just don't think it's necessary. 

Kelley: We're not putting this into place. And then people usually trip over their words very quickly and you can say great, let's give it a try. We can get rid of it if it doesn't work. But for me, as a parent, in order to better support my child, you know, put it on your shoulders whenever you can, I am really struggling to help support what's going on in the classroom at home. If we had goals in an IEP laid out your IEP will most likely have a annual goal and then incremental goals within that. So, you know, that would really help me and I know that you're open to just having conversations about this, but I'm struggling. 

Laura: I like that, taking it on yourself, too.

Kelley: Taking it on yourself. And also like you are, you're not apologizing for you, you're not apologizing for your kid. But you're saying like, hey, we're a team and this is important and really look at you know what they are looking? What are they evaluating for your child? How are they evaluating it? Is it in a way that is comfortable for your child? How does your child feel about? For example, if the school district says, I think your child needs a 1 to 1 aid full time at school. How does your child feel about that? Do they feel like that would cause social anxiety, stress isolation, whatever if there's a grown up helicoptering and if you say I agree, my child needs this support. Let's talk about how to do this in a way that is still conducive to all the social interaction that my child needs and deserves under federal law because that is what is appropriate for all children at school to have appropriate social emotional days. 

Laura: Yeah. Okay. And so I, I do, I know I hear from a lot of, I kind of sometimes I feel like I hear my listeners in my head. So there's the conversation of like this sounds like a lot and it's exhausting and I think we need to have the conversation of how do we care for ourselves. But before we get there, I think a lot of parents really worry about being the squeaky wheel and as are advocating for their child, I think that they worry about making it so that teachers don't like their child or that you know that they are being a nuisance or being extra you know, and I, I'm kind of curious if you have a little bit of a, some, some, I don't know permission for these parents that this is actually, it's actually okay to be the squeak squeaky wheel for your child.

Kelley: Not only is it okay. It is very often necessary. And I have yet to talk to a parent who looks back and says, you know what? I really wish I wouldn't have pushed so hard to get these supports in place for my child. Oh, I really wish I wouldn't have advocated so much. Oh, I really wish we hadn't added that goal into the IEP. Do your best with where you are right now. Know what your kid needs and know that it serves you and your child. If you are the phone call that people want to return, if you are leaving messages where you are just bananas and you have a chip on your shoulder and you're yelling and screaming about all the things I want to do that so badly. And in my head, I'm doing that, however, no one wants to return that phone call. So unfortunately, you do have to take into consideration how you are approaching every single interaction. I was recently told and we have a fantastic school team and IP team and it's massive because, you know, we have a dozen people on our school team. I was recently told that he really likes you, but they're all afraid of you. And I was like, that's exactly what we want. Why are they all a little bit afraid of me, quote unquote. It's because I stand firm in who my child is in, what support he needs in having high expectations and knowing his rights. 

Part of all of that is asking questions if, as a parent, you're thinking, I don't know what my child's rights are. I don't understand these acronyms. I don't know how the heck to figure out these goals. If you're like, I don't know. Cool. What you want is you want to learn and you need to and I know this can be so hard for so many families, especially when there is a language barrier. When they are mistreated or othered or all the things, it can be hard to stop one person or a whole meeting full of people and saying, wait, I have no idea what that sentence just meant. Can you repeat that again? And then I'll ask you about the words that I don't understand. The reality is and I hope everyone firmly understands that does not make you look ignorant, that makes you look engaged and you don't want to be the screaming parent. You want to be the engaged parent because that is the phone call that people want to return. The parent who says I know that you want to support my child. I want to make that easier for you. And I want to be an equal team member. Therefore, I will keep asking you questions because I can't be an equal team member if I don't understand the sentence that just came out of your mouth. And especially in IEP meetings and those documents, like, can we just all chip in and hire a graphic designer to like, make IP documents look like a social media post or something? Like they're awful. I have to read one this afternoon and I'm just like, oh, here comes, it's hard for me and I've been doing this for years. 

Laura: I think that that's probably important to hear is that it is hard. It's hard. Yeah. And it, you know what you were just talking about. I was thinking about the emotional and mental labor that's involved in, in navigating those relationships well, too. Right. So, regulating yourself, ho holding in when you want to rage about your kid, not having access to the supports that they need and have a right to, you know, being able to, to assume the best of, of everyone on their team and come in with a voice that it can be heard. You know, that's a lot of them, emotional and mental labor and it takes a toll. It, it's, it's a lot.

Kelley: It is a lot and it is so much and there's so many meetings where I have like loud screaming, punk rock music queued up on my phone that as soon as I get in my car, it's like the windows are down and the music is up and I'm screaming right along because it's like.

Laura: What are some of the. Yeah. Yeah. Tell me some of the ways that you reset your nervous system or kind of complete that cycle or give yourself permission to, you know, to release some of those things. And like, how do you care for yourself in the midst of this? 

Kelley: Something that I have learned through the last decade of doing this is to have the best sense I can of what I can control and what I cannot control. If we are raging over the things, we cannot control, we're just going to keep raging and we will just feel worse because we will never fix that problem. Period. If we are aware of what we can control, it gives us a clear path forward, not an easy path. None of this is even the easy days are often not easy and try to anticipate in my life. There is so much we cannot anticipate, try to anticipate. For example, every March, we have our annual IP meeting I put on the calendar for the for the first week in January email, our assistant principal suggest a date and a time that works for me. And because I'm emailing so far in advance, we tend to get that date and time for our meeting because that's what works for me. And I request all of the documents in advance because I know I need time to read everything in advance. And I know that I need to anticipate all of these steps of a very long and it's, it's never thrilling. It's often real boring reading all this stuff, but it's really important. And again, it's hard for me and I've been doing this for years, but anticipate our annual meeting for social services, our annual IEP meeting, our specialist meetings that we know we have scheduled and I literally section of time on my calendar for reminders of the neurologist is going to want to know these things. So I need to get my log of this. I need to check the expiration dates on medication. Like I schedule all of that in my calendar so that there is a sense of I can do this and I'm able to.

Laura: Yeah, you're offloading your executive functioning. Good job. 

Kelley: Thank you. By the way, that's very long winded answer is exactly what you just said. How can you offload executive functioning? That's why you're the host. That's exactly it. Of what can we just make automatic. And that in my experience gives me the space to say, you know what, I'm going to take a really long walk with the dog this morning because that's what I need for my mental, mental and physical health. Even though I need to read the IP document, we've got the meeting, we've got all of this stuff. I've realized I can control that workflow. And I've done that so that I can take the time to walk the dog, have dinner with my husband, just hang out and play with my kids, do whatever self care thing I need to do because all of the job and the work of the caregiving piece I've created space for that. So I don't have anxiety of whether or not it will get done and how the heck am I going to do this? Because I've created systems that allow me to say, well, that's gonna be fun. But it's on the calendar for Wednesday afternoon. So I'm doing it and therefore Wednesday morning, I can do other things. 

Laura: Yeah, you can kind of mindfully and intentionally take care of yourself so that you are in a good space to do some of the harder things that you know, you have to do. 

Kelley: Absolutely. And I was talking to a friend the other day that said her process is a little bit opposite. Is that first? She schedules the time for herself. She's like, I know I need to go to church on Sunday morning because that gives me the energy to then come home and schedule all this stuff and figure out what the thing is that allows you to check those boxes in a way that they are not taking over your life.

Laura: I like that. And I, I like the permission too to just get to know yourself. I think that, you know, we, we often go through life, not really asking ourselves, you know, what it would be the most kind and compassionate thing I could do for myself right now. Or knowing I've got this thing coming up, you know, what is it that I need in order to be able to walk into that as my best self, we don't, we don't do that a lot. And especially as parents when we've got complex kiddos who need a lot of us who are borrowing our executive functioning, you know, who are, you know, I mean, it's, it's kind of hard and complicated to make that space for us, for ourselves. 

Kelley: It is and acknowledging that to yourself. I also advocate for having real conversations with your kids if this week, I am preparing for this IP and I'm like, you know what guys, we're having some new leftovers for dinner because I am so stressed out trying to read these documents and figure out what they are. It is worth it and I am so happy that I'm able to do it. But this is the hard thing. You are not the hard thing. And naming out loud like this stuff is hard and that's ok and hard things are not bad. Hard things are part of all of our lives. And, and again, this comes from talking to so many disabled adults who have said talk to your kids about the hard things and especially you know, acknowledge their feelings when something with their disability is hard for them, because it takes away those feelings of like shame and aloneness and this is just me and I'm, I'm quote unquote bad or whatever because of the way that my brain or my body works and say no, your brain or your body does work in a different way than your brothers or your classmates or the guy at the grocery store. Lots of people do. We need to catch up to you. You don't need to change or mask or whatever the thing is to catch up to us. So I know it's hard to have patience with me sometimes, but I'm working hard to catch up to you and I love that you are part of that. 

Laura: Yeah, I like that framing too. I think gosh, that's a whole other conversation. How to, how to sit with our kids, especially as they begin noticing and wondering about their differences and creating their own relationship with, with that. You know, I feel like I wish we could have a whole other conversation. 

Kelley: Oh my gosh, many conversations and also can be a very different conversation if the parent does not share the disability, if the child's disability is visible, if their disability is not visible. And what is their comfort level with sharing their very personal information with others. You are not ever obligated to share your personal medical information with anyone and some children very much want that information out there because they think, oh, that helps other people to understand me better. And isn't that great? Other children might say kids are gonna make fun of me. Kids are gonna other me and not want to sit with me if I tell them X Y and Z about me. So we got to keep that under wraps and there's no one way to do this. Right. Wouldn't that be nice? 

Laura: Yeah. Yeah. I, I, I think it's so good to be talking about these things. So I think the last thing that I wanted to just talk about is, you know, so I feel like what we've talked about in terms of self care and you know, caring for the self is not that different than it is for all parents because parenting in general is just hard. I wonder if there are there any pieces to kind of, what does compassionate self care look like that are, that are different that we need to pay particular attention to if we're parenting a disabled child? 

Kelley: Yes, I, I think you are absolutely right. There is so much crossover for all parents of all children. When your child's support needs are exponential. The demands on you are exponential and you really do need to view parenting as a job and that is with all the parenting things. Caregiving is a job in addition to that with loads of overlap and we need to find a way to make the job of caregiving sustainable. And sometimes it is all of the boring, the paperwork and the the phone calls and the stuff for me that is a full time and forever job and I need systems in place so that all the like go have brunch with your friends, you know, go get a manicure. All of that stuff can be possible because I am working with different demands on my time, on my brain, on my energy. We need to acknowledge that we are working under different constraints as caregivers. We need to make space for caregiving as a job so that we can also make space for ourselves as people. Our job is not to erase ourselves so that we can give everything to our children and it's very easy to do that. But think about what you actually need. You might need an easier way to figure out what is in that IP document, know that and call a friend, go to an online support group so you can talk through things, figure out what support you need in order to be a person in addition to a parent and a caregiver so that you do not feel guilty or ashamed or overwhelmed by taking your dog on a long walk or whatever the thing is that you need. 

Laura: Yeah, I, I love that. I think that it's really important to highlight those, those distinct individual roles and hats that we wear and acknowledge that like we don't have to lose our personhood in this process of raising these amazing kiddos. You know that we, we still get to be our ourselves and have our own lived experience. You know that we are human beings having a lived experience, just like our children are human beings, having a lived experience. And that overlaps sometimes. And we have to, we have to still honor the, the individuals that we are too. 

Kelley: Yes. And when you do lose yourself in this because you probably will, you're still in there and you're still worth coming back to and available to come back to. So if you're like, man, I have lost myself. Don't, don't shame yourself or lose sleep over it. Maybe that's what you needed to do because there were, there was a trip to the emergency room, cool, be present for that and then find the time to be present for yourself. 

Laura: Yeah, I think that it's, you know, so often we think that it is that it's juggling, you know, and constantly trying to keep like all of the balls in the air at once and sometimes it's mindfully setting a ball down for a time, a period of time. You know, like when we talk about, I mean, we're kind of skirting around the word balance here and I think the word balance. I, I use it in the name of my podcast as a tongue in cheek, kind of poking fun at the idea that we can be balanced and it, I just, I don't, I don't think it's necessarily realistic in some certain circumstances. It's about noticing, noticing when things are off kilter, being aware, even if we can't do anything to change it in that moment in time, but being aware of it and bringing it back as opposed to, because being kind of completely oblivious to, to where we are, you know, and, and there, I think that there are times there is a very real constraints on us. I really liked what you said that we are parenting in, under different constraints. And, you know, a lot of the families that I work with, who are in my membership, they, they don't have people in their real lives who are parenting, you know, kids who are twice exceptional or, you know, all of the who they just the, the, the other parents in lives just do not understand. They don't know, the extra constraints. And so I, I so agree, finding a community where you can just feel seen and heard and like, like you're not alone, you know, that you're not the only one who's having to, to do these things is also really important. 

Kelley: Yes. And also a community where there is no comparison or competition of my kids more to say, you know, like, you know, we friends, we gotta, we gotta knock that off, like.

Laura: Is that a thing?

Kelley: Your kid might be? Yeah. Oh my God, that's such a thing. Well, and that a lot in, in some circles, my, my child is the quote unquote most disabled. In some circles, he is the quote unquote least disabled. And, you know, if somebody says, like, man, my kid is a picky eater and we're really struggling. I don't need to jump in and say, well, my kid has a feeding tube. No, because all I'm doing is just shutting them down and like patting myself on the back because like, oh, we must have it harder. Like, you know what? It's actually easier in some ways. We need to all remember to listen to one another because my heart is my heart and your heart is your heart. And my kid might check more boxes than yours. But we are all, you know, in, in my book and my friend Jill gave this quote to me, which I just love. She said we are all in the same ocean, just in very different boats. And so like, let's just be in the ocean together and like, I might be in a rickety old canoe today and you might be in like some fancy ocean liner, but like we're all in the ocean, like we're all in this together. 

Laura: Yeah, I really like that. Oh, gosh, that comparison thing. It really does steal a lot from us. So I, I agree. Yeah. Well, Kelly, thank you so much for spending this time with us. Today, I want to make sure everyone can find you. So your book is available everywhere, I'm assuming. But where, where can people go to learn more about you and from you? 

Kelley: Yes. So my website kelleycoleman.com and that's kelleycoleman.com. And I look forward to hearing from everybody. The book is Everything No One Tells You About Parenting a Disabled Child and it is just how to do all the stuff. So we can just spend less time with the paperwork and just more time loving our kids. 

Laura: I love that. Thank you so much. 

Kelley: Thank you. 

Okay, so thanks for listening today. Remember to subscribe to the podcast and if it was helpful, leave me a review that really helps others find the podcast and join us in this really important work of creating a parenthood that we don't have to escape from and creating a childhood for our kids that they don't have to recover from. 

And if you're listening, grab a screenshot and tag me on Instagram so that I can give you a shout out um and definitely go follow me on Instagram. I'm @laurafroyenphd. That's where you can get behind the scenes. Look at what balanced, conscious parenting looks like in action with my family and plus I share a lot of other, really great resources there too. 

All right. That's it for me today. I hope that you keep taking really good care of your kids and your family and each other and most importantly of yourself. And just to remember, balance is a verb and you're already doing it. You've got this!

Episode 186: How to Raise Emotionally Intelligent Teens with Melanie McNally

Welcome to another episode of The Balanced Parent Podcast, where we talk about how to raise and support emotionally intelligent teens and its three components. We are joined by Dr. Melanie McNally, a clinical psychologist, Gen Z Brain coach and the author of the book called The Emotionally Intelligent Teen. 

Here are some of the key takeaways:

  • Parental challenges in emotion and communication during adolescence

  • How to take a supportive parenting stance in when navigating adolescents' emotional and developmental complexities

  • Balancing privacy and guidance in parenting during adolescent development challenges

  • Supporting kids who need emotional help but resist parental advice (building their village)

  • Emotional intelligence and its three components

  • Balancing self-awareness, self-regulation without numbing, and modeling for children

  • Understanding and managing teenagers' impulsive emotional expressions for better communication

If you're looking to connect with Dr. Melanie and learn more about her work, visit her website destinationyou.net, Instagram @drmelaniencnally, and LinkedIn @drmcnally.

Resources:

May these insights guide you in fostering stronger connections and understanding with your adolescent children, creating a harmonious and supportive family environment.


TRANSCRIPT

Parenting is often lived in the extremes. It's either great joy or chaotic, overwhelmed. In one moment, you're nailing it and the next you're losing your cool. I want to help you find your way to the messy middle, to a place of balance. You see balance is a verb, not a state of being. It is a thing you do. Not a thing you are. It is an action, a process, a series of micro corrections that you make each and every day to keep yourself feeling centered. We are never truly balanced. We are engaged in the process of balancing.

Hello, I'm Dr. Laura Froyen and this is The Balanced Parent Podcast where overwhelmed, stressed out and disconnected parents go to find tools, mindset shifts and practices to help them stop yelling at the people they love and start connecting on a deeper level. All delivered with heaping doses of grace and compassion. Join me in conversations that will help you get clear on your goals and values and start showing up in your parenting, your relationships, your life with openhearted authenticity and balance. Let's go!

Laura: Hello, everybody. This is Doctor Laura Froyen. And on this week's episode of the Balanced Parent Podcast, we're going to be talking about teens specifically how to raise emotionally intelligent teens, the three components of emotional intelligence and how to support our kiddos in having them and maybe even how to get some of those components for ourselves if we didn't have the benefit of growing up this way. To help me with this conversation, I have Doctor Melanie McNally. She is a clinician who focuses in on supporting teens and teens and young adults in becoming well rounded but really emotionally intelligent and grounded and reducing anxiety and all those delicious, good things that we probably all wish we had had when we were younger and are doing that work now. So Melanie, please welcome to the show. I'm so happy to have you. Why don't you tell us a little bit more about yourself? You know who you are, what you do and we'll dive in. 

Dr. Melanie: Yes, thank you for having me. So I am Melanie McNally. I'm a licensed clinical psychologist and brain coach and I've been working specifically with adolescents since 2013. Before that I was working with adults, but I, you know, I really got into this work because I had such a, you know, dysfunctional and anxiety ridden childhood that and I didn't know how to manage my own anxiety. I didn't know how to talk about my feelings. And I really wanted to be the support person that I wish I would have had when I was younger. And so that's what led me to the work and to specifically, you know, diving in with adolescents is just to be able to be that support for them that, you know, like you even said in the intro, maybe some of us didn't grow up with these things. I certainly didn't, I certainly didn't grow up emotionally, you know, learning about emotional intelligence or learning how to anxiety whatsoever. And so I really like the idea of teaching that to young people now and thinking of the way that can completely change their course and path in life in such a positive way. 

Laura: Yeah, I love that, you know, oh, so many of us who are, you know, listen to this show have been so deeply committed to being emotionally present with our kids, to respecting kind of their humanity, right from the very beginning that they are full human beings capable and entitled to the full range of human experience and emotion. And there's aspects of them that are quite hard when they're young, right? But we know how to be there, we know how to be present for them when they're young. I think for a lot of the parents that, you know, who've been following with me coming, coming along in my own parenting journey, we entering those tweens and teen stages and it gets hard, it gets hard in a different way. I'm kind of curious about if you have some, I don't know, well, like, just some insight for us about like, why it's so hard, you know, like why does my teen child only really want to talk about things in an intense or vulnerable way in the dark in bed right before we go to sleep, you know, like what or in the car not looking at me like what, what's going on with these kids? Why is it hard to so, you know, what, what are some of the stumbling blocks that parents run up against? And how can we you know, keep, you know, stay firmly rooted in this mission of raising these emotionally intelligent kids even as they move into adolescence? 

Dr. Melanie: Yes. So adolescence brings two key things that really change the way parents have to interact with them. One is that adolescents are all about identity formation. During adolescence, this is when teens are starting to figure out their own identity. And oftentimes that means trying things on, you know, trying on an identity and seeing if it fits, see what they like about it, what they don't like about it. And that can be really challenging for a parent because you might, you know, maybe your kid when they were 10, maybe they loved playing the piano and they were really social and talkative and now you're watching them, you know, maybe become a little more introverted or maybe they are, instead of playing the piano, maybe they're wanting to have a garage punk rock band. And you're kind of like, what, who are you? But this identity formation stage is really key to adolescent development. They're really getting like this is when they're figuring out who they are. And then the second thing that's really important that's happening during this time is that teens and tweens for the first time, they are aware of their, they're starting to think about their future, when kids are young, everything is very much like immediate right here. 

Laura: As the moment they’re so good at that. 

Dr. Melanie: Yeah. So good. Oh, my gosh. So that's why, yeah, young kids are so fun to be around because one of the reasons, but they're, they're so in the moment it's really helpful for an adult to be around that. But tweens and teens are now starting to think about the future. They're aware of the fact that what they do now is gonna have an impact on their future. They're starting to imagine how they want their future to look and that brings like a whole host of new thoughts and new emotions with it because they haven't been thinking that way before. And so when they're entering that stage, you might start to notice some anxiety and a lot of self doubt because for the first time, they're like, wait a minute, can I like? This is the person I want to be in the future is that even really possible for me? 

Laura: Okay. So as, as parents who are seeing our kids and starting to move into these phases, you know, the stage where we're seeing these, these two things playing out, what is the kind of the posture or the stance we need to embody to provide a supportive environment for kids who are navigating these complicated things?

Dr. Melanie: One is, and I'm sure your audience is great about this but having a very like nonjudgmental open ear, you know, you don't want to shut down your child as they are trying out a new identity. You know, you don't want to make comments about maybe another one other friends who maybe it started to change in a way and maybe you start, you know, the parent wants to make that judgmental comment about what the new behaviors are of this other child. But when a parent does that, all they're doing is just shutting the door to communication. And during the tween and teen years, you want that door wide open and so your tween or teen share something with you about, you know, what they're thinking about their future or maybe they're thinking about a friend or a character on a show. Want to try and bite the tongue. Hold back. Get curious and ask, yeah, and ask, like open ended questions to get them to share more. 

Laura: What does that sound like the open ended questions? It's so hard. Open ended questions are so hard. Give us some examples. 

Dr. Melanie: It could be as simple as like, oh, tell me more about that, you know, that can be like a really good go to of like, huh that's interesting. Tell me more about that or, I wonder if that's something that you've ever experienced, you know, maybe they're talking about a friend and so you're asking about their own experience there, it could be, you know, asking like, is that something that you've considered for yourself or do you, how do you imagine your future to look if they're, you know, depending on what they're talking about, but it's just to get them to, you're getting curious in a way where it's not about what you think or you feel, but you're getting curious about them and you're helping them try and figure out like where these thoughts are coming from, where these feelings are coming from where they are headed. And so you wanna leave it in a way where you're not, you're not providing the answer for them. 

Laura: Oh my God, Melanie, you are asking parents to do the impossible thing, right? So this what you're asking us to do is so hard. I mean, so, I mean, I know all about sitting in curiosity and openness. I know, I know all these things. But when my, you know, my kids are talking to me in, in very, you know, black and white think I, you know, I, I want to respect their privacy because I don't have permission to talk about what they're talking about. But I want to shape how they're thinking. I want to guide them. I want them to benefit from my wisdom and experience and I know I have to bite my tongue. I know I'm not supposed to do that, but it's hard. It's so hard. Do you have any suggestions for parents who are finding it difficult to just kind of bite the tongue and stay curious and not launch into kind of sharing wisdom, sharing experience attempting to influence, you know. 

Dr. Melanie: Yes. And I, I hear you as you know, with that struggle, I know how challenging that can be, especially when they're sharing something that you, you know, the answer to. You can see, you know, 20 steps ahead and you know the direction they're headed and you want to intervene. But first of all, to keep in mind that it's, it's such a disservice to the child if or you want them to experience them, it themselves, you want them to go through making their own mistakes. And figuring things out because that's gonna be so much more impactful than you just telling them what to do. But if a parent is really struggling to, you know, to hold back, my go to solution is start a parent kid journal, it can just be a blank notebook that you just write back and forth to each other each day. And so you just kind of introduce it to your child, child. Like, hey, I really want us to talk more about things going on in our day. So whatever we share in this notebook, it's just kept between you and I, and you're not gonna get in trouble for what you share in this notebook. I want it to just be a way for us to talk more. 

And my only, my only ask is that we each write in it once a day to each other and it could be about anything. And so then the parent will write something and like, leave it for the child and then maybe leave it under the pillow so the child can write back that day, the parent can grab it the next day and you just kind of go back and forth in it. And what I have found is that first of all, it gives parents an opportunity to process what they're reading. So, so if you hear it in the moment where you want to just like jump in now you're reading it. So it gives you that space to think about how you want to respond. But also I found that this opens up a whole new door to communication. Like, usually the first few weeks it's like kind of silly stuff that's pretty benign. But when people are consistent with it, they find that their child starts sharing more and more things that are really, really like things that they wouldn't share in person. 

Laura: Love that. I really love that. I keep, I my, my kids go to a technology free school. And we have, you know, no, no phones for them. Which is a, a choice that we made for, for our family. Every family has to make that right. You know, the choice. That's right. But I do think about like how much fun it will be for my child to have the ability to text with me because it does open up a mode of communication that is less confronting than being in the emotional presence when you're delivering something. Right? So both of my kids are highly emotionally sensitive, very much attuned to, to what's going on within me and my husband. Right? And so being able to have a little bit of space, but I really love this journal option. And I mean, gosh, because then you don't have it's a technology free, you know, I mean, pens and pencils and paper, those are a form of technology like, you know, but they are, you know, much more I don't connected, you know, and there's so much research too on the benefits of pen and paper, writing and journaling. So love it. I love this idea. 

Okay, so what about when we get to the point with our kids where we think that they do need some support? Right. So, if we know we've maybe got a kid who's been anxious from the get go, you know, but we're starting to recognize they need some support, but they're resistant to us, giving them that advice, giving them those ideas. What are some things that we can do and to, to help support them? You know, I know your book is written with the team in mind. I can imagine it'd be really helpful for parents to read on their own just to get kind of okay, so what is helpful to, to, to say and suggest to my team? But what are like, what are, I guess, what are some of the barriers that parents face? Like, why is it that kids are resistant to influence from us? And how can we overcome those or support them in ways that they need it? 

Dr. Melanie: Yeah. You know, I think first of all, it's natural for tweens and teens and, and young adults to be resistant to the support and guidance that parents offer. You know, because they are at an age where they're really wanting to be independent from the family unit. That's just part of adolescent development. And so that means that they're not going to want to take your wonderful advice no matter how great it is or how great of a parent you are and how wonderful your relationship is. It's like, think of it as just like a primal urge. You know, they are going to separate from the family a little bit and they're wanting to, like, figure things out on their own. 

Laura: Yeah, I, I really love that. You're bringing this developmental piece in. There's a, a quote from someone that lots of people follow for toddler discipline Janet Lansbury. She says it's not personal, it's developmental. When we're talking about toddler behavior, right? It's not personal, it's developmental and we just really have to keep that in mind that that's also happening in the team year. So this is, it's not personal, it's not rejection, it's developmental, right? I love that. You're saying that. 

Dr. Melanie: Yes. Oh, my gosh, I've heard of her and I've never looked into her work. I've had other parents mention her. I need to look that up, but I totally want to use that phrase because that is genius. That is so true during the teen years. And I know how hard it is to not take things personally, especially teens. When, you know, when you does get to the teen years, they can be especially good at making things.

Laura: They are so they are so skilled at it. Right. They don't just, I mean, one of my kids has always, like, from the time she was like, three known just for, to stick the knife and twist it. I can imagine that skill is only going to get more deadly as she gets older. 

Dr. Melanie: Yes. But to keep that in mind that it's not personal, it's developmental. And so they really are at this point where they're trying to separate themselves. So they're not going to necessarily want your guidance or questions. And if you find that your child is really struggling, like maybe they are dealing with some pretty significant anxiety or they're starting to show really low self confidence or they're struggling with friendships or whatever the case might be and you want to get them some support. I would suggest figuring out what works best for your child. Like if you know that your child is somebody who's like really creative and they tend to love the arts, like get them more involved in art classes or art clubs. So they have an outlet to express themselves or if your child has a really good relationship with a relative in the extended family, like start having them spend time together so that you're again the the teen or tween has somebody else to go to and talk to and, and then don't go and grill the extended relative, you know about, you talk about what they say like, let that relationship exist outside of you have that space or, you know, you can always reach out to the school counselor, school social worker, or you can find a, you know, a therapist, a local therapist or a brain coach to get that extra support as well because those can all be really great resources to help your, your tween or teen through these tough years. I've had so many times where, I'll, you know, talk through some things with teens and, you know, and I'll, I'll meet with the parent later and let them know a little bit about what I shared and they'll just be like, okay, good. You know, you're, you're basically saying the same thing that I'm saying. But because it's coming from you, they're actually like listening and yeah, it's not, it's not personal, that's just I'm outside of the family. And so I'm a person to listen to. 

Laura: I think that there is, you know, I, my, my 11 year old has always wanted me to, to stay in the role of mom. She has never wanted me to kind of have multiple hats that I wear with her too. So I, I do feel like that comes up with lots of kids. They want you to be mom and they want someone else to be this other person who guides them in, in certain ways, you know. So she has a therapist who she adores and loves who says all the things, same things that I say, but she doesn't want to hear them from me and because she wants me to just be her mom. Yeah. That's a complicated, you know, and it not a complicated but an intense and intricate enough relationship all on its own. And I think sometimes kids and tweens, they need some, some simplicity and some departmentalization too where, you know what I mean? So, I think it's good to get those other areas of support. I feel so fortunate that both of my children have, have therapists that they really love that they feel seen and heard by that they look forward to going to and I love that they're starting early on getting that, that idea that like our mind and our heart are just things that we take care of. Just like our physical body, like our home. We do routine maintenance on all of those things. Yeah, I, I love preventative mental health care. I wish we had no access to it in this country. 

Dr. Melanie: Yes. Where it doesn't have to be like a, you don't have to wait for it to be a major blow up or issue. 

Laura: Exactly. 

Dr. Melanie: Or, yeah, you can start, you know, building those relationships now and you've got that, that wonderful resource in place. And so then if something does, big does happen, they've already got that person. They don't have to start at ground zero or anything. But then they're also still getting, you know, I'm sure that the therapists are still, you know, integrating all kinds of life skills and intelligence skills and all those great things into the sessions just very indirectly. So, that's incredible. 

Laura: Yeah. And I do think too that it's so important to find the right fit with one of my kids. We found the right fit for her immediately. And that was so nice. But that is not common, right. And so even having, you know, if your child does want to get some support, helping them understand that fit is important and you might have to try on a few different modalities of support, you know. So, I mean, we went through three or four options with my other one until she found the right, the right fit for her, you know. And I think that's a good skill to learn too, to learn how to find the right fit. 

Dr. Melanie: Yes. And they're getting to know themselves in the process. They're kind of getting to know a little bit about their personality as they meet with certain people. And yeah, so that's great that they have that flexibility and that freedom too to like, oh, it's not like this is a person and you have to make it work. It's like no give it. That's what I always tell parents to and if their child is really resistant and starting then it's just like, okay, just it's up to them, you know, like let's just do a few sessions and if it works, we'll continue and if they decide it doesn't work, then we'll stop. But it puts it on them and they have that autonomy and they feel so much more empowered versus like you have to go in and meet with this person and you have to talk to them about all of the intimate details of your life, whether you like them or not, that can be a little difficult for anyone, even an adult. 

Laura: Absolutely, for sure. Okay, so in your book, you talk about emotional intelligence and you talk about how there's kind of three human components and I'm kind of feeling very curious if you can talk with us about what those three components are. And maybe what we can be doing as adults to not only cultivate them within ourselves, but you know, cultivate an environment where those can flourish in our homes too. 

Dr. Melanie: Yes. So emotional intelligence is essentially made of 33 different skills. So it's made of self awareness, self regulation and interpersonal skills. Because when we're emotionally intelligent, we understand how we're thinking and feeling, we're able to calm ourselves down or de-escalate ourselves when things are really intense. And then we're able to also understand what other people might be thinking and feeling. And so that's, that's how those three components kind of come together into emotional intelligence and what I have found, and it's probably, it might be a little different with your audience since they're a little, you know, a lot of their kids might be a little more, a little younger. But what I have found with teens because of social media, they follow, I mean, it's wonderful. They're following all kinds of great mental health advocates on tiktok and they're about depression anxiety and yes, I know they actually have like the, the vocabulary to talk about what's going on inside of them. And it's incredible they're getting all of this great self awareness. But then what I find is that oftentimes they're lacking in self regulation. So they're not so great at knowing what to do when they're really upset or knowing how to calm themselves down. They can recognize when they're feeling that way. But then it kind of stops there. And so for parents with younger kids, you have the opportunity to be like, okay, we're really gonna make sure not only are they building the self awareness, but we also want to make sure that they're learning how to regulate themselves, how to self soothe so that when they do enter the teen years, they've already got like really great coping tools are like in their toolbox, like they're ready for it. 

Laura: Okay, and I, I just wanna acknowledge too that I think many of the adults who are, are listening to this right now recognize themselves in that too that they are spending a lot of time gaining in self-awareness, getting to know themselves, getting to know their triggers, getting to know, you know, what sets them off what that feels like in their body and are still on that leading edge of learning. Okay. So then how do I self regulate and not numb? You know, so, so much of what we do or kind of what we're taught as parents out in the respectful and, you know, gentle parenting world really looks on the surface like stuffing the oh honey, I can't let you throw toys at your brother. You know, like I'm gonna help you stop, you know, but there's not a lot of actual regulation that's happening, it's stuffing. And so I would love, I, and I know we all know how important modeling is for our kids. So like I, I'm, I would love to talk about okay, so how do we teach the stuff to our kids? But I think it's really hard to teach stuff to our kids that we don't know how to do ourselves. So I would love to talk about like, okay, so then when it comes to self regulation, how do we do that? How do we stay calm without stuffing? You know, all of those things. 

Dr. Melanie: Yes. And you know, and even I see the, the version of stuffing too is a lot of times what we end up doing as adults is we use our phones to distract. So like the moment we feel uncomfortable or anxious or stressed out, we're getting it on our phones and we're scrolling and we're using that to, that's our, you know, our stuffing that. Yeah. And it's, it's not a, it's a coping strategy but it's just not a healthy one because we're not learning how to tolerate the discomfort. We're just kind of avoiding it and pushing it away. So, what we have to do as adults is, first of all, to label our feelings like that is the key. We have to be able to label what it is we're experiencing. So either I'm angry or I'm so disappointed or I'm embarrassed. I whatever it might be, we have to label that feeling and then we have to just allow ourselves to sit with it for a moment. So we're not trying to immediately distract. We're not jumping on the phone, we're letting ourselves just kind of feel the discomfort of whatever it is, the irritation, whatever that feeling is, we're allowing ourselves to, to feel it and to notice it in our body because that helps build that self awareness and then we can do something to calm down our nervous system a little bit. So depending on what the feeling is. 

But my favorite tool that I always get people started with because it works across so many different emotions is just to practice mindfulness where we get ourselves in the present moment. And so whatever it is if I'm irritated, like, let's say I'm really irritated with a new puppy. So this is easy because he's wild and rowdy and sometimes it's really irritating. But I don't wanna yell at him because he's a puppy. Like he doesn't know what he's doing. And so I notice I'm irritated and I have to kind of label it. I have to take a breath in and then I focus on whatever is going on in the present moment. So if that means if I'm washing dishes while he's barking, I'm gonna focus on the temperature of the water. If there's like a smell in the air from the the soap, you know, if I'm, if there's any noise of like the dishes clattering together, I'm gonna really try and focus and get myself grounded in the present moment and it sounds so basic. But what this does is it just opens up that gap a little bit between emotion and reaction. And so when we're dysregulated, there's no gap there, we just have the emotion and we react. But when I pause, when I label my feeling, when I get mindful, I open up that space. So there's a little bit of a pause between emotion and reaction. And so now my reaction is going to be a little less severe because of that pause.

Laura: And more of a choice, right? So like that pause, that's where choice comes in, right? Where we have the power to choose our response.

Dr. Melanie: 100%. It gives us the opportunity to now be intentional. And so I notice I'm irritated I get, you know, I focus on the, the dishes and the soap and all of that stuff and now I'm like, okay, I'm going to, you know, I'm gonna pause here and I'm going to go do a little training with him to get him to stop barking or I'm gonna, you know, get them distracted with a chew toy. And so now instead of just like turning and screaming, you know, Bambi stop barking, I'm going to be more mindful in how I respond. And then what is really helpful too is if we think of how good it feels when we respond in that way because I know at the end of the day when I have responded in a way that's like more calm. I feel so much better when I'm going to bed at night versus times when maybe I snap at my husband or I snap at, you know, one of our pets. I feel awful and then I'm thinking about it when I fall asleep at night. And so sometimes I'll even think about that like I how good I'm gonna feel for managing my emotions and my responses and it's worth that extra effort. 

Laura: Okay. So I feel like I'm thinking about teenagers hearing this and I'm thinking about kind of how it felt for myself and I was angry or flooded as a teenager, how good it felt in the moment to snap at whoever I was pissed off at, you know, to say the snotty thing or give the dirty look, you know, that felt good in the moment and bad later out of the moment I feel kind of curious about. Okay, so when, when our toddlers experience that they experience, you know, how good it feels to hit, you know, we can stop them because we're bigger than them and we can physically prevent it, you know, or if they call us duty head, like we don't let that land because they're three, you know. Right. But for teenagers that impulsive in the moment, kind of, cathartic kind of release. That feels good. It's hard to, I think, convince them that they will feel better if they don't, not through stopping, but through regulation. So like, what, how can we support our kids? And especially if we feel like we're on the receiving end. A lot of, a lot of their dirty looks or snappy comebacks. 

Dr. Melanie: Yeah. So what's really helpful is when you catch them, when they, then when they do it, right. So when they do respond in a way that's really healthy, you wanna point that out and have them pause and like reflect on how that felt. So maybe you notice that the, the two kids, they're playing video games together and you notice that the older one gets really frustrated and says, you know, to the younger one, I can't play with you right now, I'm gonna go take a break. I'll be back in 15 minutes. And so you let him go take a break and then maybe when he comes back, you might point out to him like, wow, I noticed, you know, you got really frustrated and you decided to walk away and take a break rather than get into a fight with your brother. Like, how does that feel that you did that? How do you feel about that now? And so you get them to reflect on how good that felt in the moment because you want them to remember that you want them to really internalize that feeling. So no matter how small it is, catch them doing it, right? So you can point it out, you can give them that positive feedback, you can help them reflect on it. And then that way, you know, you can start to when, you know, maybe they haven't gotten to a point where they're doing it with like bigger things, but now you can later point that out to them of, you know, earlier today you did it with a smaller thing. So let's try and practice that tomorrow with, you know, your situations that might come up. 

Laura: Yeah, I really like that. I just wanna, you know, give a note to, to the parents listening who have a, have a kid who maybe is a little bit more demand avoidance. Like my, if I were to, my 11 year old is building that skill of walking, kind of walking away, taking breaks from when she's frustrated with her sister. If I were to say those things, she would roll her eyes. She be like, oh mom, stop talking. You're so annoying, you know, like I would totally get hit with those things. So for those kiddos, I do think it's helpful to have even just like a like a like an eye contact, like like I see you like nod at them that is like less demanding because you know, like, because when we like say like, how did that feel, how did you do that, you know, didn't, you know, like that heightens things and for some kids that can kind of just send them back down the levels of their brain, right? So just even having like some things even smaller or less, you know, because, you know, some kids again who are more demand, avoidant, they can feel praise and positive feedback. Like it's a demand like, okay, so now you're expected to do that every time and they will not be able to do it every time, right? So we're ta we're building capacity. Yeah. And so I mean, it's, they might be able to do this in this small setting. They're not gonna be able to do it right away in a bigger setting. You know, in a bigger, you know, issue and that they will, maybe they can do it one time out of 10 and then maybe three times, you know, and, and they'll build capacity and so there's, I don't know, having, I think sometimes, like, even just having a sense of, like I saw that feels really good to kids. 

Dr. Melanie: Yeah, 100%. And thank you for pointing that out because absolutely, it doesn't need to be a big conversation or anything. Yeah, it could be, yeah, it can be a smile. It can be a high five, you know, as they're heading out of the room. Or it could be like a quick reflection, you know, at bedtime where, you know, sharing good things from the day or something, you might just share like a little two sentence thing about what you noticed and not making it into a big deal because absolutely, that can be very overwhelming. 

Laura: Yeah, I mean, some kid, I have one kid who likes the kind of the big deal and then to process how it feel and one kid who hates it, you know. And so I think sometimes for parents who maybe only have one type of kid and they get it, you know, they, they try something that's a mismatch. They, it, it's easy as a parent to take that as a hit to yourself. Like, oh, I tried this thing that Doctor Pinali said on the podcast to do and all I got was an eye roll and I must have done it wrong. And then I just, I just want parents to know that there's very little, you know, like these are all things just to try and to hold it loosely and, you know, with an open palm and. 

Dr. Melanie: An experiment to see what works. Because, yeah, depending on your child's personality and even it could be, depending on the day, you know, if they had a.

Laura: Whether they had a snack.

Dr. Melanie: Yeah and so it could be, you know, it could vary where one day you try it and it's a total disaster and the next day you try it and it works out beautifully. And so sometimes it's almost like an art where you have to really read the room and you have to think of all these different cues the best you can. But to practice self-compassion.

Laura: Yes. Yeah. Oh my gosh. And, and to, and to understand too that like, I mean, gosh, these parents are brave, right? So, like Melanie, you could do this as a profession, like, you know what it's like, there are these teenagers really tough audience, right? And so there's a certain level of courage and bravery of being able to kind of wade into this without knowing how it's gonna land. You know, I, I do have just a lot of respect for, for parents and, and under like, just understanding that, like, you might not always have the energy for that too because it does take courage. It takes bravery, you know, especially with these really intense kiddos that some of us have. 

Dr. Melanie: Yes. And you, as a parent might have times where, yeah, your, your battery is really low. You know, where you, you didn't sleep well or you've got a lot going on at work or in your marriage or whatever. And so you might have to decide like, okay, my, my battery is so low. I have to just keep things really simple right now because, you know, I don't have the capacity to handle, you know, the way my team tends to respond or react to some of the stuff. And so then you have to have that self compassion for yourself and know that every day you're just, you're doing the best you can with the information and the resources that you have at that moment and that's gonna change, you know, from day to day. 

Laura: Yeah, I think having that posture of grace of self compassion and grace by yourself. Having that out loud as a model for your kids to see is super impactful, too. Letting them see you be imperfect and not always at your best, you know, and let, letting them just see you be imperfectly human, I think is good for them. 

Dr. Melanie: It is so good for them. It is because that's what they want. They want to see you as a human. They don't want a perfect parent who knows everything and does everything beautifully 100% of the time because then that's just on a subconscious level that's setting themselves up for failure because no one can live up to that expectation. And if they see you make if they see you lose your temper and then later you come back and you're, you know, you admit on to what you did and you take accountability and responsibility for it and apologize like that is going to be very meaningful and very impactful for them because they get to see that. Okay, you know what? Mom loses her cool too sometimes. Like that's human nature. That's okay. But it's, we have to own it and we have to make things right when we do screw up. 

Laura: Yeah, without punishing ourselves, right? Without berating ourselves. That balance is so important, too. 

Dr. Melanie: Yes, 100%. 

Laura: Okay. So, as we kind of wrap up our conversation, I do wanna make sure that our listener knows where they can find your book where they can find your work if they wanna connect with you. And perhaps get some support for their kiddos or even for themselves. Where, why don't you kind of give us all of your information? Where are you most, out in the world? 

Dr. Melanie: Yes. So, well, first of all, my website, which is destinationyou.net and so that's destinationyou.net and there you'll find all my, my courses and you can contact me through my website and everything. My book is called the Emotionally Intelligent Teen and you can purchase that wherever you buy your books. And I also tend to be on Instagram quite a bit. And so I'm @doctormelaniemcnally. And so I'm always sharing mental health tips for parents and adolescents over there. 

Laura: That's cool. Okay. And I do have one other like small little question before we go. So you said that you're a brain coach? And I'm very curious about what that means and what that looks like. I feel like that is the term I've seen out in the world, but I've never been able to like talk to someone and say like, what does that mean when you say you're a brain coach? So tell it like last little question, kind of a housekeeping, not housekeeping, but like, I don't know, defining things. 

Dr. Melanie: Yeah. So it's a brain coach, the way I define it is, I'm helping people really understand the way their brain works and how to live up to their potential. And so with coaching, it's really focusing on, you know, building on their strengths, getting really clear on what their goals are and helping them create the road map to reach their goals. And so with your brain coaching, it's really just focused on, okay, not only are we going to set these goals and help you reach them. But I'm also going to teach you how to maximize your potential along the way. I, I used to do therapy and, I had a private practice in the suburbs of Chicago and I did that for quite a while and I was getting a little, I was starting to get a little burnt out because working with teens, I wanted more, I wanted more access to my teens. I didn't want to just see them once a week. I wanted to be able to, you know, text with them. I wanted to send them, you know, books that they should read or a podcast that they should listen to. And you can't necessarily do that in therapy. And so with coaching, I can, we can text each other back and forth. 

And so if they have a presentation that day at school and they're really anxious, they can text me and I can tell them really quick, you know, some breathing exercises or I can send them a voice note. And so we don't have to wait that full week to be able to overcome an obstacle. We can do it right there in the moment. And then also with therapy, I couldn't necessarily share as much with the parents as I wanted to and tweens and teens don't exist in a vacuum. The parents really need to be involved. And so with coaching, that's kind of part of the experience is that parents are gonna know not all the details but they're gonna know what we're working on and I'm going to give them some tips and tools to support you along the way. And so then that way we're really making sure that we're, we're making the progress that we're seeking. 

Laura: I love that. I, I, you know, I, I wasn't aiming to talk about this, but I really love the coaching model. I love working within the coaching model. I was a practicing therapist for six years as well. And I'm, I far prefer the, the role I can take it as a coach versus as a therapist. So thank you for talking about that with us a little bit. I think that oftentimes the person outside of the field is a little unclear on what the differences are. And that was, I think really helpful, especially as people seek to get support for their kids or themselves. Thank you. 

Dr. Melanie: Yes, definitely. You're welcome. 

Laura: Okay. All right. Well, Doctor Melanie McNally, it was so lovely to connect with you. I really appreciate what you're putting out into the world for our teens and for those of us freezing them. So, thank you so much. 

Melanie: Thank you. Thank you so much for having me.

Okay, so thanks for listening today. Remember to subscribe to the podcast and if it was helpful, leave me a review that really helps others find the podcast and join us in this really important work of creating a parenthood that we don't have to escape from and creating a childhood for our kids that they don't have to recover from. 

And if you're listening, grab a screenshot and tag me on Instagram so that I can give you a shout out um and definitely go follow me on Instagram. I'm @laurafroyenphd. That's where you can get behind the scenes. Look at what balanced, conscious parenting looks like in action with my family and plus I share a lot of other, really great resources there too. 

All right. That's it for me today. I hope that you keep taking really good care of your kids and your family and each other and most importantly of yourself. And just to remember, balance is a verb and you're already doing it. You've got this!

Episode 185: The Yoga of Parenting with Sarah Ezrin

In this podcast episode, we dive into how yoga and parenting are related. Our guest for this episode is Sarah Ezrin, a world-renowned yoga educator, content creator, mama of 2, and the award-winning author of The Yoga of Parenting.

In this episode, Sarah and I discuss the following:

  • How parenting and yoga are related

  • Principles of presence and “being” in parenting

  • How yogic principles can help regulate stress for both parents and children

  • Self-care and its importance for parents

  • How to stay connected with your intuition when bombarded with external noise

To connect directly with Sarah, you can visit her website sarahezrinyoga.com. Also, follow her on Instagram @sarahezrinyoga, Tiktok @sarahezrin, LinkedIn @sarahezrin and Facebook @sarahezrinyoga.

Resources:

Remember, by embracing presence, practicing self-care, and staying connected with your intuition, you can create a harmonious and balanced environment for both yourself and your children.


TRANSCRIPT

Parenting is often lived in the extremes. It's either great joy or chaotic, overwhelmed. In one moment, you're nailing it and the next you're losing your cool. I want to help you find your way to the messy middle, to a place of balance. You see balance is a verb, not a state of being. It is a thing you do. Not a thing you are. It is an action, a process, a series of micro corrections that you make each and every day to keep yourself feeling centered. We are never truly balanced. We are engaged in the process of balancing.

Hello, I'm Dr. Laura Froyen and this is The Balanced Parent Podcast where overwhelmed, stressed out and disconnected parents go to find tools, mindset shifts and practices to help them stop yelling at the people they love and start connecting on a deeper level. All delivered with heaping doses of grace and compassion. Join me in conversations that will help you get clear on your goals and values and start showing up in your parenting, your relationships, your life with openhearted authenticity and balance. Let's go!

Laura: Hello, this is Doctor Laura Froyen. And on this week's episode of the Balanced Parent Podcast, we are going to be talking all about how yoga and parenting are related and how we can use the practice of yoga to become more grounded, connected and joyful in our parenting. To help me with this topic. I am bringing in Sarah Ezrin. She is a world renowned yoga educator, content creator, mama of two, I think, right? 

Sarah: Yes. 

Laura: And the award winning author of the Yoga of Parenting, a beautiful book that I have really been enjoying reading and I'm so excited to dive into with Sarah. So Sarah, welcome to the show. Why don't you tell us a little bit more about who you are and what you do and then we'll dive in. 

Sarah: Well, I just wanna first say thank you for having me as I told you, like in the green room that I've been a big fan of yours from the sidelines and like, feel like we're friends even though this is like the official beginning of our friendship. So I just so appreciate how you show up in the world and how you share so generously all of your wisdom and your learning. So thank you for having me. Thank you. 

Laura: I appreciate you coming in too. It's so wonderful that we get to create a community of like minded folks and support, you know, our listeners. So thank you for being here. 

Sarah: Yeah, I mean, it's like, it's just, it's funny how alone you can feel as a parent, right? Even though even though we do have these resources at our fingertips, I think we just forget that there are those accesses out there, those access points. So I love how readily available you make it on your Instagram and, and now with the podcast and everything. So I'm just lobbing the thank you back. I'm Sarah Ezra. Yeah, I have been in the yoga space for 25 years. You can do the math. I started when I was 2019 actually. And and I've always always been enthralled with psychology. I studied psychology in my undergrad. I started studying in master, my master's in MFT. But then my mom got sick with lung cancer and unfortunately, life took different paths. But I've always just been fascinated about the intersection between the two worlds and what, you know, when I started teaching, I started yoga 2001, I started teaching in 2008. There, the mind body connection wasn't really as under as, as accepted as it is today. Of course, it was understood like you read any yogic text and it was understood, but to, to have it so much a part of our vernacular and, you know, hearing your work and, you know, Dr. Gabor Mate's work and like, you know, just that, that acknowledgment that like, yes, what we're feeling is, is showing up in our body. It's just really cool to see what ancient texts had been saying for thousands of years being validated in like brain research. And, you know, more modern psychology theories. 

Laura: Isn't it interesting though that we have to sometimes have what we know to be true deep within us, validated by a scientific community. Isn't that interesting how we've been, you know, it's, it's our culture, it's our society and there's nothing that, you know, right or wrong about it. But it's, it's true that we can have this wisdom, this innate, you know, innate, inherent wisdom and it feels good to have it validated, you know, but at the same time, it was always there and I think so many moms, I, I hope we get to talk about this later in our conversation. But I think so many moms are so untrusting of themselves. And I, I love just bringing that thought in that we do have this innate wisdom and yes, it feels good to have it confirmed and there's also room for trusting, you know, trusting your inner wisdom. 

Sarah: I mean, I do also think obviously we're in North America, right? Are you in Canada? Yeah, you're a North American. I was like, well, that's all the same. I am Canadian too. I'm so sorry. I, I'm like, I am Canadian. I do know I've seen a map. But, yeah. All right. I just had like a, you know, mom, brain, brain freeze. I do definitely think in our, our part of the world that kind of patriarchal of the expert on top, usually a white man and then everybody has to listen underneath and, and it is, it's like this removal from the innate feminine from the intuition from when we look at more tribal cultures and collectivist cultures, how there is that much more, you know, not only tapping into the social structure, tapping into nature and tapping into the cycles of what happening outside of us. So there is absolutely a huge disconnect in the West. And something I will say is like, even though it's cool to see it validated is like, and that's kind of given like some more clout to, you know, writers like myself and people that are translating the wisdom text or you know, I'm not translating anything but I'm, I'm correlating them, you know, to modern stuff. I like, no, I'm not a Sanri researcher. Is that I think that the mainstream is more accepting of it, but it also is like kind of hidden behind like, well, we've known this forever, you know, it's like wink, wink, nothing's new. I didn't need this to be validated. 

I did need the veil of my conditioning and the training of like, you must listen to this person, you must listen to this doctor. And, and again, like, I'm all for western medicine. I think there's a place but I, I think especially as parents and especially as moms, there is a deeper knowing that sometimes we go against what a quote unquote expert says and practices like yoga and meditation, which I, I really are the same thing. It's just, you know, that's another understand people think there are two separate things. They are the same thing, you know, meditations under yoga. That, that will bring you back to that and, and that truth so that if you are in a room and you've got something going on, for example, we have something behaviorally going on with one of my sons and, you know, I'm, I'm being redirected to experts even though there's an expert and my husband's very much like, oh, but it's an expert. You know, there's like a doctor and, and I'm like, no, no, I don't. That's not what my tummy is telling me. So how do you get connect to that message and how are you able to stand strong in the face of a partner that maybe is a little more in mainstream, a whole system that is leaning towards that? We just went on a total. 

Laura: No, I love these tangents, I mean. but the truth is, is that so many of us as moms were raised as girls in a society that told us to stop trusting our gut from the very beginning. Right? So, yes, okay. Let's let's bring it into the yoga of parenting. I, when I heard the title of your book, I was so intrigued. I yoga is a place where I go to be in my body to be really in the present moment, really kind of deliciously within myself. Feels good in my body, but it also feels good in my mind and my heart and my soul. I happened to be in an in in a college town. So most of the yoga studios around me are like hot athletic yoga which is a very different experience than what I'm going for. So I found myself doing a lot of yoga at home since I moved here to Madison, Wisconsin. Because I'm going for, I'm going for the, the mindfulness aspect of it. But when I heard the title of your book, I, I was like, yes, that makes so much sense. But I want for the, for the, you know, the listener who maybe doesn't really understand what yoga and parenting might have to do with each other. Can you talk to me a little bit about, about this? Because what does the yoga of parenting mean? And how are they connected and relate it?

Sarah: Yeah. Yeah. It's such a great question and it's, it, I think, you know, it goes back again to this idea, these, over cultures of how we view things in, in this. I mean, it's not, it's like, it's, it's all the world these days. Right. That is like, very fast moving and everything should be intense and, you know, everything, like quick results. Right. Unfortunately, it's not just the, the western world, but I'm gonna say that very, very, very generally, obviously. You know what the West thinks of, of yoga is the exercise portion of it, even the slower versions of it, it it always correlates it to some kind of movement practice. But asana, which is the movement portion of it is the tiniest little sliver of the whole big picture. So I said earlier meditation is yoga. Yoga is the umbrella and then underneath it are a number of contemplative practices, all of which are designed to get you in touch with that deeper self, little s and self as in a higher power, if you happen to ascribe to one and again, like that can just be nature, right? So this includes meditation. It includes karmic service. So I just did a talk over the weekend and I was like, has anybody made a donation? Right? And it's like we've all done yoga in that sense. Has anybody do any of you go to spiritual functions where you're singing as part of a crowd, right? Like the yoga tradition with Kirtan, I'm, I was raised in the Jewish faith we sing in temple. 

Like that's, that is a yogic practice, that prayer and mantra, right? Which is like, you know, singing to the divine. That's all the practice. Movement is just a tiny, tiny, tiny sliver of it. So when you look at like what all these different types of yoga are, then you start to see like, well, what's the unifying piece to it? And you know, I I don't even say that as a pun because that is the pun, the pun is unity and unification that every single piece of yoga. And by the way, yoga, the word like like lowercase Y also sometimes is used to describe a mathematics sum like in just in language like that's yoga, right? So we're looking at all these things, it's like connecting to the divine, connecting to yourself, connecting to your breath, connecting to one another. I'm like, oh it's connection, it's unification. So if that's the case, if that's what big umbrella yoga is, are we not doing that when we are breastfeeding? If we're able to and deeply enthralled at that moment or having dance party and the rest of the world fades away, you know, with our kids in the kitchen, are we not in that when we have a behaviorally or neurodivergent child who was, you know, needing us to become ensconced? And you gave me that word earlier. I love that. I forgot that word. I'm like, I haven't used that in so long ensconced in focus. Right. And, and just 100% and fully with them. All of those are moments of yoga. 

Laura: Interesting. Okay. And so tell me a little bit then about how we can use that level of, of presence and being to make parenting. It's not easier, maybe more enjoyable because things don't have to be easy for them to be enjoyable. Right? So, what to, to help us in, in this role, this role that can be quite difficult. How do you see parents using those principles? And maybe what are some of the principles that you think we need to know about in order to practice being with our kids and being in this parenting role in this way? 

Sarah: It's such a great question and like the subtitle of the book, right? One of the, there's like three things that's like to help you stay grounded, to connect with your kids, but also to be kind to yourself like that was, and my original title for the book was The Perfectly Imperfect Parent. And I still, you know, stand by that kind of view because, and, and that's what the yoga practice has always taught me. It's like show up, do the best that you can and then let go of the results of it. So there is that there's that right where it's like you are, you're doing the best that you can in this moment, but you're not attaching to the results of any of it. You actually had a great post a while ago about that. About conscious parenting is not showing up to change a behavior. Conscious parenting is shown up. It's the connection. It's, it's the, it's the experience and the interaction. It's not about what the results of that. 

Laura: It's not a means to the, to an end. That's the end in and of itself. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. You, you open your book with a great quote from one of my favorite writers. L.R.Knost on this piece, can I read it? I've never read this out loud on on the podcast before. But I, I read it to myself often because, you know, when you just find words that bring truth into your heart, it's good to read them over and over again, you know. But I, I love that you opened your book this way. So here it is. Parenting has nothing to do with perfection. Perfection isn't even the goal, not for us, not for our children, learning to live well together in an imperfect world, loving each other despite or even because of our imperfections and growing as humans while we grow our little humans. Those are the goals of gentle parenting. So don't ask yourself at the end of the day if you did everything right? Ask yourself what you learned and how well you loved and then grow from your answer. That is perfect parenting. So that's from L.R.Knost, The Gentle Parent. And I love that you brought in. I think that so many folks who are authors themselves are afraid to bring in the wisdom of other teachers, but.

Sarah: Oh no, that’s like my jam. 

Laura: I know, right? Me, too. 

Sarah: Do you highlight, I highlight the quotes within the quotes within the quotes and like, that's like, no way. I'm like, please like we got, we stand on the shoulders of these teachers, right? 

Laura: I mean that a yoga position anyway too, right? Is to acknowledge our teachers. Yes. So tell me then. So what, you know, what are some of the practices that we as parents can do and how will they help us? 

Sarah: Yeah. So you know, if we're gonna, this is, it seems like we're going into non attachment, right? Which is, which is always that's one of the many principles in the book. There's 10 principles in the book. One is breath and energy management and you know, letting our challenges be struggles. What we're talking about right now to me feels like non attachment. It's like that ability to show up and like, let it go, right? So that we, we know that like we are always doing our best. Like I told you before the chat too, I'm very into the reconnected right now, which is these two gals out of Australia. And they have a saying which is like, if we could, we would and when we can, we will. And, and that's, and they, they teach us in our parenting course. And that's like, I'm like, oh, that's yoga right there. If we could, we would and when we can, we will, it's that trust that in every moment, even in our most depleted and exhausted and overrun and stressed out and reactive, that's the best that we can in that moment. And we have to trust that and that doesn't mean we can't come back and repair. It doesn't mean we can't do better next time. It doesn't mean we can't learn, but it's always trusting that we are showing up wholeheartedly. You know, and, and again, we could, you know, maybe we could be a little less yelly, maybe I could be a little less snappy next time. 

But like, you know, it's, it's also being kind to yourself. So that's, that's like the, the, you know, that very yogic view, trusting that you're always showing up. And the best way to learn that is through observation, it's through, I, I like my favorite television show in the whole wide world when they're not climbing all over me is to sit back and to just watch what's happening in front of me. That and that's a really hard lesson for people. Like, especially I'm an, A type, I'm like, nope, you gotta do it this way. Like, I, like, I'm like, God, you know, when they're excruciatingly slow to do something and I'm like, I just put the gloves on, you know, like it's, there's parts of it that you watch what comes up in you, but it's also this idea of just accepting what's happening in front of you for all of the glorious mess and beauty and, and difficulty and excitement and challenge. I mean, that's what you said earlier too, right? It's like, how do we make parenting enjoyable? Well, we don't, we learn to be in the full, the full array of all the amazing emotions and we learn to welcome them as they are. It doesn't mean we need to enjoy it, right? It doesn't. And, and I want to be clear too because I know in your, in your space and in the yogic space there's toxic positivity and that's not what I'm saying. Like if you're sad and uncomfortable, yeah.

Laura: It's so funny. Even that word, I think probably means something quite different to different people enjoy. So there, there is a space where I am very much suffering through struggles with my kids. And there are times where I'm very much enjoying the struggles with my kids. There is times where if I'm not in the right mindset, it's, it's suffering versus moments where I'm able to see the beauty in their growth as human beings, even as we're having a hard time with each other. So from, I mean, yeah, even that mindset piece of it and that is the non attachment piece, right? So shooting the, you know, this should be easy. They should be able to put their boots on by now. They should be able to like, why is it every single morning we fight to get out of the car every single night, they have to brush their teeth. Why are they surprised by this? You know, like, why are we fighting about that? You know, when we have, we're in that resistance versus this is how it is. This is what's happening tonight. You know, and, and here we are, and they're learning something powerful about caring for themselves, you know? 

Sarah: There's a meditation technique we talk about in the book that um I borrowed from a, an ancient text called the Vigna by Rava. 

Laura: Hold on, hold on just a second. You cut out for just oh sorry. Okay. Say that again about the ancient text. 

Sarah: So there's, there's a meditation techniques from an ancient Toric text and normally, when not normally because they, there's like, that's not the right word. But again, another misconception. And is that in meditation, we wipe our mind out and we don't think about anything. And that's like if you have any of your senses, working some information is coming through. So this meditation technique, it's really interesting because the tantric philosophy is all about like finding your enlightenment, if you will but being a part of the world, you know, there's so many like aesthetic practices and spiritual practices where it's like, you know, you become a monk and you move away and, and you go live in a cave and like, sure, you know, I'm sure you can, you can meditate all day. That's much easier. But what we're doing, which is living in the world and being a part of it is a little more challenging, you know, not to say that's a good bear. But the, the point being, how do we use that as fodder, how do we use that as material? 

So the observation game of like watching your children is going to be made easier if you do short practices with yourself where you just sit and you just let your mind wander literally like that is the meditation. It's not like trying to count your breath. It's not like, you know, listening to sound, you're not giving it any direction. You are literally letting it just go and fly free. And it's kind of amazing where it goes. But at a certain point where it feels you are being taken for a ride suddenly, you realize that you were actually sitting, you're still being taken for a ride for sure. The the the mind is take, choosing the directions. But you're much more like seated in the back that there's often an analogy of like a charioteer and, and being driven by horse versus the horses being the mind and the senses. So it's like, it's opposed to just being on the horse and being completely out of control. Suddenly you're like, oh, wait. Nope. Nope. I'm sitting in the chariot. I'm actually, oh, I have a little bit more agency here and you just become the observer, there's a separation that, that can happen and then you're able to have that just a little bit of space. It's like a microsecond of space when they're not putting their boots on and when they're freaking out about getting in the car and it doesn't make it easier again, it's just some days you'll have a little bit more of that kind of, okay, I'm sitting back as opposed to being swept up by this. 

Laura: Yes, that space and I love that you're bringing this in that this is we're learning to do this in the real world, right? Not in a quiet, glad, you know, glade out in beautiful nature. Sure. Practice doing it there, too. But I like that you're talking about this as a, as a practice as something that you do outside of the moment so that you have access to the skill inside of the moment so that you're building capacity, right? You know, because when, if someone were to set out to run a marathon, they wouldn't just go and do it without training, right? They would train, they would build up, they'd work their muscles, they build capacity so that they had access to resources in the mo you know, in the moment when they needed them. And so how much do we need to be doing this? Because I think that this is a thing that, you know, we've, I've talked about this a lot on the podcast with various guests who teach mindfulness and meditation. But I think consistently, people are very intimidated by the idea of engaging in a mindfulness practice or in a meditation practice because of those misconceptions and because of what they perceive to be the time investment that's needed. What, how, what does that look like in terms of like, how much do we need to be doing this in order to see the benefit in getting that little, that little space in the moment when our kids are refusing to put their boots on. 

Sarah: Yeah, I mean, well, first of all, the, the observation practice is not something you're doing when they're trying to put their boots on. You know what I mean? Like that's the time like.

Laura: No, I meant, the, I meant, the chariot practice.

Sarah: I know, I know, I don't know, I'm teasing, but I I just want to be clear, right? Like, like you observe, like you said, you're building up your reserves, you're practicing your muscle memory, you're practicing your awareness memory. So, you know, there, there's been lots of different tests and studies about like, should it be 20 minutes? Should it be 15 minutes? Can? And recently there's been some, some information coming out that like, as short as a one minute of stillness can have a huge impact on your day. And one of the practices in the book is that it, it's, it's about breathing for one minute every hour and you don't even have to do that. Like, it's like, I know that sounds overwhelming. It's literally just set an alarm at 4:20 you know, or whatever. And then for that one minute breathe once a day and then that you'll start to become more aware and you'll be like looking forward for your breath break and then, you know, you'll maybe you'll set one at 1 p.m. and then suddenly you have more throughout the day, but just that one minute of stillness and one minute is a long time, like one minute sounds really fast. 

But like if you've ever been late for a zoom and you got, you're like in the other room and then somehow you're like, get all these things done like time is so relative, right? And we really can and, and the other cool thing about meditation and this is you just have to practice and trust the people that practice who tell you this. But when the more you do it time time becomes different, your perception of time is very different. You can stretch time, you can shorten time. Like it's like you become a little bit of a time bender and I I know that sounds a little woo woo. But it, it's just, it's just the way perception works. I think it's because we're not rushing. We're not, you know, when we have those moments of pause, our nervous system can settle. Things just become more spacious. We're not just like adrenalizing our way through everything. So it's like, yeah, I mean, the joke always is like, you know, you, you only have 10 minutes to meditate, you should meditate for an hour. But like obviously, you know what parent has that, but one minute, two minutes, 3, 5 is gonna make a huge impact. 

Laura: I like to think of it as micro dosing, right? So that, I mean, micro dosing is having a moment with micro dose with, with mindfulness, like.

Sarah: Microdose meditation. 

Laura: Yes, I like it. I'm really glad you brought in the nervous system. I feel like the nervous system is also having a moment. And I think that very many of the parents I have the the privilege of walking alongside are experiencing heightened stress, kind of consistent high levels of their nervous systems kind of being turned on. And I'm curious about how you see the role of kind of maybe yogic principles like, you know, have to play and helping us learn how to turn our nervous systems off or reset or kind of complete that stress response cycle. What role that has for our kids? How and, and how do we do that. How do we tap into? I'm kind of switching off some of that fight flight freeze response and getting into more grounded and safe and social state. 

Sarah: Yeah, I love that you said like letting the cycle complete because I do think that there's a lot of pressure out there, especially in parenting circles to like switch into a place of calm and then only be calm. But like we forget that we are animals, right? We, we do have very primal responses. We have the lower brain, like we are going to have these responses. The question is, where do you go from there? How do you get back to calm? So, I mean, with the heightened states, right? Like if we think about the calm is like the earth and the heightened states are like up in the sky, right? And that's like fight or flight. But then you have those lower, the down regulated states too, which is freeze and fawn. So we're constantly toggling between all of those. And it's like, how are we getting ourselves back up to balance? Well, yoga is chock full of practices that can bring you either higher, lower, or to the balance place. That's the pool of things.

Laura: I love that you're talking about this because I feel like hardly any. We, we hear so much about down regulating, all about up regulating. And the fact is that many of us spend much of our days numbed out. You know, and, and that, and we're, we're down and we actually need some up regulating and that's what regulation is. Regulation is not being able to calm yourself down. Regulation is being able to move your energy to meet the demands of the situation that you're in and sometimes you need to move up, you need to operate this too. I love that you're talking about this. Okay.

Sarah: So, so, so let's say let's go back to the couch example. 

Laura: Can we be nerds together?

Sarah: No, I love it. I love it. I told you, I'm like, I've just gone, like, I've gone over the deep end. I'm like, reading every research paper. I'm like, let's use that psychology degree. So let's say, you know, you are sitting on the couch and you're observing, but you're observing because you're frozen and you're like, I don't know how to respond to this situation that it's not a conscious decision to observe that it's more like a, you know, just I'm stuck here. I just want, I'm just scrolling on my phone. I can't handle the mess. I can't, you know, it's that overwhelmed, that's a down regulated place that's freeze, right? So the best thing for someone is going to be something that's a little bit more uplifting. So that can be like movement in yoga. It can be like a faster kind of chant if you're into that or just like, you know, fun, like pop music, top forties.

Laura: Dance party. 

Sarah: Exactly. You know, we say in yoga that the sides of the body correlate to different energy. So we talk about like right nostril breathing as being very energizing. Our right is our sun channel. So, you know, and don't just like do it based on what I'm saying, you can Google it, Surya Vandana and you know, it's just about breathing through the right, but something that's up, right, that's going to make you feel better and sometimes honestly, it might be a little bit of coffee. It might be a little bit of tea for that person. I am just naturally high energy and anxious. So even when I'm frozen, my heart rate is like, still. So it's like I'm frozen. But I'm like, so I'm like, no, maybe I'm not the candidate for the coffee. But if you know, some of us do need that little bit of a jolt to come back to that more even place, right. That more curious and, and, you know, with that ventral bagel as they call it now, if you're up here, right, if you're like way up here and all over and running around and you're like fighting everybody that honks at you or, you know, wanting to leave and go book into a hotel, which I had many of that yesterday afternoon. Like that's gonna be more of your fight and flight responses, then you do probably need some more down regulating practices, right? And, and in yoga that's gonna be movement, that's slower. That's a little bit closer to the floor. We talked in the beginning. 

You were talking about the different classes that are offered. Well, there's benefit right to the fast moving ones if you're in like a lower energy kind of place and you're a little more slow moving. But if you're, if you're already upregulated, which most of us are because we're in a 24 hour news cycle and the world is, you know, where it's 2024. Like, you know, we're still recovering. We're, we're not nowhere near recovered from COVID and all the shutdowns, then we are gonna need something that's gonna be more grounding. So that's like slower moving, more like restoratives where you're all padded up with like a bunch of pillows and breathing, breathing through the left side of the nostril, slower breaths. But it's, I think it's learning. It's, it's again like, so that's like if you were starting your observation practice and you're sitting on the couch and you're like jittery and like wanting to jump in, that's, that's an indicator, you know, maybe, maybe let's do some grounding breaths first. 

Laura: And I love that you're talking about this observation, not just observe, like observing what's happening outside of you with your kids, which I think is an amazing practice just for getting to know your children, getting to know what's going on for them, but also observing yourself in relation to them and how that is for you and noticing that if it's really hard for you to sit with and, and observe your children without moving to go wash the dishes or, you know, picking up your phone, like, you know, just really observing yourself non judgmentally, you know, with lots of acceptance and love and just curiosity and if it's, that's hard. Right. 

Sarah: I, I actually, I wanna share something real quick and I, I love that because like, to me this is the, this is the fodder, right? Like this is, this is the cool part of parenting. I can't control them. They're gonna, I mean, I can set healthy limits and, you know, provide. But, you know, ultimately it's, it's, it's maddening to, to try to like, go in and change things, right? Like, all I can really do is work on myself. But something I realized recently with all my nervous system study is like, in high school, at least I always was like, quite a fighter, like high school and early twenties, my reactions were very much like, go forward, go into it, do yelling and, you know, just, just was, that's who I was. And I identified myself like that for a long time recently I realized, oh, no, I'm flight because I'm constantly on the go, I'm never in the present moment, I'm constantly cleaning. I'm constantly hustling, I'm constantly reading and I realize like, oh, that's actually like avoiding what's going on. That's more of like a flight response. So, like, very kindly acknowledging that I'm not like, you know, if this was my twenties I'd probably be like, oh, great. Like another thing we're going to work on. But, you know, now I'm like, 42 I'm like, all right, let's do this. Like,, so I need to work with, like, putting my phone down more and it's just cool. I think it's just, it's just fun to get to know yourself in these different ways and to know that we change. And so it's constantly checking back in change as our children change. And it's just, it's what keeps life interesting, you know.

Laura: And so it's never done, right? 

Sarah: It's never done, never ever. Which I know it can sound daunting but like is actually kind of the coolest part. Like, can you imagine? 

Laura: Oh my God, I agree. I mean, so I know it does sound, it does sound daunting or perhaps overwhelming. But like when you reframe it from a place of that means we get to continue to know ourselves and learn about ourselves our whole lives. But, you know, human development happens across the lifespan, right? So we on this podcast, we spend a lot of time talking about what's happening in the early years. But human development happens across the lifespan, our brain, our bodies raw, always constantly changing and growing alongside our children. And that I feel is quite exciting to be able to think that none of this is set in stone. We always have new opportunities and new things to learn. That feels really, really exciting to me. 

Sarah: Yeah. And like to go back to the science of it, like we can change our genes, you know, like we always thought that things were just, this is how it is and this is how it's going to be. But no, everything is changed. And that's actually another big principle in yoga is that what we see outside of ourselves, these bodies, you know, there's everything that we consider nature, which is, you know, the table in front of me, my cup, my body is, is always changing. But there is something that's, that's a steady thread throughout and that's what we're always trying to kind of anchor back into whether that's love or, you know, if you, if you believe in a higher power, it's that soul, right? There's just, there, there is a steady thread throughout, but everything else is just moving and changing all the time. So let's go for the ride of it and enjoy it instead of like constantly paddling, you know, upstream. 

Laura: Okay. So do you see some of these things? I've, I've been having a really, like lots of really interesting internal conversations about the phrase self care in my, in my brain lately, I feel like you're an ideal person to talk about it with this is, you know, so the job that I have is quite lonely at times and I'm sure you feel that yourself because we, we sit in our offices, we don't really have colleagues. You know, we're not in a, we're not in a building where we're, you know, we're talking about this. You know, I have a couple of friends that I connect with on Voxer or text message, but there's not very many opportunities to think things through. Right? So I've been thinking a lot about self care and kind of what it looks like on this kind of more superficial level and then what it looks like on this deeper level and what I feel like we've been talking about is really good self care. Do you agree? Like, how do you feel about that word and how like what it means and what it should, what we need it to mean as parents.

Sarah: I think we're just such binary thinkers that we're like self care must mean this one thing. And then, you know, and, but it is, it's like you say, it's very gray and I have to refer to another author and another psychiatrist Dr. Pojaa Lakshmin, who just recently wrote Real Self Care. I don't know if you got to read that one yet. And the she's differentiating between, well, is it, you know, this is a bubble bath that's like what she calls faux self care, right? Is that, that's like the marketed, you know, commoditized, is that the word commoditized self care? But the, but the value system of, I need to step away right now. I need to take time for myself. So I am, I had an incident yesterday where I had to get my nails done because I'm going on a trip and I had zero time to do it. And I needed someone in the family to step up for something and they like, couldn't understand how I, I, I was asking for them to step in for something that seemed as frivolous as getting my nails done. 

But in my mind that time was first I, I looking down and having my nails not done was like, you know, its own thing. It had been weeks. I, I, it just, it was something I needed to do before my trip. It was a choice. It wasn't then getting the nails done. It was the unapologetically knowing that I needed that time yesterday and taking it even with other people's discomfort, you know, and disapproval. So I think that they, like, self care gets masked behind these things that we sell. But really it's how are we doing it? It's not the shower, it's the unapologetic going and taking of the shower. Right. It's not the, like, girls weekend or whatever, you know, which isn't, it's never enough. One week is never enough. It's the tiny things we do every day. I don't know. That's how I.

Laura: Yeah. And, and the, how we're engaging with it, you know, and that's why I think sitting and observing your kid can absolutely be self care. It can be nourishing and enjoyable and enlightening and, and I mean, definitely a mindfulness practice. And so I, I really, I like that. I like what you're teaching here is that, that there is so much about the need to reconnect with ourselves, to define things for ourselves and allowing that to, to be okay. I think that there is a lot of external noise in parenting. I'd like to kind of, you know, as we wrap up our time together circle back to what we were talking about in the beginning, this kind of internal wisdom, this inner knowing that we have and we live in a world where we are bombarded by these, you know, five tips and scripts, you know, to say to your kid the next time they're having a meltdown and, and I think that those things are great, there's a place for them, but they also take us away from our intuition. And so I'm kind of curious about how you can stay connected to yourself, to your inner knowing, when we're, we are bombarded on so many levels by different sources of information, different ideas of how things should be going. 

Sarah: Yeah, I, I mean, I think that the contemplative time has to be the pregame to handle the, the quiet time for you. And I don't mean that you have to like sit in meditation for an hour. It could be like going for a run. It could be that bath, right? It's like, but that time, it could be dancing, it could be singing that time to connect to yourself. So whatever your yoga practice may be, that's going to be the pregame to be able to weed through a lot of the noise because when we're not nourished and we're not full, then we are very reactive and we are in that like, you know, upregulated place where we're bouncing all over the place and, you know, not, you know, following this person wanting to run away or we're completely frozen and, and unsure what to do. So I think that's the starting place really is what are the tiny things that you're doing for yourself throughout the day that are those moments to be quiet and again, remember quiet like, I it doesn't mean there's no music on it doesn't mean you're not moving. You know, and maybe it's the better word is stillness, right? Than quiet. But again, it's not like a physical, it's, it's that moment of connection. 

So what are you doing? Yeah. And just being so that when you are scrolling and you do see something and like this is how I fell in love with all your work. I was like, yes, like it was like a guttural. Yes. You know, and you go through and you're like, absolutely. Or you're scrolling through and something seems interesting and you're like, hm. okay. Well, you know, am I interested because this person has a really good camera and a good ring light and everything looks like very white and simplistic or you know, like it's like that perfect Instagram shot. And so that's why I think I want to follow her parenting advice. Or am I following this person because there's something in my tummy that's telling me. No, this is, this is someone speaking your truth. I also think there has to be trial and error too. Like sometimes something sounds really good on paper and then we go and we apply, you know, having two kids, like they're very different. Like I, you know, it looks one thing worked for this kid. It's not working for this guy. Like, so you, you have to like, go and do some trial and error and then you feel it in your body, you know, this isn't working right now, right? You know, you know.

Laura: I think that, you know, to some of the things that have helped me learn to listen to, to that gut to my body are much lower stakes opportunities to practice that, you know. So like if I'm going to have tea, I never just go in and, you know, pick out, you know. Well, I do now because I know what I like. Right. But, but when you're learning to do this, giving yourself a couple of options and say, okay, which is the one I want and go and go with your gut, not like based on like, oh this one says it's immune supporting but just like, really like, what does my gut say? Which one do I feel like having or going into, like even target and look like looking at things and thinking about like, okay, so people chose these things, people to put the packaging on. But which one calls to me, you know, it's obvious which one I'm supposed to want because it's on eye level on this shelf. But actually which one is, is enticing to me. So learning how to fine tune some of those things. I really like low stakes stuff. I, it helps me exercise that muscle so that I have more access to it in higher stakes areas. You know, like when I'm thinking about making a decision about whether my kids gonna have their first sleepover or not, you know? 

Sarah: Yeah. Yeah. And, and something that comes up for me is like, I often will get frozen in those situations. So I get down regulated in those situations where I get overwhelmed by shopping options and like, you know, like, and it's like, I can't handle big box stores because of that. Like, so that's something to pay attention to too is like, if you can't make any decision, that is your decision right there, that maybe that's not the day to do it or go to the Starbucks kiosk and, like, get like, you know, a shot and see if that helps any a out of espresso or whatever, whatever floats your boat and, you know, see if that can make changes or make decisions on things that feel safer for you. Like, what shirt are you gonna wear today? You know, what do you need a jacket today? Like those are, those are intuitive hits too. I just know, like, personally for me, like when you're talking about target, I'm like, oh no, no, that is very, I shut way down. Too many lights. Too much stimulation. 

Laura: Interesting. Oh gosh. Isn't it delightful how different we all are? 

Sarah: It's amazing. Right. 

Laura: Yeah. Yeah. Yes, I love that. And I, I love that. They like, so I, I, I really do like the idea too that we get to be different, you know, and then we get to just learn to listen to ourselves. So I really appreciate you bringing that message out into the world. Sarah. Okay, so I want to make sure everyone knows where to find you to learn from you. So why don't you let us know again? The name of your book, your website, your handle on social media. Where can we, you know, connect with you? 

Sarah: I would say I'm most active on Instagram, which is Sarah Ezrin Yoga, but I'm also on TikTok having some fun over there. And my book is The Yoga of Parenting. It's available wherever books are sold. There's an audio book which I recorded. So if you want to hear my voice for a little bit longer, that was fun. I actually really enjoyed that. And, and yeah, and then I also have a meditation course for specifically for parents. So it's these short bite meditations that it's like, you know, this one is 7 minutes. So it's, it's actually a really nice introduction and they're all parents specific. So it's like this one's for when you're feeling chaos, this one's when you need an uplift of energy. And that's found on Meditation University and it's called the Yoga of Parenting. 

Laura: Okay. Will you make sure you send me the link so I can put it in the show notes? 

Sarah: Yeah. Definitely.

Laura: Great. Well, thank you so much, Sarah. I appreciated our conversation and was really delightful to meet you in person. 

Sarah: Thank you. Thank you so much. Thank you everybody for listening.

Okay, so thanks for listening today. Remember to subscribe to the podcast and if it was helpful, leave me a review that really helps others find the podcast and join us in this really important work of creating a parenthood that we don't have to escape from and creating a childhood for our kids that they don't have to recover from. 

And if you're listening, grab a screenshot and tag me on Instagram so that I can give you a shout out um and definitely go follow me on Instagram. I'm @laurafroyenphd. That's where you can get behind the scenes. Look at what balanced, conscious parenting looks like in action with my family and plus I share a lot of other, really great resources there too. 

All right. That's it for me today. I hope that you keep taking really good care of your kids and your family and each other and most importantly of yourself. And just to remember, balance is a verb and you're already doing it. You've got this!

Episode 184: The Benefits of Play-Based Learning with Rachel Robertson

The 30 Days of Play Challenge has returned! While I usually run this challenge once annually, I've updated it for flexible access. You can now join whenever convenient for you! Sign up at www.laurafroyen.com/playchallenge.

Regardless, I hope that this week's episode will make playful parenting seem more achievable and enjoyable for you! I am excited to share with you the latest episode of my podcast, where we explore the importance of play in early childhood education. I had the pleasure of interviewing Rachel Robertson who has been in the educational field for over 25 years, has degrees in education, human development and family studies and a Certificate in Early Education Leadership from Harvard and is a doctoral student at Northeastern. Also, she’s the Vice President of Education and Development for Bright Horizons.

Here are some of the topics we covered in this episode:

  • Reasons behind the significant shift from play to academic focus in early childhood education 

  • Play-based education and why play is important is so important for learning 

  • Factors to consider when selecting an early childhood program or daycare for children's development

  • Supporting children in early childhood education for parents with limited choices

  • How to support early childhood teachers

  • Importance of open-ended play objects and creating a space for children to make a mess for creativity and exploration

  • Benefits and considerations of early childhood education and socialization

If you're looking to connect with Rachel and learn more about her work, visit her website brighthorizons.com, LinkedIn @brighthorizons, Twitter @brighthorizons, and Rachel’s LinkedIn @rachelrobertson.

May these insights inspire you to embrace the power of play in early childhood education, fostering a journey of discovery and growth for children and families alike.


TRANSCRIPT

Parenting is often lived in the extremes. It's either great joy or chaotic, overwhelmed. In one moment, you're nailing it and the next you're losing your cool. I want to help you find your way to the messy middle, to a place of balance. You see balance is a verb, not a state of being. It is a thing you do. Not a thing you are. It is an action, a process, a series of micro corrections that you make each and every day to keep yourself feeling centered. We are never truly balanced. We are engaged in the process of balancing.

Hello, I'm Dr. Laura Froyen and this is The Balanced Parent Podcast where overwhelmed, stressed out and disconnected parents go to find tools, mindset shifts and practices to help them stop yelling at the people they love and start connecting on a deeper level. All delivered with heaping doses of grace and compassion. Join me in conversations that will help you get clear on your goals and values and start showing up in your parenting, your relationships, your life with openhearted authenticity and balance. Let's go!

Laura: Hello, everybody on this episode of the Balanced Parent Podcast. I'm going to be sitting down with Rachel Robertson to discuss the importance of play in early childhood education. Rachel Robertson has been in the education field for over 25 years and is a well respected thought leader. She has degrees in education, human development and family studies and a Certificate in Early Education Leadership from Harvard and is a doctoral student at Northeastern. She's currently the Vice President of Education and Development for Bright Horizons, which is an early childhood care center with that's has a national presence. So Rachel, welcome to the show. Why don't you tell us a little bit more about who you are and what you do? And then we're gonna dive into one of my favorite topics, play and its role in early childhood education. 

Rachel: Great. Thank you for that introduction, Laura and thank you for inviting me to be part of this conversation. It's one of my favorite things to talk about. So I'm, I'm happy to be here for, I could talk about it all day or for 30 minutes, whatever we do today. But I think about it, talk about it a lot about play because it is just so important. My background, I'll give you the abbreviated version. I started out working in camping with young children and I thought that was 100% where I was going to spend my career being outside playing experiential learning hands on everything. You're supposed to get muddy. You were supposed to be outside, you're supposed to experiment and try and touch everything except for the poison ivy. Don't touch that. But that was what you were supposed to do. And then I, but I, when I was in undergrad, I, so I did that actually through high school and, and through college I did take a gap year and I worked at a Montessori school with toddlers. So when I went to get my undergrad, I thought, well, let me get a, a minor in child development while I'm doing while I'm pursuing my lifelong camping career here. And when I had my own children and realized living and working at camps 24 hours a day was just not going to be as feasible as I wanted it to be. It wasn't working for me. I thought, well, what could I do?

Okay. I worked in childcare. I liked that. I have my undergrad and child development. Let me just see about child, early, early care and education. I answered an ad in the paper. So that was a while ago and someone thought, okay, let's give her a shot. And I was in a, a, a trainee center director. Within weeks, I remember, I still remember distinctly thinking I'm staying here. This is so important. I thought what I was doing with older kids and camping was the most important thing. And it's very important. That was great work. I'd do it again any day. But I understood pretty immediately once I got into early care and education that this was the most influential time in a child's life. And if I wanted to make a difference in children's lives, it would need it to be in early childhood the way I wanted to do it because of the immense amount of brain development that was happening within this kind of beautiful, joyful, precious childhood.

Like it's play, you're having so much fun, not, it's not always easy, but it's joyful work and you're setting these children up for lifelong thriving. So once I got that, which was pretty immediate, I've said like this is where I'm gonna stay. And I've been in this career 25 years since, since that happened. And the work I've done, I just keep saying yes to things. So I'm lucky to be in this position here. But I've worked, I've written curriculum. I've worked with state systems. I've done a lot with training. I've done a lot with family education. I've written books. I work with military and I just kept do kind of collecting experiences in the field that got me to this place. And I actually specifically chose to come to Bright Horizons because of the commitment to early childhood research and quality and because of the innovation around research and science to make sure that and I wanted to work somewhere that allowed that for me to do that. And again, just do it in this like joyful, playful, filled, not that it's all places of course, like stuff happens, like somebody bites somebody, of course. But, once in a while that happens, but it's just really beautiful, playful work and, and it's childhood, get to be part of so many people's childhood. 

Laura: Okay. So I, I love that. I would, I would love to hear a little bit more about what, what play based learning actually is, I think that that is a buzzword. I think it's coming, you know, coming into fashion a little bit more than it was when my, when my kids were little. So my kids are 11 and 8 and when my oldest was move, moving in and we were looking for an early childhood, education or care setting for her. There was a lot of emphasis in educational or academic curriculums. And at the time I was in my PHD program for in Human Development and Family Studies. And I knew I wanted my kid in a play based program because that was the, the gold standard. And yet all of these places we were looking and interviewing were talking about their academic curriculums, which I felt was wildly not appropriate for the age that my child was. She was about 18 months.

And so I, that was really, like, kind of, for me, I, I knew going in, I wanted a play based environment for her but I don't think a lot of parents know going in that that's what they should be wanting or should be looking for. And I think that they don't even know necessarily what that means. And so I guess maybe a better place to start is why do you think there was such a strong shift away from play and into academics? And how do you kind of see the world moving back into play because I do think that that's starting to happen. 

Rachel: Yeah, I, I could say so many things. So we, we are fairly competitive society and there's some researchers that I followed and they, there's some theories about how we got into this competitive place just in education overall. So there's a lot of that out there and, and so we're, we're sort of winning trying to run a race around academics and we're not even running the right race, but we, we look at these like external measurements or these top of the pyramid measurements and we're not paying attention to all that's happening underneath. So we get these superficial things like oh, they can do this or they got this score, they passed this test and we fixate on that achievement, but we don't value or understand all that it takes to get to that achievement. So one of the things I often say is if you're rushing development, you're also skipping development. It's not, it's you're making a trade off.

So if you're rushed now, some kids have developmental trajectories go on an order typically. But kids move around. You might develop one thing differently than I do at different paces and rates. But we're all kind of going in the same order. You, you, you crawl before you scoot before you walk. That almost always happens. And that's what most development. So if you skip to the walking because you're so eager to get your child walking that you just kind of like, no, we're not gonna crawl. We're going to skip to walking. They actually missed out on some really important development that happens in that phase. That's underneath the pyramid.

Laura:  That provides that strong foundation. Yeah.

Rachel: Exactly. So you, I yeah, that analogy is perfect. So you can go like deck create the house because you want it to look beautiful. But if you didn't spend your time on the foundation, it's not gonna be worth it because they're gonna have that houses challenges. Same with a young child. So you might want them to be able to say all the letters in the alphabet from flashcards, but they're missing a bunch of, they don't even know what those letters stand for. They don't understand that. Letters are symbols for sounds that make up words because you've rushed, you've skipped over the development. So we, we get really fixated on kind of uh faster is better and more is better. And neither one of those things are true for child development or for education. So that's, and the push down.

So we've said, okay, this amazing amount of research is happening and sophisticated. Oh my gosh, we understand early childhood to be so important. The first five years of development are so important, so much is happening. And also we're very competitive and want things to happen faster and more and those things collided and that's what turned into this. I think this like let's make everything academic, let's start them when they're three. Like how about when they're two? They should be studying Mozart by then and they should be getting ready to be math geniuses by them. And the the other thing that we all struggle with is that we don't have any regulation around the term educational. So any anyone can say that their toy or material is educational. So with the influx of information sources, we also all got flooded with that. So all those things were happening at the same time.

There are, there are toy companies that have been sued immensely and lost because they falsified claims about how smart your child was gonna be if they use the product and they're still selling their product because they make that much money off of it. So, all of that at once I think is what got us to this place of like, oh, that nursery school stuff that play stuff that we used to do when we were young. That's just, that's custodial care. That's just care, that's not sophisticated learning. And we just wrongly went to this place of push down more. Everything must separating care and education. And in fact, you can't really separate. If you're gonna have high quality early learning, you can't separate care, play and education, they're all together. 

Laura: Yeah, especially for the, the young ones. Okay, I love what you're saying. I feel, you know, I feel so strongly that parents are quite a vulnerable population. They want so desperately for their kids to, to become successful, whatever definition of success you have. And it makes so much sense that if we are seeing products out there that are marketed to kind of give our kids an edge or classes that are supposed to give them a leg up, it makes so much sense that we would go for those things. 

Rachel: Absolutely. Every parent wants the best for their child, nobody wants to get it wrong. Right? Like right.

Laura: Right. Yeah.

Rachel: Everybody's coming from that place. And if someone says this is gonna give your child a leg up, of course you're gonna pay attention to it. Of course.

Laura: Of course. Yeah. So one of the things I would love to kind of arm parents who are listening to this episode with is with some education, with some ability to be really aware, conscious consumers of, of some of the the ways that they're marketed to. So let's just break it down to what is the benefit of play for a child when it comes to their early educational experiences? We all know that play is children's language. That's how they process and move through things. But when it comes to education, what is play based education, why would play be a beneficial part of education? 

Rachel: Yeah. It's such a good question. So, when you watch children play, I think you can see a lot of what I'm about to say. If you just for a sustained amount of time, just watch them play. That's okay. 

Laura: Okay. Can I just interrupt for a second? So, during the month of January, we do this 30 days of play project within my community. The 1st 10 days are solely dedicated to observation with it. It's so your, your only job is to drop into presents and observe your child and play for 10 minutes. But because of that, because you have to observe anyway. Go ahead. Sorry, I didn't. 

Rachel: Yeah. No, I love it. That's exactly, because you can see a lot of what we're talking about here when you pay attention to it. A lot of times adults will do something else when play is happening. Like it's always like I can take a break here, the play is happening and.

Laura: Which also is okay. 

Rachel: You know, it's definitely okay, but just a couple times, take a moment to pay attention to what is exactly going on. So play is I don't remember who said it and I think it's actually been sort of changed over the years, but play, it is Albert Einstein or someone said it was like you learning laboratory, like every all the experiments like mad scientists play, that's what kids are. Scientists from the get go. They are, why, why, why? That's a good scientist. Questions they're experimenting, they're trying cause and effect what will happen if this happens? What, what's the reaction of this person gonna happen? How does this work? Like they want to know all that stuff and play is really the best way for that to explore all that natural curiosity and wonder they learn about what they're capable of. They learn how things work. They learn scientific processes, they actually learn some pretty sophisticated stuff.

They learn a lot about stem concepts and engineering and balance and geometry and everything you can think of is happening through that play, how to express themselves, how to regulate their behavior. One of the things I say to adults when I'm talking to them in a meeting space is what are you doing right now? What skills are you applying right now and a lot, it takes a minute sometimes to think about it. But it's stuff like I'm waiting my turn, I'm managing my behavior. I'm thinking about what you're saying. Am I connecting it to something else? I'm planning ahead. I'm thinking about what I'm gonna do tonight. If people are honest, what, whatever they say, all of that stuff is foundational executive function, social emotional skills. Those are happening in play. That's what kids are doing when you're, when, when you're playing with another child.

And they say they take the storyline in a different direction, you have to be flexible, you have to be a creative thinker. I'm gonna say kids are in a constant state of improv, they are constantly working on. Well, I don't know what's gonna happen next. Let me find out and that is all happening when we give them space for play. It's such a you can't, you can't fabricate that experience. You can't give them a five step direction activity and have all those things happen at the same time, the way it will when it happens through that natural, even if you and we can talk about this a little bit, even if you prompted or guide that play a little bit. It has to have that open ended. I don't know where this is gonna go bring all your ideas and imagination. There's no wrong answer that has to be included to have it be real play. And when that's happening, there's just nothing else that's as rich and meaningful and powerful as play. 

Laura: I love that. Even for, even for adults. I know. Right. I mean, the, the way we play is different. Right? So, play looks very different for adults, but we still need it. You know, humans are an animal that needs play. You know, we are primates, we need play. It's important for us. 

Rachel: I think, you know, when we talk about hands on learning or role play, which no adult likes, but they all learn from a lot that's play, that's play when we do like a group project or a creative activity in your brain. Sort of like, oh, I have a little space to think here where you walk away from your computer screen and your brain feels relieved like you're in a state of kind of creative space and play. We all need it. In fact, I've read recently some, some thinking around the fact that some of the mental health stuff that we're dealing with as a society is coming from the greatly reduced amount of play that children and adults experience the last few years. 

Laura: Oh, yeah. I mean, I think that that makes a lot of sense because a lot of our free time is so easily solved by the thing in our pocket. You know, our phones, our devices.

Rachel:  Our lessons, our class, or keep busy with this or, yeah, we're, we're, we're, we focus a lot on occupying time rather than how we use that time. So, we're thinking, let's just stay busy. I can't, we can't do this. We're getting through this. We're doing this next. And that another good thing about play is it's a perfect antidote to boredom. And boredom is a good thing when kids say I am bored. That's a good thing. 

Laura: It is. 

Rachel: There's a wide open opportunity for some good imaginative play. 

Laura: I mean, I do understand that for the parents, you know, who are at the tail end of a summer vacation with their kids home, hearing mom, I'm bored who we've maybe hear that too much. But you're right, boredom is such a beautiful opportunity for creativity and ingenuity and play. Okay. So when, if I'm putting myself in the shoes of a parent who's looking to get their child into an early childhood education program, preschool daycare, what are some of the things that they should be looking for when they are interviewing or exploring or touring programs and facilities? That would clue them to the fact that play is valued.

Rachel:  Yeah, so that, I mean, just flat out asking how, how is play incorporated in your program? If you hear answers like, oh, we have play time from 2 to 2:30 in the afternoon. Anything like that should sound some alarms that there's compartmentalizing play that they're not unconnected, play with learning and care. 

Laura: Interesting. Okay.

Rachel: So you want to think for like you don't want someone to be scheduled and you don't want play to be really constructed for a child. So the second there's a right or wrong outcome or there's the moment an adult is directing it, like do this, here's the directions, this is what it should look like at the end. That's not play. That could be something else. Maybe that's learning to follow directions or create a pattern, that's not play. So we, you wanna make sure that there is that rich imaginative play, guided play and not everybody uses that term. But so I'll explain what it means. But guided play is really where the richest learning happens. So where an adult understands their role as a facilitator of learning through. So any of these kind of ways someone might talk about it or it's written in their philosophy, but you could, you should also watch for this. Any high quality early care and education program should allow you to come visit.

Laura: Yes.

Rachel: And see what happens in the classroom. So if you see things like a teacher, children playing in different spaces, not all required to move at once, not having a timer and they have to rotate or anything like that because that takes the, the free play out of it. You want to see a teacher choosing to put themselves with children and prompting their thinking maybe, oh, looks like you could. What about this material? I wonder what would happen if so they're not telling them what to do. But they're prompting thinking or maybe they're adding a vocabulary word or helping children chart their hypotheses about something going to happen or like, oh, that's not fitting in the space anymore. What ideas do you all have? So, helping them problem solve, nurturing their own development through that play. That's guided play. So free play is like the adults not interacting at all.

That's wonderful. That's great. We want lots of that free play. But real rich learning happens from that guided play where a teacher might say, oh, I'm looking at your play. I see that you're making something really tall. I wonder, I wonder if you could also make it really wide. And so they're adding a layer or context or a challenge, but they're not just so looking for that kind of interaction from a teacher. Again, like making sure that a schedule isn't just block chunked up until like here's play time, here's learning time and that that teacher is really celebrating and having fun with the children at their level. Joyful laughing, enjoying the like childhood should look like childhood. It shouldn't look like fun in third grade. Right? It should in third grade, by the way, should be fun too, but.

Laura: I agree.

Rachel: Should look like childhood. It shouldn't look like mini school or another grade that we're trying to get them to. And in fact, if you pay attention to what's happening in schools, they're talking a lot about differentiated instruction and project based learning that's all happening in good early childhood. So what I say is we should be pushing up, not getting pushed down because the beauty of what children experience in high quality early childhood is in fact what children in older grades also need. 

Laura: Yeah, I love that. So, just for the listener who's not familiar with the pushing up versus pushing down. So, in, in education it, there's been a trend in the past, what would you say 15, 20 years to push? Yeah, to push skills down. So, you know, when I was growing up I maybe learned letters in kindergarten. But reading, learning happened in first grade. Really, you know, really, like I learned to read in first grade. Now most kids are fully learning to read in kindergarten and they're learning letters in four K. Right. Wouldn't you say that's what we mean by pushing down.

Rachel:  Yeah. And I think that's right. So, if you, so if you walked into a toddler room, let's say, and you saw alphabet rugs and alphabet posters that would give me a lot of pause. 

Laura: Me, too.

Rachel: Like the first, no one's learning the alphabet from a rug. So that's one thing. Like, it just makes us feel like there's academics happening, but there isn't a richness of academics and it's actually too early. We want them to be building their expressive language, their ability to say how they feel we want them to be learning about receptive language, listening to directions, responding to other people.

Laura: Those foundational executive function, skills, learning to wait and regulate. Yeah. 

Rachel: Yeah. And of course, like, so busy doing flashcards about letters, what they're gonna do is they're gonna be able to see, they see that shape of the A and they're gonna start to memorize that. They don't know what that letter does, what it means. So it's, again, it's that rush skip development. The other thing I would say about play, if, when you're looking, if you're going to early care and education program, so ask them about it, look for their philosophy. Um ask the, you know, if you want to get sophisticated about it, you can ask like which theorists do they use to develop their philosophy? What, what's their curriculum based on and ask for examples of the curriculum? Make sure what's on the curriculum kind of matches what you're seeing in the classroom. You want to look for things like can kids do? Are there, is there process art, meaning messy, creative stuff? It's not all looking the same. That means the process is valued.

You wanna look for, maybe there's a, maybe there's a black tower over there in blocks, but no one's there. But that means that kids are allowed to leave their work and come back to it, that they can continue to evolve, that it's not about like everything being neat tidy. It's good that kids learn how to take care of their classroom. But it's not, it's about the richness of the exploration. So if I go in a classroom and see something over on a table and it has like a save sign or it has some kids names on it because they got to save it with their name. That's thrilling to me because that means that project is happening over time and kids get to come back and iterate and be creative and try new things and they're really engaged in it, they want to keep it there. And that means that also that the teacher's main goal isn't to clean up. The teacher's main goal is to help children learn through something they're really interested in.

Laura: I love that. Yeah, I love that.

Rachel: Can I give you one other thing?

Laura: Please, please, please. Yes

Rachel:. I, so if you're looking for it because I mean, academics isn't wrong to learn about, right.

Laura: No, no. 

Rachel: If we use reading, children usually develop reading school skills somewhere between five and seven. So we don't need to rush it. If they, if they end up reading early, that's fine. That's a natural development, but we shouldn't push it and force it before it happens. But we can get them ready for again, looking at the trajectory of development. So if you am I in a preschool room, if they're doing worksheets and flashcards about letters, I get concerned about that because that's memorizing, that's repetition. That's didactic, that's not meaningful, playful learning. But if I see that they did a cooking project and the chef came and helped them or their caterer or someone at the grocery, whatever food related thing happened that, that they're then using writing a thank you note as a group and practicing letters together. Then I'm so excited because they. 

Laura: Because it's meaningful, yeah.

Rachel: And it was engaging and they're getting much better learning because they're using and practicing their skills in a useful way. None of us in our jobs. I mean, maybe there's a job out there that you have to do this. You have to sit around and recite the alphabet, but that's very foundational. We have to use the alphabet and that's what they, what, like, let's have them do that because they can do that. And that's actually how they'll, they'll learn the foundational skills and the more advanced skills at the same time. So looking for that, you can look for the learning. It doesn't have to be just replay and I actually don't, not just replay but look for the learning embedded in the play, not next to or on the side. 

Laura: Yeah. Like things like if there is a kitchen area in the play space making, you know, are there, is there a pad of paper for taking down orders available? You know, like that sort of thing. Okay. 

Rachel: That's a great example. I was just in the center I visit centers a lot and I was just in the center where the teacher was in, read a book about something about building. And then all the, a lot of the children, not all of them, but a lot of them are choosing to do some building afterwards. And I sat next to a little girl and I said, tell me about what you're doing. And she said she's telling me that she was building a, a rocket. And I, and then I sat next to her for a little bit and she said to me, can I tell you the most specialist thing I know.? And I was like, of course, you do, please. And she was telling me about this secret passage way. She knew about it at a museum that was near a rocket that she was excited about. And then the teacher came over and was talking and they were going to start doing a rocket project.

They were interested in it asking lots of questions. And the teacher was asking questions like, well, what do you think makes it go? And then they made this big chart about, well, what do we know about rockets? What do we want to know about rockets? So, like, it just stemmed from this very natural interaction. That was fun. And, and that's where the learning went. The teacher found the opportunity within children's interests instead of fabricating, like this month's theme is on apples. I don't think if you're interested in rockets, we're gonna talk about apples. So that's again, something I'm always looking for is like, are the children's interests inspiring this because then it's gonna be really engaging and playful.

Laura:  And rich. You know, I'm, I'm thinking about that one for that takes a lot of skill as a teacher. Right? It takes a lot of resources as a teacher too. And I'm, I'm thinking about the privilege associated with being able to be in a care setting. Like the one you just described, like what we've been talking about, there's a huge amount of privilege in there. Now, I know of several, you know, several families whose children are in home care settings who do exactly those things, too. You can find care settings like this at all, entry levels at all price points. But I do wanna just have an eye towards the families who maybe don't have as much choice about where their kids go for their care and what parents can maybe be doing if they're starting to, if they're noticing some of the things that we've been talking about here, maybe aren't happening in their childcare and they want to see them more play based things or if they're seeing some of the things like the alphabet rug, for example, and then, you know, starting them wondering about what they can be doing to support, maybe even, you know, support their individual child, but maybe even the, the care center that they're in. What are some things that parents who maybe don't have as much choice, as much latitude. What can they be doing to support their child and, and hopefully all children because we're all in this together.

Rachel: Yeah.  I think. I mean, so the alphabet rug, it's, I, I.

Laura: No, I totally know. Yes.

Rachel: Like, so the alphabet rug it's not gonna hurt anyone but it's.

Laura: Of course not. No, it's just an indication.

Rachel:  It's an indication. Yeah. So I would say to families a couple of things, one is a lot of times, early care and education providers are doing some of this academic work because they think that's what families want. 

Laura: Exactly. Yes, so good you said that.

Rachel: You simply start to tell them. This is not actually what we want or how can we infuse play more or how can we support the teachers or? And I understand. 

Laura: Oh, that is so key Rachel. How can we support the teachers? The teachers do I mean, oh, my gosh, these early childhood teachers, oh, they have the, they have the hardest jobs on this planet and the most important jobs.

Rachel: So hard and so meaningful. And when, when I, if we have this education development department, upright horizons that I lead and when people want, a lot of times people want to join our department and sometimes they've been worked in the center and I always have a pretty frank talk with them about it's gonna be you, you think you're actually gonna miss it a lot because there's no one who hugs you at the end of the day. There's no one who makes you a picture during the day. There's no classroom, you can go in and see all these faces and all this development and celebrate these milestones with family. So it is this but the, but it's a lot of work and it's way immensely undervalued early childhood educators. So there's just this beautiful joy and it's a great career path and it is absolutely a lot of work. It's demanding, you're working with vulnerable population and their families who are also very rightly worried about their care and what's happening with them.

But so, so offering your support versus I don't like what the teachers are doing or why are you doing this or this or that you must not know or whatever kind of phrasing that might accidentally come out just really support this. Is there a workshop we can all do together? Is there a study? And I, and I understand parents don't have time. Parents might not have the money to add to these resources either. But some things like some programs can take donations. So are there some I can help loose parts, natural materials are some of the best things you can have. They are free, you can get really safe, like splinter free sticks, stones, shells, pine cones. Those are wonderful things to have in a classroom. Parts of PVC pipes. Paper towel rolls, empty Kleenex boxes. If I open a cardboard box and there's anything interesting cardboard in there, I'm like, I'm saving this for the next time I go. 

Laura: Absolutely. 

Rachel: It's, you can get, go to a picture frame store and ask for all their cardboard extra stuff that they just. 

Laura: I love that. Yeah.

Rachel:  You don't need them so you can help with that. If you're helping out a program, you can also tell them that you value play and you, you're supportive of them exploring that and pursuing that. But you and then you can also supplement at home and the night, the thing I love the most about early childhood is while it is so important and sophisticated and it sets a person up on a trajectory for life. It also isn't, is fairly simple to get it right. There is a lot of ways to get it right. And if you do some of these things at home, you child is also flourishing. So making sure you're reading books, making sure you're having rich conversations that you respect your child as a and this, you want to look for this in the care program too is you respect that child as a partner as an individ that has their own ideas and they have a lot of them, right? They're not there to just be quiet and do what you say. But that you and then you give them, you enrich their vocabulary maybe you say. I, I've actually a children's book author too and I have in my books, I use what I refer to as juicy words. I stole that from a different author, but kind of, you don't shy away from a word like magnificent. You use it and then they learn how they learn how to say it. I've been, I was in a, a class one of our classrooms a couple months ago and a child told was using the word benevolent. I'm like, what, what's happening? 

Laura: Love that word.

Rachel: Appropriately too. So, so that kind of thing and that play and offering them take, take, I'm just looking at your background, you can take like little wood and pieces or you can take shower curtain rings or whatever, safe, old corks or what, you know, clean, clean things, safe things always, but just let them play and experiment. This is why children love the paper box, the cardboard box. This is why they gravitate towards the pots and pans because it can be anything. A toy car is.

Laura: Open ended and.

Rachel: Yeah, exactly.

Laura: And they're meaningful objects.

Rachel: Toy car every day. Right? So every single day. A a block can be a toy car can be, it could be whatever it could be a dolphin, a rocket ship. It could be part of something else. Yeah. It's just like you're saying open ended objects. That's really important. 

Laura: Yeah. My favorite place to find like loose parts stuff other than out in nature. Is that thrift stores? There's just really like my, my kids favorite continue. So they're 11 and 8 and they still play a lot and their favorite kind of most used play object in our playroom continues to be floral gems. Like the little glass gems that would go in the bottom of it. They are so open like they are everything to these kids. They are used for everything. So I love that. 

Rachel: Yeah, I love that. We got into this conversation too about loose parts because that is a really valuable part to play and it's so low budget. Like in fact, you actually you fabrics like scraps of things. 

Laura: Scraps of fabrics, yeah. 

Rachel: And see what it'll be because it'll be a lot of different things which is very different from like this is the one way you use this material or toy, which is not very playful, but when they can be inventive and use their own natural ingenuity and curiosity, you don't know what's gonna happen. The thing that parents and you, everybody gets to make their own decision but find a place in your space in your child's life that they can make a mess because that's a big part of this beauty around play. If they're worried about the mass or what they can't do, they're much less likely to feel the freedom of creativity. I do, I used to do things like take watercolors to a stream near our house. Nontoxic watercolors and let my kids paint rocks, that’s fine. You could make a mess. It'll wash right off and just if it needs to be outdoors at a public park, that's where they can get messy, mud washes off. 

Laura: Yeah, I love that. I, you know, as a, as a parent to young when I was, had much younger children, there was all of these Pinterest boards and Instagram, you know, ideas about doing sensory play, you know, the rice and the colored pastas and stuff and that was not happening in my house. I just can't stand the feeling of rice under my feet or the mess. So we had a mud kitchen and the mud kitchen was a place where they could get dirty and messy. They use it, they still use it, you know, there, I mean, I gave it to my child as a her second like her two year old birthday present. They still use that at 11 and 8 and they use it in the snow too. So it's, it's perfect. Perfect. Yes. So they get all those good experiences with, you know, it is okay as parents, right? It's okay for us to acknowledge our own limitation. 

Rachel: Everybody can have their own limitations. And in fact, I'd say we, I, I, I would say don't even worry about fancy stuff in a sensory table or especially food because there can be some like as we're getting into a little bit, like some people have a challenge with using food for play because.

Laura: 100% because there's food insecurity is a real issue. Yeah. 

Rachel: So, but you could do something like, I just saw this in a center too as they were making something with corn and they were letting the kids peel the silk and instead of like adults are, like, get this off, let's get this done. We have cooking to do. The kids were like so enamored by the one little string and how it felt and really exploring that. But you could do that at home. 

Laura: I love that. 

Rachel: Little time for that. Right? But that's such a beautiful sensory experience and it's also getting you to something you need to do, which is make dinner. So.

Laura: Yeah, and involving kids in a meaningful way in their, I mean, gosh, beautiful. So I guess one of the things I just wanted to ask real quick, I feel like I, I get this question from parents a lot and I'm trying to figure out how to ask us in a nice way that, that you'll feel comfortable answering because so a lot, I feel like I interact with a lot of parents who have kids who are maybe two or three and they enjoy being home with their, with their kids. They like having them home but they feel like they are supposed to put their kids into care it for some particular reason like that they have to, that it's best for them that they need socialization. And I like, how do you feel about that? What is your recommendation? Do we have to put our kids into care? 

Rachel: There is a lot of value that comes from early social experiences, from having to do those things that we've talked about, negotiate, react to someone regulate your own emotions. You don't learn as much about regulating your own emotions. If you don't have anyone to regulate, if you can just have whatever emotions you want. There's so there's the socialization part where you're kind of like figuring out how to work in a group, how to not always get your way, how to compromise, how to, how to, how to advocate for yourself, how to react to other people, regulate all that good stuff, how to make a friend, how to enter into play. There's three people over here. I actually want to go over there. The best way to do that is not to knock over everything they're doing, but as adults need to have that skill. So there is a lot to that.

There's also something a term I just recently heard from a researcher is this idea of social synchrony. And this happens to all of us, where are we kind of sync up mentally when we're together in a group? So this starts, which is not always good. Sometimes you have to break that group think up. But there is sort of like this social experience that happens with your brain that is positive. We're all missing each other. The the pandemic told us that we need people, we need to be together and that helps does help with development. There is, there is that is factual that is important. And if an early care and education quality program is available to you, that's a great way to do it. If it's not available to you or if it's not the right choice for your family, just find those social experiences.

So you don't want your child to go show up at kindergarten, not having any social experiences, especially if they don't have siblings or cousins that are kind of a piece of their neighbors or whoever you want them to have those purposeful social experiences where they, where things don't always go their way where they don't know, it's not working out, they're fighting, let's go home. They, you need that sustained kind of working it out, learning from, but it doesn't have to be in that formalized setting. You just want to make sure that you're doing, you're supplementing it and augmenting it in other ways. So, so I would say, you know, it is really good if you have the ability to do an early education program, that's high quality because if it's low quality, it can actually have a negative impact. So you don't want, you don't want to settle like, it's the best I can do even though it's not good at all because you're so worried about the social piece, that would be better served for doing, using your community or.

Laura: Like story times and music together classes. 

Rachel: Exactly. Exactly. And just, yeah, getting them, having play dates, starting to do that kind of stuff is important and just recognizing it's not just to keep them busy, it is actually developing some pretty important skills. 

Laura: Yeah. And at the same time, I think too, for those parents were, like, wait a second, I was so looking forward to, to three hours a day of, of preschool, you can do that too. Right. So kids can go to three hours a day of preschool and again, like, you can be supplementing at home and, oh, the, there's so many choices. We have so many choices in this day and age. 

Rachel: And also, like, that's another false belief that we are competing with is a half day program of preschool is not richer than a full day program that embeds also the care. So, if you're a parent and you're saying, oh, well, my child's going to this childcare now because I need, I need the care as a working parent. But when they're older, I'm going to put them in preschool. Well, if it's a high quality early care and education program, it's doing everything a preschool would be and wrapping that into the entire day. So, we should stop having a, we, we, we like false choices in this country. It seems like not either or you can do all of it in the same place. And in fact, I mean, that's what we do. We would never, we, when we're thinking about the decisions we make for children, we're 100% thinking all the time about their learning and development. But that's why care is important. That's why play is important.

That's why these other things are part of the whole day because it's all part of their learning and development. Not, we don't separate our day into like, okay, the real learning happens in the morning and then the, that's just not how a high quality program manages itself, but we have this thinking about it like that. So again, if you can access you know, a high quality early care and education program for whatever hours you need for this, the routine and schedule is very valuable for children. So I would avoid like one day here, one day here, one day here, very unpredictable. That's hard on kids. So find some sort of predictable, especially the year before they go off to school is I would say that's the most important. 

Laura: Awesome. Thank you so much, Rachel. It was so fun talking to you. 

Rachel: Yeah, you too. I could talk about this for days as you could talk. 

Laura: Same. 

Rachel: Yeah.

Okay, so thanks for listening today. Remember to subscribe to the podcast and if it was helpful, leave me a review that really helps others find the podcast and join us in this really important work of creating a parenthood that we don't have to escape from and creating a childhood for our kids that they don't have to recover from. 

And if you're listening, grab a screenshot and tag me on Instagram so that I can give you a shout out um and definitely go follow me on Instagram. I'm @laurafroyenphd. That's where you can get behind the scenes. Look at what balanced, conscious parenting looks like in action with my family and plus I share a lot of other, really great resources there too. 

All right. That's it for me today. I hope that you keep taking really good care of your kids and your family and each other and most importantly of yourself. And just to remember, balance is a verb and you're already doing it. You've got this!

Episode 183: The Science of Playful Parenting with Dajana Yoakley

The 30 Days of Play Challenge is BACK! Normally I only offer this challenge once a year, but I’ve revamped it so that you can now access it at the time that is right for you! If that’s now, you can sign up here: www.laurafroyen.com/playchallenge If that isn’t right now, that’s ok too, you can sign up whenever you want and move at your own pace!

Regardless, I hope this week’s episode helps make playful parenting feel more doable and fun for you! This week, we’ll delve into the importance of playful parenting and how incorporating playfulness can lead to more connection, cooperation, and peace in the home. Our guest expert, Dajana Yoakley, a mom of three, is a certified Peaceful Parenting Coach and Parenting Educator. She trained under Dr. Laura Markham, the queen of peaceful parenting and Dr. Lawrence Cohen, the father of playful parenting.

Here are some of the key takeaways:

  • Understanding the benefits of play for children’s development

  • The importance of playful parenting

  • Why play may be hard for some parents (and the need for inner work)

  • Using play to engage cooperation

If you need support or guidance for playful parenting, visit Dajana’s website www.delightinparenting.com and follow her on Facebook @dajanayoakley, Instagram @dajanayoakley and on her Youtube @delightinparenting.

We hope these insights inspire you to explore playful parenting and discover the transformative power of play in your family's journey towards greater connection and harmony. 


TRANSCRIPT

Parenting is often lived in the extremes. It's either great joy or chaotic, overwhelmed. In one moment, you're nailing it and the next you're losing your cool. I want to help you find your way to the messy middle, to a place of balance. You see balance is a verb, not a state of being. It is a thing you do. Not a thing you are. It is an action, a process, a series of micro corrections that you make each and every day to keep yourself feeling centered. We are never truly balanced. We are engaged in the process of balancing.

Hello, I'm Dr. Laura Froyen and this is The Balanced Parent Podcast where overwhelmed, stressed out and disconnected parents go to find tools, mindset shifts and practices to help them stop yelling at the people they love and start connecting on a deeper level. All delivered with heaping doses of grace and compassion. Join me in conversations that will help you get clear on your goals and values and start showing up in your parenting, your relationships, your life with openhearted authenticity and balance. Let's go!

Laura: Hello, everybody. Before we jump into this week's episode, I just wanted to invite you to join our play challenge. Now, in the past, we used to run this play challenge live every January and I have to be perfectly honest, my capacity to support that challenge hasn't been as high. So I skipped it this past January and in the time in between, I've been making it a, a challenge that you can sign up for any time. This way, you don't have to wait until January. You can actually go and do the challenge anytime you're ready for it and you can sign up now at laurafroyen.com/playchallenge. So this episode will support you in your play challenge. And then there's also a private podcast that goes along with the challenge to support you even further in deepening your understanding of how important your child's play is and how you can get more peace cooperation and connection through play with your kiddos. All right. Enjoy the episode. 

Okay. Hello everybody. This is Doctor Laura Froyen. And on this week's episode of the Balanced Parent Podcast, we're gonna be talking about playful parenting and why it's so important how you can use it in a way that feels authentic and good to you and how it can help you get more connection and cooperation and peace in your home. So, for this conversation, I'm bringing in a peaceful parenting expert, Dajana Yoakley. And she has recently trained with Doctor Laura Markham, the, you know, queen of peaceful parenting and Doctor Larry Cohen as the father of playful parenting. So two really like awesome places to be trained in. I'm so excited to be talking about this topic with you, Diana. Why don't you tell us a little bit more about who you are and what you do and then we'll dive in. 

Dajana: Yeah. Thanks for having me. So excited to talk to you. Yeah. So I again, I'm a mom of not again, but I'm a mom of three. I have three kids under the age of 12 and so play is a big part of our household. And really cult a household of playfulness, but as, as a peaceful parenting coach and recently trained as a parent educator and certified with Doctor Larry Cohen. I've really seen kind of the, the neuroscience behind play and understand why it's so important and, in really parenting overall and building connection, and, you know, making the household more peaceful and getting cooperation, getting kids to listen and cooper in using resources that don't that don't feel like force to them, you know? 

Laura: Yeah. Okay. So, so yeah, can you tell us some of the, like the, I, I mean, I always love it when we can geek out. So tell us  what have you learned? What are some of the things like, what are some of the benefits of play? 

Dajana: Yeah. So I would say if we can reframe play, you know, generally I think parents will kind of dismiss play as children's work. But when we rethink about play in terms of the nervous system and I love, you know, the neurobiology of peaceful parenting and playful parenting when a child is playing on their own or with you, they're really in a state of nervous system safety. Their nervous system feels safe enough to play. They're in a state of connection, whether it's with you or with uh you know, themselves or with the world that they're in. And so when we, when our kids are having a hard time they're struggling with big emotions or struggling with challenging behavior. One of the best ways to reframe that is that their nervous system is in a state of unsafe, feeling unsafe, right? When they're having big emotions or challenging behavior, they're they're not feeling like they have emotional well being right now in that moment. And so when we introduced the element of play, we're signaling to the child and we're tapping into this interpersonal safety, this creating safety in our bodies. Rough housing is one of the most foundational ways to play with kids, not just because kids love it, but because the body is the container of our emotional experiences, right? And rough housing gets the giggles going. Laughter is the antidote to anxiety. It's the antidote to feeling stuck, right? Because laughter is a neurobiological expression of safety. 

Again, when you think about primates playing or roughhousing, they're queuing to each other that they're not a predator. So when your child is having challenging behavior with you or in the household, they're sending signals of, you know, this feels like a threat either inside of me or outside of me or I don't feel connected to you. And so when you incorporate play in your relationship with your child, you're signaling to them without verbally saying anything. You know, we often tend to, as adults, we often tend to go to lectures and we want to explain to them in, in compassionate words, why things are the way they are. We want to talk about feelings and there's a time and place for that. But especially for little kids and, you know, don't underestimate the power of play with teenagers even, you know, pillow fights and different activities like that. When you play, you're kind of going below the radar of like the linguistic element, right? You don't have to tap into the language in the child's brain. You basically just go to the somatics, you're going to their body when you can play and get them laughing, get them giggling. It's not manipulative. It's really an intelligent way, it's an intelligent way to relate to a mammal, a primate um and create safety and connections. So you can influence their nervous system state for more cooper operation within your household. 

Laura: Oh my gosh, no, it's and I love, I love what you're saying and I think it's so true, you know, so early in my own parenting journey, I had feelings of, I don't know, concern about using playfulness to get my kids to do things because it felt a little manipulative until I sat down and really thought about what was actually happening here. You know, really speaking the language, the language of the body, the language of connection, the language of play for these kids and how there's nothing more respectful than meeting a person where they are and speaking their language. But I do think that parents feel worried that, you know, I, I think, I guess maybe we can talk about concerns in a minute after we talk about kind of. So what does playful parent like? What does playful parenting mean? How can it increase cooperation? But I do think that parents are concerned around. I have cons, you know, the things I hear are well, should I, you know, why can't they just listen to me when I tell them to do it the first time? Why do I have to put on some big show to get, you know, to get them to do things or isn't it like, isn't it, you know, inauthentic, you know, or isn't it? You know, why, you know, why is it? So, you know, I don't want to have to do those things. That's a lot of energy just to get a kid to brush their teeth, you know, and we talk about that a little bit too?

Dajana: Yeah, I think you're right. You know, it, it is like, almost like this framework of respecting people's languages. Like if you were to go to a foreign country on vacation and you're, you're tourists, you're looking at their different things they have on display and they speak their language because they live there you're visiting and so you're like, can you guys say it in English because it's like a lot of work and like, you know, for me to say it in your language and, you know, and I'm paying for this. So can't we just, like, make it easier for me? Yes, that's, that's kind of what I think sometimes it feels like for parents. Like, why do they have to travel to this child's land and speak their language when the child lives with me in this house? It's like, you know, I created them, I'm the parent and it's almost like this battle for like whose needs are gonna get met first. Like who you know, and, and yes, there's a time and place for play. It's not to say that kids are more important than parents. Everybody is equally important. 

Let's respect everybody's needs, but it's also respect the fact that their primary way of relating to the world is play. That is their first language. That's how babies operate. They don't speak first, they play first up through like the pre teen years. That is the way that they experiment explore the world. That's how they get input from the world. They engage with it in a playful way. And so just kind of respecting that, that is how they actually understand it better. So if we want to be more effective, we should speak in a language that they understand clearer and more more quickly and more coherently when we say it in our adult ways, we're actually asking them to do more work than we're doing. Right, we're saying like you come up here where I am in, in the, in the, in the adult world where we, where I say things and you respond and we have a conversation and we talk about limits and rules and it's like, and, and it's almost like the expectation on the kids is higher than the expectation on ourselves. 

Now again, we can, it's parenting is hard and I'm not blaming parents. I think what, you know, you talk a lot about internal family systems and I think there's a part of us that feels like my needs matter too, as a parent, my needs matter too. And why can't these kids for one meet my needs? Right? And so then it's like who's going to come to your rescue? Is the kid going to have to come to your rescue and make it easier for you in this moment? Or can you support yourself with kind of the inner wisdom and self compassion and give yourself what you need first kind of that self regulation. And then step two go into connection with your child to as the adult, as the one that kind of, you know, gave them life or brought them into your world. You're the parent, you have to take responsibility even when it doesn't feel like it's something that you want to be doing right now. Right? It's kind of the work of adulthood and parenting on that. 

Laura: Yeah, I know. I really, I love what you're saying. And I, I mean, so it's so important that we under, you know, that we understand this, this tricky balance of, yes, we are the parents and we, you know, we have these kids and we are responsible for them and sometimes we have to like, you know, put our, our needs aside and go to their level and everything. And at the same time, we are human beings who have needs, but it's not our child's responsibility to meet those needs, right? It's our responsibility to figure out. Okay, so how am I going to get these needs met so that I can show up for myself and for my kids in the best way that I can, you know, like it's, it's about like that balance is so tricky and so important to really peace out. And I think the piece of it that is helped me when I talk, when I think about peaceful parenting, not peaceful parenting, playful parenting. Sorry, is that I'm gonna spend the time anyway. If my three year old is refusing to brush their teeth, I'm gonna spend the time anyway. And that time can be spent in battles, in bribery and you know, and you're doing it like force, you know, it can be spent in that way or it can be spent in, you know, getting a pretend phone call from our local zookeeper who tells me that, you know, animals are hiding in my children's teeth, you know, I'm gonna spend the time either way. 

And playful parenting allows me to spend the time, get the job done and connect and feel good about it. Not, and not just, you know, and, you know, I, you know, I know, I know we're not supposed to just do stuff. I know. No, it's okay. It's okay for us to want to enjoy parenting. It is, right? It's okay for us to want to enjoy parenting. It's more fun for me. It's more fun for them and it's more fun for me when I give myself that permission to just go to them, meet them where they are, be that playful person. Allow, let the play make it easy. I don't like brushing my teeth, even, even as an adult, I usually read my kindle while I'm brushing my teeth. It's boring. I get it, it's way more fun to have your parent brushing your teeth, you know, finding hidden animals, you know, from the zoo than to just sit there and do it. You know, it's, it makes sense that they don't want to do some of those things. It makes sense that we would want to be able to have more fun in connection and play. And I just, anyway, yeah, with your thoughts. 

Dajana: Yeah. And I would add that, I think we, when we kind of go into adulthood, we, we stop playing in a way like kids play and we start playing in a different way. Like reading the Kindle is kind of a form of play for play to flow, right? Like it's your preferred way to play. Whereas a kid I want to, you know, brush the sink with their toothbrush or whatever, like, it's a different kind of play because we have different, you know, mature brains, but we're still playing like as adults, we're still playing just in our own preferred way. So it's almost like when you think about siblings and they're trying to negotiate a game to play, maybe they're different ages like three years apart or something and they have different ideas about how the game should go. So it's like, yes, what would make this pleasant for me versus what would make it pleasant for my kid? And then it's like, can we find a win, win because, you know, parents shouldn't feel like they're, they have to play, you know, again, we can talk about parts as well, like finding there's a playful part somewhere but that you can try to like, you know, kind of bring more into like conversation, like by allowing these other parts of resistance to kind of have their speak and then move to the side a little bit, create some space for other parts. 

Maybe the playful part can come out and tell, you know, have a chance to speak once these other parts kind of shift aside by really looking within like one of the one of the foundational aspects of playful parenting is looking within yourself if you have a hard time playing with your child. But also finding like a balance. Again, you don't have to play all of your kids favorite games, you can play one of their favorite games and then invite them to play something that you also enjoy. So what do you like to play that they also enjoy playing? And can you meet in the middle? Look for a win, win. So it's not always just dinosaurs and trucks, but sometimes maybe it's you know, some game that you like, you know, that is still playful in, in their world as well, but maybe it's not their game. And so you kind of take turns again, kind of like thinking about those siblings with different brain development stages, they play, eventually they end up playing, but they find a way to negotiate, they find a middle ground where we can bend the rules a little bit. So everybody's happy and we can still coexist. So knowing that our kids have preferences for different types of play and we have preferences for our types of play. But how can we meet in the middle? So we can still connect because when we're not even joining them, we're not connecting and connection is the foundation of parenting. It's more than 80% of your parenting influence comes from the connection. And so we've got to get into their world or invite them into ours. But again, it takes a little bit of negotiation and finding the right kind of fit for, for us to play. 

Laura: Dajana, I love that balance that you're putting in there too because I think we sometimes we feel like we get the message that we just have to lay ourselves on the altar of motherhood and sacrifice ourselves and just do it for the kids and that we don't have to do that. If you find legos mind numbingly boring, you don't have to play Legos but find something that meets your needs and your kids needs. I really love that you're highlighting that and I also really appreciate you bringing in that parts work piece around. If, if there is resistance, there might be a reason why and there might be an invitation to look closer to go inside. Thank you for that so much. I wanna be super respectful of your time and I want to make sure that we get to talk about. Okay. So there's like these two paths of playful parenting, there's playing with your kids and then there's using play to engage cooperation. And I think that that's the one like we all know we're supposed to play with our kids, right? Maybe we do, maybe we don't. But the the using play to engage cooperation, can we talk about like what that can look like in practice and maybe how parents can get ideas because kids are so different around like the points and their routines and rhythms where they're sticking points and how they can bring playfulness in to maybe make those things go more smoothly and how play works for that, how it makes it easier for cooperation to happen?

Dajana: Yeah, I mean, I would say in general follow your child's lead. So 90% you know, when you're trying to incorporate play into like a transition or in a challenging situation, you still want to follow your child's lead. So maybe like, so 90% of it is like your child's leads, let's say your child leads the play because they have to find it playful. If they don't, it's not play. It's an order from mom or dad to engage with the legos, right? And so like whatever they kind of find playful, it has to be kind of, that had to be the foundation, but you can be the one that kind of throws the idea in there and then kind of like the crumbs, throw in some crumbs and let them come closer because you know, that that's something that maybe they've engaged with in the past that they find enjoyable. And so you're kind of like suggesting maybe very tentatively or throwing something out there or setting it up in a way that is very in incentivizing for them. And then, but it's in the context of following their lead because this is something that they would enjoy. And so, it makes it easier because of the science of a safety transitions are easier, challenging behavior gets a dampened and, reduced with play because you're introducing, they understand play as safety. And so when you need to get something done, you want to get your kids to listen and cooperate, if they go into their Amygdala, they're going to be looking at, you know, they're operating from kind of an anxious perspective. 

And your problem gonna be one of the things that looks like a predator to them and you want to get them on your side, right? You're trying to get something done, you want to get their cooperation, you want them to listen. And so always think about how, how play really, resonates as a safety message. It's a cue of safety. And so how can you introduce, you know, play and in a moment of transition again, it's gonna depend on your kid because different kids find different types of way ore, you know, interesting, different styles like somebody that's, sensory avoidant might not enjoy you like jumping out from behind the wall and, and scaring them in a funny way like, right. But other kids that are like, you know, that love like a hide and seek chase game. If you did that and then run out the door, who's going to be faster to the car to get to school, they might love that. And so it depends on your child and kind of looking at individual differences. But I think you first have to kind of observe your child outside of the context outside of this situation to understand like, what do they, what are they drawn to? What types of things do they do their peaks, their attention? What did they look up for when, when something interesting happens And then using those, strategically, use those types of plays and, and kind of again, 10% just throw in the little fishing line and wait for the fish to come because they can't resist it, right? It's, it's their language and it's queuing them for safety. 

Laura: Can I share some just examples from one of my kids who really loves? Like, so she has my youngest who's 8. She still has a hard time with transitions. They're still really hard. And so I have, I mean, and they have been for a long time. So I, I have lots of playful strategies that we use to make it through transitions. Now that she's older, she just asks for them. Mommy, I'm having a really hard time getting dressed this morning. Can you please make the clothes eat me? You know, so like when she's littler, I would make all of her clothes, eat her and they would, you know, as I put her pants on and I'd squeeze her legs. She loves sensory input. I'd go nom. nom, nom, nom, nom. And they, you know, eat her. But like, she also loves, like, little, it is very intrigued by little things moving on their own. And so, like, when it's time to clean up her legos, which is always a battle, you know, sometimes I will just go, like, lay on the floor and start moving them in a line and, like, make them hop into the bucket by themselves and I'll make them, like, make like a little like who like and look at her, you know, and then like, hop into the bucket and she'll be so delighted that she just starts doing it too. 

And then we're getting the legos cleaned up. You know, like those are, those types of things are. But you have, you, you're so right, you have to get to know your child. And I think like, it takes time to do that. You know, that's why, like in my 30 days of play challenge, I have you, I have the parents doing 10 minutes of daily play observation a day so that they can get to know their kids because play is where their kids really, you know, where they shine, where they show us what's important to them, who they are. And we can't do playful parenting if we don't know those things. So I really love that. It's 90% child led and you have to be really observant picking up on what would they, like? What would make this easier? What could make this go more smoothly for them not to manipulate them, but to just make life more enjoyable, life is meant to be lived and enjoyed and connected, you know. Yeah, I love that. 

Dajana: Yeah. And it's in the framework of like, yeah. And I think it's in the framework of like, instead of thinking like, well, they should just do what I say when it's, when kids are defiant and they resist and they're having challenging behavior, it's not because they love to live in that, in that state of stress, it's stressful for them when you're, when they pick up on signals from you that, that they're being difficult, they don't like that. They want to be in harmony with you, they want to be in connection. Because that's how they're wired, they're wired for attachment with you. And so when things are. 

Laura: Even if it seems like they like it.

Dajana: Right. Right. Yeah. And when they're having a hard time play can make it easier, because they're good people, these kids we have are all good people just like we're good people. And so when things are hard and they can't just get it together and listen, the fifth time play can help. It's like, can we give them a hand, can we reach out to them and say I'm here to help you versus, you know, staying far back and saying we're not going anywhere till you learn this all on your own, you're on your own. And again, that's not peaceful. Parenting is about supporting our kids and it's about mastery and high expectations. But people can only, you know, do things hard things when they have support and including our children. So play is just really a tool to help them get to where they want to go to. 

Laura: Yeah, I love that. Diana. Thank you so much for your time. Will you make sure that everybody can find you? I know you've got a new podcast coming out and you do a beautiful summit. I would love to you know, how do you support parents? 

Dajana: Yeah, I have a my website is delightinparenting.com and you can find all of my content on there and, and my podcast is launching in the beginning of 2024 Delight in Parenting with Dajana Yoakley. So I'm excited to share more resources on peaceful parenting, playful parenting. And just how we can bring more delight into into our households. And yeah, I support parents with a one on one coaching and I also have a new course on self compassion and peaceful parenting. And so, yeah, just working on, you know, kind of bridging the research and science of child development and neurobiology with day to day parenting and making it really practical and useful for people to apply these concepts to live more joy, joyful lives um with their kids. So, thank you so much for having me.

Laura: Dajana, I think we're kindred spirits. And so every, you know, listeners, please make sure you go check out her podcast and if she's the right teacher for you, you know, join her programs, I'm sure they're wonderful. I think it's so important that we find our teachers and find our mentors all through the course of our lives. We have things to learn and we find the right teachers at the right time. So, I hope that there's somebody listening who finds, finds you because gosh, you seem like it'd be fun to learn from. 

Dajana: Thank you so much. Really appreciate it.

Okay, so thanks for listening today. Remember to subscribe to the podcast and if it was helpful, leave me a review that really helps others find the podcast and join us in this really important work of creating a parenthood that we don't have to escape from and creating a childhood for our kids that they don't have to recover from. 

And if you're listening, grab a screenshot and tag me on Instagram so that I can give you a shout out um and definitely go follow me on Instagram. I'm @laurafroyenphd. That's where you can get behind the scenes. Look at what balanced, conscious parenting looks like in action with my family and plus I share a lot of other, really great resources there too. 

All right. That's it for me today. I hope that you keep taking really good care of your kids and your family and each other and most importantly of yourself. And just to remember, balance is a verb and you're already doing it. You've got this!

Episode 182: How to Slow Down For a More Peaceful Life with Stephanie O'Dea

On this week’s episode of the Balanced Parent Podcast, I will be joined by Stephanie O’Dea, New York’s bestselling author and the host of Slow Living Podcast. We will dive into the profound theme of purpose, slowing down, and living an intention-filled life. 

Here’s an overview of what we discussed:

  • Stephanie’s journey into slow living and parenting

  • Exploring the acronym for SLOW (Simply Look Only Within)

  • 5 Steps to Living a Slow Life

If you enjoyed listening to Stephanie’s insight into slowing down, follow her on Facebook @stephanieodea, Instagram @stephanieodea, and her websites stephanieodea.com and ayearofslowcooking.com.

Embrace the SLOW acronym—Simply Look Only Within—and consider incorporating Stephanie's five steps to living a slow life into your journey.

Resources:


TRANSCRIPT

Parenting is often lived in the extremes. It's either great joy or chaotic, overwhelmed. In one moment, you're nailing it and the next you're losing your cool. I want to help you find your way to the messy middle, to a place of balance. You see balance is a verb, not a state of being. It is a thing you do. Not a thing you are. It is an action, a process, a series of micro corrections that you make each and every day to keep yourself feeling centered. We are never truly balanced. We are engaged in the process of balancing.

Hello, I'm Dr. Laura Froyen and this is The Balanced Parent Podcast where overwhelmed, stressed out and disconnected parents go to find tools, mindset shifts and practices to help them stop yelling at the people they love and start connecting on a deeper level. All delivered with heaping doses of grace and compassion. Join me in conversations that will help you get clear on your goals and values and start showing up in your parenting, your relationships, your life with openhearted authenticity and balance. Let's go! 

Laura: Hello, everybody. This is Doctor Laura Froyen and on this week's episode of the Balanced Parent Podcast, I'm really excited to be digging into the topic of purpose, slowing down and living a life, with intention and to help me with this conversation, I am bringing in Stephanie O'Dea. She is the New York Times best selling author of The Slow of, oh gosh, what is the name of your book Stephanie? 

Stephanie: That's okay. So I've, I've done. No, no, you're good and you have a cold and the fact that you're here with me bright and early in the morning is amazing and wonderful. And I think you're fantastic. I am, I'm in New York Times best selling author of Crockpot Cookbooks because that makes sense right? 

Laura: No, no, but no. I, I love that because you got started with, with your Slow Cooker, right? And now you have this beautiful podcast, Slow Living, which I love and have listened to so much and I love this idea of slowing down. I'm so glad that we're going to be talking about this topic today. So, Stephanie, why don't you just tell us a little bit more about who you are and what you do and then we'll dive in. 

Stephanie: Absolutely. Absolutely. I think we have a lot of overlaps. I know you've got baby girls. I've got baby girls and I, when I kind of launched into my parenting career, I wanted to be with them more than not be with them. But we live in the Silicon Valley and I needed to work. And so I, on paper, it looked great. I was running preschool centers and my kids could come to work with me. But the youngest at the time, and I only had two at the time, she kept getting sporadically sick. So I thought it was daycare germs and I quit right on the spot. And my husband who is amazing, but he's also an engineer and likes math and spreadsheets is like, yeah, no, we, we, we need to find a way to still make money. So I am, I started writing online and I started doing some freelance writing and I had the idea to start a crockpot blog because I liked the, the tight seo search engine optimization of a recipe site, but I am not a good cook and I really just like the crock pot. And so I would plop the food in and, and I made this New Year's resolution to use my crock pot every day for a year and write about it online and it took off, it it completely and totally took off and at the end of the year, money was coming in. I was able to stay home with my babies. We realized that my youngest at the time it's totally fine now. But she had celiac disease, which is a gluten intolerance and it just wasn't as prevalent in 2006. Like, we didn't know that this was a thing then and it just kind of seems silly now. But I was talking to my brother because he has two year old and a four year old and he was going down the slide and without even thinking, I said, watch his legs, don't break his legs. He's like, I know, and I'm like, the issue is, is I have, I have a 20 year old and, and we didn't know we didn't have the internet to tell us all this stuff. 

So it was the moms on the playground talking to each other then. But, but now it just seems so ridiculous that my silly little site was the first crockpot site. But it was, and so it just sort of took off and then right around 2016, the instant pot hit the market and I was really pressured ha ha ha, pressured by my publisher and, and I know an agent to translate all my recipes. And so I bought an instant pot and I get it, I get the tech of how cool it is to cook a frozen chicken in 45 minutes, but it's not how my brain works. My brain, I'm an early riser. I wanna put stuff on, push a button and then never have to enter the kitchen again for the rest of the day. And, and so I just didn't like, I didn't like it and I felt really phony baloney. And so I had this kind of like voice of God being like so Steph just because you can do things fast, it doesn't mean you should. And I realized that that's sort of been the metaphor of my whole life without even knowing it. And so that's how the Slow Living podcast came to be. And, and what I do now, which is to write, coach, teach and speak about all things slow living. And that's how I got to know you because a lot of the way you parent and teach really overlaps to what I was doing. 

And I was just doing it by trial and error of what feels good. And so it's nice to know that there's actually science behind, behind all of the things and, and I'm, I'm happy to say my kids are older now, so they're, they're 20, 19 and then the baby is 13, but we've kind of come full circle that, that my 20 year old and, and 19 year old is like, you know what mom, you, you, you did it right? Like, like I feel, I feel good. Like, like those choices you made, like, like, like when you're in the middle of it, you don't know, you're making the right choice until after the fact of what feels good. And I'm just thankful, like, okay, we didn't over schedule you. And that was a good thing, even though the mom down the street made me feel like I was an idiot for not pushing Kumon, on my kids. 

Laura: Yeah. Okay. So that, I mean, I want to dig into all of those things. I just wanna validate for you though that in trusting your intuition, you found your way to the right space for your family. And I think that that's something that's so important that we are inundated as modern parents with information and the, you know, quote right way to do things and learning how to listen, how to tune into yourself, to slow down and really ask yourself, okay so what is my core belief here? What is it that I really feel is important for my family, for me, for my kids who are my children, who am I? You know, how do we need to move through this world correctly? Learning how to do that slow down and really tune in, I mean, it is huge and all of the research out, you know, in the world can't replicate that sense of inner knowing and rightness, you know? So I just, I, I really, you know, whenever I work with, with families, I, I understand that I'm gonna come into their life for a small period of time, walk beside them. And my hope is that they come away from that time knowing how to tune in, how to listen to themselves, how to be their own kind of source of wisdom, of inner wisdom, you know. And I think that you are similar in that.

Stephanie: I am, it's, it's really funny because I was actually joking with a friend of mine because I coach in a very similar fashion that I don't want people to need me.

Laura: Exactly. I feel like that's what the coach is doing.

Stephanie: I know it's probably horrible business models.

Laura: I agree. I, I start with, I start with them like, so you really don't need me, need me. Like I'm happy to help you. But, but yeah, when you take the time to slow down and really ask yourself open ended questions and then go quiet, your, your subconscious bubbles up with what the next right step is gonna be. And, and if you take to the internet or, or you go on TikTok or any of these, like quick fixes, it's a dopamine hit but it's not answering your core inner like, like belly like, like what do I need here? And you're not going to find the answer on tiktok. You're just not.

Laura: Yeah, I mean, you can find really great little tips and scripts, you know. But they aren't, they're, they're a placeholder. They're a band aid. They're not the, the truth that your gut and your body knows.

Stephanie: Yeah. And, and it's tricky and it's tricky. And I get the irony that you and I are recording this over the internet and I wouldn't have met you without social media. Like, like I am no saint I, I, I really am not. I, I truly am a real person and I also don't believe in one size fits all advice. So I believe in, in taking it in and then slowing down and, and filtering it. 

Laura: Filtering, yeah.

Stephanie: Yeah, I love the acronym for SLOW which is simply look only within and, and again that those answers you're seeking are not going to be found in a social media reel. They're just not, take advice and, and then tune it out for a while. I love journaling. So start journaling and then asking like, okay, so, so what is it, what is it deep down inside? What is my definition of success? What, what does a healthy, happy kid look like? The kind of kid who when they go away to college is gonna remember these kind of like life lessons that you've, you've hopefully imparted on them through throughout their years. I, I, I think sometimes it, it's, I don't know, like the best way to have well adjusted teenagers is to have well adjusted toddlers and, and you're just kind of constantly building on the same ethics and morals and teachings and don't do drugs and, and all of this stuff that you start at a very, very young age. 

Laura: Yeah. And I, I think, you know, you know, so, I, I, I would love to have this conversation. So I feel like when we think about purpose and success, we can be thinking about our definition of like, like focusing on ourselves when we feel successful as parents, as, you know, as entrepreneurs, you know, and how we define success for ourselves. And then there's also this piece of how do we define it for our kids. And, and there's, I mean, there's a lot of there can be, if we're not careful, there can be a lot of overlap there. When our kids are successful, we feel successful, you know. And so I would love to just have a conversation. I've been thinking about this a lot around how we are offered a definition of success by culture. And how do we go about redefining that for ourselves? Now, as adults, you know, I my, I have a pretty winding path. I'm giving a talk at the local university in a couple days on, on my career trajectory to undergrads who have a similar degree to mine. And I'm feeling a little, you know, because it's so I, I went the path I was supposed to go. I got in, you know, all straight A's, high test scores, good college, you know, with a famous name and realized once I got there that I had no idea who I was or what I was doing, I, I continued to push myself and find, to find things that I love, but at the same time was very defined by traditional success. 

I ended up getting a PHD along the way. And I had this moment when my, my youngest was probably three months old, I had been in a car accident while I was pregnant and I just couldn't bring myself to care anymore about my research, my program of research about the, you know, the papers I was supposed to be writing. I, I just, I really, my, like my purpose, my, I knew I needed to change my definition of success. So now that kiddo is eight now and I feel like I've just been continually like breaking it down for a long time. It doesn't, it was not overnight, you know, of what does it mean now that I'm not an academic? What does it mean? You know? So now I have this podcast, I have this business and, and they, you know, when things my life got a little rocky this past year with one of my kiddos and we're on the other side, it's, she has her autism diagnosis. We are in such a better place. But I really had to step back and, you know, I was in reading your book, I, there's this part at the beginning where you talk about what your clients tell you, they would rather be doing gardening, baking, painting, going for walks, yoga. And I was like, that was like my list and like, is it okay for me to want those things? Like, is it okay for me to not have some bigger purpose in life? You know, that I'm supposed to change the world, you know, and I think we grow up thinking we're supposed to have this big purpose and be these super successful people. And what if we just want a slow and simple life? Is that okay? 

Stephanie: Yes. Yeah. It, it's, it's really tricky. I wish I could hug you right now because you are doing all of the right things and we are programmed at a very early age because we're put into this box of school and, and in order to get gold stars in kindergarten, you've got to sit quietly and put a bubble in your mouth and raise your hand and stand in line. And that's how you win in kindergarten. And then in, in high school it's what's going to be on the test and, and you're only gonna learn what you're going to be tested on and then it absolutely and definitely through academia it, it's do this and then you get this and do this and then you get this and, and the path has been created for you by so this is where I get mean and nasty. But I always envision a group of white men sitting in a walnut flanked office and, and huge boardroom table deciding what people are going to learn. And this is how they will quote unquote, succeed in life. And, and, and maybe that's really, I don't know, cynical of me, but that is how I envision, like, quote unquote successes is a whole bunch of white men in suits deciding what that means for me. And when you're an adult, like, and when you're out of school, like, like you're just, oh, like you're just on your own now and, and I absolutely felt very floundery and, and, like, vulnerable, like, ok, well, now what do I do? Like, like in order to be a good mom? Like, like, what are the markers here? And you're right. I mean, it, it turns into like, this weird psycho competition that you're a better mom because your six month old can sit up unassisted than that six-month-old like.

Laura: It’s wild. But it's there. It's true. Yeah. 

Stephanie: And, and how, how you're feeding your baby is somehow one way is better than another way and how you're sleeping and how you're swaddling and, and whether or not you can afford the expensive car seat and I gotta tell you it's all gonna be okay and, and, and, and I I love kind of the idea of unplugging it all and going back to the roots and thinking about it. Okay. Well, well, let's think about the pioneers, like, like what did they do? They, they fed the children and they, they did what was right for them as a family and they literally didn't know what the people on the next plot of land were doing because they were only focused within, they were only focused on their own little nuclear family and, and it's tricky because we're so hyper connected right now. But I teach the five steps to slow living and number one is to declutter and, and get rid of all of the stuff that doesn't serve you and isn't making you feel good about yourself and your family and, and maybe it is taking a break from social media, maybe it is stop going to church for a while if the people at church are are shiny, perfect, happy step for type people and they're making you feel bad about themselves. But you don't know, you don't know if really there was World War 27 in the house that morning because the French braid had to be perfect like you, you don't know.

Laura: I would. Yeah. You know, I would just love to bring in some like some grace and compassion too for all of us who are parenting in this time. This like you said, this hyper connected time where we think we know what's going on in someone else's house. You know, because we're, we're looking at their Instagram stories, you know, so we think we know them and we don't, and, and it's, and there's, there is so much pressure on us to, you know, the, you know, maybe 100 years ago we were looking at our neighbors, you know, and now we're looking at everyone across the world and comparing and, you know, my one of my favorite ideas is that comparison is the thief of joy. It's one of my mom's too. It's funny that she, we both have that without talking about each about it with each other. But I do feel like I got that from her. Anyway, but I, I think it's really hard for us not to compare. I just, I feel like we are so inundated. And so I just want it for all the listeners who are listening in on this conversation right now, I just, I want you to know that it makes sense if you have found yourself caught up in the comparison game. If you found yourself a disheartened or feeling like you don't measure up or it's never enough. It, it makes sense that that's been your experience. And so with lots of self compassion, you know, Stephanie is offering a another way to be thinking about these things. So the decluttering I love that you brought in, you're bringing in these five steps though. Declutter is a first and we're not just talking about declutter physical things, right or the cluttering practices that.

Stephanie: I mean, you most certainly can. But, but it's interesting because I don't want you to like declutter with a hefty bag and then haphazardly just be in a bad mood and throw everything away because that's not mindful and purposeful. 

Laura: No, yeah.

Stephanie: So, so, so pay attention to that. And, and then number two is know where you're going and kind of know where your end goal is. And that a lot is because of how we were programmed in school. Like, like what's the next step? What's the next step? But what I would like for you to do is when you're calm and in a good mood, kind of jot down some ideas of what success looks like for you. What does an organized life look like and feel like and, and write down some adjectives and some things and then hold that off and then in teeny tiny baby steps, which is three, you're, you're just kind of making little incremental switches and changes. So, so maybe for time management, me in the future gets up an hour before my kids get up and, and maybe I'm not there yet because I still really like staying up late. So maybe, maybe for a month, it's 15 minutes earlier and then 30 minutes earlier, I think we are so sold on the, I don't know, have six pack abs in the next 10 days. 

Laura: Yeah do it now, right now, make all the changes.

Stephanie: Yeah, do it now. And, yeah, and, and just have the ideal and then teeny tiny little baby steps towards it and then, and then four is as much as you can stay present and, and stay positive and know that you'll get there when you get there and, and it's just fine. And then back to your comparison is the thief of joy. I think that's Thomas Jefferson. But I don't know.

Laura: I don't know or Roosevelt maybe. I don't know. I don't know. 

Stephanie: Oh, yeah. Well, maybe they just, well, so that's the interesting idea is I is, I really do. And this is, again, why I'm not the best marker in the world is there I don't think there's any new ideas. There's, there's solid core beliefs that, that, that change over time and, and get modernized over time. But, you know, deep down inside what the next best thing to do is for your health and, and the next best thing might be for the relationships you have in your life. And, and, and again, you're not gonna find that on social media, you're gonna find that within and then step five just to round it out in case anybody's paying attention is, is to tweak and, and to fine tune and, and filter it out in a way that makes sense to you and your family because if, if we were all the same and there was a perfect prescription. We would all look the same talk the same. We would, we would be Stepford cookie cutter like versions and, and that's not real and that's not what you want for yourself. You want your kids to have your own, their own identity, you want you to have your own identity. So in yoga, they tell you to keep your eyes on your own mat because when, well, you're gonna fall over if you, if you don't, and, and then in school kids are constantly being told to keep their eyes on their own paper. So if you have that idea of just doing the next best thing for you and not worrying about anyone else, I think you'll immediately feel calmer and unless like you're behind. And that's where that kind of hustle culture and mentality comes from is that pressure that somebody has all the answers and is doing it better than you. And that's just not true. That's marketing. 

Laura: Yeah. And, and, and, and it's not true and, and it's also okay, right? So it's okay if your neighbors, kids are in an activity every night and they can already play a sonata on the piano and, you know, they are, you know, I, that's okay for them and it doesn't have to mean anything about you. It doesn't have to mean anything about you or your kids. My kids are in a phase in their life where they want literally no after school activities, we come home from school every day and they play and that's all they do. They read a little bit and they play, maybe the one practices, you know, their, their violin maybe. But that's it. You know, and, and I get, I mean, definitely the thought enters my head. Should they be doing more? Should I be having them in lessons? Shouldn't they be in voice lessons or? You know, one's such a beautiful singer, you know, shouldn't she get back into gymnastics? And I have to then have a sit down conversation with myself where I say my kids are learning how to tune in and listen much earlier than you did. I had to learn how to do that as an adult. They're learning how to do that now they're learning to tune in and say it's too much going to school is enough and all I wanna do is play after school. They're learning how to do that. And that's a beautiful thing for an 8and an 11 year old to be able to do. I mean, gosh, I don't, I honestly know very few adults who on a regular basis know how to just tune in and listen. 

Stephanie: Yeah. Well, and it's, and it's, you're teaching proper boundary setting. Just because you get invited to all the birthday parties doesn't mean you have to go to all of the birthday parties and if if your body is tired, honor your body and you're absolutely right because learning that lesson at a young age means when you're in your thirties and forties, you already have those boundaries in place and, and you don't have that kind of, there's too much to do and not enough time to do it feeling that that most of the people who reach out to me have. So, yes, absolutely. And then I also want to to circle back around. Do you and give you gold stars when you were talking about at kind of the markers of what a, a good parent is. And how you are your own person and your child is your own person, their own person and what they can and can't do isn't a reflection of you and, and it's tricky and I, and I know you, you have this autism diagnosis and I work right now in an elementary school and I just wish I could hug all the parents that it just is what it is, it just is what it is. And, and, and there's no right way or no wrong way and, and it's not because you did this or that or, or you ate nuts when you were pregnant and that's why they have a nut allergy. Like, like, so it just, it is what it is. 

Laura: Yeah, there's this way of acceptance. Yeah. And not just acceptance, you know, like affirm affirming the, the truth of our kids, you know, so our autism diagnose, you know, my daughter's autism diagnosis has been hugely positive for us. She has really claimed that identity. She has, you know, out and proud talks about it with everyone she meets as you know, been super happy for me to talk about it on my podcast. She's just delighted to know that there's nothing wrong with her. 

Stephanie: There's nothing wrong. Yeah. So, so that's why I think this generation of parents is so much better than the previous because it just is what it is. 

Laura: It just is what it is

Stephanie: Like, it just is what it just is, what it is. I, I, many people didn't start reading until third grade and it doesn't mean that there's something wrong with them and I'm just making stuff up right now. But I know, for me as a parent, it always made me very uncomfortable when someone would congratulate me for my child's success. Like, oh, so, and so graduated high school and then they come to me and they're like, congratulations and like, I just fed them and watered them. Like, like they did the hard work, like, like, like it's on them or if they have a failure or if they, they make some sort of life choice. That isn't what you I, I wanna say agree. But, but there's no shame and, and I wish that just, we could shine a light on all of that, that we're all just human around trying to be the best humans we can be and sometimes we make mistakes and, and it's okay and, and own them and if you've hurt some of these feelings, apologize. But, but there's, there's nothing that's completely and totally perfect and, and I like that you talk so much about balance because I think sometimes people think of balance as walking across a tight rope and you have to do it this way and only this way or you're gonna fall off and, and that's not real because you can, you can just crawl over like, like you'll get there. It's fine. 

Laura: Yeah. And I mean, and it's, you know what you were talking about earlier with the tweaking. I mean, that's what balance is, is constant tweaking. It's, and, and I mean, your book in your book, you talk about how your purpose should, should shift over time that we are not these people carved in stone, who we are at 20 is different than who we are at 30 who we are at 40 we're allowed to be to grow and change. There's a reason why we think about development as lifespan development because we are growing and changing over time. And so it's okay for you to be making those tweaks along the way for what you felt really passionately about in your twenties to be very different than what you feel passionately about at 40. And that and that those things are okay those speaks and, you know, and having a season in your life where you're really pouring into one aspect of, of your life and then another season where you're able to dedicate more to another. Like it's, it's okay for that to be the truth, you know, to be how it is in your life. 

Stephanie: Yeah. No, absolutely. It's interesting. So, so you read an advanced copy of a book that's not even out yet. So you read it before. No, no, you're good. I like this because again, hashtag marketing, my publisher will love this. So, so the Slow Living book will come out in the fall of what, what year are we? Is this 23? Okay, so in the fall of 24. I know, I’m not myself.

Laura: Oh, thanks for letting me read early.

Stephanie: Well, I, I'm, I'm thrilled that it resonated with you and that it's kind of coming full circle of talking about passion and purpose and stepping away from hustle culture because I think we were sort of like preached upon that you have to make money from your passion and purpose and you're doing it wrong if work feels like work and not play. So I know Warren Buffett said that a perfect life is when work is something that you tap dance to every day and it doesn't feel like work. And it's okay, it's okay to not have all of your needs met by work and, and, and separate that. So, for instance, when you're talking about the different seasons. Sometimes I have passions like putting together a fairy garden or relandscaping the backyard, but I'm not making money from that. And it's okay. And in writing this book was I poured my heart and soul into it and, and I love every bitty bit of it and it probably will do okay. And it probably will make a little bit of money. But I'm still going to keep my day job. And I'm, and I'm not gonna, like, go all in on something and then trust that the money will follow because I think that's when you feel like you're doing it wrong. So if you went to school for a certain thing and now you've got a job and your job pays the bills and your, and your job is, is funding future retirement and it's paying maybe into 529 for a kids college. But you're thinking you're a little bored and you don't want to do this anymore. Okay, but slow down and please don't haphazardly, like, quit on the spot to go knit hats for dogs down on the beach. Like, like, like there has to be a happy me like you can do, but it doesn't have to be either or. 

Laura: Yeah, I, you know, I do. So I think we're both in the, in the mom world, you know, online a lot and I think that there is a huge message out there that, you know, moms can retire your husband, you know, retire your husband and, you know, have these online businesses. And I really feel like there's, you know, there's a great podcast called Duped: The Dark Side of Online Marketing. 

Stephanie: And that sounds like right up my alley. 

Laura: Yeah, I think you would love it.

Stephanie: Kind of poking apart internet influencers because I've been online so much. A lot of people that used to, like, have, like all of this like marital advice, their marriage crumbled and all of these stuff.

Laura: No, no, I know. I mean.

Stephanie: It sounds really mean of me and I'm not like no, but I'm not poking fun. But also you, you have to be humble.

Laura: We have, well, we have this insight on being kind on, on the other side of, of having we're marketed to, right? So you and I are marketed to by business and entrepreneur coaches, right? So we're marketed to and we get sold, you know, that we can have these big flourishing businesses and retire our husbands and, and, and it really isn't true. It's very rare that those things happen and you often have to do things that don't feel good, you know. You know, so I, I feel very strongly, I'm a terrible marketer because I'm incredibly ethical in my marketing, which means, you know, and that's just how it is.

Stephanie:  Right, you’re never going to say, get, get six pack abs in the next 10 days.

Laura: Or like take this course and they'll fix all of your parenting troubles, like that's not real, that doesn't like that isn't, that's not real like that, doesn't your parenting troubles will not go away. Your kids will always have meltdowns over things like, you know. And you.

Stephanie: And in the middle of the meltdown, you will always be beating yourself up in your brain and wondering if you're doing it right? Am I creating trauma and will they end up in therapy? 

Laura: Yes, RIght. So those things don't go away. It's about how you are in them, how you navigate them, how, how, how you stay in relationship and connection in the midst of those hard times. So the hard times will be there, you know? 

Stephanie: Yeah. So it's, it's interesting because I had success with the Crockpot site and I ended up on the phone with the CEO of a very like, well known, like self help personal development brand and I'm not gonna name who it was, but he wanted me to write a, how to book on, on how to recreate my success. But I knew at the time I started the first Crockpot site and it had really tight seo because they also were gluten free recipes. And even in the course of my year of doing it, I could see my own recipes being stolen and, and repackaged and repurposed. So all these other sites started. So I had luck and I know I had luck. The only thing I did write really was I followed my gut and my intuition, which literally is the only thing I'm telling here is slow down. Follow your gut. Follow your intuition. 

Laura: Yes. Exactly. 

Stephanie: Which I believe it. But I never felt so bad about myself is when I read Tim Ferris' four hour work week because everything he said I should be doing, I was not doing and yet I had this success, but I wasn't doing it his way. So I kind of plummeted into this like, gosh stuff. You're just an idiot because you don't, this guy knows way more than you. And I don't think he does and, and, and, and.

Laura: I’m glad you came out the other side of that.

Stephanie: I, I Yes, absolutely. Well, and it's funny because later I've heard interviews of him talking about how he was actually in a really dark place and he should have had therapy and he should have done a bunch of things. So it came full circle. But another resource that acknowledges luck and you probably read it is the psychology of money when it like Bill Gates points out that yes, he created Microsoft in garage. But he was very lucky because of all of these different things. And, and when, if you're in the market for a coach or, or anything, run it through a filter of, is this real, is this a scam? Is this just a, a, a get rich kind of thing that, that, that the lizard part of my brain is just snapping at because I'm feeling desperate right now and, and I want you to be, to be thoughtful and really think about, what you're clicking on and, and what will serve you in the long run. Not just this kind of quick fix dopamine hit because that, that's what makes you feel bad. And, and really, let's think about retiring your husband. Love Adam. We've been married 25 years. I think he's great. This morning I'm trying to set up to get ready to record with you and he's in my space and he's talking to me about Christmas lists and I'm like, dude, go round out on like, like you're in my, you're in my space like you're supposed to be on the treadmill right now because that's how I planned my day and, and so to really think about.

Laura: Yeah, I mean, I, I love what.

Stephanie: What you’re being served. 

Laura: Yeah, I, I love what you're saying too that we don't have, you know, I had to, I, so I, I grew up with two parents. They were both teachers, one for whom teaching, she loved teaching, she loved working with kids, but it was not her identity. And my dad's identity was as a teacher and he was an award winning teacher, you know, invited to the White House Science Teacher of the year, you know, excellent teacher, but that was his identity. And it was really interesting to watch them retire and to watch my dad's retirement versus my mom. My mom's retirement, she's doing art classes. She's volunteering. I mean, she's doing all sorts of just fun pleasure stuff. My dad is still, you know, it, I mean, it is very, very active but he's involved in lots of things that again, build his identity and build his ego. And it's just interesting to watch those two, you know, watch that trajectory happen. And my, you know, so my husband, he's a professor and he does not feel passionately about his work. It's his job. You know, he's an accounting professor. He researches accounting, he researches taxes, which seems crazy that you can research that. But that's what he does and it's his job. His passions are ice fishing and golfing and his kids and family and hanging out with us and he's just so relaxed about it and I feel so much angst about, about, about it, you know, like I feel so much more angst than he does about. Like, I don't, I have to have a job that I feel passionate and purposeful about, you know, but I think that's because I watched my dad go through all of that, you know, go through that in his life. And I, I don't, I sometimes I just want to bake and paint. 

Stephanie: Yeah. 

Laura: Yeah. 

Stephanie: Okay. And, and I would tell you that you can do both. 

Laura: I know right. Like I can do both.

Stephanie: So both and, yeah, so, I mean, we’re recording this and then you can, you can go bake. 

Laura: I am super passionate about child development too. I'm super passionate and nerdy about those things, you know, and, and it doesn't always have to be, you know, like I just, I don't have, I don't, I guess, I don't know. I'm looking for permission to just want simple and slow. Is that okay Stephanie? Can you give me permission?

Stephanie: I am happy to give you permission. But also if your needs are met, your needs are met like, like there's milk in the fridge and you're paying your electricity bill and you've got a home and you've got a marriage and you've got kids and, and they're there and to hug you, like you're living a pretty gosh, darn awesome life 

Laura: Oh my gosh. So privileged. So lucky. 

Stephanie: Yeah. Yeah. And, and in tuning out that kind of non tensy hype of order to be doing it right. You've got to take your kids to Europe every year or whatever it is that happens to be in your, in your neck of the woods and, and it's funny because before we hit record, I was telling you that I was on the phone with a coaching client who, as young kids and they went on a cave tour and like, if you're little going on a cave tour and wearing the, the, the hat with the light thing on your head, like that's amazing and, and wonderful and would create so many more memories than then, then kind of being pushed into this idyllic net. Now we're gonna fly for 11 hours and we can't talk and we have to be strapped into our seat and, and stuff. So, so really deciding what you're trying to create for your kids and what kind of memories and you can be a great parent and not do a whole bunch of things that the internet or Pinterest tells you.

Laura: I agree. Yeah and if you like those things great, do them, right? So, I like, I love.

Stephanie: Or you do it because you want to do it not because your tryna warn up.

Laura: You want to not everyone tells you to. Exactly. Like, so like I love doing really intricate gingerbread houses. It's a form of art for me. I mean, I, my husband takes the kids somewhere else and I do it by myself. I they're Pinterest worthy, they're beautiful and I like them and I in no way think anyone else should ever make one unless they want to, you know, like it's just if they want to, unless they want to. 

Stephanie: Yeah, we should. So here we, here we go. Laura, we should create a course on how to market for people who hate marketing because the whole thing, the whole, the whole hashtag is but only if you want to.

Laura: But only if you want to, you know, I mean, like that's, you know, I mean, yeah, so I like, I love having people on to my show that I feel really comfortable sending folks to, you know, so I would, you know, knowing this about you, I feel really comfortable sending folks to listen to your podcast, you know, to get your book when it comes out to explore coaching. You know, all I really want for people who listen to this podcast is to know that there is support out there that there are teachers out there for all of us and the right teacher comes in to our lives at the right time. And if that's me, wonderful, if that's you, Stephanie, wonderful. All I want is to help people find their teachers, find their guides. So why don't you go ahead and tell us where folks can find you and learn from you? 

Stephanie: Absolutely. The Slow Living podcast is in all of the podcast player apps. And then, if you're in the market for crock pot recipes, that's at ayearofslowcooking.com. And I'm Stephanie O'Dea and I'm happy to help in any way. And, my hat is off to Laura for all the amazing work she's doing. And if you have parenting questions and concerns, reach out to her, because I don't want anyone to ever feel like you're alone because any thought you've had any worry, you've had any fear you've had, someone else is out there with those same thoughts and feelings and Laura can help you navigate them. Absolutely. 

Laura: Oh, thanks, Stephanie. All right. Thanks for being here with us. I really appreciate you sharing your wisdom. 

Stephanie: Absolutely. Thanks for having me.

Okay, so thanks for listening today. Remember to subscribe to the podcast and if it was helpful, leave me a review that really helps others find the podcast and join us in this really important work of creating a parenthood that we don't have to escape from and creating a childhood for our kids that they don't have to recover from. 

And if you're listening, grab a screenshot and tag me on Instagram so that I can give you a shout-out, and definitely go follow me on Instagram. I'm @laurafroyenphd. That's where you can get behind the scenes. Look at what balanced, conscious parenting looks like in action with my family, and plus I share a lot of other, really great resources there too.

All right. That's it for me today. I hope that you keep taking really good care of your kids and your family and each other and most importantly of yourself. And just to remember, balance is a verb and you're already doing it. You've got this!

Episode 181: How To Become More Intentional and Present in Your Parenting with Holly Swenson

In this podcast episode, we dive into how to become more intentional and present in parenting. Our guest is Holly Swenson, BSN, RN, a mother to four sons, a wellness blogger and the author of the book “Stop, Drop, Grow, & Glow”. 

Here are some of the topics we covered in this episode:

  • How parents struggle to “let it be” and “let it go” and the concept of surrender in parenting

  • Steps and examples on transitioning from feeling stuck to soft surrender 

  • Tips for self-care challenges for moms with young children

  • Holly’s framework “Stop, Drop, Grow, & Glow”

  • Mindfulness and meditation in parenting and the importance of mindful practices

  • Balancing self-care with parenthood for personal growth

  • Guidance for parenting and self-identity

  • 5 Rights of Parenting

If you wish to connect with Holly Swenson, visit her website liveyourglow.live, and follow her on Instagram @hollyswenson.

Remember, from Holly's insights on surrender to the transformative power of mindfulness, there are endless ways to deepen the connection with your children while nurturing your own growth.

Resources: 


TRANSCRIPT

Parenting is often lived in the extremes. It's either great joy or chaotic, overwhelmed. In one moment, you're nailing it and the next you're losing your cool. I want to help you find your way to the messy middle, to a place of balance. You see balance is a verb, not a state of being. It is a thing you do. Not a thing you are. It is an action, a process, a series of micro corrections that you make each and every day to keep yourself feeling centered. We are never truly balanced. We are engaged in the process of balancing.

Hello, I'm Dr. Laura Froyen and this is The Balanced Parent Podcast where overwhelmed, stressed out and disconnected parents go to find tools, mindset shifts and practices to help them stop yelling at the people they love and start connecting on a deeper level. All delivered with heaping doses of grace and compassion. Join me in conversations that will help you get clear on your goals and values and start showing up in your parenting, your relationships, your life with openhearted authenticity and balance. Let's go! 

Laura: Hello everybody. This is Doctor Laura Froyen and on this week's episode of the Balanced Parent Podcast, we are going to be talking about how it's become more intentional and present in your parenting with Holly Swenson. And she's got a great book out called Stop Drop, Grow and Glow and we're gonna dig right into it. So Holly, welcome to the show. I'm so happy to have you here. Why don't you tell us a little bit more about who you are and what you do? 

Holly: Yes. Thank you so much for having me. Laura. I'm grateful to be here. I am an author on the rise and really on a mission to bring more wellness, joy and intention to parenting and beyond. And for me, I have, I was formally trained as a, an RN BSN, RN. I have four beautiful sons who are teaching me every day, 

Laura: They are best teachers, right? 

Holly: I'm a wellness blogger and I always say I'm a perpetual student of life because I love just this concept of continually learning. So that's a quick, quick backdrop of who I am and what I'm doing. 

Laura: Okay, so Holly off the cuff question, what is something you've learned? Like most recently, the like most recent thing you learned, whether it's a small fact from your child or that kind of lit you up? 

Holly: Well, you know, I, I think for me something that I don't know, just the first thought that came to my mind when you ask that question is I think so I, you know, having four kids as roommates, you know, I'm always finding fun treasures around the house and I had a moment where I went down to pull silverware out of my drawer and I opened the drawer and there was silverware everywhere. Like it wasn't, you know, the forks and the forks that, you know, the, the knives and the spoons, they were, you know, whoever had emptied the dishwasher had just like, thrown them in the drawer. And I, I used that moment to really, like, find humor and smile about, you know, the path of what it means to be a parent and, and taking a moment to really just infuse that, like, even though that's something very simple. But I think when you're dealing with kids and you've got all these different things that, you know, these little fires you're putting out or different things, you're trying to mold and help your kids to, you know, to figure out. I really took that moment to smile, in a moment that could have been like, oh, why did they not put, you know, these things away right. I'm trying to, to find more joy in the things that are like letting go of things that really don't matter as much. So, does that make sense? So, really trying to find the humor in, in things that are, that you can just let go of. That's, that was my, my recent lesson. 

Laura: Yeah. No, I feel like what you're saying is, you know, there's, the world has handed us so many shoulds that we wear like weights around our necks and then having an opportunity to shift into curiosity and into delight, that pause, that moment of, okay, so the spoons are not in the right spot, but who says there's the right spot? And what else is true when I look at this drawer? You know, so like I'm just imagining your kids unloading the dishwasher and trying to do it as fast as they can so they can get back to LEGO or get outside to help dad rake or you know, just I'm just imagining kind of what that rushed job of putting the spoons and forks and cutlery away was also a representation of. And I love that invitation to start shifting the way we view those lens, you know, view those things, the lens through which we view all of these little mundane things that you know, can cause a hiccup or cause like cause us to have a moment of uncomfortable, you know, of, of negative feelings when we could be accessing some positives. And not that it's bad to have those negative feelings, but it's interesting to think about that that way. Thank you. 

Holly: Yeah, just putting a spin on something like thinking about it in a way that you know, it's like this is the work I'm here to do and yes, I have to, you know, help guide them in the right direction. But sometimes I just, like, let it be what it is. 

Laura: Yeah. Let it be what it is. I think that that's really hard. Why do you think that's so hard for us to just let it be and let it go? Well, I think we have a lot of societal conditioning that makes it hard for us to let go. 

Holly: You know, I think we have these, like, storybook images of what, you know, what it's supposed to look like and feel like. And you know, life really doesn't always follow the story book. And so I think that you have to just learn to meet life, you know, where, where it is like just head on, you know, and as joyful as you can and, and not every moment will be joyful. But I think when you, when you can just let go and I, you know, I love the word surrender. And so I think with parenting, you know, you're asked to surrender in a lot of instances. And so I think when you can just practice that, it will help you.

Laura: Talk to me. Yeah, talk to me a little bit more about surrender. I love that word. I had a, when I was birthing my kids, I had a stone that had surrender carved into it that I used as kind of a, a focal point. I feel very curious about kind of what that word means to you. What it means to surrender as a parent.

Holly: I really, ultimately, I think surrender for me is it, is that practice of letting go and trusting that you're on your journey for a reason. And, and, and also like, I think, you know, for me too, it's like letting go of some of the control that you think you have to like, manage so much all the time. I mean, you are doing a lot of managing, but I think sometimes you can just, you know, for me that the word that's showing up a lot is softened, like just soften in those places, maybe where you feel tension or where you feel stressed and kind of surrender to, to what life is asking you and, and it with a little more gentility and grace. And so for me, that's kind of what's ringing true for surrender, at least at this point in my life. 

Laura: Yeah. You know, for this past year, you know, I went through a really hard year personally and with one of my kids and I felt very brittle and the way you're talking about softening and surrendering feels like it could be an antidote to that brittleness. You know, that just like any little, the next little thing is gonna crack me or break me versus becoming a little bit more supple, a little bit more resilient. And I, I feel like I'm in that place now, I'm trying to think about how I got there through a lot of rest. You know, just a lot of rest. What are some ways for folks who are feeling, feeling really stuck in that kind of brittle, hard, easy to crack. You know, one last straw is gonna break our back kind of in that place to move from that place of. I can't even say the words but, you know, to a more soft and supple surrendered place. How can we like? What are the steps to get there? 

Holly: Well, I mean, I think it will look a little different to each person, but I think the first step is self awareness and knowing that that's where you're at in life. Like having that consciousness enough. Like, wow, I'm in a space that's maybe not where I really want to be. But I, you know, so I think having that awareness is really a good first step. And then I also really value the importance of self care and taking time for yourself every day because I think a lot of parents especially feel, you know, worn down or they're, you know, like you said, like the word brittle, you use the word brittle just because we're always, we are always on. And so you don't have that like rest and reset time to really nurture yourself. But I think that if you start cultivating more, you know, time for yourself, so maybe it's meditation, maybe it's, you know, making time for more exercise or whatever it is that helps you find your reset button, making time to take care of yourself a little bit every day and maybe it's just breathing, maybe it's five minutes and that's all you have. But taking a moment to intentionally sit down and breathe or just practice awareness, there will help you to start finding more softness in your life. And also maybe finding more gratitude for those hard parts that are teaching you lessons that you don't always want to learn, but that you're being asked to learn. 

Laura: Can you give me an example of what that looks like for you? 

Holly: Well, I think, you know, dear, I don't know that I have like a great example to pull from, but I think it's just, you know, I mean, maybe it's a conflict you're having with your, with your kiddo or maybe, you know, you know, cell phones are a big hot button issue with, you know, with older kids, you know, that you're, you know, your kids want, you know, trying to balance screen time or, you know, that sort of thing. And so it's a, it's an area that creates some tension, I think for a lot of families. And so I think a like, I also believe in good boundary setting. So teaching your kids healthy ways to engage with, you know, like if we're talking about cell phones, like how do you set boundaries where, where it feels good to you and to them and that's not always you're not always going to drive there, but how do you, you know, help them form, you know, healthy habits with, with electronics or, you know, with their device and then how, how can it also help you not have to feel like you have to micro manage everything they are doing, if that makes sense, so

Laura: Sure, yeah, you know, I'm thinking about myself how I moved through this most recent time period. I think I had to give myself just okay, so what is one thing I can do that I can, I know I can do on a regular basis. I really had to find that just like the like the like the lowest, the lowest possible fruit on the tree to that I could pluck regularly. I mean, for me, it was getting back into therapy, into regular therapy, like regular sessions with my therapist in the past in other moments of brittleness kind of in my life. It's been making time for 30 minutes of daily movement. Usually yoga. I just like getting into my body. I have felt incredibly privileged and blessed with a partner who really prioritizes my health and well being and makes that time super available for me. And I do that for him too. That's part of our, you know, relationship. I feel very curious, you know, I think that moms feel we hear a lot make time for self care and then the reality of doing that is so hard. Do you have any tips for, for moms who are maybe in that place where they know they need it. They, they're having that brittle feeling and like to, just to get those five minutes to even because, I mean, you know, I know that people say we all have the same number of hours in the day. But, I mean, to the mom with, you know, 3, 4 kids, you know, under all, under 5, you know, it's, it's feels like a lot. It feels very hard. 

Holly: Yes. So, so here's my advice and, you know, we have four boys and, you know, they're getting a little older now but um they're all at home and, you know, for me where I found that I can really tap into some of my own self care is sometimes it's early in the morning before my family even gets up. And I know that that sometimes doesn't feel the best, you know, depending on what your habits and rhythms are. Like, not everybody loves getting up early in the morning. But, you know, for me that's where I can fit it in, you know, on days that are really busy and I really, like, don't have time during the day. It's like, okay, I try to make, you know, 15 to 30 minutes to, you know, sit and find some quiet space or, you know, if you're a night out, maybe you do it after your kids go to and then you take some time to do something that fills your cup and again, I think it's, it comes down to practice, you know, because I think it can be easy to resist or put it off or like, you know, you need it, but, oh, you know, I'll do it. 

Laura: Why do we do that? 

Holly: I don't know because we don't feel good. I mean, it's, you know, we pay the price. So I also think it's part of, it's just, it's practice and it's making it your habit and once it, of your habit then it feels easier to access. 

Laura: Yeah. I, I mean, that makes complete sense. You know. So, for so long my kids have always been early risers and for so long they went to bed early and now they're older, they're 11 and 8.5 and they stay up until like 8, 8:30 sometimes 9, you know, because they're reading and everything and I used to have in my head, you know, before this was a really rough transition for us because before we put them to bed they'd stay in their rooms and my husband and I had an hour or two every single night for ourselves. You know, we'd get to, you know, hang out, talk on the couch, I'd maybe do some painting. I mean, we would just get to have our time and when they started to stay up late all of a sudden, my husband and I were like, wait a second. What about us? 

Holly: What happened to our time, our sacred hour?

Laura: Our sacred time. And, you know, and then I, I, we have, we have the neighbor kids that my kids love to play with. And I was starting to feel really lonely for my kids because normally they would come home and stay home with us. But now they've been running off with the neighbor kids and I started thinking about, okay, so now they're in this new stage, they're becoming a little bit more peer oriented, that's really developmentally appropriate. They're staying up later. Now, I need to take that hour that they're off playing with their friends that I normally would have with them and have that for me, my time for myself. And then, you know, I don't need it when they go to bed. But I, I think that like, as our kids age, as they move into new developmental stages, we need to be flexible with, you know, like, so if we've gotten really creative when they're young and then they grow, then all of a sudden, you know, we're bereft because we're, we've lost, you know, the, the things we put into place, we have to be flexible and creative in making new space for ourselves as our kids, you know?

Holly: Absolutely. I totally believe that. And, and also too, I mean, sometimes it can be even as simple as like penciling in, like, looking at your week and penciling it in, like, something on your calendar so that it makes you more drawn to do that, like, make space for yourself to. Okay,I see. I have an hour here, like, like you said, like, shifting it to, like, when you're, you know, your kid is out playing with his friends, like, that's your window. And so really just, you know, making, you know, time to take care of yourself, it's so important, It will make you a better parent. 

Laura: Yeah, absolutely. I, I have also found for myself that having, having it as a part of like my, not just scheduled with myself but scheduled with someone else, like attending a Zumba class or attending an art class, having it in my calendar, something I've signed up for and paid for really helps me make those things a priority, you know. So I have a, my Monday morning Zumba class that I love. I have a Wednesday morning yoga class that's in person that I love. I have regular painting classes at an art center that I love to go to and having those things where people are expecting me to be there. And if I'm not there, they're like, where were you? We missed you. That feels really good and make and helps me make myself a priority. 

Holly: That's amazing. So, you're doing, you're doing some really good work. I think it's fabulous. 

Laura: I mean, it's not easy though. And again, there's privilege there, you know, I have the financial privilege of being able to, to work in those spaces. I have the, you know, the time privilege of having a partner who is able to be home with the kids during those times. There's lots of privilege that goes into it. Yeah. Okay, so I would love to, to talk a little bit about your, your framework that you talk about in your book. Can we do that? 

Holly: Absolutely. 

Laura: Okay. 

Holly: Yes. So, you know, I created a framework and my framework is actually in my title, Stop, Drop, Grow, and Glow. I, I wanted it to be something that was kind of easy to access and remember. And, and so, you know, the, the ultimate, you know, premise is that I, I'm hopeful that it will help, you know, really revolutionize the way you parent and, and help parents align with who they want to be and how they show up for their family. Like that's really, I just want to create more wellness in the world. And so that was really, you know, kind of what this is rooted in. And so Stop is really about assessing where you are to date both as a parent, but also as an individual because I think it's important to take stock of both and not, you know, I think as parents, we kind of, we take everyone else's stuff on and sometimes we forget our own identity. And so I think it's important to separate the two and do some, just some internal gazing on what's going well in your life. And maybe if you have some sticky parts that aren't going well, maybe just, you know, kind of curl up with those and, you know, figure out, you know, how you can make improvements or, you know, where you need to put in a little more work to, to get to where you want to be. And if, and if you feel like you're on track and things are going well, then that's, that's also, you know, that's also helpful to have that your own internal feedback of like, you know what I'm on track and things are going well. So I I, for me it's the first, you know, the first area is Stop to just stop and check in with you. 

Laura: I really liked that phrase, internal gazing that just felt very delightful. I feel like so much we like we put so much scrutiny and pressure and judgment on ourselves and you're talking about something completely different. You're talking about open, curious noticing, you know, within ourselves. Yeah, that feels so much better. 

Holly: I'm glad that lands well, you know, and again, these are just really brief, there's a lot more depth to it, but I'm just want to give, you know, drops of what, you know what this entails. And so Drop is really working to, to drop any drama, trauma or personal past lived history that's keeping you from living in the now and, and really like, kind of holding you back from stepping in to, you know, being in the present. And I think when you have those things in life that are kind of pulling you away from really showing up, you know, for yourself and for your family or, or even the outside world in a way that where you feel distracted or kind of fractured. I think, I think it's important to just do some work on yourself to see if there are any areas that, that it feels like, oh, that's kind of ringing a bell, you know. Oh, maybe that really, I never thought about it but it's, it's more of an opportunity to, again, cultivate curiosity but, but also to maybe do some deeper work if there are things in your life that you feel like need some attention, you know, I do, so.

Laura: And so you're not just talking about like pushing them aside, ignoring them, kind of that kind of, I don't know, uber positive, like just let that go. It's in the past you're talking about. Okay, so if we're really going to drop them, we need to do the work so that we can shed them. 

Holly: Absolutely. It forget it. It doesn't mean forget it, but it means not letting it take away from what you have to give because even if we think we like, oh, well that happened, you know, it's, it's like, okay, wait a minute. It's still there, it's still breathing. And I just, I think when you reach a certain point in life and you're ready to put the work in and, and releasing in a healthy way, I think it will help you step into more wellness. 

Laura: Okay. And so what are some of the ways that folks can go through the process of, of dropping other than therapy? 

Holly: Well, I mean, sometimes, you know, some of this work is really done, you know, even on your own, I mean, you don't even necessarily, sometimes, you know, there are things in like where a therapist is really valuable and, and can be that sounding board that you need to really work through things because some of the some of life's, you know, everyone's journey is different and so sometimes having that outside resources invaluable, some of this stuff you can work through on your own. And, and, and then I think it's also like in terms of looking at, you know, some of your, you know, like maybe your family, your family lineage, you know, are there areas that you want to, you know, maybe certain things in your childhood you really love, but maybe there were certain things that were, you're like, wow, I don't want to pass this on to, to the next generation. So I wanna shift out of, you know, what was familiar to me so that I can create a healthier platform for my children as they grow and then raise the next generation. So there's some depth to it for sure of, of really getting in there and doing, you know, I think getting creative and creative and curious again, I think, you know, I think it's important. 

Laura: I really love internal family systems work and like inner child work for that process, you know, that you're discussing, I really love digging into those things and like connecting to the art in our world or our, our part to carry all of our stories and do all of our meaning making. I, I like getting to know those parts because so often they're running the show kind of behind the scene, you know, and then once we get to know them, hold them to the light, ask them what they need, how we can support them. They, they allow us to stop acting from old wounds, you know, and kind of be more available to the present and the now. So I really like that. 

Holly: Yeah. Thank you for that and then Grow is it's really learning to expand your awareness and as a parent and lean on habits that will support and nourish you on a deeper level. And so again, you know, I think it's always an individualized journey of what calls to you for what that means. But for me, like, you know, mindfulness practices such as meditation. So, but I've made meditation a big part of my life and I try to make time to, to create space in that, in that way for me because it helps me to find my peace. 

Laura: What kind of meditation do you do? 

Holly: You know? So I kind of like, I'll just do like a mindfulness meditation or I'll sit and even infuse like a little bit of prayer into my, like, it's more of like a gratitude prayer of like just being, you know, like remembering all the things I have to be grateful for or wishing the world well, you know, I think we're living in challenging times. And so I try to, like, put my good energy out into the world in a way that I hope it is helpful. I think, I believe, you know, energy, it's powerful. I think where you put your thoughts and your attention. So I try to create a space of goodness for myself and then hopefully for, you know, for my family and for the world, like, that's my time.

Laura: How did you get started on mindfulness and meditation? 

Holly: Yep. So I, for me, I, I actually, when my, I was probably seven or seven or even close to eight years ago. Now that I went, I went actually to a wellness retreat and it was then that I realized like, I really hadn't taken the time to like stop or be still like, I, I just was like, always running like with my, my, my head, you know, we have four kids and we started with twins and we had 1, 12 months later. So it was like having children. And so it was really a lot. And so I just, I just hadn't really taken a break. And so taking this wellness journey for me, it showed me the importance of getting quiet, of making space in your life to find stillness and honor your, you know, who you are and what you bring. And so that was kind of what really set me on the path of making more time in my life. And I'm really grateful that that, that landed for me. 

Laura: I feel like lots of the folks that I talked to about mindfulness or meditation, they feel really confined by the need to do it, right. And I'm kind of curious if you had that process as you started to make kind of your mindfulness, practice your own and individualize it for yourself and any tips for people who are, I don't know, looking for permission to kind of just do it the way that's right for them. 

Holly: Absolutely. I, I think you should take the stress element out of it. You're not, there's no wrong way to meditate. You know, I think it's, it's really about, you know, it can even be as simple as counting numbers, you know, to keep you keep your mind like from thinking about, you know, it could be 1, 2, 1, 2 or like a sweet mantra, you know, something that's that helps keep your mind focused on just being in the present. But, you know, or you can do a guided meditation. You could even, there's so much online you could put on something, you know, on your phone. 

Laura: Spotify has so many great guided meditation. 

Holly: So there's a ton out there. Like if you are like, I'm not feeling creative or I can't stay on track, put on something that helps keep you, you know, supported in your meditation. It can be, you know, there's, there's a lot available that now that, that never used to be. 

Laura: So as I've been dabbling with, I was recently diagnosed with ADHD and as I've been kind of dabbling in accepting my neurodiversity and understanding why sometimes mindfulness is so hard for me. It's because I have an interest based n nervous system. And I have found that guided visualizations are like my joy when it comes to things where the, you know, the person speaking takes you on this journey where you're in your mind, kind of constructing a world that as you follow along. Oh, I love that. 

Holly: Yeah, those are powerful.

Laura: And my nervous system loves them. And, you know, I think that there is, I think that there's some idea that those aren't, you know, real meditation, real meditation is sitting in silence with a blank and empty mind. And of course, we know that that's not true, you know. 

Holly: Absolutely. And that's again where I think you individualize it, like what feels good to you in your body and like, I love that you say, like, that is your jam. Like that's what makes you feel like nourished and like, and to be able to go on these creative journeys where, you know, it's, it's pretty powerful, like where your mind will take you sometimes. And so I think that that's giving yourself freedom to also try on different meditations. Like, if you're curious about it, you've never done it to, to like maybe try a few different types. One like strikes your fancy. 

Laura: Yeah, I love that. Okay, and then what about the Glow piece of things? 

Holly: Yes. You know, so Glow, oh I wanted to just mention a couple of other things about, you know, because I talk about mindful practice. But I also wanted to say like, I really want to drive home the importance of getting good sleep like for, you know, as parents as much sleep as you can possibly get and for your kids like making it a priority in your life because sleep will change your life for the better if you make time for it. And then I also wanted to just talk about the importance of eating good food, like eating, eating as you know, clean whole foods as often as possible to keep your system balanced and, and you know, really able to function at an optimal level. I think diet is such an important part of your health. And so I wanted to mention that. And then the lastly in this section, I'm just going to mention the importance of learning from your children. You know, for me, my children have taught me more about myself, my strengths, my weaknesses, my capacity to love and my desire to grow, change and persevere than any other humans to date. And I think that while we're teaching our kids, you know, we're raising them up. I think we also need to value what they're teaching us and they're, they're showing us where we still have work to do as well. And so I just in this grow section, I just want to give a shout out to our kids for all that they bring to the table. 

Laura: Yeah, I think that that's so important, you know, it's, they're just being themselves, they're just being kids. You know, that certainly isn't their job to help us grow. But they, they do it so beautifully, don't they? And I mean, just being open to the invitation is, is so good, so important because I think it would be easy to miss so many opportunities when we stay stuck and rigid in that, you know, that we don't have any room to grow, that we don't have any room to learn. But we know best. It's my way or the highway. Like we, we really miss out on so much richness in life. 

Holly: I totally agree. 

Laura: Yeah. Beautiful.

Holly: And then, and then Glow is really, you know, you know, kind of taking what you learned from my framework and applying it. But, but within this, there's also I, you know, we kind of already touched on it. But the need for self care, I believe that self care is not selfish, that it's really a necessary tool to help you thrive as a human being. And when you make that time for yourself, it will help you to glow and, and you know, be as radiant as you can be. And I think we need to reframe, you know, what self is and really support people in finding that in their lives, especially parents who don't have a lot of time for it. 

Laura: There's something, oh, sorry, I was just going to ask that. So there's something that you talk about kind of taking care of yourself as a person so that you can be a better parent. And I wonder if we can just talk about that a little bit because I think sometimes when we become parents, it's like we put that the person of ourselves off to the side, they sit on the shelf and they're just going to hang out on the shelf until our kids are 18 and then we'll get to be them again. And I really love the invitation to, to bring that person into the here and now and that we get to be a full person regardless of our parents status. Can we talk about that a little bit?

Holly: Absolutely. I, yeah, I believe it's so important to keep nurturing who you are as a person and not put that on pause for 18 years because that's not healthy because when you, when you stuff yourself down, you're not able to, like, it's, it's, it's such a gift you give your kids when they can witness you being who you are. You know, like if you're living out your dreams or I, I talk about the importance of, of, of keep dreaming as a parent because I, you know, I think when they witness that, it also inspires them and it will teach them that when they become parents, they can still, you know, achieve these things that are important to them. And, and being a parent for me has been like the biggest job I've ever taken on and in such a joy. And I mean, it's all of the emotions. And so I think for me like being a mom comes first, but I am stepping into some of these other areas where I'm, you know, I wrote a book and I was able to do these things and be of service in a way that's really meaningful to me and filling my cup in, in a different way than being, you know, being a mom. And so, and, and one, you know, I, like I said, being a mom is number one for me, but it's really also awesome to be able to nurture some of these other areas in life for me that are helping me achieve things that feel meaningful. And I just can't, you know, drive that the importance of that home enough that whatever that is for you to make time in your life for it. 

Laura: Yeah. You know, I think that lots of the parents, I talked to feel a little lost in knowing even who they are now that their parents, you know, those early years of motherhood shift so much in our identity, so much changes and then we have this kind of untethered feeling, you know, where we don't really know who we even are anymore as we kind of emerge out of the baby years and into the toddler years and we get catch a breath and we look around and we don't even know ourselves. Do you have any guidance for parents who are there and who are looking to find out? Okay. Wait a second now, who am I again? 

Holly: Yeah. Well, I mean, again, I think it goes back to that like awareness thing. Like first of all, like realizing like, wow, I haven't thought about who I am for, you know, three years like, wow, you know, so I think it is just like about sparking your own, you know, sparking that thought of like, how have I put myself on pause? And what is it going to take for me to regain who I am? And my own identity and while being a parent at the same time? So I think it’s. 

Laura: And while being compassionate towards ourselves, right? Because it makes so much sense that we put ourselves on pause, the world and the culture that we're in tells us that we matter so little, you know. And that’s not true.

Holly: Yeah, you are, you're so immersed in being with your kids and your babies and trying to do the best job that you can for them. And so I just, I think it is just touching base with, with who you are and, and you know, in this podcast like this where maybe it plants the seed of like, oh, wow, maybe that is where I am and, and I, you know, I haven't thought about that but maybe I need to, you know, take a minute for myself to figure out what my priorities are and where I am and who I am matters. 

Laura: Yeah. And, you know, it's something that I've been thinking about a lot with, in regards to my own mom. So I, I've noticed that she has retired and has kind of fully like stepped into her hobbies and what kind of what she loves to do. It's been just really interesting to get to know her on a, like, I don't know, like a more adult to adult relationship. And I, I think about how delightful that is and how impossible that would have been for me to really understand as a kid. And yet she probably already, like, had those things going on that I just had no awareness of. And that's been really helpful for me to think about with my own kids now that I can have these parts of myself that maybe they aren't even aware of because they're young and they're self centered and then their kids and that's just, that's, their focus is on themselves and growing up as it should be. And, you know, maybe they'll look back on their childhood as adults and see the, the glimmers of the person that is me, you know, woven in throughout there, you know.

Holly: Absolutely. And that's kind of the joy of life and, and I think also just hitting these different stages in life and then being able to reflect and look and see, see now what you didn't see then, you know, and in that, I think it's really cool. 

Laura: I agree. Yeah. Okay. I did wanna ask you, you know, I, I wanna be respectful of your time but within your, in the stop section of your book, you brought in the, the Five Rights of parenthood and I feel or of parenting. And I, I felt super curious about it. So this comes from your world as a nurse. Why don't you just explain a little bit about that and share them with us? 

Holly: Sure. Yeah. So this was kind of a spin off. So there's something called the five rights of the medication administration, which it's, you know, it's a quick way to make sure you're, you know, you're giving the right medication at the right time. It's the right dose, you know, those sorts of things. And so for me, I wanted to put a parenting spin on it and create something that would be kind of easy to recall for, for parents to like, kind of do a quick self assessment of themselves. And so that was kind of how this took shape. And so I'll run through them briefly with you and, and, you know, again, I think it's, for me, it was really just a way for, for parents to be able to touch base with how you're presenting as a parent. And so for the first one is right now, so it's learning to be in the moment, not distracted doing, you know, three other things. I mean, you're going to have moments in life where you are working or you, you know, you're busy and you can't give your child your full attention. But I think it's important to carve out time that's devoted to being present and they feel that they feel when you're like, all in with them or when you're like, mom's kind of here, but she's kind of doing, you know, three other things and not really like, you know, as available as she could be. And so I think I just want, I wanted to plant that seed for people of what does that mean, to show up right now for your, for your family. And number two is right, intent. And so this is really being intentional with the choices, the choices you make, the guidelines you set and how you're treating your child. Like how, you know, what does that look like for you? I think, you know, if you don't know why you're doing what you're doing, maybe you should, you know, reflect.

Laura: Take a pause.

Holly: Take a pause, you know, so really just curl up with like, okay, you know, are you showing up in a way that you want to be showing up? And then the third one is the right use of speech. And I really believe that your voice is a tool of creation. And so it can create either a positive tone or a negative, you know, mood depending on where you're at. And, and so I think that it's a critical component of effective parenting is really learning how to speak in a way that you want to be speaking again. This comes down to like being conscious. Okay. Like, oh, you know, and you're going to misspeak at times, you're going to say things that you wish that you're like, oh man, I wish I hadn't said that or, and that's part of being human. I mean, we all make mistakes, we all say things we're like, oh, I wish I hadn't said that, but for whatever reason you did. And so I think it's just, you know, practicing self compassion, but also trying to get more intentional with how you are speaking to the ones you love. And then the fourth one is the right use of power. And so you, you know, as a parent, you are the guiding light for your child and you are the one who decides on discipline, you set boundaries and you have the final say on whatever issue arises, you know, during the 18 years that they are under your roof. And so I, I wanted to really just create again this, like we plant the seed of like how are you showing up and how are you using power in your family? What does this look like? 

Laura: Yeah. The idea of power with rather than power over with our kids. Yeah. 

Holly: Yeah. And then the last one is the right use of love. And so this one is my favorite. I really believe that love is the cure for all that ails us, parenting and beyond. And so I believe that you should tell, you know, tell your children you love them as often as you can because it matters and it makes a difference for them and it makes them feel valued and supported and, and cared for and, and even, and I, I think I also mentioned, you know, even as they get older and maybe they don't tell, you know, say it back to you the way you wish they would, they still feel it coming from you and it makes a difference. So.

Laura: Yeah, absolutely.

Holly: Given that love. 

Laura: Yeah. And I mean, probably too, like if you were using this as a self assessment, like, am I using love unconditionally or am I attaching strings to it? You know, just maybe out of habit or, you know, because I've got my own stuff going on and do I need, you know, what do I need to do to release those strings? So am I making, you know, the proper use of love? And I really like that. I also really love in the, if we're using it as an assessment, the right now, like which now am I in, you know, am I fully present or am I being led by the past or led by the worries about the future? You know, like what story am I living? You know, it's and situating myself and my, as my voice coming from the past, you know, maybe my mom's voice is falling out of my mouth, you know, like those I really love, I love this approach, these, those five, you know, just check ins because it's, I think we all get the hint when we are kind of stepping outside of our values and parenting. But it's really hard to have, you know, to kind of know what to do with that when we get that kind of like, oh, I don't feel right and having a like a five step things. Okay these are the five things I'm gonna check in, you know, right now, right? Intent, right? Speech, right? Power, right? Love, you know, like just I really like having that brief check in. So I appreciate you sharing that with us so much. 

Holly: Thank you. Thank you so much. 

Laura: Absolutely. All right. So where can folks go to learn more from you and follow you? 

Holly: Yes. So you can visit me online at liveyourglow.live and, and then I have got links to Instagram and Facebook. And then you can, you know, my book is available anywhere you buy your book, your book. So, Amazon, Barnes and Noble, all those great platforms. And then my book also just launched on audible and anywhere you buy your audio books. 

Laura: Oh lovely.

Holly: So for busy parents who don't have time to open a book. I wanted to create a platform that felt easy and accessible. 

Laura: Is it your voice on the book? 

Holly: It's my voice. Yes.

Laura: Lovely. I bet that was lots of fun to record. 

Holly: It was good, yeah, it was great.

Laura: Cool. Alright. Well, thank you so much, Holly, I appreciate what you're putting out into the world. 

Holly: Thank you very much. It was a pleasure to visit with you. 

Okay, so thanks for listening today. Remember to subscribe to the podcast and if it was helpful, leave me a review that really helps others find the podcast and join us in this really important work of creating a parenthood that we don't have to escape from and creating a childhood for our kids that they don't have to recover from. 

And if you're listening, grab a screenshot and tag me on Instagram so that I can give you a shout-out, and definitely go follow me on Instagram. I'm @laurafroyenphd. That's where you can get behind the scenes. Look at what balanced, conscious parenting looks like in action with my family, and plus I share a lot of other, really great resources there too.

All right. That's it for me today. I hope that you keep taking really good care of your kids and your family and each other and most importantly of yourself. And just to remember, balance is a verb and you're already doing it. You've got this!

Episode 180: What's Really Going On with ADHD with Dr. Connie McReynolds

I am excited to share the latest episode of my podcast, where we will be delving into ways to determine how to support our children with ADHD and a new way of understanding what’s really going on with these kiddos.

In this episode, I had the pleasure of interviewing Dr. Connie McReynolds. She is a Licensed Psychologist, a Certified Rehabilitation Counselor, and a Certified Vocational Evaluator with more than 30 years of experience in rehabilitation counseling and psychology. Dr. Connie is the founder of Neurofeedback clinics in Southern California specifically in Redlands and Rancho Cucamonga and the author of a beautiful book called “Solving The ADHD Riddle.”

Here are some of the takeaways:

  • How ADHD is diagnosed and develop a plan for support

  • Misconceptions and stereotypes of folks with ADHD

  • The role of auditory and visual processing in ADHD and effective interventions

  • Understanding how neurofeedback can support folks with ADHD

  • Ways for parents to support children with ADHD at home 

  • Screen time impacts for ADHD kids and the difference between high-impact and low-impact video games

  • Understanding why busy environments or background noise enhance focus and concentration

If you enjoyed listening to Dr. Connie’s insights on ADHD in children, you can stay connected with her and learn more about her services. To connect with Dr. Connie, visit her website conniemcreynolds.com and connect with her on LinkedIn @conniemcreynolds, Instagram @drconniemcreynolds and Facebook @drconniemcreynolds

Resources:


TRANSCRIPT

Parenting is often lived in the extremes. It's either great joy or chaotic, overwhelmed. In one moment, you're nailing it and the next you're losing your cool. I want to help you find your way to the messy middle, to a place of balance. You see balance is a verb, not a state of being. It is a thing you do. Not a thing you are. It is an action, a process, a series of micro corrections that you make each and every day to keep yourself feeling centered. We are never truly balanced. We are engaged in the process of balancing.

Hello, I'm Dr. Laura Froyen and this is The Balanced Parent Podcast where overwhelmed, stressed out and disconnected parents go to find tools, mindset shifts and practices to help them stop yelling at the people they love and start connecting on a deeper level. All delivered with heaping doses of grace and compassion. Join me in conversations that will help you get clear on your goals and values and start showing up in your parenting, your relationships, your life with openhearted authenticity and balance. Let's go! 

Laura: Hello, everybody. This is Doctor Laura Froyen. And on this week's episode of the Balanced Parent Podcast, we are going to be diving into how to figure out how to support our kiddos with ADHD, particularly those kiddos for whom the traditional approaches and interventions like medication and behavioral approaches don't work. I'm bringing on a guest who I'm so excited to talk to. She's written a beautiful book called Solving The ADHD Riddle. Her name is Dr. Connie McReynolds. Dr. Connie, welcome to the show. I'm so excited to have you. 

Dr. Connie: Oh, thank you so much for being here. Love having me here. It's just great and I look forward to our conversation today. 

Laura: Me, too. Why don't you tell us a little bit about who you are and what you do? 

Dr. Connie: Thank you. So I just want to say I used to live in Madison, Wisconsin. So that was a long time ago. It's where I actually did my doctorate work at UW Madison. So I lived in the same town that you live in. So it's kind of a kindred spirit feeling here. And so thank you so much for having me on. 

Laura: Oh, I love that.

Dr. Connie: And really, so my career actually, I sometimes joke about it starting second grade a long time ago because my mother taught second grade for 32 years in the same classroom. And one of the things that as I was writing this book, a story came up that I had long ago forgotten about, but clearly had left an indelible mark on me, which was, she had a little boy one year who couldn't learn how to read and he was struggling and couldn't sit in his chair, there's all kinds of things going on. And so she over the summer took him to a teaching center at a university that was about 45 miles away each way. And they diagnosed him with something back in those days was not well heard of or learned about which was dyslexia. And so with that diagnosis and their health, they were able to figure out how to teach him how to read. And he went on and had a great life. 

And then as my life unfolded in career, I became a rehab counselor. And the beauty of that profession is that while we may look at diagnostic information, we're always looking for the strengths, the abilities of the person. And we're looking for ways to mitigate problems. And so that was the foundation that I used when I went in to get my degree in Rehabilitation Psychology, which likewise was a similar approach, which you can have diagnostics, but you really need to have a plan to help someone because the label really doesn't do it. So I taught in academics for 25 years and that was really the philosophy that I brought to the classroom. When I taught psych rehab, I taught drug and alcohol rehab, I taught a host of counseling classes which is the diagnosis may get a person in the door, but it doesn't tell you anything about the person. So you need to figure out who the person is. 

Laura: I really love that Connie. You know, a lot of the folks that I work with are either thinking about entering the diagnosis process or worried about entering it and getting their kid, you know, having a label. And I really love the framing of the diagnosis, getting you in the door, but then needing a plan. So for the families who are maybe kind of seeing some things coming some flags coming up for their kids, they're thinking about a diagnosis, what would you recommend they do so that they can not only maybe get the diagnosis that gets them access to services, but get it in a way that helps them have that plan?

Dr. Connie: Well, I think it is a little bit of a double edged sword for some families and parents because they struggle with this idea of a label because in some ways to access services at a school or even insurance, you may have to have a diagnosis for this. And yet they may think I don't want my child labeled with this. I don't want this label following my child through school. So I encounter a lot of parents who really are on the fence about all of this. And it's a case by case situation, you know, if they're needing some kind of insurance benefits that they can qualify for because they have the diagnostic criteria, then they may need to do that. If it's something else where they're not going down that road and they're looking for alternatives, then we have an answer for that one too, which is we have a different way of looking at this and I'm happy to talk with people about that and really explore. So the first part of it really is figuring out what is the need, what do the parents need, what's the family needing, what's the child needin. And then we kind of go into the next step of that, which is figuring out what is really going on with these children. And I'll say, and adults, because I work with as many adults who have this as I do children. 

Laura: Okay. So let's hone in on this. So can you tell us a little bit about especially on ADHD specifically? Can you tell us a little bit about how kind of ADHD is perceived how it's sort of in kind of a mainstream way and how the reality of how ADHD can show up in certain populations with certain kiddos is very different because I, I think we all have in our minds that one kid when we were growing up, usually a boy couldn't sit, still, definitely had the H in the ADHD  the hyperactivity part. But I was diagnosed with ADHD earlier this year. And I was never hyperactive. I had the inattentive type. So can we piece those apart kind of what our preconceived notions are, how we misunderstand it and kind of what's really going on when we talk about ADHD?

Dr. Connie: Great question because it's really the heart of everything. It's kind of the heart of the book that I wrote, which is when we think about ADHD  typically, we think about the little boy typically who is like running with an uncontrolled motor and won't sit down and is kind of knocking stuff around and, you know, can't go to bed at night and parents are frazzled and everything's not working very well and teachers are worn out. So everyone's worn out around this little guy, because he's just 100% on all the time. Sometimes I ask parents about energy level on a scale of 1 to 10, 1 being low, 10 being high and they'll say 15. 

Laura: Yes. 

Dr. Connie: So that's kind of the, I think the general population understanding that is one tiny segment of what ADHD  can represent across our population. So part of what I discovered 15 years ago when we started using this particular assessment is I look at 37 ways the brain is processing auditory and visual information. So if you think about that, that's completely different than saying, oh, this kid's hyperactive. So what we're looking at is a host of information across auditory and visual processing as well as fine motor hyperactivity. Some comprehension, we look at processing speed and stamina and you can have, it's almost, I've come to think of it as these assessments of the graph that comes from that as an individual fingerprint of ADHD, because it can be inattentive, it can be combined, it can be hyperactive, it can be, well, they've got a whole bunch of auditory and visual processing, but they don't have enough to even qualify on this assessment for ADHD. But they have all the same behaviors that a child who maybe does qualify for a diagnosis of ADHD. So really.

Laura: Wait a second there because this is, that's, I feel like that's the part that when I was reading your book, I just jumped out at me and blew my mind because I, I work with so many of these kids who they even go through the diagnosis process and the parents think it's ADHD but they get in there and they you know, the diagnostician says, nope, it's not ADHD but they're having all of these behaviors that, that look like it. So tell us a little bit more about the auditory and visual processing aspect of this and how like why we get confused, why that misunderstanding is there?

Dr. Connie: Because we don't know what we're looking at. Bottom line, we don't know what the behaviors mean. So the traditional approach to ADHD in any child who's struggling, the, these are the ones who have come to the surface popped up to the surface typically because of behaviors or grades or something. So these are the children that look like something is going on perhaps. But, but what about these children who, as you were describing, they have all this going on, but someone says, no, they don't qualify for ADHD. Well, perhaps they do from a different standpoint because if we get rid, let's just get rid of the ADHD diagnostic label for a moment. And let's just look at the underlying causal factors of what's going on. Typically, there are behaviors that people are trying to get rid of bottom line. So either we're trying to get someone to pay attention or we're trying to get someone to sit down and it falls on a broad spectrum of those. And so the challenge is that if we have these behaviors and our sole purpose is to get rid of these behaviors without understanding what the behaviors are actually telling us. Then we've lost the language that's being communicated from the child to the adults.

Laura: I love those so much. Yeah, go ahead. Keep going.

Dr. Connie: Yeah, it's a language that the children are using because they just have behaviors, they can't walk in and say mom, my auditory vigilance is off today. I'm really going to need you to repeat this two or three times in order for me to hang on to it so I can do what you're asking me to do today. It's not that I don't want to. It's that I can't remember. You're not gonna get that from a child, but you're gonna get behaviors from a child. 

Laura: What will that look like behavior? How will a child say that with the behavior? 

Dr. Connie: So the behaviors for auditory processing, if it's a vigilance problem, which is they can't sustain their attention, they could drift off, they could be inattention, they could be wandering around in their mind and it's like they can't follow instructions, they can't remember what was said. It just got the list goes on and in the book and it look like.

Laura: Can it look like purposeful defiance and not paying attention?

Dr. Connie: Absolutely.

Laura: Okay.

Dr. Connie: It absolutely can look that way because the child doesn't know how to tell you that they can't figure out what you're asking them to do. So they're going to drift, they're going to be disengaged sometimes they're going to be obstinate looking, sometimes they're gonna look like they have willful, bad behavior because, and some of that will develop as a result of this because it's a defense mechanism for this child to protect themselves against punishment, against harsh words, against criticism, against all of these things that are coming at them that they can't understand because they don't know why they are getting in trouble because it isn't anything that they are willfully doing. It's simply the brain cannot keep up with what's coming at them and it has nothing to do with intelligence. So I've worked with geniuses who are in special education their entire academic career. It K12 until this one young man hacked the school's computer system because he was in the library one day and bored out of his skull. And that was the first inclination that this kiddo was brilliant. So we miss it completely with these children because we're looking at all the wrong things for all the wrong reasons. We can't get the right intervention until we figure out what's really going on. And if we're treating an attentiveness and we think it's willful bad behavior, we're going to use punishment or withdrawal or something to try and improve the behaviors and when it doesn't work and it doesn't work and it doesn't work, there's something off.

Laura: And it may even make things worse, right?

Dr. Connie: It does.

Laura: So I just wanna hold to light something that you're saying that I think the, the folks in my community have heard from me a lot that the, you know, so much of this is not necessarily within the child's control. And then when we layer on punishment, shame and blame, we heighten their, you know, their safety systems and their bodies and they make more mistakes and they have more behaviors that are challenging. And I just really, you said earlier that, you know, our go to is to start if to either get more of one behavior or less of the other. And I just wanna say you're speaking right now to a community who is really moving to, to set aside behaviorist approaches. We are hungry for understanding, not just what's going on under the surface for our kids, but how to actually support them. And so I'm, I'm, you couldn't be speaking to a set of parents that's more primed to be hearing what you're saying. 

Dr. Connie: Well, as I said, I'm thrilled to be here because this book is really for the ears who are ready to hear. 

Laura: Yeah. 

Dr. Connie: What this is and I think there are a lot of ears out there that are really ready to hear an eyes that are ready to see things quite differently than where we've been. What we've been doing isn't working. And I learned that 15 years ago when parents were coming in, they'd have their children on all types of medications, multiple medications, side effects. Children wouldn't take the meds, behavioral inventions didn't work. And the question became, why is this not working? What is going on here that all of these traditional things aren't working? And me being kind of a out of the box thinker to start with because I didn't like labels too much anyway, you know, I, I didn't buy into the labels that these children were walking in with, which was oppositional defiant disorder, intermittent explosive disorder. You know, just go to anger management problems, willful, bad behavior, Tourette's syndrome. 

The list went on and on and on with these diagnostic conditions. And I'm interviewing this little guy in the room or the little girl and I'm looking at them and they're conversing with me or you know, I have had children spin all the chairs in the room that has happened. I did have one little guy that pulled all the plugs out from underneath the chairs one time and brought them into the conference room and it's like, well, okay, this is unique. So again, this is really about understanding the behaviors and looking at this from a completely different frame of reference, a different lens of perception where we can better understand that if we get to the root cause of this, there's something we can do about this. And that's the beauty of what I've discovered over the last 15 years is that when we can find these auditory and visual processing problems, we do this with a 20 minute assessment that's computer based.

Laura: 20 minutes?

Dr. Connie: 20 minutes. 

Laura: I mean, wow, my kids just went through the diagnosis process and it was a two day full on. 

Dr. Connie: It is. And as much as I come from teaching myself, I understand psychology. I get all of that. It takes days and days for that material to come to the surface. And they still miss this because they're not doing this assessment. 

Laura: Yeah.

Dr. Connie: And so they still miss this information, which in 20 minutes tells teachers what they need to know more than anything else will. And when I ran the pilot project in a school, the changes that I saw, not only with parents, obviously, that always happened, but the changes with the teachers and the administrators was full on mind blowing. When they actually looked at this assessment, I held up the graph and they've got the little girl melting down in the classroom every single day, crying and having a horrible day. And I ran this assessment. She didn't have any visual processing, which means she couldn't understand what the teacher was putting on the board or how to get it to her piece of paper. She couldn't figure it out and she was so embarrassed and mortified that her only response was just to break down every single day and just having and just in tears in a puddle all the time. 

Laura: Doesn't your heart ache for these children? 

Dr. Connie: Yes. Every single day. I hear these stories every single day, every day for 15 years. I've heard these stories, which was the reason the book came about once I figured out how to deliver these services beyond the 20 or 30 mile radius of my clinics. Once I figured out how I can deliver this to anyone in this country, then I was ready to write the book and I've actually worked with people in Switzerland as well. So.

Laura: That’s awesome. Okay. 

Dr. Connie: It is. So we can, we can solve it is the bottom line here, we can solve this. 

Laura: Okay. So I feel like you gave us a good description of kind of what audit like auditory, visual like sorry, auditory processing problems can look like. What about the visual stuff? How does that work in the brain? What's going on for kids who are having that, that type of processing problem? 

Dr. Connie: Well, this is the child who can't remember where he or she left his shoes, the backpack, the homework, the toys are scattered all about runs into things, bumps into things disorganized, messy. Can't write very well, so messy handwriting or eye hand coordination, missing letters when they're copying words. A whole host of behaviors come with visual processing and they can just not be able to track on things going on. So like the little girl who was crying every day, so the teacher is diligently writing on the board thinking she's doing exactly what she needs to do for her students. The little girl sitting in a puddle in the room because she can't figure out what anything means because she can't translate what's happening on the board to get it on a piece of paper. She looks around, she sees her peers doing something. She has no idea why she can't do it. The only conclusion she comes to is that she isn't very smart and they use terrible words for themselves. 

They start telling themselves that they're stupid and we hear it and it's just like we have to stop this, we absolutely have to stop this. So and we can't. So these visual processing and I have a checklist at the end of the auditory chapter and the the visual processing chapter where parents can kind of go through there and see, you know, are there, you know, characteristics here that they're noticing in their children and some children will have both, will have combinations of auditory and visual. And sometimes the auditorium in one area is working in the visual is that sometimes it isn't working across both of these sections. And these are children that really struggle. And then I have children that don't have the ability to score anything on either auditory or visual processing. And these are the children who are most likely to end up channeled into support services and end up over there and never get out. Because if you can't process information, you look like you have other kinds of disabling characteristics that may or may not be the case.

Laura: Okay. So I, I feel like you're, you're giving me a lot of really interesting information. I'm processing it. So I, I'm thinking about the listeners listening to this right now and as you're talking and describing these things, they're thinking about a kid in their lives. I'm actually thinking about one of my kids. I, lots of things are kind of dinging a bell for me there. So for those of us, you know, we may go through your book, go through the checklists or we have the ability to take your assessment. What do we do then with that information, when we find out specifically where some, maybe some auditory or visual processing is going awry for our kids? What are some interventions of things that we can start doing or places to go immediately? 

Dr. Connie: Yes, immediately what I tell parents once we know what's happening, so we get the assessment, we know which areas are working great and then we know where the pitfalls are for this particular child. Then I can tailor the intervention specific to the parents at home and they can share that with the teachers. And sometimes I write a combination letters if they're having a particularly difficult time with the school district, you know, we're gonna punch it up a little bit and see if we can get some help coming in for a child. But for auditory processing, you need a visual backup if they have the visual processing capability. So whenever you're saying anything visually small chunks, one thing at a time don't be doing multilevel instructions or multi step expectations for a child with auditory processing gets going in and you may hear that oh, when in one ear and out the other. Well, that's exactly what happens because it's not sticking on the way through because they don't have that neuronal processing capability to retain information has nothing to do with intelligence. 

But if my brain has a Teflon spot on it where it's supposed to be hanging on to auditory information, it's gonna slide right out and I'm gonna go. What, what do you say if I have the awareness that you even said something to me that may not even be on the menu today, it could be something totally, you know, distracting for this child. If there are auditory processing problems that interfere in noisy environments, think about a typical classroom, think about a typical home and homeworks going on. Could be the TV, going on at school. There's probably 20 or 30 kids in the classroom. All of them are making some kind of little noises here and there can have an air conditioning unit, can have a lawn mower outside, you can have a dozen other things going on while a child with auditory processing difficulties. All of that comes in at the same level, there isn't the ability to discern to shut out the unwanted information to get to the wanted information. I once had a little girl come in and tell me she was after she did neurofeedback, she was a teenager. She was now not taking her medications anymore because her brain was working better and she came in and she said, you know, now when I'm in the classroom, she said I can choose who to pay attention to. I can pay attention to my friends who are chatting around me or I can choose to pay attention to the teacher. 

Laura: Okay, so.

Dr. Connie: We asked the breakthrough. 

Laura: Are you saying that, that these aren't things that are set in stone? They, that with practice, they can get better for some folks. 

Dr. Connie: Absolutely. It's what I do all day long. That's what we do with the neural feedback. So the neurofeedback is.

Laura: Yeah, tell me about that. But how is the, what's the mechanism like? I mean, I know our brains are amazing and plastic and they grow a new neural connections forms. I'm fascinated. 

Dr. Connie: So this is the beauty. It's called neuroplasticity. And neuroplasticity was actually get, this was introduced in 1949 by Dr. Donald Hebb out of Canada. It's taken us a while to figure out what he knew way back when. But this neuroplasticity means the brain's ability to change. We change our brain every single day. The only way we've ever learned how to do anything is through repetition from picking up a pen to riding a bike to being an astronaut, it doesn't matter what it is, it's repetition. So neurofeedback, EEG Biofeedback capitalizes on that which is called operant conditioning or operant learning, which through reward and repetition, the brain learns to hang on to things. So any of these areas of weakness, we literally target them with a training plan that are low impact video games that have been scientifically designed to tackle the auditory, the visual processing problems and through the repetition, typically 30 minute sessions, two or three times a week for every 10 hours of training, we come back and rerun these assessments to measure overall global progress toward the goals. And then if we haven't hit everything on the 1st 10, which most of the time we don't, then we do another 10 hours, which is equivalent to 20 hours of brain training, which is pretty much industry standard. So kind of the average, if you think bell curve kids in the middle there, you can usually get most of it. 

There are some that get done sooner, some that take longer depending on how far we have to go. So we're strengthening. Yeah, if we're strengthening existing neural pathways, that's one thing. If we're building it, it's gonna take a minute because we literally are building these pathways in the brain so that this child's brain will retain this and go on. And once we get this all strengthened and channeled in and wired in, people don't need to come back to see me. That's the beauty of this. You get done with this. The brain's working and because repetition works and reinforces everything, the more you use it, the stronger it gets and the better you just continue to get. I've had adults come back five years, eight years later and say I just wanna let you know, my brain continues to get better and better and better. 

Laura: Oh, that's really beautiful. And I don't know, gives a lot of hope. Okay. So what are some of the, like it, it sounds like that's a computer game like that people can play. What are, you know?

Dr. Connie: Specialized computer.

Laura: Of course. No, of course. But like what are some of the things that, you know, I'm, I'm just thinking about my, my one daughter who dings some ADHD bells for me. But perhaps it's perhaps it's just some processing stuff going on for her. The other day I was asking her to do something and I said it, you know, super respectfully, calmly, connectedly three times and after the third one, she goes mom. So she's, she's eight. She goes, mom, I heard you, I just needed a moment to process. And I mean, I was like, oh, thanks for that feedback, but she's also like a highly verbal kid who can really tell me what's going on for her. I'm not all kids can do that. This is also my child who, when I say like, oh, we need to clean up the playroom, it can throw her into a meltdown. But I, I say, okay, take this bin and go pick up all of the toy cats. She goes and takes them and it's not a problem, you know, it like she gets thrown by those kind of big multi step things. But if I or if I make a visual list for her and say, just do this one first, she's able to go, you know. So I mean, those are dinging some bells for me. What are some things that parents can be doing if this is also dinging some bells? But we're not at the place where we need to go and have like maybe have some big time interventions. But what are some things that parents can do to support these kiddos at home and not just, you know, perhaps building some new neural pathways but just even making life easier so that we don't get that meltdown when we say it's time to pick up the playroom. 

Dr. Connie: Well, meltdowns are indicative of overwhelming. Yeah, being overwhelmed. So the brain's overwhelmed when you're getting meltdowns and that means whatever was just presented to this child was too much, too much, too much, too much, too much.

Laura: Yes.

Dr. Connie: So it's just smaller, smaller, smaller, smaller increments to figure out. Okay, where's the threshold for this? So what does this child, what's the threshold by say go get your toothbrush, brush your teeth, pick up your pants on the way, feed the dog, take out the trash and then you've got, nothing happening.

Laura: Yes.

Dr. Connie: Might remember something about playing with the dog. 

Laura: Yeah, right.

Dr. Connie: Okay. Oh yeah, the dog, I mean play with the dog. Yeah, that's all they got through. So again, segments, small increments, big projects for children who are overwhelmed will melt cause meltdowns. It's just thinking about what type of segment does this child particularly need. And and parents often know parents kind of know and many times are implementing some of these. Now some parents don't, but some parents have kind of figured out. Okay, if I say five things, nothing's gonna happen here. If I do one, we might get it done. And so it's like do one thing, check for comprehension, check for completion, then the next thing. And so if you've noticed that your words fall on deaf ears, so to speak, then switch to list, switch to chore list, switch to some kind of visual. If you realize that your child doesn't even notice, you know what color the shirt is that they're putting on and things just aren't operating that way. But if you tell them to do something, then go that it's literally figuring out the strengths. 

Now, I will say whatever any of those weaknesses are, we've tackled a lot of it. And so the beauty is that yes, a lot of these children can learn these, you know, these techniques, parents can learn that too when it gets to the point where they're struggling in school and it's just a lot, then it may be time to kind of look at. Okay, you know, is there something we can figure out here? Is there a little bit bigger piece of the puzzle? Now, the checklist in the book will give you that. And then there are chapters in the book for teachers and for parents for what do you do when you have these kinds of situations that you've identified in your child. So here's this approach, here's this approach, try this and try that and then kind of see how it's going. And so, yeah, you're right. Not every child needs, you know, interventions, but honestly, a lot of them do and can benefit. So it's figuring out where you are with all of that. 

Laura: Okay. And so, you know, for, you know, I'm, I'm looking at your book right now, which was one of the funnest books I've read in a long time. It's funnest a word. I don't know if it's a word. But it was lovely. It hit all of my like delight, you know, in child development and, you know, it's, I, I've always heard that ADHD brains are interest based nervous systems, you know, that we have an interest based nervous system and it definitely pinged my pinged my brain. But I'm, I'm just thinking about the parents who are wanting support with this. You know, the book is so good for, you know, folks who are in a kind of do it yourself place. But what about folks who want to have someone walking alongside them? Want some, you know, help or for, you know, I have one kid for example, who only wants me to be their mom. She does not want me to be their therapist. She does not want me to be their teacher. She wants me just in one lane in her life. You know, which I love, I love that. She can tell me that, you know, and I, so I just stay in my lane.

Dr. Connie:  Which is great, which is great. So what I was able to do a couple of years ago with the software company where, you know, we've been working with them for 15 years now is to be able to do what I call remote neuro feedback. So literally everything we do in my clinics, we can do with people sitting in their homes and we can do it, because the the gaming industry, although I'm not a big fan of the gaming industry per say, they did create very powerful laptops. So these new computers that we now have can handle all of this where 1520 years ago when we started this laptops were not that powerful. So you kind of had to go to university or some big place to get this. You can do this in your home now and we have people all over California that are doing this and I have people in different states that are doing this. And so we start with the assessment. Yeah, I send the tech sheets. It's like, okay, we're gonna do a tech check to make sure we've got all the tech right to be able to handle this. 

And then literally through zoom, we do the assessments and within an hour and a half, we can have all the information that we would have if you're sitting in my clinics, I go over that with the parents. We email those assessment reports out and I can do consultations then with schools if they need it. So that gets you in the door and then the neuro feedback, we can deliver that the same way. You do have to lease the equipment. So we have some licensing and some leasing things that have to happen on the front end that don't happen for the people, you know, that come into the clinics, but we can make this completely doable. And that was really the lynchpin or the keystone here before I wrote the book because I, I knew all this material for years and I just had decided, I'm not writing this book if I can't answer and provide help to people who need it and want it. And then I thought, well, not every, like you said, not everybody needs that, but people just need tips and techniques to handle, you know, some of this for the schools and for home. So it's, it's avail all of it's available. And yeah.

Laura: Okay. So I have a, so I have two questions and they're totally different. So I'm trying to figure out which one to ask you first. So one is, so there's quite a few people in my community who have experienced harm from behaviorist invention interventions in the past. ABA ones that are coercive and punitive. Can you tell us a little bit about how your approach to behaviorism within this training is different? 

Dr. Connie: That is so important because I see it all the time and I see it in the classrooms. And I think it's indelibly stuck in my mind when a mo mother came in one time and told me that the teacher of her young son had decided that she could improve her son's attention by having him sit on a one legged stool throughout the school day. And it just sends chills around me when I hear these stories and the beauty of neurofeedback is or neurofeedback just so people understand most people have heard of biofeedback. So biofeedback was where you put a little sensor maybe on your finger and it measured your pulse and you had measurement of your respiration and that's the biological feedback. And so that was fed into some equipment and it may be beeped or there is something on the screen and you could see that by practicing breathing exercises and relaxation, you could lower your heart rate and you could improve your breath. And so you could get the biological feedback which is hence biofeedback. So, neurofeedback is EEG biofeedback where we're doing the same kind of thing only we're just reading brain waves. 

Laura: Fascinating.

Dr. Connie: So with a little, yeah, with a little sensor on the brain, on the scalp, it doesn't go in the brain, nothing goes into the child. It's the same kind of feedback loop. So by being able to read the brain waves, we can tell how the brain is working with attention and concentration and focus. And then there's these low impact video games that as your brain is creating the desired outcome, you win your video games. And so.

Laura: Okay.

Dr. Connie: There's no behavioral intervention involved here. This is your child or you as an adult, allowing your brain to get trained. So I call it kind of a brain boost, so to speak, we just kind of boost the functioning of the brain. Reinforce that. And literally children become self empowered because instead of constantly being in trouble for their quote, bad behaviors that they can't control. They start learning, they can run a computer with their brain, they're not using a mouse, they're using their brain to run the computer and they get pretty excited about this when they get to see they have that kind of control in their life, in areas that they didn't think they had control at all. 

Laura: Yeah.

Dr. Connie: And so literally, this is such a kind of low impact intervention that kids generally, even children with mild to moderate autism. We work with these children who come in and it just helps them develop a greater sense of self. And I will say for adults, too. So I talk a lot about children in this book because I really want to help people understand that this is completely workable here. We can do something about this. But there are many, many adults who have similar challenges, maybe they've lost a lot of jobs or relationships or things just haven't gone well, anxiety and depression may have set in and even some trauma. So the trauma, which is a little bit what you were hinting out there with some of those behavioral interventions, we tackle trauma too. And so that's the other side of this is that I worked with a lot of veterans, I've worked with children who come through foster care. I've worked with people who've had all kinds of traumatic experiences that when the brain gets kind of locked into that, there are response patterns. 

And so that is literally the brain learning how to relax again. And so we teach the brain how to do that as well. So yeah, the beauty of this, particularly for military folks is that research now clearly shows talk therapy for a lot of people who have trauma does not work. It is not the thing to be doing. And there are a lot of organizations that still haven't quite learned that research yet and they're still going down that pathway. But I've worked with veterans when I lived in Wisconsin. So I was at the VA center there for a year or two doing my doc work and, you know, talk therapy has its place. But I, I would think of so many of those veterans and then the last 15 years, the veterans I've worked with here and what I wish I could have done for the, at that time there were Vietnam veterans that were getting served there at, Middleton VA Hospital. So there's a lot that can be done and this is really a workaround for any of that traumatization that's happened,  where talk therapy hasn't worked for behavioral and punishment and all of that hasn't worked. If those things aren't working, it's time to change the game, is what I'm saying. If it isn't working, stop.

Laura: I mean, I think like the punishments and those types of things work in a way that like the mechanism by which they work isn't necessarily one that most parents really want to be leaning into anyway. You know, they just do it because they feel like it's their last hope, you know, their last thing that they can do. Okay, so I have, now I have a couple other questions, sorry, I warned you that this is probably gonna happen. Okay, so one is I've noticed that,  you know, in my own life and in lots of the people that I work with that kids with ADHD tend to gravitate more towards gaming and screens. And I'm kind of, do you have thoughts on that around like why it can be harder for them to, to self manage, you know, and and remove themselves from those things. Some of the families I work with even say that feels like their kids are self medicating with them. I I I'm kind of curious. I've always wanted to ask an expert about that. 

Dr. Connie: Oh yeah, straight on the answer is yes, it has an impact and yes, it can be addictive and I've actually treated children who have video game addiction to the point that they, once the parents tried to withdraw that from the child, there was destruction, there was violence, there was all kinds of bad negative behavior, you know, because this child's brain was literally addicted to the dopamine rush that gets dumped in with these games that are specifically and I'm going to be very careful here, but I'm gonna be very specific about it. Some of these games are specifically designed to keep children playing those games. 

Laura: Of course.

Dr. Connie: The high impact that cause a lot of the anticipation and the reward system for children who have ADHD they're short on dopamine, which is our feel good neurotransmitter. These games, guess what they dump into the brain?

Laura: Dopamine, right? 

Dr. Connie: Dopamine to the point. And this research and it's cited in the book when I talked about it, the references in the back and you can go find it. So there was research that was done back in the late 1990s by scientists who were looking at these violent video games and these high reward, high impact video games and they were able to measure the amount of dopamine that was getting dumped into these children's brains. And it was the same as an injection of methamphetamine. 

Laura: Wow.

Dr. Connie: that's been out since the late 1990s. People know this.

Laura: Yeah.

Dr. Connie: This is not a secret that this is what's going on. 

Laura: And so of course, we're not attempting to vilify games but understanding what's happening in your kid's brain while that's going on. And so is there are there things that we can do to help our kids heal from that if, if we're seeing that? 

Dr. Connie: Well, it is. So obviously, I'm using video games, we use video games in our training. So again, is it low impact or is it high impact? So what is, what's actually happening with that game? What is that game designed to do? So if you're looking at your child and you're saying, okay, it's time to come get dinner, your child can't get out of the game, can't walk away and it's just a constant battle and constant struggle you may have to start looking at. Okay, do we have a situation going on here where this child's brain is just being so overly stimulated that to walk away from that then causes the dip in the dopamine. So here's what's so important for parents to know, if this child has been using these games and a lot and you can define however you wish to for a lot that it's the behaviors again you have to look at. So we have the behaviors and you start to put an intervention in and you start getting a lot of pushback. 

You have to start digging a little bit deeper in here because this could be a situation where this brain has become dependent upon the video game to manufacture the dopamine. Because what happens as in any type of addiction, I'm using the term a little bit loosely, but there's been good research out there that actually speaks to video game addiction. It's out there, it's in the book too. So what happens is when the brain starts becoming dependent on these video games and it gets these big dumps of dopamine, then when you don't have the video game, the brain is dependent upon the external source to create the dopamine rush. And its own manufacturing unit starts to slow down because it's measured that it has enough dopamine in there. And so then if you pull away the game, then the brain is going through withdrawals. And so now you are dealing with an addictive brain. 

Laura: Okay, and so then do you need to find other ways that increase dopamine levels for these kids as they come off of games? 

Dr. Connie: Well, certainly math doesn't do it. So, so if you're thinking homework and thinking.

Laura: For a second, I thought for a second, I thought you said meth, not math.

Dr. Connie: Math, meth doesn't do it typically for these children, okay. So what I have recommended is kind of those old traditional things. Get outside, get outside, get outside when you can. Now, when you live in the north, I know what it's like.

Laura: Oh man, you know.

Dr. Connie: That's quite hard. But the gym, something where you're getting physical activity because you're gonna have to find other ways for this child to get reward systems and it's gonna, it's not gonna measure up, you know, once the brain kind of gets tied into that video game business, it's hard to find something that's gonna give that kind of a dump because it probably won't. We don't really want it to, we just want the child to develop better habits, other interest, find things that are joyful. If sports, you know, used to be something, let's figure out what that is. It's creativity, you know, what else is interesting and it may be difficult for that child to identify once the brain has kind of gone down this pathway, so it might take some investigation, it's gonna take some patience, it's gonna take some creativity to be able to get this going. And really a hands on approach with parents is, is necessary. It's like, well, let's figure out, you know, can we in the summer go for a bike ride, can we go, do you play sports? Can we get outside? Yeah, whatever it is, get outside because we know that physical activity increases the feel good, you know, neurotransmitters in our brain. So, you know, is there are other kinds of puzzles and games and other kinds of things that we can do that aren't driven by a particular type of video game. There are a lot of video games out there but these are the ones that are designed that cause the trouble are the ones that are designed to really keep kids hooked to playing them.

Laura: Okay.

Dr. Connie: If you've got a kid who can't walk away, then you might have a kid with a problem. 

Laura: Okay. You, you used to a term earlier that I wasn't quite, quite clear on. I think it was high-impact and low-impact video games. 

Dr. Connie: That's what I've called. I've started calling them that because I have to make a distinction because video, not all video games are created.

Laura: Yeah. Can you tell me what some of the, you know, my, we basically do know video games at our house. And so I, I don't even know. I know Roblox is a thing. I know that like is Call of Duty still a thing, you know, like I, I mean, I know Minecraft is a thing. So what are some of the high, high and the low is that? 

Dr. Connie: Well, the ones that you were just mentioning, if it's designed to keep a child playing, and keep them engaged a lot, then I call that more of a high impact because there's something about it that keeps drawing that child in that they can't kind of let go of it to go do other things. They have trouble kind of putting it down. It's like if you really love chocolate chip cookies and someone just pulled a dozen of them out of the oven and you're sitting there, how many of them can you walk away from? 

Laura: Right. 

Dr. Connie: You know, kind of the same thing. But you know that maybe that salad is a little bit better for you, but it doesn't quite taste as great as that hot chocolate chip cookie taste. But it's somewhere, you know, that maybe if you go the salad route, you're gonna be better off. So part of it is really teaching and crafting and molding children's response patterns to their environment. It's like, what can we do that really is going to enhance this. So low impact is what I talked about, which is just kind of innocuous programs, things that don't necessarily drive a lot of this desire to continue to do it. So, in our, clinics, our training programs are usually about 25 minutes long and they'll have like three or four or five or six different little video games in there where they're only playing it for two or three minutes. But it's designed to do something really specific for those two or three minutes and through the repetition of that. So they're not going to get addicted to coming in and doing these progress because we're mixing it up and it's low impact. We don't have a lot of super high impact visual reward systems in there. It's much lower impact on that. And that's for a good reason because we don't want that kind of thing going on. So high impact is a lot coming at you, a lot of auditory stuff. There's a lot of visual stimulation, there's a lot of reward coming at it. 

And so you just want to keep winning as it feels great or you're beating all your friends or, you know, they have ways that these kids can actually have a bunch of kids playing all at the same time. It's all sitting in their room by themselves and they think they're connected with all these kids all over the planet, which to some degree they are. But let's get them out and get them actually socializing because that is not socialization. Playing a video game is not socialization, they need to be able to be with people. And that's part of what we've learned with some of these video games is that it does strengthen certain aspects of the brain. So you might get some multi multiprocessing aspects, you might get some good visual, but there are parts of the brain that are underdeveloped when they do too many of these video games. And part of that is executive functioning, decision making, being able to even tell when you need to go to the bathroom. So that part of the brain just gets diminished, it doesn't grow and you have to have all of that in order to be successful in the world. 

Laura: Okay, so without talking about what games to avoid, are there any like, you know, just like standard available video games that you actually like that are like that you would, that you would say like this one is, you know, not one that's gonna be a problem?

Dr. Connie: You know, I kind of stay away from that conversation. 

Laura: I understand why you might.

Dr. Connie: Yeah, because anything can be misused. 

Laura: Yeah.

Dr. Connie: And so, you know, if I say, oh this one's okay and everyone runs out and then I get a call and my kid's addicted to this one. So I.

Laura: I totally understand. Okay, so I have one more question.

Dr. Connie: Sure.

Laura: And then a general question. So one more this one is just, this is just for me, a total like, this is one of the benefits of this job. I get to ask experts personal questions. So I found out in college that in order to really focus on studying, I either needed to be in a really busy environment with lots of like external noise or I needed to be listening either to music or honestly audio books. Like I some, I needed to be filtering something out and I've never really understood the mechanism for like, why that worked well for me. And I'm just kind of curious why that. 

Dr. Connie: Well, and again, I haven't met you and.

Laura: Of course, yeah I know.

Dr. Connie: And assessments or anything. So, just kind of broadly speaking, there are a lot of people that have that and part of it is because everything can kind of come in at the same level for some folks. So all the noises that are around. So it's trying to control the auditory levels of noise that's coming in. And if you have a song, you have something, your brain can lock onto that and then you're able to then focus in on other things. Whereas if those off, you're catching everything, the car that's driving by outside. Yeah, the air conditioning that's clicking on it. You know, the dog barking down the street. And so what you're doing is trying to focus the brain in to enhance the attention, the ability to put inputs.

Laura: Fascinating.

Dr. Connie: Yeah. And that's part of what we tackle is that very thing. 

Laura: Okay, thank you, Dr. Connie. You know, I spent my whole life feeling like I was bad at things, you know, obviously I ended up being, you know, academically successful, you know, I have a PHD in all of those things. I learned lots of hacks to get myself through those things. Getting my diagnosis over this past year has been a really lovely experience for me just because it has helped me understand myself better and be more forgiving with myself. You know, just it kind of changed the way I viewed certain childhood memories and certain ideas I had about myself as a kind of a, a careless clumsy person. So I that's felt really good for me. I have, I, I feel like as I have been talking with more parents who are noticing some neuro divergence on themselves, the, the conversation in neurodivergence that's happening kind of more, you know, in a more mainstream way right now, I just feel kind of curious how you think the field is gonna be moving when we you know, it just so this is totally like not on your topic necessarily, but this is more just a kind of a colleague to colleague question. I, I feel like I'm getting a, a vibe from the community that are our understandings of autism, ADHD, sensory processing disorders that all of this is gonna be changing. So that we, they no longer fit into these discrete, you know, binary categories. And I, I just feel kind of curious what your take is on that?

Dr. Connie: Well, my take has always been about dealing with stigma and that's really what all of these labels have created for decades is the stigmatization of people. If you've got a label, you're stigmatized, you fit in a cubby hole. This is a little box of a little corner that you get stuck into and this is what it means to have that and it couldn't be further from the truth, because I, I can, you know, and hence, whenever a person does a presentation to a room full of people, whatever words go out, each person sitting in the audience is gonna hear something a little bit different. It's all the same message as being the words are the same that have been delivered from the one mouth, but you can have 1000 people with 1000 different interpretations of what that is. And that's how I view diagnostic labels. There are 1000 interpretations of what ADHD can mean. I can have 10 kids walk in in a day and have ADHD, they're all 10 going to present a completely unique manner. Autism, the same thing might have a few traits here and there. And the DSM-5 which you know, some people are familiar with. The whole purpose of that you know, when that was created a gazillion years ago, wasn't to give labels. It was merely as a method to communicate from professional to professional, what a grouping of symptoms might be. It wasn't to say you have ADHD. 

Laura: Yeah.

Dr. Connie: It was for me to say to you, okay, we've got a cluster A here. So this is what I've seen is cluster A, now I'm handing this person over to you a cluster A. And that was all it was intended to do. And now we have, you know, books that are hundreds of pages and link with hundreds of diagnostic criteria in there. And I'm not sure who wins with that. I'm ready to walk away from that a lot and I've spent, I've spent the better part of my career walking away from it because as I said, in the beginning, it may help you get in the door. It's not going to help me know anything about you per say. It's just a shorthand mechanism that someone created that. By the way, the ADHD diagnosis now almost anyone can qualify for ADHD when the DSM-5 came out. There were a lot of influences that are well known now about how that came about. And you always have to look at, you know, where the money is on some of these things. So, you know, my goal is let's educate people, let's let people know that there's a different way of looking at this, that there's hope out there, you're not abandoned, you're not walking alone. We have lots of resources that we can help with and I can help if you wanna pursue this, there's a lot of different neurofeedback systems out there. Not all of them are the same. Many of them are quite good again, check things out. And I'll just say briefly that if it's something that administers something to the brain, the industry standard has been, that's not neurofeedback, that's, that may be something that can help the brain. But if they're calling it neurofeedback, the tried and true professionals within the field will say that's not truly neurofeedback because neurofeedback is simply the biofeedback, which is giving feedback about how your brain is working. It's not administering something to the brain. 

Laura: Got it, like as in like a shock or magnets or something. 

Dr. Connie: Yeah. Anything that's administering something to the brain doesn't mean they don't work. I'm not saying that at all. I'm just saying that's not neurofeedback in the traditional sense of what neurofeedback was designed to be. 

Laura: Okay Dr. Connie McReynolds, thank you so much for this conversation today. I just, you know, so I really would love to make sure that everybody knows where they can go to find you as we wrap up. I'll make sure everything is in the show notes, but you know, some people like to hear it out loud. So your book is called Solving the ADHD Riddle. But where can they go to get the book and learn more about how they could potentially, work with you? 

Dr. Connie: Straight to my website, which is just my name it's www Connie McReynolds. So that's conniemcreynolds.com. There's a link right on the front page to the book which takes you right to Amazon. It's available as audio book and I did the audiobook myself. 

Laura: Oh, fun.

Dr. Connie: Ebook and, paperback. And then there's also a contact form on the website. So you can fill that out. It comes straight into my email. Just give me a way to contact you if you have questions, phone number or times to give you a call, then kinda cuts down on the back and forth. And so people, you know, we put that in your email message when a good time is and a number to call you. It's, there's too many questions and too many variations for me to answer questions through email. I'd much rather have a five or 10 minute conversation with people to really get to the heart of the problem. 

Laura: I love that. And, you know, of course, this is a global podcast. But for those of the listeners who are in California, where are you practicing? Can I ask that question? Is that okay? 

Dr. Connie: Absolutely. I'm in Southern California. So I actually have two clinics. One in Redlands, California, which is halfway between LA and Palm Desert and one in Rancho Cucamonga, which is a little closer to LA than Palm Desert. But you can driving up and down the 10, you, you're probably gonna bump into me. 

Laura: Nice. I love that. Okay, thank you so much, Dr. Connie. I really appreciated our conversation. 

Dr. Connie: This was beautiful. Thank you so much and stay warm in Wisconsin.

Laura: You enjoy the nice Southern California temperature. 

Dr. Connie: All right. Thank you so much. It's been a pleasure to be here today. 

Laura: Same. 

Okay, so thanks for listening today. Remember to subscribe to the podcast and if it was helpful, leave me a review that really helps others find the podcast and join us in this really important work of creating a parenthood that we don't have to escape from and creating a childhood for our kids that they don't have to recover from. 

And if you're listening, grab a screenshot and tag me on Instagram so that I can give you a shout-out, and definitely go follow me on Instagram. I'm @laurafroyenphd. That's where you can get behind the scenes. Look at what balanced, conscious parenting looks like in action with my family, and plus I share a lot of other, really great resources there too.

All right. That's it for me today. I hope that you keep taking really good care of your kids and your family and each other and most importantly of yourself. And just to remember, balance is a verb and you're already doing it. You've got this!

Episode 179: How Acceptance Can Transform Your Parenting with Andee Martineau

In this podcast episode, we dive into how acceptance transforms parenting. Our guest, Andee Martineau, a mom of 6, the author of the book “Connect Method Parenting”, and the creator of Connect Method Parenting: a breakthrough parenting framework that leverages connection as the primary mechanism for influencing children. 

In this episode, Andee and I discuss the following:

  • How to stop yelling and communicate effectively 

  • Why bribes and ultimatums do not work

  • Concept of acceptance and alternative approaches to handling difficult situations

  • Six acceptance questions from the Connect Method Parenting book

  • How to practice acceptance while holding boundaries and limits

To connect directly with Andee, you can email her at andee@expandedlife.com, her website connectmethodparenting.com, Instagram @andeemartineau, Facebook page Connect Method Parenting and her podcast Connect Method Parenting.

Resources:


TRANSCRIPT:

Parenting is often lived in the extremes. It's either great joy or chaotic, overwhelmed. In one moment, you're nailing it and the next you're losing your cool. I want to help you find your way to the messy middle, to a place of balance. You see balance is a verb, not a state of being. It is a thing you do. Not a thing you are. It is an action, a process, a series of micro corrections that you make each and every day to keep yourself feeling centered. We are never truly balanced. We are engaged in the process of balancing.

Hello, I'm Dr. Laura Froyen and this is The Balanced Parent Podcast where overwhelmed, stressed out and disconnected parents go to find tools, mindset shifts and practices to help them stop yelling at the people they love and start connecting on a deeper level. All delivered with heaping doses of grace and compassion. Join me in conversations that will help you get clear on your goals and values and start showing up in your parenting, your relationships, your life with openhearted authenticity and balance. Let's go! 

Laura: Hello. I'm Doctor Laura Froyen and I host the Balanced Parent Podcast. And I'm so excited to be talking about this topic with, with you Andee. So my background is I have a PHD in Human Development and Family Studies with a specialization in Marriage and Family Therapy. And I really love coming alongside families and helping them parent in the way that feels really good to them, really aligned with their values and focus on connection. And I feel like you're the same. And do you want to get a little bit about you? 

Andee: I will, I'm so excited for this conversation that because as we were chatting before we hit record, you know, there's like we were like, what do we want to talk? There's so many things we could talk about. And the, and the cool thing is how aligned we are on our purpose and mission. So I'll just briefly introduce, I'm so excited that we're gonna get this on both of our podcasts. But my name is Andee Martineau and I have six kids and I'm very passionate about sharing an approach to parenting that's based in developmental psychology, that's based in attachment theory that honors emotions and just really helps us understand what it takes to be in a relationship with our child. And with our ourselves, to be honest, where our nervous systems are regulated and our kids are more open to what we have to say to the feed. We have, I have lots of teenagers and adult kids now. And so that's important all throughout. But especially as they're getting to be more independent to have that relationship and so of honesty, of openness. So I'm so excited we're going to talk about some of the, like the things we're going to dive in today are going to be really pertinent. If you are in a, if you're, if you're parenting and you're feeling resistance and you're feeling a lot of frustration, we both understand. We both get you and, and we're going to dive into that because that's something that can be really hard as a parent. So, yeah.

Laura: Andee so I, I'm sure you hear the same thing, but I hear from parents all the time that they, they really want to be respectful, compassionate, conscious parents and they want their kids to, to listen to them, they want to feel heard and respected themselves as, as adults and, and it's really hard. It's, it's so easy to say you're committed to something and then the putting it into practice is, is so much different because, you know, you're dealing with another human being. And one of the things that I think the you can tell me if you've experienced it too, that the kind of the peaceful parenting and respectful parenting world, it gives this impression that peaceful parents are respectful parents are, are always this kind of even keel, you know, they have this sweet voice. Oh my darling. You know, and in my experience, lots of parents think that they're regulating and in reality, they're stuffing. they're kind of gritting their teeth through the hard moments. They're kind of white knuckling it through and they're not actually regulating their nervous systems and learning how. Okay, so how do I actually deal with the, the moments that are challenging and hearts that I don't yell. And when we, when we were white knuckle through it, we eventually hit that threshold where we revert to our old patterns, the patterns that were uploaded into our, our nervous system. When we were younger, we start yelling, our mom's voice falls out of our mouths, you know, like, so I guess that I'm so excited to talk about that with you. So like, that's my theory that my not yelling is so hard is because we are resist. We are in resistance so much. What do you think about that? 

Andee: To the emotions, exactly. Well, if your nervous system is activated and you're trying to put on the calm parent front, there's a huge disconnect and I've had, I've even had people tell me no, no, no, I didn't raise my voice. I like was smiling and I said, well, how did you feel? I rate annoyed, frustrated and I, and I, I totally get it because I've completely been there before where I'm trying so hard to be the parent. I want to be not understanding that I can't hide my internal fury, you know, like I'm trying to, but my kids map it. 

Laura: They are kids know they can see it .

Andee: exactly. I mean, you hear mirror neurons, you know, that are sending out this, I think of it as a radio signal saying I'm really upset inside. You know, and, and even though the, the facade might be a what I like to call stretchy smile, which is us doing our best. The kids feel the emotion that's being transmitted and they pick it up with their mirror neurons and, and you can't hide it. So I love talking about really what's the, what's the core issue? You know, it's like if an apple tree wasn't producing apples, we would look at the roots, we wouldn't look at the and we would treat the roots and water, fertilizer, you know, that kind of thing. We wouldn't look at the fruit and say let's put some ointment on the apple that's not gonna cause the change, right? That's not really the problem. And so I think going to the emotions, going to the nervous system and seeing what's happening, that's how you get to a place where you are showing up more intentionally.

And I, and I loved your point of, you know, portraying an image of just this sweet, calm, which I'm as you can hear by my, in my intensity in my voice. I I'm a very intense person. So like that was really, I wanted that so bad. I had a couple of friends that felt like they could just, you know, never raise their voice above a whisper hardly. And I thought that was amazing and that I tried to be that for a while. That's not me. And if that is you, that's amazing. But regardless of how we are accepting who we are accepting our emotional capacity, and it's not about necessarily always being perfect or even not, you know, even if we show up in a way where we, we do let some of that frustration get out. It's about learning how to process and take care of what was at the root of it. So you can do better next time. 

Laura: Yeah, I mean, because Andee, we parents are humans, we get to be human. You know, and I think that sometimes we, we think we have to strip our humanity away in order to be these perfect respectful parents and, and that's not real and that's not what our kids want. Either. Our kids want real authentic connection. Of course, they shouldn't be burdened with our kind of emotions. Of course, we need to be taking care of ourselves, going to our friends, a partner, a therapist if we need to do some, some work. But they need to know, they need to know there needs to be congruence between what we are expressing on the outside and the kind of what they're picking up and they can tell when we're faking it, they really can, you know, and they're, you know, from an attachment perspective, a biological perspective, they're primed to always kind of be on the lookout for what's going on with mom because that's how they survive. You know, that's, you know, it's a, I mean, that is just biology or human animal nature and, and so being congruent and being authentic is really important. So I thinking about then this, the parents who are in these moments where they're feeling frustrated, overwhelmed, they feel like their kids aren't listening and they've tried to be nice and they feel like the only thing they can do at that moment in time is to do what they, what we know works in the short term, threats, bribes, punishments, time outs, you know, those things do work in the short term. 

Andee: They do.

Laura:  they do, they get compliance when that's what we're looking for. They don't work in the long term. There's, you know, 4060 years of like solid research telling us that they don't work in the long run, but they do work in the immediate moment. What do we, what is the I mean? You know, you use that word acceptance. I feel like that's the first step. Well, first step is awareness that something's happening, right? We always talk about that, right. First step is awareness, okay? We're aware, I guarantee the parents listening, they're aware, something's happening. What is it? And, and lots of us, I know for me personally, just as an example to tell a personal story. I was on vacation for my 40th birthday. We were in Florida and we were, oh, thank you. Oh, I feel so excited about being in my forties. I.

Andee: Me too. I love my forties. 

Laura: I'm so excited about it. I feel like I'm like at this level where I can just like, be me. I don't know. I just, I'm loving. Okay, I've been in my forties for like a week, but I really love it. 

Andee: Welcome to the forties. 

Laura: Anyway, we were, we were at a beach in Florida that is just really famous for seashells. And one of my daughters found a really nice big seashell and my other daughter did not. And there were all of these feelings about it. This was on my birthday and I had so much resistance to what was happening for both of my kids. I had one kid who was super excited wanting to call grandma and grandpa tell her about the se and the other kid who was losing it. I never find anything, you know, just had the whole negative narrative going. And then I was in my own mind having my own negative narrative and it really made me think about your book and you have these six acceptance questions. So let's just, can we talk about those for a few minutes or like just about what acceptance is? Why resistance was so painful for me? Why it caused a lot of problems and what I could have done instead. 

Andee: Yeah. Oh, goodness. I, I could tell my own version of that story. 

Laura: We all have them. Right. 

Andee: Yes. Well, and I just, before I go into the question, I just want to say, being willing to say, hey, I'm a human and I feel the same emotions as everybody else feels like II, I think with parenting sometimes we feel shameful or because there's so much pressure to get it perfect that we're afraid to admit that we aren't getting it right all the time. So I love that we're sharing authentically because hopefully it will help other people also be willing to share and realize there's nothing wrong. If you resist. 

Laura: There's something quite right about about this. We're, we're human. It's happening for a reason and it makes sense that all of this is happening for us. I think that there are people who like learn about peaceful parenting and respectful parenting and are like, oh, that makes sense like and are done and go on their merry way. That is not my truth. That is not, this is like, I'm so lucky I get to do this for my job because it's a daily like reaffirmation of the work I'm doing. But anyway. Yes, okay. 

Andee: Exactly. Yeah. Yeah. So I love that we're being vulnerable and that's the first that's allows the awareness that then allows us to go into the next step, which is one of the next steps, which is acceptance, which is a process to me of regulating our nervous system. So I think when we're in resistance, we're in that fight or fly, that's the typically the terms we call it. There's fawn freeze, you know, there's the other ones, but like we're in this nervous system, activated place and from the, from that place, we're going to try to do the tug of war, do the fix it, do the.

Laura: The thought is this should not be happening. That's the thought that comes in my mind. This should not be happening. She should not be doing this. I should not be feeling this like, like just like I just start, this should not be happening. Everything. 

Andee: Yeah. And when you, when you have the word should I it's, I'm so aware of that word now and I'm like, wait, it's like ding, ding, ding, like, let me look at that a little bit more because I need to inspect if that is act and most of the time it's not helpful. But this like when I'm using the word should, it's usually not helpful. So I'm so glad you said that. So that some version of this should not be happening. They should know better. I, you know.

Laura: they should be able to do this by now. 

Andee: Yeah. My kids shouldn't be fighting or having, you know, problems with the, you know, you.

Laura: She should be happy for her sister. She shouldn’t be bragging. 

Andee: Exactly. I shouldn't be so frustrated, you know, I should be handling this.

Laura: I should accept her emotions.

Andee: Right. Or if I was a better mom, you know, I should be able to prevent this from happening or whatever, right? We have all of these.

Laura: and so those are all resistance, right? 

Andee: Yes. Examples of resistance. And when you go into resistance, you go into an activated nervous system. And I love just saying it's your nervous system, there's nothing wrong with you. Of course, you want to protect yourself. This is survival. This is how humans have survived. We just think that the girls having the seashell dilemma is life or death. Like that's what our brain thinks and it's not a tiger about to eat us. It's really not. 

Laura: Can we just dig into to the narrative there that happens for so many of us because it's not even about for protecting ourselves. I for me, when I know I get triggered in a certain way, it's about a fear of my kids becoming unlovable. And it is deeply important as a human animal parent that our kids be lovable and acceptable in society because we know that that's what keeps them safe. That is a like a human imperative. It's written into our DNA. We cannot help it, right? That it's there that our nervous system reacts to that fear of they're doing something that's going to get them rejected, that's going to cause them to lose love. And so it just makes sense that that would be cause a reaction within us. Right? 

Andee: Yes. Yeah. And I wanted to say that because that if you have that awareness that this is fine, this makes sense. Of course, my nervous system is reacting this way. Of course, my girls nervous systems are reacting this way and you that is leading you into acceptance, right? Because now what I'm doing instead of fighting against the reality that I have in that moment, I'm saying, okay, I can at least accept where I am. I'm not trying to change anything at this moment, right? I'm just saying this is my reality.

Laura: This is reality. 

Andee: This is reality, right? And, and the only like we, when we fight against reality, we lose 100% of the time. Like there is no way in the moment when it's happening. And I'm not saying, talking about five minutes before or five minutes after in the moment when the girls are having the thing about the seashell and I could, I could share my own version, but then you share, we'll just use it. So you here. Yeah. And you're having your experience. It's like this is the best we can all do right now. This is what's happening. This is what our nervous systems are doing. And if you can go into that versus I should be different, my girl should be different and you're just either upset at yourself or upset at the girls or both. And all right, like this is ruining my birthday. This is not how I want to feel. Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. Right. They're gonna live there. It's almost like I was because I have my exact version of this, you know, like, you know, my brain likes to catastrophize like they're, they're not gonna share, they're not gonna be cooperative, they're not gonna have friends, they're not gonna rest the success, blah, blah, blah, like I'm going 20 years in the future. 

Laura: And so that's one thing that acceptance does is it pulls you back into the here and now this moment, can I ask you a question? So I feel like acceptance gets a bad rap in a lot of places. It feels like it's a kind of a, well, we're just, it, it feels like inaction. It feels like we're just gonna let this happen because it's happening and we're letting it happen. Feels kind of like the walking all over the doormat type of vibe. And it's not that it's actually quite an active process to be radically accepting of someone or of a situation. And it doesn't mean that we think those things are all okay, either, you know, in this circumstance when my kids weren't hurting each other. But if there was a, a hit or something that happened, it, of course it wouldn't be okay. That one kid hit the other kid.

Andee: Right.

Laura: It's still reality. It's still what happened.

Andee: It’s still the truth.

Laura: Its still the truth.

Andee: You can either accept it or not, right? It's still like, am I going to accept it and use my and how my nervous system start to calm down so I can use my prefrontal cortex and make wise decisions or am I going to stay in resistance and wish things were different which causes my thinking brain to turn off. And I go, you know, straight into reactionary mode, which I'm not proud of. And I love what you brought up with acceptance. They've heard the same exact thing. They think it's passive and they think acceptance means condoning and it's not, it's not, I'm not saying, oh yeah, I'm so glad they're fighting and I'm so glad. No, no, no, no. You know, it's not that at all. So acceptance just means seeing what's happening in front of you and saying this is what is.

Laura: This is what is. You have some questions in your book. Your book is called Connect Method Parenting. And you have some questions in it that I really liked because I feel like sometimes people are, you know, when we get the advice to just accept what's happening, accept what is we don't actually get any information. Okay, so like, what does that look like? And how please and I really love the questions that are in your book. Can we go over them a little bit? 

Andee: Yeah, let's go through them. Yeah. So the first one and in my book, I'm telling about a scenario and then I use the questions to kind of walk through the process I went through. So I guess I will just apply them to the situation you, they're universal, they're universal. So how does what? And then I said he is saying, make perfect sense to him but like what she's doing, how I'm feeling, you know, like you, how does it make sense to your, let's start with your children. So how does, how does what they're saying and doing make perfect sense to them? 

Laura: Oh my gosh. I mean, it makes perfect sense that my one child who found the seashell would be really excited about it would, you know, it was really lovely specimen. It was the biggest one we found our whole trip. Basically, it was something we'd been talking about for months leading up. Of course, she was going to be excited about that and she had no ill intentions in being excited. She was just fully embodying her own emotional experience. And for my other child, same, we had been talking about this trip for a long time thinking about whether we would find a big seashell or not. She desperately wanted to find one and her sister found one instead. And of course, she felt jealous. Of course, she felt sad. Of course, she wondered if there was something that she was doing wrong because she didn't find it because she was right there, too. You know, I mean, of course she was having, it makes so much sense. She was having all of those negative thoughts and it makes so much sense that I would be having the thoughts that I was having, too. It makes so much sense that I would feel frustrated and annoyed and wish my kids could just let it go. I wish that one didn't have to be quite so exuberant and, you know, that the other one didn't have to, you know, be quite so sad. Like, of course, that all makes sense that I would feel that way because it was, you know, it, we feel our kids stuff too. We often take that stuff on even when we know it's theirs and yeah. So, I mean, that makes some, I mean, just even saying those things, I feel so much better. 

Andee: Yeah. Oh, good. Yeah, it gives us perspective on all the, all the things going on in the moment and the next couple of questions you've already answered. Like I, I talk about why they feel there were two children involved in mine too. So it's like, what did he feel? What did she feel? So that's what the next couple are and you already answered all of those. 

Laura: So the next couple questions. So just to read them are what are their words or actions telling me? Yeah, I love, I love that question. So, I mean, those two questions are something I do kind of automatically at this point for myself. So I think what's important for our listeners to know is that this doesn't stop. There is not some magical time, at least not for me. And so, you know, where I won't have to do this, I will be doing this work for the rest of my life. And I've come to accept that.

Andee: I mean, to what you're saying, like anytime you're going to train to run a marathon, you'd have to train to run the mar if you're going to run marathon after marathon, right? You can't just stop training just because you did it once. Right. Life long work. 

Laura: Yes. It's lifelong work. And so like those two things, those first two questions are really good habits for me. By right by now when I start feeling that kind of this regulated panicky feeling of like this is not happening the way I thought I was going to, I know to ask myself those two questions, their habit. But I love your next question. So the next, your next one is, what's the best thing I can do right now for them and me, and that is a question on that beach that morning. I did not ask myself that question. 

Andee: Yeah, I didn't think you could. What would you say now? 

Laura: what the best thing that would have been like the best thing for me to do, would it have been for me to walk ahead? And regulate myself, breathe, you know. So the ocean is a mindful place for me. There's something about the repetition, the sound, the rhythm of the waves and stuff that is really good for my nervous system. The best thing for me to do in that moment would have been to kind of say, all right, I'm going to walk this way for a few minutes by myself. Go do that, get drop into the present moment, get into my body, get back into regulation while my husband who does not get triggered by this sort of thing dealt with the kids. That's what the best thing I should have done. I did not do that, but I wish I had.

Andee: Well. And the reason I wanted to ask is because even if you discover that in hindsight, every time we have that awareness, it helps you next time it will serve you to have the awareness. So I love that always, I'll always regulate ourselves if we can safety first, you know, separate us if there's safety issues and then yeah, take care of ourselves. I love that so good. Yeah. Do you want to read the next one? 

Laura: Yeah. Yeah. And so the next two questions are, what am I making this mean about me and why and what am I making this mean about them and why those questions are really helpful. I find those questions challenging for lots of people to answer. Do you find the same thing Andee? 

Andee: I do, I do. I, I found it challenging for me to answer at first too when I started really having the, the ability to even answer the questions. It was like, oh my gosh. Yeah. So what is the most challenging part that you find with people when you're asking them those questions or when? Yeah, that's coming up. 

Laura: I think for the folks that I talked to, the story has been playing in the background of their mind kind of subconsciously for so long that they're not aware of it. And these stories, you know, what am I making this mean? There's usually a a consistent narrative, the circumstances might change, the characters might change. But the story is kind of the same, I'm a mess up, you know, like I'm a mess up. I don't do anything, right. You know, there's some kind of consistency to the narrative and we're so used to that kind of that narrative being in the background. It's this background noise that we just don't even notice anymore. And so learning to quiet and tune into it. It is hard, you know, but I, I think the way I asked my clients often is, what are you telling yourself? You know, what are you saying to yourself? What are, what are the thoughts that are rolling through your head? The storm of thoughts that are just flowing in your brain, what are they saying? And once I can get a client to start saying those things out loud. That's when we find the narrative. What about you, Andee? 

Andee: So powerful. Yeah, I love it. It's super similar to what you're saying. It, it's fascinating because sometimes it's not that the story is inaccessible. They've just never realized.

Laura: That it's happening.

Andee: That it's happening just like what you were saying. It's, it's surprising to them how negative and I will say for most women, they don't have a problem making it some feel something terrible about themselves. They're really comfortable being a failure and having like a beating themselves up, which is really a whole another topic we could talk about. But you know, like women are a lot of women are hard on themselves. They think that's necessary or even useful. But when they and I, I don't think either of those are the case like it's not necessary or useful or helpful. But what's interesting is when they realize what they're making it mean about their kids that their kids are a failure, that their kids are rude or mean. And we start to talk about it, they realize how they do not want to have that story about their children. And that even if they feel like they have the evidence for it, they want to entangle that and they want to believe something different because when you start to talk and you have the awareness you, you want to create something new. And when we start to see like if I am believing this child is rude, for instance, that's what I'm, that's the filter I'm looking through. 

So I'm gonna keep finding evidence for that in my life. And so I want to clean it up. And so once we start untangling and unpacking the not just the story but the impact it's having on their life and the impact it's going to continue to have on them. They wanna, they wanna let it go. So that's my experience and super powerful questions. I find myself asking myself this often like, what am I making that mean about them? And is that and is it true? And can I know it's true? And what if it's not true? What if it's just that because I'd love to say what if it's just that their nervous system is activated? What if they're just struggling today? What if the truth is they're just having a lot of her emotions that haven't filtered through and it's just coming out as an attack on me because I'm a safe person to purge like when you start to see it from that perspective, it's like, oh, I can release this, judge this judgmental story I have about them and now I have compassion. 

Laura: Yeah. Yeah. And so I like asking what could also be true. You know.

Andee: That's good. That's really good. 

Laura: I think, you know, so I have the joy of getting to run a play group on Mondays. With babies. It's so much fun. And one of the moms was there with her three year old and her three month old and the three year old was helping me clean up. The other kids were all a little young to be really helping with the clean up. But the three year old was helping and he kept, you know, listen to the language. I'm about to use. He kept snatching toys away from the babies to put into my play bin box. Listen to that language snatching. That's the lens. That's the interpretation. It looked like he was doing those things and the mom was so anxious about it. I don't know why he's doing that. He shouldn't take from the babies. And I'm I and I was like, wait, hold on. Let's just everybody take a second to reframe.

What's happening for the sweet three year old. This three year old saw me, his teacher doing clean up and wanted to help this child is being helpful. He is not snatching anything. He's helping these children release the toys and put them in the box, you know, and I mean, and not like meant like that lens shift is super important. And I feel like that's what acceptance does. It helps us step into a place where we can shift our lenses, culture, society. They gave us these lenses to look at our children through, to look at ourselves through. And we don't, we don't have to keep them on. Right? And acceptance allows us to see the lens like to have it come in focus like, oh why I'm wearing that lens again. Let's take this off and remember which ones I'm choosing to see my kids through. You know what I mean? 

Andee: Beautiful. I love that example. It's I could just, yes, exactly what you said. It's so, it's so true that the lens effects and it affects how we see things and it's not personal like the mom was interpreting it that way just because of the lens she was wearing it. There was nothing like all she has.

Laura: There was nothing wrong with her either. 

Andee: Nothing wrong with her. No, she was the child. 

Laura: She's a conscious aware mom who wants her child to be perceived well, in this setting, it was one of her, you know, like second times coming, you know, so she's kind of new, she wanted the community of parents to think well of her. I mean, all good things, all things that make sense and they, and they impact us. They impact how we show up with our kids and, and they're not going anywhere, they're going to be there. Culture is going to be there. We're all swimming around in this culture soup and it's not our fault and it's not going anywhere. We just, it's just our job to be aware of it. 

Andee: So good.

Laura: And raise kids who are aware of it too. What's beautiful about a process like this is that this is also something that you can start modeling for your kids and give your kids the opportunity to start practicing these things too. 

Andee: Yeah, exactly. So good. And there's, there are questions. I, I used to have a three by five card in my back pocket because I'm in my forties. So I didn't always have my cell phone handy and we had cell phones but they weren't smart cell phones, you know, and I'd have my questions right now, you know. So if I started to feel the resistance, I had my little questions. Okay, what do I, you know, and I would go through similar questions to these to help, to help me navigate tricky situations. And you're right on like it helps the kids see how to handle situations, you know, and how to, how to respond. I, I also love that if at the end of the questions, you're not ready to fully accept that you still want to have a little bit of resistance, that's okay too, just to consciously do it and give yourself enough space and time and permission to allow your nervous system to regulate when it's ready, you can't force the process. So I love this just takes as much time as so even accepting the resistance that I might have the residue of it, you know, it, it just takes the amount of time that it takes. And it's beautiful to even just be able to say no, I can't accept this right now, but I'm working on it. I can accept the fact that I'm working on it and I'm still resisting. That's beautiful too. That's beautiful too. 

Laura: Okay, so I feel like when you say that, like I can't accept this, there's this phrase in parenting that we, we hurt ourselves, this is unacceptable behavior. And so I feel like the need to kind of pull that up as a contrast like the, you know, I'm thinking about like, okay, so siblings hitting each other. Yes, we don't, we don't want them hitting each other. So what are you, what do you mean? Like when you say, can I accept this? Are you saying can I, you're not like let's really piece out the condone and the accept, can we really like pull that apart? 

Andee: Yeah. Yeah. 

Laura: Sorry, I was really talking with my hand. Listen, 

Andee: I love it. I love it. I I talked to Yeah. So specifically when I said I can't accept that I was not talking about the behavior necessarily of the kids. I was talking specifically of the introspective question of like, am I able to fully release the resistance I have about this situation? I totally, so I wanted to make sure, but I love that you brought this up, this idea of like a fully like I like unacceptable behavior, right? Like this is unacceptable behavior and understanding the difference like the behavior is just information. Do you agree? Like the behavior is just, and, and tell me if I'm not answering your question correctly and maybe you can read. But I love, like, it's just information, telling me what's going on internally. So that's why I, if you can separate the behavior from the child, like it, it's not because sometimes we label like they're rude or they're, you know, there's, they're doing this behavior and it means this about the child then, yeah, it gets really complicated because now like it's one and the same, but it's like the behavior is information. It's like an SOS signal saying I'm in trouble in here. Can you help me? I'm being really kind because I'm completely dysregulated and I'm really upset and I don't know how to do. I don't know what to do. And that helps me. I don't know, share what share, what helps you. But I just Yeah.

Laura: Yeah. No, I, I totally agree with you. I have a, a mentor uh Ross Green who teaches collaborative and proactive solutions, a model of collaborative problem solving. And he talks about behavior as a symptom and not the root cause I really like that framework. And it's exactly what you're saying. It's information just like when a person has the flu, you know, influenza, they might get a fever, that's a symptom. The fever is not the illness, the fever is not the root cause we might treat the fever by giving you Tylenol or another, you know, fever suppressant or anti-inflammatory, but that won't treat influenza, right? And so we're talking about getting to the root cause and separating those things just like when a child is dysregulated and hitting their sibling, you know, the, the Tylenol, the ibuprofen in the moment is getting in between them saying I can't let you hit your sister, you know, let me help you get your body safe, you know, sweet sister, let me help you get your body safe.

You know, that's treating the thing and then it's all what's underneath is the pro is kind of what you're asking folks to accept the, you know, and so I think that that really piecing that apart is really helpful where no one is asking you to accept your child hitting your other child, right? What we're asking you to accept that they have things going on under the surface that is leading to the hitting and of course we can't, you know, we can't let the hitting happen. We have to be working on giving other, you know, outlets for anger or frustration, other ways of expressing those things. But the underlying anger, frustration, disregulation, tiredness. Those are the things that we can accept that. That's where the kid is and then we can move towards supporting them. Does that, is that what you mean? 

Andee: Yes, 100%. Yeah. You said it beautifully. And I love, I love using the Tylenol analogy, just the surface versus underneath. And it, it's beautiful because that's, that I feel like is the thing that if more conversations or we had about that, like we were because we need to, we just, it's just an understanding. We just need to understand what we're accepting and that we're not just passive, it's very active actually. You know, like you were saying at the beginning, it's a very active process of accepting the human, the person while, while setting a limit on the behavior to create safety to it's necessary. I always say limits, create safety. They can create boundaries and clarity around what is allowed and what's not allowed in a situation. But they aren't necessarily the thing that's going to create healing or significant intrinsic long term change. But we need both, right? You, you absolutely need both tools. So having the right awareness of what we're talking about is super important so that people can, can integrate it into their life and not feel like they're just letting their kids run wild and they have no boundaries. 

Laura: I mean, and so one of the things too that I think is really important to highlight is that on the outside, it can look exactly the same if you have a parent, you know, two parents, both with two kids and they're hitting each other. They, those two parents can do the exact same thing get in the middle, separate, you know, make sure that nobody's body is getting hurt. But the energy of the one who's accepting, oh, my, you know, my kid is really disregulated. They haven't had their snack yet. Who's kind of acknowledging all of those things is drastically different than the energy of the one who's saying, gosh, my kid is just in this hitting phase. He's a hitter. I never thought I'd raise a hitter. You know, like the, the energy, the mindset is really different even though the actions might look exactly the same on the surface. Do you know what I mean? 

Andee: Exactly. Yeah, I, I talk about the fuel, right? We want clean, clean fuel versus, you know, if you put dirty fuel into your car, it's gonna, it might get you where you wanna go, but it's not gonna be as helpful for the, for the longevity of the car, you know. And so it's exactly what you're saying and it goes back to that, the mirror neurons and sending out those messages and the mapping that our kids do. Yeah. It, it definitely makes a difference. The beliefs behind the emotions and the beliefs behind the actions we take. They matter.

Laura: And it feels better to us. I was just talking with a parent about how she's, you know, she came into my membership community because she's realized that the, the respectful parenting kind of tactics that have gotten her to age five are starting to not feel good anymore. Because her child's getting bigger, getting stronger, she's having to use a little bit more force and it's just she's learning, she needs new strategies and because it does, it, the like it feels different to come in from a place of, oh, I see you with compassion and grace. I see you're having a hard time and I can't let you hit your sister. And so I'm coming in here and moving you away versus you. I need to get control of my child. This is unacceptable behavior. You can't do this, you know, like just the, the, the love that comes out of our hands when we lovingly move a child away versus the frustration and the tension in our fingers as we frustrate, you know, and we've all probably, you know, had moments where we've maybe been too frustrated and should have gone and taken a breath instead of interacting, you know. But do you know what I'm saying? Like it just feels different to us too. There's a qualitative difference.

Andee: and it feels so different to the child. Yeah. There, there's a safety if, if we want them to want, I, I always use, want to listen to us. It's, it's one thing to get a child to listen to you. You can do that through force, you can do that through manipulation. You can do that lots of ways. But to get them to want to listen to you, I believe and I'd love to have you comment on this? This is my belief is that I believe that requires a regulated nervous system, a, a clear compassionate understanding of what's actually going on with the child space for them to be messy. For us to be able to create a relationship that's so trusting and, and strong that we can in the same scenario, both say, I unconditionally love and accept you and nothing you can do would ever change that. And this behavior is, is I'm going to put a limit on this behavior. It's not something we're going to do right now. And to be able to communicate both messages simultaneously allows the attachment to stay strong, them to not react to our activated nervous system. Because that's often what's happening is we're, we're one of the parties is, is reaction, you know, having an activated nervous system. So the natural tendency is we react in kind and then we just, you know, the tug of war ensues and from there. 

But when we refuse to engage in the tug of war, they might be so activated and so frustrated and so disappointed by something or what the child is. And if we can show up and what you're describing is a regulated nervous system because we have the correct understanding of developmentally what's going on with them emotionally, what's going on with them. And I'm sending out a signal of love and acceptance while setting a limit like that changes everything. And now they get the opportunity to respond to us in that scenario. And so many parents I've worked with will come back and say you will not believe this. And I'm, I'm so cute. They're like, you will not believe this. But the other night my child was doing XYZ and all I did was I just set the limit and I sat with them in the chair and within five minutes like it was done and they cried, you know, they had felt their emotions fully through and I call it the mad to sad trip like they resist and they, then they get sad and they surrender and they complete the emotional cycle, right?

They, they, the child's back to regulated the chi the the the parent is regulated and then what happens is the capacity for love and attachment and trust. I feel like you get double the return on those scenarios because I think if the child can trust you when they're at their worst, then, then their nervous system says this is a really safe person, you can bring them anything and they will be there for you. And that just, it changes, it's just this ripple effect. It changes the experience for everyone involved. And it's, it really feels like magic because we've been taught, it's what we do and it's what we say and it's really what we feel and what we think that then generates the do and the say but, you know, like that's what matters and then, but like you said, it could look on the outside, the exact same, but on the inside it is, there's no similarities between what's going on. Yeah. 

Laura: And, and like you said, the child's experience of it is radically different. I think that was a beautiful explanation. Thank you for sharing that with us. 

Andee: You’re so welcome.

Laura: Oh I really love this conversation. 

Andee: Me, too. Yeah.

Laura: I want to make sure that folks are able, you know, folks listening to my podcast are able to find yours and vice versa. 

Andee: Mine, yours.

Laura: So my podcast is the balanced parents. You can listen anywhere you get your podcast. I love to have, you know, anybody who's listening to Andee’s podcast, you'll feel right at home. 

Andee: You're gonna love her. Yeah, you're gonna love that one. 

Laura: Yeah. And what about you, Andee? 

Andee: So mine is connect method parenting. I tried to keep it super simple. Same name as my book. Yeah. And, and did know if you're listening to this on my podcast feed, you're gonna love, you're gonna love all the stuff that, that you're gonna hear over on the other podcast on, on Laura's podcast. So, yeah, I feel like we have the same, the same purpose mission to go out and help, help get this information out to parents. And I,yeah.

Laura: I so agree. It's really lovely finding colleagues. This is, I don't know how you feel, but working online like this can feel quite lonely at times I miss my colleagues in academia. That's the one thing about academia about being a professor that I really miss is being able to just, like, walk down the hall and geek out about child development with someone. So it's really nice to, to get to connect with you, Andee. And I hope we can do this again. 

Andee: Oh, me too. We'll have to do a few more. I feel like we could have gone down a few other rabbit holes but we tried to keep it to acceptance, but I hope we did and I think we go some of those other things that I was tempted, but I'm like, stay on the train. I know it was really lovely and I, and I feel the same way. It's, it's beautiful to collaborate online with someone who's like minded and shared mission and, and really, I think what we both want is just to empower more parents to feel like they are capable of, of bringing this kind of parenting into their home and to feel how amazing it feels, even though it might feel a little scary at first. 

Laura: And I mean, and it's no joke. It's hard work. It's intense. You know, it's, it's hard work but it's good work and it feels, it feels so good to know that you're doing it. And I, I think, you know, a lot of us are hoping that if we do this work now our kids will have less work to do, they'll have their own work, but maybe a little bit less.

Andee: Maybe a little less because of us. 

Laura: Yes, hopefully.

Andee: Yeah. Life brings it all. So they get, they get their own experience right? 

Laura: They’ll get their own experience, right?

Andee: Yeah.

Laura: Andee thank you again.

Andee: Thank you so much. Yeah, thank you too. This is so wonderful. 

Okay, so thanks for listening today. Remember to subscribe to the podcast and if it was helpful, leave me a review that really helps others find the podcast and join us in this really important work of creating a parenthood that we don't have to escape from and creating a childhood for our kids that they don't have to recover from. 

And if you're listening, grab a screenshot and tag me on Instagram so that I can give you a shout-out, and definitely go follow me on Instagram. I'm @laurafroyenphd. That's where you can get behind the scenes. Look at what balanced, conscious parenting looks like in action with my family, and plus I share a lot of other, really great resources there too.

All right. That's it for me today. I hope that you keep taking really good care of your kids and your family and each other and most importantly of yourself. And just to remember, balance is a verb and you're already doing it. You've got this!

Episode 178: Parenting Beyond Power with Jen Lumanlan

Welcome to another episode of The Balanced Parent Podcast. We are joined by a distinguished guest and author, Jen Lumanlan. Jen, who holds an M.S. in Psychology (Child Development) and an M.Ed. Jen is not only the esteemed host of the Your Parenting Mojo podcast but also the author of the beautiful book, "Parenting Beyond Power” which delves into the importance of recognizing parents' needs, advocating for oneself, and finding a balance between family obligations and personal well-being.

Here are some of the takeaways:

  • Jen's self-identification as autistic and its influence on her parenting and podcasting perspective

  • Exploring the importance of identifying and understanding both our own needs and the needs of our children

  • Distinction between needs and strategies in parenting

  • Parents struggle to prioritize their own needs and its impact on parenting

  • Recognizing and advocating for parental needs

To connect with Jen, visit her website yourparentingmojo.com and her Facebook group Your Parenting Mojo.

Resources:


TRANSCRIPT:

Parenting is often lived in the extremes. It's either great joy or chaotic, overwhelmed. In one moment, you're nailing it and the next you're losing your cool. I want to help you find your way to the messy middle, to a place of balance. You see balance is a verb, not a state of being. It is a thing you do. Not a thing you are. It is an action, a process, a series of micro corrections that you make each and every day to keep yourself feeling centered. We are never truly balanced. We are engaged in the process of balancing.

Hello, I'm Dr. Laura Froyen and this is The Balanced Parent Podcast where overwhelmed, stressed out and disconnected parents go to find tools, mindset shifts and practices to help them stop yelling at the people they love and start connecting on a deeper level. All delivered with heaping doses of grace and compassion. Join me in conversations that will help you get clear on your goals and values and start showing up in your parenting, your relationships, your life with openhearted authenticity and balance. Let's go! 

Laura: Hello everybody. This is Doctor Laura Froyen. And on this week's episode of the Balanced Parent Podcast, we're gonna have one of my oldest colleagues and friends on the show to talk about her new book, Parenting Beyond Power. It is a gorgeous book, super helpful and detailed and with these lovely little shifts and the way you see your child, their behavior and yourself and your own behavior. Oh, I loved it. You must run out and get it today. But please welcome to the show, Jen Lumanlan. She's, I just, I'm so happy to have her back. She's been on the show before. We kind of grew up together in this kind of parent coaching world. Jen, it's so nice to see you again. How are you doing? 

Jen: I'm okay. Thanks for asking. I'm really glad to be here. I got COVID about three weeks ago and yeah, I was prepared for the COVID period and then I found out, oh, there's actually like a month where you're gonna have a cough for a long time after that. So I'm still sort of in that phase. So not quite up to a full capacity but really happy to be here. 

Laura: Are you able to use some of the, the wisdom you've gained in writing your book? You know, your book dives into kind of recognizing your needs, advocating for yourself, figuring out how to balance your needs and your family's needs and the needs of the world. Are you able to use some of that right now? I'm sorry. This is like a total off the cuff question. 

Jen: Yes. Yes. It absolutely helps. And I think, this, this may not sound like a very restorative practice. But we, we were in Vancouver for the book tour where that's where I got COVID and we were staying in, in quite a small one bedroom apartment and my daughter kiss was having a really hard time with it. And just so it was, you know, in a basement unit and there's something it didn't, it didn't really affect me, but I could see her bouncing off the walls. And so when we came down to Seattle, I really made a strong effort to connect with the local homeschooling community here because we're, we're homeschooling. And so we've been going out a couple times a week and there's also a, a family here that we are friends with and we've been seeing them and, and so meeting her needs more of the time, right? For socialization, for fun, for play with others, helps me to meet my need for it because it's harder for me when it's, when she's bouncing off the walls. So, sort of really stepping towards supporting her and meeting her needs ends up helping me and yeah, that's absolutely, you know, all throughout the book. 

Laura: Beautiful. Okay, so why don't you just tell us a little bit about yourself and just for the folks who don't know you, I feel like everybody should know you already, but in case they don't, you are the host of the, Your Parenting Mojo Podcast. You are the person who hosted me on my very first podcast interview. Yeah, I know so fun like so long ago now. But why don't you tell folks a little bit about who you are and what you do and then we'll dive into talking about your beautiful book and how we can move beyond power in our parenting. 

Jen: Thanks. Yeah. So I launched the podcast. Gosh, it's gotta be almost seven years ago now and I started it because I was getting all of these emails when my daughter was a baby from, you know, all the baby websites that you sign up for. And I would get these clickbait headlines like five reasons, you know, five ways to tell your child has a developmental delay. And it's, you know, it's clearly designed to get you to panic, to click through to see the ads. And if they ever did reference an academic study it was, you know, study says growth mindset is key and then here are 20 ways to get growth mindset never actually helping you to understand. Okay is growth mindset really a thing we should be paying attention to. Does this latest study fit with the body of research that came before it. Does it completely refute that body of research that came before it, we have no idea. And so I started the podcast to, to really be the resource that I wanted to have in the world and to look at academic research and use it as a guide for parenting because I realized that I'm, I'm, I don't have much parenting instincts and I don't have amazing parenting role models. 

And so I'm gonna need something else to guide me. And so that's why I started the podcast. And then I was sort of on this journey where I started to understand a bit more about my white privilege as a parent, I started looking at patriarchy and capitalism and realizing that the, the researchers are swimming in that same toxic cultural soup that we all are. And so when the researchers are saying, you know, success looks like this to, to raise a child who is successful, you need to do X, what we're ultimately talking about is raising a child who is going to be successful in a white supremacist patriarchal capitalist culture. And that if we want to have a culture to be in a culture to raise our children who are in a culture that is run according to different principles than that. Then the academic research doesn't really get us all the way there and we actually have to do things a little bit differently even than the research points out. So I'm still research based, still using that as kind of a grounding but always looking at it critically saying is this really ultimately where we want to go? 

Laura: I love that. I just want to say I've loved the shift that's come in your podcast in the past 2 to 3 years, seeing, seeing more of you come out into your podcast too. More of the kind of.

Jen: In so many ways. 

Laura: Yeah, I, I just, I, I really loved and enjoyed that. I, you know, I left academia with a little bit of disillusionment about the research process and what it meant to people who were actually living the lives of parents. That's why I left in a huge part. And so it's really lovely to have a conversation with someone who is, you know, using the information as a good starting point and then teaching parents how to filter through their own understanding of what's right for them, their own values, what's what they want for their kids, they want for their family, what they want for the world and using that information to, you know, but still having a, a good understanding of themselves and just trust in themselves too. I just, I've really loved that from you. 

Jen: Oh, thank you. Yeah, I will say I get a lot of criticism for it that I get people who leave me reviews on itunes saying I just want the data, I just want the science, I don't appreciate the bias that this podcast host brings to it. And to me that's kind of a fundament fundamental misunderstanding of what science is because the bias is still there. It's under the veneer. Yeah, there's just this veneer of objectivity that says this is science and so it's value neutral when actually the, the bias is baked into the way the researcher asked the question and what their sample size is and who they're sampling and how they and all of it. Yes. 

Laura: Yes, one hundred percent.

Jen: So, yeah. So it gets me in trouble sometimes. 

Laura: Well, I think, I think it's good to piss people off sometimes. Like I, you know, sometimes that tells us that we're doing something right. You know, if we are wanting to challenge the status quo and I mean, most of us are doing parenting in a different way, we're wanting to raise our kids differently than how we were raised, right? 

Jen: Yeah. Yeah. And you may have heard on the podcast that 18 months this year ago, I self diagnosed as autistic and a parent reached out to me and said I knew you're autistic a year ago and said something like, you know, you dive deep into it, research and your willingness to buck the social norms and there was something else as well, all characteristics of my favorite people. And so, yeah, so I didn't know that at the time. I know that now. But yeah, so I think some of it is linked to, to the autism. 

Laura: I'm, I think that's a beautiful example though, of modeling how to be in the world and the delights that our neurodiversity brings to the world, the beautiful gifts that we have. My daughter was recently diagnosed as autistic, too. And the oh gosh, just the process of her coming into her kind of autism identity, how positive it is. But, but it's just is a, this beautiful thing is so different than what it was like growing up in the eighties and nineties. The way she's accepted and out kind of out in her school and it's just a beautiful thing. And so I, I love that you are feeling vulnerable and that or I mean, safe enough to be vulnerable in that way and to talk about yourself and accept yourself in that full, in that full capacity and it's beautiful. 

Jen: Yeah. And I kind of wanted to use it as a model for other parents to be able to say, oh, if I'm seeing some things happening, maybe understanding more about myself can help me fit these pieces together. And I, I mean, ultimately, we're all kind of telling stories about our experience that, that don't really matter in the grand scheme of things. But it can be really helpful to us when our stories have more coherence. And so the the autism piece kind of helps to give my story a bit more coherence. And yeah, I did actually get another email from another listener saying, you know, conceptually, I knew before that everybody has value, that neuro divergence has value. But it wasn't until you said you're autistic that I saw how much value I get from how deep you go into the research. And so now I, you know, I truly on a, on a bodily level, I get the value that neuro divergence brings to us. And so that was a really a really sweet moment for me. 

Laura: Oh, that must have been really meaningful to hear. Oh gosh, good. I'm so glad. Okay, so kind of a little on this, this topic of worthiness. I, I wonder if we can talk a little bit about, sorry. I'm wanting to word this question. Well, so, you know, I, I, for me just personally, I, I received an an a ADHD diagnosis over this past year and it helped me see in my world some things that I had been shamed for, blamed for that I thought I was just bad at and kind of a bad person for being bad at. It helped me to see them in a completely new light with lots more grace and compassion and it helped me shift quite a few areas of my life where I was still pretty hard on myself. I don't know if that's been a little bit of your experience too. Yes. Yeah. 

Jen: Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It's, it has allowed me to lean into sharing it with others. Right. So I'll, I'll, I'll often be in workshops and the particular way the autism shows up for me is in social communication and kind of reading body language and reading subtext of what's being said. If the, if the subtext is different from what, what's actually being said, I don't catch the subtext. And so when somebody is sitting with me in a workshop and they kind of sitting there with their arms crossed, I now have the capacity to be able to say to them, you know, I'm autistic and I'm having a hard time understanding if you're like not aligned with me or if you're just cold, can you help me understand that? And so it's really helped me from that perspective to be able to see when I don't understand things happening, which previously sort of happened just below the surface. 

And it's also helped in my relationship with my husband and an example of that is when he, he likes to have air purifiers on in our house, when we're at home and the low hum of that just drives me batty. It's like constant mental energy to hear it. And so I would walk around the house, turning them down or off and he would walk around the house, turning them back on. And once we found that, oh, this isn't just Jen being awkward. This is, you know, this, this is a part of autism all of a sudden he would sometimes turn the fans off. And so, you know, I think there's part of it is like, why couldn't this just be a conversation we could have had before, right? Why wasn't it okay for me to want quiet before when now I have the self diagnosis. It's suddenly okay. But at least we're now able to understand that better and, and he is now supporting me more effectively in some of the ways that it's really meaningful for me to be supported. 

Laura: That's wonderful. So I feel like that brings us to a really important part of your, your book. So your book spends a lot of time on identi identifying needs, the needs of others, our own needs and teaching us and children how to work together so that everybody's needs are being met in creative ways, as opposed to using kind of more traditional approaches to, to discipline, to kind of get the obedience and control that many parents are seeking when or think they're supposed to be seeking. 

Jen: Yeah. 

Laura: And so what you were just talking about is, was an interesting piece of that because I think that it's really difficult to know what your needs are. 

Jen: Yeah. 

Laura: This new piece of self understanding helped you understand why a need for quiet is a valid need for you. But even if you didn't have this diagnosis, it's still a valid need, right? 

Jen: It kind of is. Yeah. And it always was to me.

Laura: It always was right. So what is it what, you know? So I feel like we could, we could totally talk a little bit about, I would love to talk just a little bit about identifying needs, our own and our children. And then I would just love to dig into how we can trust that our needs are valid and, and go a little deeper in there. So first let's just talk about needs and, and why it's so important for us to understand our needs and our kids needs in order to have a peaceful collaborative, harmonious home. 

Jen: Yeah. Gosh, I mean that, that just, that cuts to the heart of what the book is really about. And that when we understand what our needs are and we get those met and we understand what our child needs are and we're able to help our child meet those needs. We're just in a fundamentally different relationship than we are when we're telling them, you know, this is how it's going to be done. This is what we're gonna do and this is how you're going to do it. And I think that it can be confusing for parents in the early days because we tend to use the word need as a way of kind of absolving ourselves of responsibility for the thing we're asking them to do, right? So I might say I need you to get in the car. That's not actually a need, right? I might need have a need for a competence in my work if I'm dropping my child off at daycare and then going to work. And I've said I'm going to be there at a certain time and I have a meeting. I might have a need for ease, for calm, for peace, for harmony in the morning, for collaboration with my child. All of those are needs. And I, I think that I need, you too is a really key indicator that the next thing about to come out of your mouth is not actually a need. 

Laura: Yeah.

Jen: So, so when we, yeah, so, so when we understand what our needs are and then write the critical piece also understanding what our child's needs are. Why are they resisting this thing that we're asking them to do? It's because they have a need that they're trying to meet and resisting is the best way that they see to do that. And and this is, I think another way that my autism comes into play is I'm a master pattern seeker. And so I'm always looking for patterns in behavior, right? So is this pattern only coming up on school days? In which case, maybe there's something happening at school with a teacher with another child at school that is difficult and and and our child is trying to postpone that moment of entry into school. Maybe it's the separation. So we see it coming up on school days and any time you the child off at grandma's house. And so they have a need for comfort and safety, maybe it's happening every day and it doesn't matter where we're going, even if we're going to the park and then we're looking at things like, well, are their clothes comfortable? Are they resisting, getting dressed because their clothes are uncomfortable. Are they not wanting to get in the car seat because they're feeling bored or, you know, they're looking for a sense of joy and play. 

So we're so we're looking for these patterns to help us understand what are our child's needs even before they can start articulating them to us. And then when once we see both of these needs, we find many, many, many ways to meet both of our needs. And, and so it's not that sort of, you know, I'm suddenly a permissive parent who is doing everything to meet my child's needs. Not at all. That's just perpetuating patriarchy, right? Where I'm the caregiver and I'm just getting walked all over. What we're saying is you have needs as a parent and you deserve to get your needs met and your child has needs to and they deserve to get them met. And it is possible the vast majority of the time to meet both of your needs. 

Laura: Okay. And one of the things that you talk about that I really like in the book is helping parents differentiate what between what's a need and what is a strategy that we're currently employing to get the need met. And I really love when you talk about how we are often don't have actually a conflict of needs, but really a conflict of strategies. Can you tell our audience, teach our audience a little bit about that because it's really a helpful way to frame things. 

Jen: Yeah. So I, I've done training in what's called nonviolent communication, which is basically what this method is, right? It's, it's nonviolent communication. And for some reason, most people don't think to apply to children and I'm not really sure why because it really makes parenting easier.

Laura: Because children are humans. 

Jen: Yeah. Oh, yeah, we got that part. 

Laura: We don't think of children as full human beings worthy of dignity and respect. 

Jen: And so, so that's why we don't think about doing this kind of communication with them. So, pretty much whenever, I mean, virtually always, whenever we're having a conflict with somebody we're having a conflict, not over our underlying needs, only over the strategies we're using to meet our needs. And sort of a touchstone example that I come back to over and over again is a time when I just got sick of unloading the dishwasher at our house and it, it's been broken for a long time. So this hasn't happened in a while. But, I would put my oatmeal on for three minutes in the microwave. So I would, I would know it wouldn't take that long, right? It's not uh an objectively difficult task. It's three minutes to unload the dishwasher and I just got sick of doing it. Why am I doing this every single day? And my husband would swan out of the bedroom at 9:30 or 10 in the morning and make his fancy coffee and sit there with his Instagram and his coffee and his toast. And I'm like, but I've already unloaded the dishwasher. I've done two hours of work. I fed myself, I fed my daughter, right? Why, why, why is this happening? And so I picked a fight with him over why he doesn't unload the dishwasher? 

And in the back of Parenting Beyond Power, there are lists of needs, list of feelings and you will not find anything related to dishwashers on that need list. It did not exist. And what were so what were my needs, right? My needs were for collaboration, for partnership, to feel like we're on the same team. And I had latched on to that strategy of getting him to unload the dishwasher as the only way that I would find acceptable to have that need for partnership. And if I had instead gone to him and said, you know, I'm, I'm kind of feeling overwhelmed and I'm wishing that I could feel like we're more on the same team. Would you be willing to, to help me think through some ways we could do that? We would have come up with things like him doing grocery shopping, him doing more cooking, him taking our daughter out to, to go play so I can get some work done, right? 100 strategies we could have used maybe three of which have anything to undo with unloading the dishwasher. And so, so that's what we mean by, by fighting of a strategy. So anytime we're saying to our child, I need you to or you have to or even we have to, right? We have to go now. Well, no, we don't. Maybe I have a need for, for nourishment, for food. And I can see that you have a need for joy and play and how can we meet both of those needs, right. That's the kind of conversation that we're moving towards. 

Laura:  I love this. Okay. So one of the questions that I get from parents all the time is, okay, but at some point, they just have to put their dang shoes on and get in the car because I can't be late for work every day of my life. 

Jen: Yeah. 

Laura: So what do we do? What do, what do parents do? 

Jen: Yeah. Yeah. So firstly, I would say let's not have that conversation as we're trying to get out the door because everybody's tempers are riled up. And is that a moment when you're going to be able to be a calm and empathetic presence for your child? Possibly not. Right? So how about we just get out the door today in whatever way we can. And then this evening when everybody's calm and well regulated and fed and feeling okay or maybe even this weekend if right, school is difficult the beginning of a school year. And, and, and there isn't really a really regulated time this evening, we could put it off to this weekend and then we hear to our child and say something like, hey, I've noticed we've been having a bit of a hard time getting out the door in the morning. Can we talk about that? Right. So, we're not saying, you know, I, I want to talk about how you're gonna put your shoes on or how you're resisting or how you're refusing to do this. Right? Because if I say those things, it's like, no, I don't want to talk about that. We're locating this as a problem that we both have that we both have a stake in would you be willing to have a conversation with me? We have to be willing to accept no, as an, as a, as a valid answer. Assuming they're willing to come along, we can try to understand, our feelings and their feelings. Right. I'm, I'm wondering what's going on for you when we're, when we're getting out the door. 

It seems as though maybe you're feeling kind of frustrated and maybe even sometimes angry when I ask you to put your shoes on. I know I'm feeling really frustrated as well. And when I'm trying to understand what our needs are, and I'm wondering if maybe you have a need for autonomy, which means you get to decide things that feel really important to you. Does that feel right? And then you're looking for them to kind of come towards you with a Yes, yes. That, that, that's it.  Or if that's not it, right? I'm wondering, are your shoes uncomfortable or are you? I know that means that we're going to drop you off at daycare and gosh, are you looking for a connection with me in the morning? Do you just want to be close to me? So we're looking to understand what, why are they resisting putting their shoes on? Right. And what are my needs, right? My need is not to get the shoes on. My need is for competence in my work for ease, peace, harmony, partnership, collaboration, all those things. So, I know a lot of parents will sort of come at this from the mindset of, but they're seven, they should be able to put their shoes on. 

This is not that hard. And when we approach it from that mindset, we get into this conflict of strategies, right? But if we can see this as their real need, right. Maybe it's, maybe it is the need for connection and they are resisting because they know that every moment they resist is another moment they get to spend with you and they love you so much. So could we instead of telling them to put their shoes on? Could we kneel down and help them ease their foot in, you know, do the laces up, fold the velcro over or whatever it is and have that be a beautiful moment of connection and then lo and behold our child's need for connection is met while our need for competence in our work, for ease, for harmony, for collaboration, for partnership, all of those needs get met as well. If we can get past this idea that my child is extra years old and should be able to do this by themselves. Why won't they just co-operate?

Laura: I love this. Oh I and I love the idea of looking under these needs. So I think that so many times parents are, I mean, gosh, we have a lot going on. I I mean just they there's so many presses on our time and so little support for parents, really. And I, I think that it is so tempting for us to just want to ask people like you or people like me. Laura, Jen, just tell me what to do, tell me what to say so that they'll get their shoes on. And what you're asking us to do is instead of say a certain thing, read a script is to get to know ourselves and get to know our kids and develop an authentic 1:1 relationship with them where we go through life together as a team. We doing this, you know, you talk in the book about power with instead of power over and that's really where that shift comes in. I love that, so much. 

Jen: It's found a different way of being in a relationship with other people. 

Laura: It is, and the thing is too, is that you're gonna spend the time anyway, you know, really we're gonna spend the time anyway with these kids. You know, I was talking with a parent the other day. We were talking about teeth brushing and the, the dad was saying exactly what you just said. He, he should be able to do this. It shouldn't, it shouldn't have to be a battle. And, you know, and we were, we were talking about what his son is like what he might because I don't know, I don't know their kids, you know, they know their kids, but they might like and stuff and I'm like, it's so you could spend 10 minutes wrestling him, holding him down and brushing his teeth, or you could spend 10 minutes telling an entertaining story about all of the animals hiding in his teeth, you know, and that you're brushing away or, you know, the skeletons from dinosaur, the dinosaur fossils or whatever his kid is into, you know, like you're gonna spend the 10 minutes anyway, like it may as well be 10 minutes that connects you that fulfills the the child's needs and on some level at probably fulfills the parents needs too. You know, they, we have these higher order needs of, of, you know, getting things done, but we also need connection with our kids. So we have those needs too. We didn't decide to become parents just so that we could have little people to order around most of us. You know, if we're listening to those parenting podcast, most of us had kids because we wanted to have a really good relationship with them. 

Jen: Yeah. Yeah. And I think the key to recognize in the toothbrush example is if the child is looking for joy and connection in that moment, then that strategy, right? The strategy of making it playful will quote unquote work. If the child is looking for autonomy, 

Laura: Yes.

Jen: I get to decide what happens to my body. Then a very different set of strategies will work, right? Then we're looking at things like where are we going to brush? You get to decide that you get to decide which quadrant of your mouth we do first. You get to decide which toothbrush we use and which tooth uh piece flavor we use, right? We, we did toothbrush for six months in the living room because the resistance was just about, you know, I hear you saying this is really important and there's not a negotiation on whether toothbrush is going to happen. But I'm going to let you decide as much of it as possible. And that feels like a meaningful decision to my daughter. So, yeah, so we brushed with fluoride free toothpaste in the living room. So she didn't have to spit it out and eventually we transitioned back to the bathroom and it wasn't a problem anymore. 

Laura: Yeah, I love, I, I love the, you know, there, there's so much that goes on with teeth brushing too because there's also a sensory experience, an incredibly intense sensory experience for kids, you know, so it might be things like exploring different styles of toothbrushes, you know, non filming toothpastes. My, one of my kids has to have a non filming toothpaste because the feel of the foam in her mouth makes her gag, you know, and for a long time.

Jen: We we're focused on just brush your freaking teeth. We miss that.

Laura: Or try to like you enough to like make it it playful enough to you know, to get you to do the thing that's still controlling, right? So, it's really about understanding our kids and their needs. So I guess one of the things I would love to talk about, that you kind of, you bring up in your book. Why is it so hard? So, we've talked about kids needs. I'd love to talk about the parents needs. You said before that, that we are able to have needs that we're entitled to have our needs that we're human beings, you know, worthy of having our needs met too. And I feel like that is something that is so easy to say and yet so hard for us to truly believe sometimes for some parents. Why is it so hard for us to really believe that? 

Jen: Yeah. So I'm wondering if you'd be willing to to go on a little journey with me and I'm feeling a little hesitant about it because of the way that you raised this earlier. So you, you talked about your ADHD diagnosis, right? And how that had sort of put a different lens on characteristics about yourself you'd had a hard time with and I'm guessing that you were punished and shamed for doing some of these things and maybe rewarded for doing the opposite of some of these things. And I'm wondering if you'd be willing to share with us, what were some of the things that you were rewarded for doing and some of the things that you were punished and shamed for doing. 

Laura: So I was, let's see, I mean, ii, I, as a sensitive person, I think I experienced a lot of things as shaming that perhaps were intended to be. I just want to preface that by like, I, I have lovely parents who made lots of human mistakes and we have a good relationship. You know, just in case they're listening, I love you, mom and dad. You know, they don't often listen. But I think, I mean, gosh, I mean, I was careless and disorganized with things, you know, like there was definitely morality, you know, as a part of tidiness and being able to keep things organized and not losing my homework or for getting my lunch box or leaving like money laying around. Like my parents had a an envelope titled Laura's found money that if they found my money laying around the house, they would put it in there and I would have to like, I don't know, like beg and grovel to get it back out in order to be able to use it. So, I mean, there those are some of the things, but I, I was also very, very shy, I'm extremely introverted. I know people find that hard to believe because I do a job like this. But um, you know, the speaking engagements take a lot out of me energetically. And so I was definitely pressured to hide that part of myself to be outgoing, what I didn't really feel like to be friendly to, oh gosh, to not be dramatic or so sensitive, you know, all of those things and I was highly rewarded for academic success and like athletic competence too. 

Jen: Okay, okay. So thank you, thank you for sharing that.

Laura: Sorry, that’s a lot.

Jen: Sorry, you cut out. What did, what did you say? 

Laura: It was too much. Sorry. 

Jen: Oh, no, no, no, not at all. So, so I do, I've been doing a lot of workshops with parents and with teachers about the ideas in the book. And so we, we sort of in a way, we kind of started a little bit back to front in this conversation that we started out talking about the tools and the book starts in a very different place. The book starts by helping us to understand how we've been impacted by really big social forces like white supremacy, patriarchy and capitalism. And so the, the reason that I asked you what kinds of things that you were rewarded and punished for doing was because we can see how these fit within the framework of those social ideas, right? And so when we, when firstly, if we start with white supremacy, Tema Okun did some work. It was probably about 20 years ago now to to think about how white supremacy showed up in in organizations. And more recently, an anti racist educator named Amanda Gross has translated that into how it shows up in families. And and so I just want to be clear about what’s what white supremacy is, right? It's not about hating white people. I'm white, this is, this is a, a system of power and dominance where whiteness is valued and white ways of being in the world are valued. And so what are white ways of being in the world? Well, white ways of being in the world are perfect, right? You're perfect. You do everything perfectly every time. Things like being careless, being disorganized, being untidy, forgetting things. None of those are perfect. 

Laura: No, definitely not. 

Jen: Right?

Laura: Yeah. 

Jen: There very often, I also see sort of this fear of open conflict as well. The idea that there are people whose, whose comfort deserve to be protected at all costs and it it's not like they even make. 

Laura: My dad’s.Yes. 

Jen: Yes. Okay. So, so now we're starting to see links with patriarchy, right? Very often. There's a male figure sitting at the top of the household who who is afraid of conflict, who is defensive when there is conflict. And if, if anybody raises a need or says the way that we're doing things right now is not working for me, then that person shuts that down at all costs, right? It's not okay to threaten my sense of comfort, my sense of safety. You are the problem. You need to stop doing this thing that is threatening me. And oh, now we put that little bit of ourselves in a box and we say, okay, I, I, I know I can't show that part of myself to my dad. I have this need, but I'm just gonna put it over here and kind of pretend that it's not there anymore. And then over time we forget that it's even in there. And then we're shocked that we have no idea what our needs are. 

Laura: And okay. And so, oh sorry, I, you froze for a second there. So that makes complete sense. You know, we've put it in this box, we've walked things away. What is the, why do we do that? Why did as kids do we do we put those things away. It's not like a child is thinking like, oh I'm embedded in patriarchy and I need to make sure I do this, you know, like what if, what is going on in the child's mind when this is happening? 

Jen: So the child is thinking I need love and care and acceptance and belonging more than anything else. And these parents, these caregivers, whoever, whoever my caregivers are the primary way I can get that right. We adults have other places, we can get that kind of support. We have partners, we have our own parents, maybe. We have friends we have therapists, we have lots of other places that we can get support. Our children basically have us and they look to us for this model of what is acceptable and what is not acceptable. And so, so I, I wanna be clear that our parents didn't do this to hurt us, right? They didn't say I'm gonna do this on purpose. I'm gonna hurt my child. Our parents looked out into the world and saw, oh my goodness, Laura is never going to be successful if she is this careless, this disorganized, this untidy, if she forgets this many things. And so I am going to train her, which may hurt her a little bit right now, but I have to do it, right? There's no alternative because if Laura goes out into the world with all of these capacities, right? The the shyness, the introversion, which is, you know, the opposite of what a good girl is like. Yeah, a good girl is supposed to be out there and making friends with people and managing everybody else's feelings, not primarily taking care of her own feelings. 

The the academic success, right? That's linked to capitalism and, and and how your your brain power was valued because it could get you success in the world because it could buy you things, right? Our parents saw all of the things implicitly or explicitly and they they may not have had the language to be able to say oh yeah, I see white supremacy. I see patriarchy. I see capitalism they may have just seen, oh, yeah, Laura. Laura's gonna get punished for, for, for for, for being careless, for, for forgetting things, for being too shy. So I'm gonna make sure that she doesn't do those things too much now and it may hurt her a little bit and, and that's an acceptable price to pay because I think she's gonna be better off in the long run. And so when I work with parents, the the this has not been a positive experience for the majority of them that this shutting their feelings down in a box has not resulted in them doing better in the world. This is a process that really hurt us even though our parents did it with the absolute best of intentions because they wanted our success. 

Laura: Yeah. And how does, how does do the echoes of that impact us now as parents? 

Jen: Yes. So, so very often what we see is that parents can kind of keep a lid on it and I was really good at this, keeping, keeping a lid on the whole thing until I became a parent, right? And then we become parents and then maybe our child gets to the same developmental stage that we got to when we started getting careless, disorganized, untidy, right? Forgetting things. And then all of a sudden there is this massive internal conflict inside the parent and it, and it's like, you know, if you're, if you're listening to this podcast and you believe in respectful parenting, you probably want your child to be able to express their whole selves and to know that their whole self is lovable and acceptable. And then there's that part of you that got shot in the box that, that's thinking, but I would have been punished for doing all those things. This is not cool. They're, they're never gonna be able to succeed in life if they don't learn now. But, but wait, I want them to be able to know they're lovable and acceptable. But, and so there's this massive sort of tension and that's where. Yes. Yeah, I, I, that's where I, I see a lot of parents show up in my taming your triggers workshop because that's when we start yelling at our kids that the whole thing just kind of explodes out and it seems like it's coming out of nowhere, but sometimes in our mother's voice and it's not coming out of nowhere. It's coming out of all of the feelings and needs that we stuffed down into that box for so long. 

Laura: Okay. And so part of it sounds like part of the solution is starting to recognize our children's needs really committing to that as, you know, committing to our values and making sure that what we're doing, what in and what we're enacting in our home is conscious and aware and, and driven by kind of the child in front of us and what we value, where does it cut? Like where does our own kind of work come in to play? Because for me doing that kind of like, I don't know, like white knuckling through that is exhausting and impossible to do for a long term. So how can we make this? You know, I, I, again, I love how you talk about our needs but for a person who's been suppressing their needs, you know, not even recognizing that they have them for so long and that the needs of, you know, thinking what like you were just, you just illustrated the thinking that these needs that I have not only are, you know, do I have them? But having them makes me unlovable. The very act of having them makes me unlovable. That's why they were shut away. So then how do we go about accepting? Like, I mean, you do a great job of teaching us how to be aware of the needs that we have. 

How do we go about accepting that we have them in the first place that we have that we have them and giving ourselves permission to advocate for them without so much guilt around it. In your book, you give this, I'm sorry. In this, in your book, you give this example about and setting boundaries around like the, the child wants. I don't know, a blue cup instead of the red cup and the parent who perhaps has been up four times and now just wants to sit, being able to say, you know, you're welcome to go get the cup that you want. I'm, I'm not willing to get up right now. And that feels, I know for so many parents reading that they are thinking to themselves. I could never do that. I would feel so guilty. I, that would, I could never do that to my child. You know, and at the same time, every time we don't set those boundaries, we're abandoning ourselves in the same way. We were forced to abandon ourselves growing up, you know? So what, what do we do with that? 

Jen: Yeah. Yeah. And I would say not only are we abandoning ourselves, but we are perpetuating the cycle of trauma, right? We are teaching our own children. It is not okay for a parent to have boundaries. And then they take on that lesson too and then they struggle with setting boundaries just as much as we struggle with setting boundaries, which for most of us has not had a positive impact in our lives either. So, so I think maybe there's sort of three components to this. The first is, is sort of the insight and for some, for some parents that really shifts a lot. And I, I will say that I think that happens for me primarily I'm guessing because of the autism because I process things very cognitively. And I, I still remember an episode that I did on intergenerational trauma. This was probably like five years ago now. And it, it was actually in the interview when I realized the source of one of my biggest triggers is being interrupted and why that is and, and that it was because my father who was a teacher would, I, I mean, I remember this period where it was like every day for a month, he would come home and I would have done something wrong and I don't even remember what the things wrong were, but there would just be this lecture of upwards of an hour where I was not permitted to say anything. And, and, and I would just shut right. 

I would just mentally, I was not there anymore. I would say yes and, and not at the appropriate intervals. And and I would just mentally disappear. And so, you know, that, that idea that I'm not allowed to have my own ideas. And so when my husband would interrupt me, I would just explode out of nowhere. I mean, it seems like it's out of nowhere and, and the, the insight that I gained through that conversation made me see, oh, that's where that comes from. And it's really weird, but I it's still irritating to me, but I do not explode anymore. I haven't exploded anymore since I got that insight. So, for some parents that insight is enough. Right? That, that makes sense. Now, I understand where it came from. Sometimes that's enough to really make a difference. Another big piece of this is, it can seem like this stuff comes out of nowhere but very often it doesn't. So when we, when our child asks us for the green spoon and we get up and we get the green spoon, we put our need for nourishment and for rest on hold there is probably something in our bodies that says, oh, this isn't right for you. There's a little tension in our shoulders, in our chest, in our stomach, in our neck, in our, in our head. Some, somewhere around those areas. Just usually this little twinge that says, yeah, that, that's, that's not right. It's not meeting your need. And then we go through our day and we ignore these things. We don't pay attention to them very often. We don't even see that they're there and then we get to the end of the day and it's bedtime and we have been busy all day and we're relying on that hour after our children go to bed for our self care time because we haven't had any of our needs met throughout the day. 

And our children resist getting into bed and we explode and we wonder why and, and a big part of it is that we have not had our needs met and we do not know how to recognize the signals our bodies are trying to tell us to say, oh little little need here. They need pay attention and, and so it builds up and builds up and builds up throughout the day. And so we can learn to start to pay attention to those physical signs that say you have a little need, like, you know, a little little flag here and we can start to pay attention to those things. And then I think the third piece of it is obviously the biggest piece is is, is the worthiness piece, right? I am not worthy of having needs. I am not worthy of expressing needs. I'm not worthy of getting needs met. And I mean, I think there is there is a role for therapy in this work, right? If that is a deeply, deeply, deeply entrenched belief, I do think that therapy can be helpful. I've been preparing a lot for a module of content in my membership on internal family systems and and doing some of that work myself as well. And and I think there's also value in seeing that this is, this is not all of me, right? This is not all of me that cannot cope in this situation, that is unworthy that there is a part of me, there is a part of me that is struggling with this. And I think sometimes seeing it as a part of you can help it to feel like that. Actually, maybe we can find some movement here that this is not a, a like a set in stone. And I'm always going to be like this and there's nothing I can do to change that. There is a part of me that is feeling like this and that maybe if I can witness that part and the pain that that part has experienced at thinking that they are unworthy, then I might be able to believe that I in, in my sort of my wholeness of myself is, is actually worthy of getting my needs met. 

Laura: Well, I love that you brough IFS into it. I, I love that that's starting to get more play in the parenting world. I've been teaching IFS in my parenting from within program for years now. And I just, I, I love it. It's my favorite, like one of my favorite modalities of therapy, even though there's very little research behind it. You know? It's.

Jen: There is, it is shocking how little research there is. 

Laura: It's one of those things that just makes such intuitive sense to me, you know, the, the idea of parts. When I first learned about it in grad school, I was like, oh, well, this all just makes sense, you know? But, you know, and.

Jen: There's that insight, right? 

Laura:  Yes. Yeah. 

Jen: It can be a big help. 

Laura: Yes. I mean, the, you know, for me, the, a lot of the work, you know, that people, I feel like inner child work and rearing is really having its moment in the parenting world too. And I see those two things as you know, largely interchangeable, finding the modality that helps you understand. And then doing that work is really where it's at. So I really like presenting people with a variety of modalities. Here are lots of the options, dive into the one that really fits well for you and you know, whatever helps you offer yourself compassion and see your humanity, your wholeness. And because that's what the part like, that's what IFS really ultimately is about is learning to see yourself the self as a, as a a being within you that helps all these parts kind of is leading the family system that's within you and seeing yourself as a whole being a multifaceted person where all parts are valued and all parts are worthy. What I love about IFS is that it really feels like respectful and conscious parenting on the inside as we are respectful and conscious parenting on the outside in our family. It just feels very like echoey and lovely to me. Like when that resonance is happening.

Jen: Yes, when it, when it fits right, when the pieces fit together. 

Laura: Yeah.

Jen: And I just actually, I just did an episode on public vagal theory, shocking little research there as well and a lot of struggling.

Laura: Oh my goodness, you know, I, I listened to that episode and I was like, so scared that you were going to say like, so let's not talk about it anymore. And I was like, oh, but no, it's so helpful and I'm so glad you came to the conclusion that you did that. It is just so helpful in understanding ourselves and understanding our kids. And so I, I love, again, I, I do love the direction you've taken and kind of being willing to entertain, like, see the value in things that maybe aren't so supported, but make a lot of good sense. And help people, you know?

Jen: And helps you know where it landing.

Laura: Yeah. 

Jen: Yeah. Is, is that if this makes sense to you, if this helps you to explain your experience, it doesn't really matter what it did for a statistically significant sample of other people, right? Especially if it's low cost, which IFS really can be, you can, you can just do it by yourself. And so, so I, I think that that's where the, the research becomes more important is if you're spending multiple thousands of dollars on a treatment, you sort of want some evidence that it's more effective than another treatment. But if this is, you know, 10 minutes of your time going into yourself and paying attention to yourself, it's probably gonna have some, some kind of benefit. And so the the research is less important than does this particular modality fit with your worldview and your belief in in what can help you and if it does, it probably will and if it doesn't, then you probably want to look for for something else, so.

Laura: Yes and so just to talk a little bit about kind of what that looks like in practice for me. So a again, like I continue to work on advocating for my own needs and setting those boundaries. A recent one that I've been playing with it, I'm having some hormone and health issues and my Doctor is like because of cortisol levels, I have to be in bed, like with the lights off at 8:30 every night. That's really hard as a parent, especially like my kids are getting older. They want to stay up later than that, but I have to be in bed. And so when my, you know, almost my tween child, I don't know, she turned 11 yesterday, so she's a tween now wild wants to stay up later and chat with me in bed, you know, because that's what bigger kids do. They want to unload their brains before bed. I have to sometimes set the boundary of. You're welcome to stay here, but I need to turn my brain off and I need to read. And so I won't be talking anymore, but you're welcome to stay here and read with me. 

Sometimes that is upsetting to her and they're storming out. And so then after she's out of the room. I have to have a little conversation with little Laura inside around it’s okay for me to have needs. It's okay for her to have her feelings and they don't necessarily mean that I'm being uncaring or unloving towards her. It's okay for me to prioritize my health and my sleep and, you know, just having this little, almost like a little, like I put my hand on my heart and close my eyes and envision myself like holding a little Laura, like in a little, like on my lap crisscross on the floor. That's what I do. And is the inner child work? Is it IFS, I don't know, but it feels good. It feels comforting because there's a little part of me that's really worried about my child, feeling rejected in ways that I was rejected as a child, you know? And so, I mean, but that's what it looks like in practice and.

Jen: Yeah, and I don't feel like. And then also maybe there are ways that you, maybe there are ways that you could explore at a different time, right? Not at bedtime and, and say, hey, I, I'm seeing that you're, you have a need for connection in the evenings and that's really important to me. I want to feel connected to you as well and I, I want you to get that need met. And, and also I know that rest is really important to me right now and rest often looks like this, right? It can look like reading, it can and these are all strategies you're using to meet your need for rest, right? Being in bed, reading, maybe having the lights off at, at, at, at a certain point. And so then we're looking for, how can we meet both of our needs? What kinds of things could we do that could meet our child's need for connection and also meet your need for rest and they don't happen to have, have to happen in that exact same moment. Right. Yes. It can be nice to connect right before bed. Connecting at other times is also nice. So are there ways we can build more connection earlier into the day so that we have more capacity for you to be resting later in the day.

Laura: Yes. Oh, we've had lots of iterations of that conversation and it's an on like a work in progress, you know, we're trying things and I think that that's one other thing that I, I appreciated it in your work is that we are not going to get it right every, you know, at the beginning, right? So just because one solution doesn't work right off the bat or if it works for a little while and then we have to come back to it. That's okay. Those are teaching really good skills for our kiddos to learn how to solve problems. See each other's needs, understanding that needs are changing all the time. And that when one, all the time and when one need is being consistently met, all of a sudden a new need, you know, starts clamoring for attention and then we have to address that one. You know, this is just part of being human. 

Jen: Yeah. Absolutely. And, and so recognizing that wholeness in each of us, right? Is, is what we're doing here, which is what we were not allowed to do when we were children. And, and that's how this breaks the cycle of trauma for the next generation. 

Laura: Yeah. And, and it does, I think it really does to be able to regulate ourselves and comfort ourselves in the midst of holding a boundary and kind of not abandoning ourselves. I think it is a really important modeling for our kids. 

Jen: Yeah.

Laura: And it's still hard to do. And what's nice too about being an adult is that we have other resources where we can go and get that support and affirmation, you know, is there we can check in with our partners or with our friends around it. Am I being like, am I being too needy by saying I have by setting this boundary with my child and get that feedback, you know, from other people from outside sources, who hopefully will affirm your right to have needs and get them met. I, I think finding community is really important. I know you haven't a section on that in your book. But I, I know that the folks who are in my membership find that community and that supports here. I'm sure that the people who are in your membership also find that community. Do you have any other places where they can go to get support from you or kind of start building some of that community? 

Jen: Yeah. So, I mean, I have a free Facebook group as well and I know you do too. So that's, that's one place. The taming your triggers workshop that I run can be a place to kind of process this stuff. And I often find that, that it's not so much that taking on new information that makes a difference. It's actually processing that in community with others because other people have questions that you didn't even know that you had. And you're like, oh yeah, that's a thing for me too. I didn't even know it until you said it. And it's sort of short circuits in a way the process of learning. And so, yeah, so, so workshops, memberships and that and that kind of thing. But I think the book is a, is a great place to start and I'm trying to live my post capitalist values. It's available on a gift economy basis on my website at yourparentingmojo.com/book. And so you can, if you would like to support my work and, and you have the financial capacity to do that and you would like to pay more than the cover price, you can do that. If you would like to accept it as a form of reparations for me, if you identify as buck, then feel free to pay a lower price or if you're having trouble affording it. And sort of trying to, to live my values every day. Even as I, I'm existing within a capitalist system where I also have bills to pay. 

Laura: That's awesome. I love seeing you. I live it that way. Was your publisher okay with that? Like, did you have to negotiate that? Is it okay for me to ask that? 

Jen: Yes. Yes, it is. Yes. And I hope that everybody hears this and says, oh, I can negotiate that with my publisher too. 

Laura: Yeah. Right. That's so cool. 

Jen: It had to be an ebook and not a PDF. I, I'm not sure why there was that condition on it. But yeah, I think there's a certain website where you can buy a lot of things that's named after a river that is less than happy about these kinds of things. But I think they figure, you know, there's probably not so much of a chance they're going to find out and that it's, it's okay. So, yeah, they, they're actually on the board with it. 

Laura: That's awesome. Good. Good for you. That's great. Well, Jen, thank you so much for having this kind of, I don't know, meandering conversation. I always love chatting with you and picking your brain. It's really lovely to have colleagues in that sense that we're in this together. I know parents need that feeling too. So it's so good to be able to point folks to good resources where they can feel like they have support doing this really hard thing of learning how to parent in our values. So, thank you. I appreciate you so much. 

Jen: Yeah. Thanks for having me. It was lovely to see you again. It's been a while. 

Laura: It has. Hopefully it won't be so long. Next time I would love to maybe even have a deeper dive into like neurodiversity and affirming identities. That would be a really cool conversation to have. 

Jen: Yeah. Yeah. I've learned a lot about that in the last couple of years. 

Laura: Yeah. Okay.

Okay, so thanks for listening today. Remember to subscribe to the podcast and if it was helpful, leave me a review that really helps others find the podcast and join us in this really important work of creating a parenthood that we don't have to escape from and creating a childhood for our kids that they don't have to recover from. 

And if you're listening, grab a screenshot and tag me on Instagram so that I can give you a shout-out, and definitely go follow me on Instagram. I'm @laurafroyenphd. That's where you can get behind the scenes. Look at what balanced, conscious parenting looks like in action with my family, and plus I share a lot of other, really great resources there too.

All right. That's it for me today. I hope that you keep taking really good care of your kids and your family and each other and most importantly of yourself. And just to remember, balance is a verb and you're already doing it. You've got this!

Episode 177: What Parents Need to Know About Teen Suicide with AnneMoss Rogers

In this episode, we're diving into a very difficult yet vital topic – suicide among children and teens. This episode may be triggering to some, so please give yourself grace and compassion as you consider whether or not to listen to this episode.

If you or someone you know needs support there is help available here:

Crisis text line 741-741

Suicide & Crisis Lifeline 988

International Association for Suicide Prevention - IASP

I'm joined by AnneMoss Rogers, a mental health motivational speaker, suicide prevention speaker and trainer who became an expert educator on the subject of mental health after her son's death by suicide. She’s the author of two mental health books: Diary of a Broken Mind and Emotionally Naked. Together, we'll explore the critical insights and vital information that parents need to know about teen suicide.

Here are some of the topics we covered in this episode:

  • AnneMoss's journey through the loss of a child to suicide 

  • How to identify indicators of mental health struggles

  • Discerning normal curiosity vs. signs needing attention in kids discussing death

  • Distinguishing self-harm and suicide

  • How to handle a child's suicidal thoughts

  • Seeking risk assessment

  • Advocacy steps for swift support and child well-being as a parent

  • Responding to mental health issues in the community among children

May this discussion empower parents with compassion, open communication, and proactive mental health awareness for preventing suicide in children and teens.

To learn more about AnneMoss Rogers, visit her website mentalhealthawarenesseducation.com and her blog emotionallynaked.com. Follow her on LinkedIn @annemossrogers, YouTube @annemossrogers, Instagram @annemossrogers and Twitter @annemossrogers.

Resources: 


TRANSCRIPT

Parenting is often lived in the extremes. It's either great joy or chaotic, overwhelmed. In one moment, you're nailing it and the next you're losing your cool. I want to help you find your way to the messy middle, to a place of balance. You see balance is a verb, not a state of being. It is a thing you do. Not a thing you are. It is an action, a process, a series of micro corrections that you make each and every day to keep yourself feeling centered. We are never truly balanced. We are engaged in the process of balancing.

Hello, I'm Dr. Laura Froyen and this is The Balanced Parent Podcast where overwhelmed, stressed out and disconnected parents go to find tools, mindset shifts and practices to help them stop yelling at the people they love and start connecting on a deeper level. All delivered with heaping doses of grace and compassion. Join me in conversations that will help you get clear on your goals and values and start showing up in your parenting, your relationships, your life with openhearted authenticity and balance. Let's go! 

Laura: Hello, dear listeners. This is Dr Laura Froyen and on this week's episode of the Balanced Parent Podcast, we're going to be discussing a sensitive topic. How to discuss suicide and self harm with your children and teens. I want to start this episode by emphasizing the profound care and sensitivity with which I've tried to approach this topic. This is a profoundly sensitive and emotionally charged subject that affects individuals and families in deep and lasting ways. My guest and I acknowledge that discussing these matters may trigger some strong emotions or difficult memories. And you are those who are listening along with you. And we want to provide a safe and compassionate space for you as we delve into this important issue. So please let this serve as a content warning.

This episode contains discussions about suicide, depression, emotional mental health struggles in children and teens and myself. We will share stories and statistics that may be distressing for some listeners. Please please consider your own emotional well being before listening and know that it is entirely okay to offer yourself grace and skip this episode if you feel that it may be too difficult for you to handle. If you or someone you know, is struggling with thoughts of self harm or suicide, we urge you to reach out to a trusted friend, family member or mental health professional. In the United States you can simply dial 988 to get support. There's also quite a few options internationally at International Association for Suicide Prevention. iasp.info. It's an international site that kind of collects options for who to contact if you need support based on your country of origin. Please remember that you are not alone and help is available to you. All right, let's go into the episode now. 

Okay, so on this week's episode of the Balanced Parent Podcast, I'm sitting down with Anne Moss Rogers to discuss suicide in our little ones, our young kids, our teens. So, Anne Moss Rogers is a mental health and suicide education expert. She's a speaker and she's here to talk to us about how to have really difficult and challenging conversations with our kids. Conversations that need to happen. Anne Moss, why don't you get us started by just telling us a little bit about who you are, what you do and, and your story, we'd love to hear it. 

AnneMoss: I used to be in advertising and then I owned my, I co-owned a digital marketing firm and around 2010, I was really concerned about my younger Charles. Before then I had seen some signs and of course, the pediatrician, he'll grow out of it. My husband, oh, don't worry about it. He'll grow out of it. And my mo my spidey sent the intuition is saying, you know, it's something more and I, I felt kinda like I was on an island with, with not a lot of help. And I remember we started seeing a therapist simply because my husband and I didn't know what to do, especially when he started using drugs and alcohol. I would find out later he had drugs and alcohol to numb those feelings of suicide.

And to any other painful feelings which of course doesn't resolve anything but it gets you addicted and it pushes it away, making it something bigger later. And it robs you of the ability to develop other coping strategies. But of course, he's a teenager and guess what? In the moment it works. So, why not, why not use that? And isn't it better to use drugs and alcohol instead of killing himself? And, I mean, who can answer that? You know? I mean, so he was chosen to be on homecoming quarter, sophomore year and I think to everybody in the stands that you're looking down, they must have thought how, you know, she's got one son who actually is elected homecoming king and the other one is on the court that that family must have it made. We did not have it made and I wasn't trying to keep it a secret, but I can tell you nobody really wanted to talk about it. 

And I remember going to that counselor going. Are there any groups that we could go to? No, none that I know of which is so stupid. Why wouldn't you know the resources? So every clinical social worker counselor type meeting I have, I let them know there are parent, parental support sources and here they are one being NAMI family support group in every state or available on Zoom. NAMI family to family, which is a six weeks course on living with someone with mental illness. And then there's families anonymous and smart recovery, both have ones related more to the addictions and substance misuse, which often happens with mental and we have family support as well.

I would eventually go to families anonymous. And meanwhile, my son, we have to basically kidnap him out of his bed and take him to a wilderness program. And because he's just taking all these really dangerous risks he's using and using more and more dangerous drugs, taking greater chances. And I'm like, he is not gonna live if, if he stays here much longer and there is nothing I could do to stop it. And that's when you really realize as a parent how helpless you are, because you think, oh, I'll just take away the car keys. I remember one parent telling me, oh, well, my kid does drugs. I just put that sort of thing. It doesn't go on in our household all hardy. Like, well, I got it made, I would later find out that her son was a drug dealer and the way I found that out is that fileware  on my son's computer and I would see her again and she would kinda have that haughty attitude with me.

And I remember being, feeling sorry for her, but also wanting to go and say, you know, your kid is selling drugs on Facebook, Messenger, right? You're, you're aware of that. But I, I didn't do that. I'm not vindictive, I'm vindictive for about two seconds in my head. And then I get to a place where that's just cruel and I probably would have told her if I thought she might have been receptive, but I don't think she would have been. So fast forward, he goes to wilderness therapeutic. He ends up not really using the coping skills he learned and he becomes addicted to heroin and I don't know this at all. And it's kind of crazy that I don't know it, but he would text his drug dealer. Drug dealer would come to the front of the house and deliver the drugs to him in the car. He would do the drugs in the car. It was heroin. I thought you had to shoot it up. He snorted it and then he would come back in the house and he would sleep it off. Well, it's 2 a.m. and guess what, I'm sleeping. So we didn't really know. And I mean, I saw some odd behavior and things that were suspect, but I'll be honest with you, my child would do heroin, not my kids. No way. 

Laura: Yeah. 

AnneMoss: You know, we were good then, you know, we've gone through all this trouble. Therefore, somehow to me that built some kind of wall. We would find out he was addicted when the police came back and showed me pictures of him selling my family silverware at a pawn shop. And I just didn't know what to do with that information, at first. Of course, on one side it's like, oh, he's definitely using drugs and the other. Like, no, there's another reason for that, you know, there's that side that doesn't want to believe.

Laura: Doesn't want it to be true. Sure. 

AnneMoss: So I end up and I am really proud of how I handle this stuff. I sat down with my child gently, calmly without yelling. And I said, the police came back and they showed me pictures of you selling our family silver. I looked in the box, there's one spoon left, I suspect drug use. His dad was on the speaker phone, by the way. I said, why don't you tell us what's been happening? And he goes into this big story and I listened to the whole thing and he goes, well, do you believe me? And I just said, you know, Charles, that is some story. And then you know what I did? I shut up. I said nothing. I didn't lecture. I didn't ask more questions. If we leave those stretches of silence, it gives our kids a moment to process the information and a lot of really rich valuable information can, can come in those silences if we shut up long enough. 

Laura: Yeah. 

AnneMoss: And that's what I did. And then he would eventually and it probably wasn't more than a minute. But it, it felt like a long time. 

Laura: Yeah. Those silences can feel really long.

AnneMoss: Right. And he, he confesses to, he thinks he may be addicted to an opiate. He never says heroin because heroin is, you know, ugly and dripping with stigma, you know, wants to really be associated as a heroin addict. And I and Chales didn't want to be that, you know, he didn't start all this to, to grow up to be, you know, addicted to heroin. He would go to detox and rehab to recovery house and then he would relapse. They would take him back to detox. He saw a friend of his there and they left together and for two weeks, we didn't really know where they are.

Were we got the occasional text and we got each, got a call. Here's what I wish I would have done kind of in the mode of, well, we gotta do the tough love thing. We've done everything else. Charles wasn't a tough little kid, because to him, tough love was kind of weaponizing my love and saying, well, if you're not well, we don't love you anymore and you're useless to us. I didn't think that, but that's how he translated it, because this is a very loving child. Always, our love was really important. 

Our family was really important. And I mean, this is a kid you walked in his room and he had all the family pictures up on the wall and by the way, them on the wall because when you struggle without the suicide, that would stop him were those family pictures. I had no idea that's why I had them up on the wall. But I would read later, that's why I did. So he's out there for two weeks. Here's what I wish I would done. I wish I would have called him every day and I wish I would have text him as much as I want you to get well.

I love you even if you don't, allowing him to understand that he may not be living in our house or allowed to live in it and he couldn't because we were moving and we had nowhere to live in the 10 weeks between the time we sold the house and moved into the other one. So we were living in various AirBNBs and I mean, he hadn't been with us to live in a recovery house. So I didn't have accommodations for him too. And he would call me on a Friday afternoon. 

I didn't realize it was our last phone call and you know, it didn't go real well and I was emotionally bereft. I did not handle this. Well, he's yelling and I yelled back and that's never the right thing to do. We should always, we're the adults. If we start yelling, it escalates their behavior and they're just gonna get in that vortex of emotion. And we need to avoid that by staying out of that vortex of emotion and keeping and check our own emotions. But I was so emotionally spent with the house selling and him being out there. And we just, we had only known about the drug addiction for maybe 30 days or actually less.

But if, let's just say 30 days, so I didn't even wrap my arms around it. And then the police came and met us in the parking lot of where we were eating dinner. One night they called my husband's cell phone. They said we're gonna meet you right there. And they delivered the worst news of our lives and told us they had found our son dead, and then they told us it was a suicide and the method lepto question.That line felt like this extra twist of the knife. And at the time, I'm like, I must be the worst mother on earth. I mean, didn't he know we loved him? Why would he do this to us? But he didn't do this to us. 

He did it to himself. He thought he would burden and that the world would be better off without him, including us. He thought he was doing us a favor. You know, he's addicted, he's worthless. And wouldn't our family be much better without that all the anguish he caused.  That's what he thought. And I understand that now and I didn't understand why suicide for a long time. And it took me years to get there, so I sold my digital marketing business. I got training and then I talked to probably now hundreds of people with lived experience, because I wanted to understand what that moment was like.

And it's different for everyone. But, you know, some people have lived with thoughts of suicide since they were eight years old and have lived with those thoughts. Other people might have once or twice in their life and it never revisits or come up, comes up. So there's all types of living with this. But I think it's really important as parents to recognize those signs because Charles did leave, oh just big signs. And I didn't recognize them because I wasn't educated what they were. 

Laura: Anne Moss, I just wanna, before I jump into questions because I have them. I just, I just, I want to express my compassion for you and my gratitude that you've turned such a painful moment in your family's history into an opportunity for all of us to reduce suffering in the world and to learn more. So I just, I really appreciate your bravery and willingness to do that.

AnneMoss: Laura I didn't think I could survive pain like that. I've never felt anything like that ever in my life. I mean, for a year I would curl up on the floor and just scream and cry and kick the ball about how unfair it was. And you know, you wanna go back and redo everything because you see the errors afterwards, you see what you missed and that's agonizing and I just don't want other parents to miss. I mean, you know, you might be in a situation we can't prevent all suicides, but we can do the best we can.

And I have gotten to a place, it took me a lot of time and a lot of work where I have forgiven myself, where I've learned to see joy again, where I've learned to live without the one that I love and it was hard and it doesn't mean that I've forgotten him or don't think about him or have some difficult times, but it's not like it was at first time and a lot of work has sort of removed the fangs of, of that. Don't feel like I'm walking broken glass with bare feet anymore. 

Laura: Yeah. Yeah. Well, II, I so appreciate the, the desire to want to do as much as we can. So, what are some of the signs that we can be looking for as parents? 

AnneMoss: So, a lot of times it's really natural for our teenager to sort of pull away from us and you know, what their friends do and say seems to be more important. But if they're pulling away from you and the front and they're isolating, that is a warning sign. 

Laura: Okay. 

AnneMoss: And, and a very important one, you want to look for like multiple traits. Kids who get sick a lot, go to the school nurse a lot. They're often to struggle with maybe depression and anxiety and maybe at higher risk of suicide. You know, their stomach hurts, their muscle hurts, they get more headaches, they may get more flu and, you know, be more prone to get COVID. And that was short. I mean, I knew the first name of every nurse of every school he ever went to and they knew me and had me on speed dial back when there was a thing called speed dial. And so lots of times they'll draw pictures.

Younger kids may draw a lot of pick out death. They may write papers in English class or at home or tell stories about death. They may talk about death, a lot. Charles talked about death a lot. Taking a lot of risks like crazy risk, like doesn't he know that's going to like kill him? And there's a fine line between that thrill seeker and the one who's taking risks who basically doesn't care if they live or die, like if it happens by accident, then I've, I've solved all my problems. 

Laura: Yeah, I can, I, so I, I really appreciate that kind of fine line distinction. I feel very curious about some of the other things that you've mentioned that can also be developmentally normal. Like there's developmental stages where kids do get more interested in death or if they've lost a grandparent or a pet, they might talk more about it. How can we as parents be discerning and figuring out what's normal and what might need a little bit more attention and then what do we do if we're seeing some of these signs? What's the first step in?

AnneMoss: So Charles would consistently talk about dying young. So while, and we even as a teenager, you know, mom, I might die, I'll probably die young, I'll probably never have children and not get married and then talked about all the people who did die young. And it could be just a curious conversation and instead of being struck down, we need to ask the question. I'm so curious about that. What made you think of that? Start asking more questions and get to the bottom of it. So it sounds like you think about death a lot. Tell me more about that. Do not shame them, do not humiliate them. Remember to ask all questions related to suicide or death with curiosity. And if they've lost a grandparent, that's, you know, if they're younger, you wanna sort of define their maturity of, of the, of understanding because to some kids, it's like, well, the grandmother's gonna come back by magic because I see that on cartoons, you know?

Laura: Right.

AnneMoss: Or, or a video game. So they don't have a mature concept of debt. So let's say your, your child is at school and they've run out into the street when they were upset or they could have been experiencing suicidal ideation. This came on in a flash and they are left in a flash and they decided to run out and, and that is suicidal ideation for a younger child.

Laura: RIght.

AnneMoss: But they don't know what suicidal thoughts are they don't even know what the word suicide means. So you would add. So if you were to ask a teenager, are they? And you wanna know if they're thinking of suicide, you want to say, are you thinking of suicide? For a younger child, you want to say, were you trying to make yourself dead? So you wanna find out, was there some intention behind the act? Now, it may be different when you talk to them because they would have come out of that sort of spell for lack of a better phrase because when somebody and this isn't for everyone, but when they're in suicidal thought they can be in sort of a trance like place where they don't have full control over their actions. You know? So the, these thoughts keep coming, they're so painful. They're so persistent and intense.

Laura: And intrusive.

AnneMoss: Very intrusive. But when I talk and then I'm like that real but intense part just like my grief last 60 to 90 seconds. So stick it out because it's gonna drop off and it may get intense again, but it's gonna drop off and you're gonna feel ambivalent. And then I can always tell when somebody's coming out of it. Like, for instance, there was a friend of mine on a bridge and all of a sudden she said it's really cold out here and I'm like, bingo, she's coming out of it because the whole time she's like, I'm worthless.

Nobody loves me. And I just, it's really important to listen to that person and, and not, and not try to fix it. But I gotta, and, and also say what they say. So, they'll talk about death a lot. They'll say I'm so worthless. I can't do this anymore. Oh, I have a solution to fix this. I feel so overwhelmed. I just to die. I'm going to kill myself. Funny that when people say I'm going to kill myself, how the parent will say, oh, well, because they said it, therefore they're not gonna do it. Now they're telling you because they want to talk about it. 

Laura: Yeah. 

AnneMoss: Parents don't wanna ask that question. Are you thinking of suicide? Because what's the first thing that they think are.

Laura: I mean, I think that a lot of parents are afraid it's going to give the kid ideas that they didn't have before.

AnneMoss: First question I got last night from a student. And it's always the first question. Even if I put it in the presentation from parents. Won't it plant the idea in their head? The answer is no. I will say the flip side of that is if they're at school and exposed to the suicide of a student and they're going through that period, they are at higher risk. But talking about it, talking about it doesn't give them the idea, but instead gives them the opportunity to talk about it and what you'll see most of the time is really leaked. Like my God, finally somebody is.

Laura: Yeah. You know, so I've, I've experienced suicidal ideation my entire, I mean, since I was 13, I think it is the first time I remember really having those thoughts come in. It's not something I talk about often, but I still experience that suicidal ideation from time to time during moments of extreme stress. When my window of tolerance is very low. It's one of the places my, my brain goes. And I can imagine at 13, if a parent had asked me some of those questions, have you ever thought about harming yourself?

Do you ever, you know, think about those things. I would have been so relieved, because I thought I was so crazy as a 13 year old. I thought no one else was thinking these things. I thought I was so bad and so wrong for thinking about them. It took me until college, studying psychology and really into grad school for me to really understand how not alone I was and how not, how common some of those thoughts can be and how much support there was for me. I didn't know as a teenager, it would have been such a relief to have a parent to talk to about it. 

AnneMoss: Wow. Well, I really appreciate you being so vulnerable. I think those stories important and if it weren't for people like you Laura sharing their stories with me, I swear, I would have pulled it up like a napkin and given up. I mean, it was, it was the people who had been through this who so generously shared their hearts and their stories that helped me understand that my son didn't kill himself because I was a crummy mother. And I held on to that for a pretty long time. I also want to point out we do not want to say, are you thinking of harming yourself unless we are talking about self-harm.

Laura: Yeah.

AnneMoss: We want to say, are you thinking of suicide? Are you thinking of killing yourself? And we got to ask it. 

Laura: Yeah, can we talk a little bit about the difference between self harm and the drivers behind self harm versus suicide and what parents should be looking out for as them being kind of two discrete categories. Because I also know that in addition to an uptick in teen suicide and younger and younger suicide, self harm is also something that is very big, very happening almost happens via social media too. Now these kids have so much more to contend with than what we did. Can we talk a little bit about some of the differences and how parents?

AnneMoss:  Absolutely. So self-harm is also called non suicidal self injury. Kids who are self harming are not attempting suicide, but they are attempting a way to sort of release the pain. So you know, somebody who self-harm told me she says, I don't get all this mumbo jumbo in my head. But I get blood and when I would cut myself and I would see the blood. It's like that's what pain is. I understand that. And she said it was a way to sort of release the pain in a way she could understand. 

Laura: That makes sense.

AnneMoss: Yeah. A lot of kids sort of get addicted to it. It's kind of a thrill.

Laura: There’s and adrenaline, yeah.

AnneMoss: Yeah. And they're wanting to feel good. So there, there are a lot of reasons for it. Those are the two main ones, kids who are self harmers are only at higher risk for because they're, they don't fear the pain. So a lot of people will say no, I'm not doing that cause it might hurt while I'm doing it. And if a child who has been self harming is also having those urges, they're just more likely to attempt because that's not a hurdle for them.They've been through the pain from cutting. So it is not a suicide attempt, but that's why the risk is, is greater than other kids. 

Laura: Okay. Thank you for that. So, if we ask our kids this really hard question, are you thinking about killing yourself? Are you thinking about suicide? And they say yes, what do we do besides not freak out at the moment? 

AnneMoss: Well, I'm glad you said that because that's number one don't freak out. And a lot of people don't wanna ask it because they are afraid of the answer. They don't know what to do with it. If that child says yes. And if I leave it alone, then I don't have to deal with it and everything will be okay. That's what your brain is telling you. 

Laura: Yeah. 

AnneMoss: But you need to go what you feel in your gut. So your first reaction might be that sense of panic. You gotta stop and take a deep breath. You have to meet them where they are right now. The most important thing is they are sitting in front of you. They have confessed this to you, which is something I never got. I did not know that that is a gift. It is a huge gift. This child has also opened up to you and shared something so deep, so difficult. They said yes, your first response, I am so honored you trusted me with that information. I know it was hard and I really appreciate you being honest. So we have to, we have to let them know that is a step of courage. It is not a step of a weak person. It is a step of courage. We cannot shame them out of suicidal thoughts. We, you know, did you ever ask to have suicidal thoughts? Was it something you desired or did it? 

Laura: No. You know, I've been, I've spent so much time being ashamed of them.

AnneMoss: Right? So we, we cannot add to that shame. Like we can't say, well, you're not gonna do that again. Right? You know, you can't attempt that cause you mean too much and I understand that when you say that you mean you, I love you too much, mean too much to me. That's not how they're saying it. You're basically telling them you can control this and you're sort of shaming them out of a feeling that they never asked for.

Laura: And then you're making and you're making them responsible for your happiness, too. 

AnneMoss: Right? It's okay for to live because while, because they feel obligated to live before they can engage and move forward and enjoy life on their own, on their own terms. Again, that's okay. But we want that child to find their, their own way and build life skills. As a parent what you wanna do if they've told you that or if they've attempted and they're coming home, you want to just every time they walk in the door, are you okay? What's the matter with you? You know, you're, you're panicked because now you have this knowledge and you don't know what to do with that. So let's talk about before we get there.

What do you actually do when you get that confession? So the next thing you wanna do is get a suicide risk assessment and the safety plan and then you might also want to get a psychological evaluation. So you wanna find out if there is some kind of mental illness driving that it may not cause there are people who don't, who struggle with thoughts of suicide, who don't have a mental illness at all. And there are people with mental illness that do have thoughts of suicide and then there are people who suffer from depression or mental illness and never have the first thought of that ever. 

Laura: Right. Where do you go to get a risk assessment? 

AnneMoss: So, usually your county has a suicide risk assessment and if you are in a rural area, they'll often do it telehealth or they'll do it over the phone. 

Laura: Okay. 

AnneMoss: So there's a Columbia, it's called the Columbia suicide scale. And they'll ask, ask some questions to find out should this person be hospitalized? And I want you to know as parents, we kind of want to put them away and go get fixed. But transitioning to a hospital environment and home is, can be a tricky transition. So that's really a last resort. What we want to do is outpatient type support. If, if we can do that. Now, if your child is crumpled in the corner hasn't, has told you that they're thinking of suicide and you can't even get them to speak and they can't even function.

You're gonna, you're gonna need to take them to the psych facility and usually don't have to call 911. You can say let's get in the car and let's go to a facility and get you suicide risk assessment and see where we are with that. To your best ability you want to tell them what the next steps are or you call and put it on speakerphone. So you're both listening at the same time. 

Laura: You know, what about? So, because of the way all of these resources are over, overtaxed at right now, what if the wait seems too like, too long? What if the wait to get in for a psych eval is too long? Some, I mean, some of the clients that I work with, they, they have to wait six months to a year. What are some steps that you can take as a parent to advocate for your kid and get them more support sooner? 

AnneMoss: So, if your child is having suicidal thoughts and you've called the county and like here it'd be RBHA which is Richmond Behavioral Health Authority and they have a crisis line. You'd call there. They do the suicide risk assessment, which is basically on a scale of 1 to 10. Is this child gonna like attempt tonight? You know, how how serious is it? Where are they right now in their thought process have did before? They'll get a lot of information and they make, you know, an informed decision and then they'll do the safety plan after that, the psychological evaluation in some counties, they'll follow up right away with that with that kind of patient. Some of them they'll make, they'll make them wait.

They're not gonna make you wait for suicide risk assessment. That has to be done. Jan, it's considered an emergency. I don't want parents immediately calling 911 unless their child is sitting in the house with a firearm. And any time you mi mix guns and judges there is risk there. And I mean, not that our police officers are now trained, they handle the situation, but it is a last resort and I would call 988 if you don't have any where else to call or you can text 741741 and you can call if you are worried about someone else and you can call and put it on speaker phone so that your loved one, hears the response that you know, so that you're not keeping them in the dark. 

Laura: Okay. And so we've been talking a lot about our own children. But what if your kid comes to you and tells you that their friend is think having some of these thoughts or been thinking talking about it more and is concerned, what can we do as parents for if it's not just our kid, but it's by a kid in our community. 

AnneMoss: So I, I get that a lot, a parent will say, I don't, I don't know whether I should reach out to that parent or not. And I'll say, well, let me ask you this. Would you want to know about your child's suicide before they attempted and died by suicide or would you want to know after? And usually people are like, okay, I'd want to know before. It may be that you don't know the parent but you know, the child really well and that can be awkward. So maybe you and your child call together and then, you know, and you practice it and you talk about it and say this is gonna be an awkward conversation. It's going to be uncomfortable.

I just know as a mom that I would want to know this and Ashley has something important to share with you. If you do not want or have no contact with this parent, go through the school counselor, tell your school counselor and say, and have your child be involved in this process. Don't cut them out. You want to start taking agencies for their own mental health and their own life and you're teaching them and you're just partnering with them. So you can then tell the school counselor what you know, because you've got to tell another trusted adult that can take action because this is life or death. I mean, you wouldn't want to find out later that, that your son had been talking to two kids who had told their parents and none of them told you because they were afraid of how you're gonna react. 

Laura: Yeah. Absolutely. 

AnneMoss: And that parent usually they don't, but maybe that parent cusses you out screams at you forever. But I would rather have a parent mad at me than a child dead. And that's when, you know, I have got to go to the school counselor now. I can't let this go. 

Laura: Yeah. Yeah. So, I mean, it's a really hard situation but so important that we stick up for all, all kids and do those hard things and teach our kids how to do the hard things. I lost a friend in college. She survived her suicide attempt. But because I called, I got her help afterwards. She would never speak to me again and she disclosed after she had taken, you know, steps towards ending her life. And I, so I, I lost that friendship in college. It was a really hard thing to do as I, you know, I was 19. It was very hard to face that, but that person has a life and a family now too, you know. 

AnneMoss: Right. 

Laura: Yeah, we do lose, we, you know, there are risks. So it's not, it's not like, you know, I think if our, our kids were, I, I think about a child, a teenager in that situation, perhaps being quite worried about losing a friend or them being mad at them or being ostracized. And I think it being the parent being, you need to be really strong and making sure that we're all doing the right thing too at the same time. And I think as parents, we have to be willing to have our kids be mad at us when we're talking about a topic like this, when we're talking about lives. 

AnneMoss: Exactly. And so what you said that number one? Wow. I'm, I'm amazed and really proud that at 19 years old you did the right thing and you took that risk and it, it kicked you in the butt. But, you know, it's kinda like my mom start talk about suicide And the very first time she did it, she reached out to a friend who had lost a child to suicide. And as soon as she called and said, she wanted to talk to them, they hung up on her and she was like in her eighties and she called me and she, she, you know, she was so hurt and I'm like, I just started crying. I said, mom, I'm so proud of you.

And then she got over the hurt because I, that's really coming a long way for her. You know, I mean, this is somebody who never talked about mental health or, or any of the ugly family stuff and reached out to someone and she got the door slammed in her face, but she did it and I was just so proud of her for doing. There was a young lady who called 911, a young man and he had a follow up. So she actually made the right call by calling 911. He had it in his possession and he was telling her over the phone that he was going to kill himself. 

The cops show up at the door. The parents are like, what are you doing here? I had no idea. He's just upstairs in his room. They called the young man down, he comes down and they say, well, mom, we will bring you in this conversation, but we want to talk to him first. Everything's okay. He's not in trouble just to kind of calm her nerves because she's still freaking out what they want to talk about. They talk to him and then they talk to the parent and he ends up going to the ER, he is so ticked off at this young lady called 911. And so the mom calls me and says, oh my gosh, what do I do? He's so mad at her and I said he'll probably call me but I want you to defend what she did and say, you know, it's only because she cares about you that she did what she did and I quite frankly am glad she did that because it saved your life. And where would I be? You know, now, if you hadn't have done that? And that said part two is you need to call this young lady because she's freaking out. 

Laura: Yes. Yes. 

AnneMoss: She has no idea how, you know how you feel and you need to tell her all right, right now he's ticked off, but here's the thing and I am so grateful you, you did the right thing. Thank you so much. I I will not, I can't be more grateful. Let me tell you this child had been freaking, hadn't been sleeping. She was worried nobody was talking to her. And so, you know, just by the fact this mom come a couple of weeks go by, she sends me a picture of the two of them hanging out. So he had called her and told her thank you. And they got to be friends and, you know, this isn't like your 19 year old story. But I think the difference is in this case, the mom said she did the right thing. I'm really proud of her and it was so brave and think about how scared she was to do that. 

Laura: Yeah. 

AnneMoss: And I think a little later on he was able to put on that hat and understand how absolutely frightened she was to make that call. 

Laura: Yeah.

AnneMoss: Because it's hard. I've had to and it is hard and I've had one person get really mad at me, but she got, she was grateful a few weeks later and, but like you could go the other way and I just had to take that chance. 

Laura: Yeah. So I feel like we've spent a lot of time talking about those kind of deeply pivotal moments. I'm kind of curious if we can talk a little bit about how, you know, so as we wrap up, I want to be respectful of your time, I just want to touch on. Is there anything we can be doing as parents to as an earlier prevention? You know, but to prevent that kids getting from that point on to that dark place.

AnneMoss: Right. So first of all, we have to understand why our children aren't developing the skills that we developed as children. Because when the digital age moved in that, which we thought would bring us together, pushed us apart and our kids started getting less face to face time than generations before. Well, that face to face time, time on the playground, negotiating with the neighborhood referee that's not been paid.

You know, that you've got, you know, you gotta figure out if you don't like the call and you stocked up, well, you gotta negotiate yourself back into the game, right? Or you got no friends. So that was kind of my world. Well, our kids aren't getting enough of those opportunities to build the resilience. So we need to start building those in our parenting skills and we need to start building those opportunities in school. And I have a list and now we're not gonna get through them all, but I'm just gonna touch the most important. And the first one is some more and lecture less. Our kids are not feeling seen and hurt, we're lecturing them, we're telling them what to do. And they'll tell you the same things over and over because they do not feel hurt.

Laura:  Yeah.

AnneMoss: And we need to shut up and we need to acknowledge. So, what you're saying is that you think that all your friends hate you? So, tell me more about that. Why do you think that instead of refuting? Oh, that's not true. You're absolutely wonderful. And then being sort of cheerleaders and pushing them into the light. We need to allow them that moment of not being okay of being in pain without punishing them and shaming them and drowning them in toxic positivity and parent cheerleading. 

Laura: Right. 

AnneMoss: And if we do that, they're more likely to come back to us when they're struggling and I'm gonna share one more tip of the night and that is be vulnerable yourself. And I don't mean saddling them with some huge issue, but let's say you're going to work for a new job. You're really, really nervous and you wanna make a good impression and you're feeling really anxious. You may tell your children I have been so angry and irritable and I'm gonna tell you why it has nothing to do with you. And I've been taking it out on you and I'm so embarrassed, but I'm really anxious about this new job and I would really appreciate some random hugs and whatever you can do because I'm not handling this role well, and I will handle it well, and I'm gonna figure out some healthy coping strategies to do that.

But you could help and I would love it if you would help. And the random hugs and the understanding would, would really go a long way. You're giving them some power in a world where they feel unseen, unheard and powerless. When they give you that hug, they're gonna instantly recognize that you turn into limp noodle and you are no longer have the racing heart and the sweatiness. They're gonna understand that they are an important part of helping you. And they learned something in that process and I'm gonna share a story that's so sweet.

So a mom did this. She was starting a new job, her 12 year old and her 9 year old got together and other than doing the random hug, which they did, they started writing notes and they snuck down to where she had made her lunch and they put these notes in her lunch. So she opens it up at noon the first day and the daughter had written a note. I love you mom. I hope you're not feeling nervous today. You're the best, you're the best nurse ever. They did that. He did it the next day. They did these personal notes for two weeks.

Laura: So beautiful. 

AnneMoss: I know. I know. So, you know, they felt like they were really doing something and they did, what do you think she did with those notes? Do you think she threw those away?

Laura: Oh, they’re treasures. Yeah, of course.

AnneMoss: They’re treasures, absolutely. She will never let those go.

Laura: And the other like, super powerful, the thing about that is that she modeled for them, what it's like to recognize within yourself that you're going through a hard time and to reach out for support from loved ones like exactly and, and gave them permission to do the same. I, I love that. I have, I know you mentioned that you have an e-resource that an ebook that parents can access to have some, some deeper conversations about this. Can you make sure that I get the link to that or you can tell them where to go?

AnneMoss: Absolutely. What I'll do is I'll send you the link and you'll get the resilience book and you'll also get the book about if your child has admitted they're suicidal and you know, that's been a really popular download because I'm contacted about that all the time, but it gives you scripts, you may not do that script, but it'll give you an idea what you can say. 

Laura: Yeah. And I, I feel like it would be so good for parents to like even if this is not on your radar right now, download it now, read it now so that it's there and ready for you when you are, you know, lots of my listeners have much younger children. But I think it's, this is something to start getting used to and comfortable with so that when the need arises, we're ready and we've got that skill set. 

AnneMoss:But the resilience one. We need to start doing that. Now, now we need to start asking our our kids questions and not lecturing them.

Laura: Yes, listening is not lecturing. Yeah. 

AnneMoss: Right. So they come up with their own. Well, they, you know, you kind of do what I call motivational interviewing but parent style and then I give you examples of what that looks like and sounds like. So yes, I will send you links to that. 

Laura: Okay. So those links will be in the show notes. AnneMoss, thank you so much for, for being so brave and vulnerable and sharing your story and turning it into a, a beautiful way of preventing more pain and hurt in the world. I really can't say thank you enough in helping us have this difficult but really necessary conversation. 

AnneMoss: Well, thank you. You asked some questions, not a lot of people have asked to really dig into those difficult pivotal moments. So I appreciate that that'll kind of differentiate this particular interview from a lot of others. So thank you for that. I really appreciate it. 

Laura: I appreciated our conversation too. Thank you again. 

AnneMoss: Absolutely. 

Okay, so thanks for listening today. Remember to subscribe to the podcast and if it was helpful, leave me a review that really helps others find the podcast and join us in this really important work of creating a parenthood that we don't have to escape from and creating a childhood for our kids that they don't have to recover from. 

And if you're listening, grab a screenshot and tag me on Instagram so that I can give you a shout-out, and definitely go follow me on Instagram. I'm @laurafroyenphd. That's where you can get behind the scenes. Look at what balanced, conscious parenting looks like in action with my family, and plus I share a lot of other, really great resources there too.

All right. That's it for me today. I hope that you keep taking really good care of your kids and your family and each other and most importantly of yourself. And just to remember, balance is a verb and you're already doing it. You've got this!

Episode 176: How Understanding Anxiety Styles Can Help You Be Unflustered with Amber Trueblood

In this episode of The Balanced Parent Podcast, we will dive into how understanding various anxiety types and styles can keep us unflustered. To guide us through this insightful conversation, we have a new guest, Amber Trueblood, author of "The Unflustered Mom." Amber is not only a licensed marriage and family therapist but also a mother of four boys. Join us as Amber shares her expertise and practical strategies to be unflustered.

In this episode, Amber and I discuss the following:

  • Exploring the concept of being an unflustered mom

  • Five anxiety styles and how to identify your style

  • How to support and help kids navigate their emotions using insights from anxiety styles

I hope this conversation inspires a deeper understanding of recognizing these styles, guiding a more harmonious and purposeful parenting journey.

Connect with Amber directly to delve deeper into these topics or to share your thoughts. Reach out via email at truebloodamber@gmail.com or visit her website www.ambertrueblood.com. You can follow her on Facebook @ambertrueblood, Instagram @ambertrueblood, and on Youtube @ambertrueblood.

Resources:


TRANSCRIPT

Parenting is often lived in the extremes. It's either great joy or chaotic, overwhelmed. In one moment, you're nailing it and the next you're losing your cool. I want to help you find your way to the messy middle, to a place of balance. You see balance is a verb, not a state of being. It is a thing you do. Not a thing you are. It is an action, a process, a series of micro corrections that you make each and every day to keep yourself feeling centered. We are never truly balanced. We are engaged in the process of balancing.

Hello, I'm Dr. Laura Froyen and this is The Balanced Parent Podcast where overwhelmed, stressed out and disconnected parents go to find tools, mindset shifts and practices to help them stop yelling at the people they love and start connecting on a deeper level. All delivered with heaping doses of grace and compassion. Join me in conversations that will help you get clear on your goals and values and start showing up in your parenting, your relationships, your life with openhearted authenticity and balance. Let's go! 

Laura: Hello everybody, on this week's episode of the Balanced Parent Podcast, we are going to be having a conversation about how we can stay unflustered during the holiday season by understanding different anxiety types and styles and how they impact our communication and interactions with those around us and kind of with our life. So for to help us with this conversation, I have a new guest for our show, Amber Trueblood. She wrote a great book called The Unflustered Mom and I'm so excited to have her here with us. Amber why don't you tell us a little bit more about who you are and what you do? 

Amber: Hi, Laura. Thank you so much. And you know, on my screen, first of all, it says Cameron and we talked about that right away because, yeah, I have his computer, my son's computer. And so starting off the day with like, oh wait, his computer has totally different inputs, inputs than mine. Let's figure out how to deal with this. So, you know, just know you're not alone. We're doing podcasts and we look like we have all our stuff together. But no, no, we're just.

Laura: We're all human.

Amber: Our morning probably went the same as you. And, yeah. So my background is, I am a marriage and family therapist, a licensed therapist. I have four boys at home and actually they're at all at school right now. Which is lovely. I know we did, we did several years of homeschooling. So I've had all kinds of different types of, of logistical experiences here and educational experiences. But, and right now they are 10, 11, no not 11, 10, 12, 14 and 16 years old, all boys. And I love like, what really powers me up and refuels me the most is when I can connect with other people and share the tools and strategies that I've learned that I've developed that I've, you know, learned from other people that I've read about that I've tweaked and formulated all those things so that I can help you out there live a life that is less flustered, you know, that feels more in control where you're more in control, where you're feeling at peace, where you're feeling confident and like heaven forbid where you actually are having fun, like you're not just surviving it and, and, and you know, we use the word drive a lot, right? But like literally just like, like, did you have fun yesterday? You know, like you asked your kids, oh, did you have fun? You know, the focus often is on the joy of those, the safety and happiness and joy of those around us. And I think that you really are gonna not only enjoy your life more but show up in a way that you really align with like as a parent or as a partner or as a coworker as a boss, like you're gonna be able to be your best self when you're unflustered as well. Does that make sense? 

Laura: It does. You know, I loved hearing your systems thinking I, my background is in marriage and family therapy too and I just heard it come out, you were talking about all the kind of the different systems that were embedded in as h ans and the, the individual being in a place, a good place, a well taken care of place, a nurtured place impacts all those systems that we're in. So it's so important.

Amber: Like, it's not selfish. I just want to like, it's the opposite of selfish. It really, really, it doesn't feel like that, right. Because for a myriad of reasons and we get that, but the more we can catch ourselves like, oh, taking a nap in the middle of the day right now, like, because I actually do have 20 minutes before I have to do this or that. And I see the laundry or see, but I'm going to make a choice that's actually the opposite of selfish. It's really, really taking care of myself. So that when I go to pick up I'm not distracted, I'm not exhausted. Like I'm gonna be, I'm gonna be safer in the car. I'm gonna be less likely to leave my purse, leave my purse at home and then my, you know, can't find my cell phone and then I'm snapping at everybody and then we all know how that escalates and snowballs.

Laura: It does. 

Amber: And effectively the mood and patience and flexibility of everybody else. 

Laura: Exactly. Yes, yeah. Okay. So you, you use the word unflustered and I, I feel like that's a word that we might all have different ideas about what that means. I'm curious about your definition. What does it mean to be an unflustered mom? 

Amber: Yeah. Well, it's a little misleading. Really, first of all, because, you know, I'd like to add like a little caveat, like temporarily unflustered, often unflustered, learning the skills to go on. Yeah. But like not permanently, you know, like there's nothing that's just like, oh, check, I am now unflustered mom, like you're a robot, maybe if, maybe if you're a robot that will work, but if you're h an, you're gonna have these emotional ups and downs and that's what makes life lovely in a lot of ways. Right? So, you ha you have to have all of that. So, you know, my book and my teachings are all about giving you the tools and strategies, like also the support and the insights so you can kind of understand how you work emotionally maybe differently than your partner or differently than your coworkers or your best friend or your neighbors because we're all really individual. So I love to help people find what works for them and not only from like a perspective but also like, okay, what does that mean about? Like, how am I, what am I going to do the last 15 minutes before I go to bed differently than I did the last five months of my life? And how is that going to impact me? Like, what am I gonna do when I first wake up in the morning differently? That's going to help me feel more unflustered, more often, more easily the rest of the day. 

Laura: Okay. And so I think, you know, in your book, you detail kind of how to do that, how to figure out what you need.

Amber: Yeah.

Laura: What your individual needs are. And it has a lot to do with different types of styles of anxiety.

Amber: Yes.

Laura: Can you talk about the five styles that you teach in your book and what they are and how we can figure out which we are? 

Amber: I would love to. Okay, so here, you know, if anybody has heard of like the five love languages or, you know, there's all these quizzes online with like understanding your personality type, yes you know. Yes, exactly. So this is yet another way to look at your own emotional needs and kind of click for you hopefully, you know, my, my goal is to have people say, oh my gosh, I get it. Now, I get why when XYZ happens. So say like soccer practice gets canceled and all of a sudden, you know, we, we, we got invited to go camping for the weekend. Why I'm like, oh my gosh, this is the, this is amazing. This is great. We get to spend all weekend together and it's this like impromptu spontaneous, like family oriented thing.

 So that would be something. and I'll go into details later that for instance, the lover anxiety itself would just be like, yes, yes, yes, I love this. Whereas the executive style who is a lot more oriented toward planning, organizing, knowing what's to come being very structured. Like that kind of last minute switch is going to feel very jarring potentially, right? And so they might react like, okay, wait, wait a second. Okay, I had all these other things I was going to do. We actually we were going to have your mom and dad over. So and it's not to say they are not, they don't want to spend time with family or that's not even the most important thing on their list. It may very well be, but they're gonna need more transition time to like regroup, rethink out the weekend, before they're going to get excited. So if a lover is partnered together with an executive and something like that happens, imagine if you know that about yourself, right? 

Laura: Right. 

Amber: So like if you know that about yourself, then you can communicate, maybe take the other person's reaction a little bit less personally because it can even work backwards. So, like, the executive could be like, you don't even care. Like, I actually, I actually spent a lot of time planning this lunch for your parents because we haven't seen them in three months and your blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. And like, you just came in and, like, threw that out the window and expect me to just change it all. Like, how, like that can feel very disrespectful. 

Laura: Yeah. I mean, it sounds like you're talking about making sure that everybody feels seen and heard and valued for the unique individuals that they are. 

Amber: So how do you figure out your type? Like, how do you figure out which one you are? So, I have a quiz, but I'm gonna go, I'm gonna go into detail here and then anybody or if you can't help yourself and you'd, like, have to know right now. You can go to flourishquiz.com, flourish quiz.com and, and just answer the first thing, that kind of your gut reaction, it will give you two choices and you just, you don't want to overthink it because sometimes they're really close. Sometimes you're like, ah, kind of depends on the day I might answer this. Sometimes it's like, neither, you know, and that's purposely set up that way.

Laura: Sure.

Amber: So that it's a robust, thing because some of there's overlap between all the different five anxiety styles. So the five are The Lover, The Fighter, The Executive, The Visionary and The Dynamo and all of these types have different contributing factors. So what happened earlier in your life or what kind of emotional, not necessarily trauma, but what, you know, big emotional markers make you you. But as we know, like because we see siblings who have the same parents and have, you know, experienced a lot of the same environmental processes and they're totally different emotionally, right? 

Laura: Right.

Amber: So that's just you know, possible contributing factors. And then there are, you know, emotional triggers, like I would mentioned earlier, there's some things that are gonna trigger a, a visionary that are not gonna trigger a dynamo at all, right? And and then there are ways you flourish like, and so that's what I want to share here is like for the, the holidays, for instance, or any, any period of time where you're like, okay, man, I gotta gear up like I need to raise my emotional base account because it's gonna be challenged because I have too much on my plate right now or, you know, I have unrealistic expectations for myself right now or whatever that might be. So understanding your anxiety style can then help, you know, know what triggers are likely to happen so that you can like either avoid or minimize those. So that you can communicate those to other people.

Like, hey, just so, you know, when we're going to be, you know, packing for this trip, I'm going to need XYZ. Right? So you can anticipate your emotional needs and communicate them better and then also know what you need to refuel yourself specifically. Like, okay, I know I'm gonna need a walk outside by myself every morning. Okay,0 so if the kids are getting up and they're playing with their cousins, I'm gonna like set my alarm earlier, grab a cup of coffee down the street and just disappear for 15 minutes. Like, right? So you can anticipate your emotional needs and know for you that that's gonna be much better than, for instance, somebody else kind of like introvert, extrovert things too, right? When you know what fills you up. So, okay, so let me ask you which, which one do you want to delve into first? Got lover, fighter, executive. 

Laura: Let's just start with the lover. 

Amber: Okay, so lovers are going to be really all about, not only their connection with the people they care about most, right? So they're about quality time about feeling needed, feeling, wanted, feeling like like I, you wanna be around me, like the people I care about wanna be around me like I'm liked and loved and cherished. So and everybody has the the right like that's, that's a very human thing where it goes a bit further where you know, like oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah is better it's kind of better to look at where you might get triggered. And if you're like, oh, that wouldn't bother me at all, then you're probably not a lover, right? So, a lot of lovers will get triggered for instance. So say you're on social media or you're on a friend's, you know, Instagram and you see that, they went out to lunch last week with a bunch of friends, like people, you know, and they were like just down the street and.

Laura: No one called you.

Amber: Nobody called you. And so like it's a very common reaction to be bummed. I mean, some people might be like, I don't want to go to that anyway, like I prefer, I prefer one on one time with these girls or I don't want to go out to a restaurant at night or whatever. But lovers will tend to really spiral with that emotion like, oh my gosh, is she mad at me? Did I do something to offend her with my kid? You know, like I'm just spiraling off with no basis. In fact, just all of these potential worst casee scenarios and it really, really begins to bother me, really hurts my feelings. So lovers are going to be really triggered by that.

Now these are kind of less like for instance, there's some people who are like, oh yeah, I used to be like that totally. But now I know and I have kind of a checks and balance system for myself and you've already then learned the skills to modulate. Yeah, to help modulate some of those emotional reactions, which is fabulous. It's also what's going to fill you back up, right? So, it's also asking your partner or your kids for time with them in a way that really lights you up. So time without devices around, like, even if it's just five minutes, like, hey, let's go, let's go for a quick walk around the block before you start your homework, right? 

Laura: Yeah, yeah.

Amber: Or, or, you know, let's put down our phones and like cuddle up and watch a show together with your partner, you know, so it's asking for things that really fill you up and and then also, and I recommend this for everybody no matter what your anxiety style is, is them being sure to tell the people around you how it made you feel. Like what? Because we're really good at saying what takes us off, right?

Laura: Yeah.

Amber: Like what aggravates us, what frustrates us, what hurts our feelings. Not everybody's great at that, but a lot of us get to a point of frustration where it comes out. But we don't spend quite as much time and energy saying, oh my gosh, when you did that, when we laid on the couch together last night for a few minutes, like, even though you were busy, like it just really filled my heart like it really made me feel special. It made me feel happy, it made me feel happy. The reason I say that is like, don't assume it's obvious, you know what I'm saying?

Laura: Yeah. 

Amber: Like, don't assume everybody knows what makes you happy. And so if you, if it's something or somebody said or did that, you would like to see more of in your life, like go out of your way, be like that made me really happy. Thank you. Like that was amazing. It's awesome. 

Laura: I love that authentic feedback. That's beautiful. 

Amber: It's priceless. And it's something that it's easy to get out of the habit of doing so much so that it feels weird when you do it. So it might take some practice. All right. Should we hit another one or you have? It's about the lover. 

Laura: I think I got the lover. I, I do have a question but I think I'm going to save it or when I, we've heard them all. So what about the visionary? I think that let's do them next. 

Amber: Yeah. So visionaries are very like is in the title like focused on the future. Focused on a big dream, a big impact that often the people around them and sometimes see them themselves. They don't see all the little steps to get there. They're not really concerned with like, okay, then I have to do this and I have to do this, but they're very focused on this big goal. And it's almost like this visceral feeling of like, I'm meant to be doing something really, a lot more like I my purpose here is big and sometimes there are people who are comfortable saying that out loud and other times they just feel it, but they don't feel like they can share it. 

And so one of the things that I recommend a lot with visionaries is that they find other visionaries to connect with even just one or two people where you can freely like really release your wings, you know, spread your wings and be like, oh my gosh, like I wanna create this whole network of 10,000 chains of, you know, probiotic, you know, for new moms or whatever it is like, I'm just making up something here but like where you can, you know, where, where it's not what's to be received like, oh my gosh, that's awesome. I actually know somebody who did something like that but with for babies, like, do you want to talk to her? Like, okay, like really surrounding yourself with big vision thinkers? It's gonna be beautiful. For visionaries what might drain and trigger visionaries is, hey, here's this list of tiny minutia things that I need you to take care of. I mean, again, something that most people don't like to do a lot of, I mean, not all, but this is going to drain a visionary, a lot kind of take their light away.

Laura: Okay.

Amber: And also visionaries. So each of these has different, like, visionaries tend to be more future focused than in the present moment. Right? 

Laura: I was gonna ask that if they have struggled to kind of stay in the present moment. 

Amber: Yes. Yes. Whereas lovers tend to be really good at focusing in on the a present or focused on the past, less, less concerned about the future. I mean, there can be great planners too. They can totally be, but they have an easier time. I'll say really being present with somebody. 

Laura: The visionaries often feel that like depressive kind of the the blues after the holidays. You know, I know lots of folks who get put, throw themselves into the planning, they've looked to the future and then all of a sudden there's nothing to plan anymore.

Amber: That it's a really good question. I think it depends. I think it depends. I think that almost all of these anxiety styles could have that. 

Laura: Yeah, got it.

Amber: Yeah, that depth emotionally. It depends Ithink on how much you're, you're filling yourself up, you know, like, and there's, there's so many different strategies in the book. I go to like so much more detail on all of these. So I'm going to try to just touch on like the, you know, just enough key points where you can see this is gonna help me to, to dig deeper. But, you know, visionaries also tend to make decisions with this more intuitive gut instinct feel as do lovers same thing. Whereas like executives and dynamos are more up here. Okay. Let me make a list, let me see what makes sense and it's practical and logical and let me add the pros and cons that it's much more of a mental game than like a gut feeling. 

Laura: Okay.

Amber: So, so yeah, that's kind of the, the tweaks with visionary. 

Laura: Okay and so who's next?

Amber: We could talk about dynamos since you mentioned them a little bit. So are also very forward thinking.  But more practical based, more mental than kind of gut. So they tend to live in the future more than like in the present moment. But when I mentioned like this, the end goal and the visionaries like, don't necessarily like to concern themselves or their gift so much with the details, the dynamos will, we will be like, okay, so if I want that goal, then in nine months, I need to be here and in six months, I need to be here and in four months, I need to be here and then today I need to do this and then in the next 15 minutes, I need to do that like really like do do, do do.

And so dynamos are very achievement oriented. So, whereas lovers are more connection, right? I want to feel wanted, I want to feel loved, I want to feel connected. And I always say that each of these has kind of a life lesson. So this is not something solved by the end of the book, this is like a a life lesson. So lovers, you know, for lovers, what I really want you to do is know, just know that you are enough like your, your value is there your quality of, you know, life, your value as a human is there regardless of what anybody else says or does? Right? 

Laura: Yeah.

Amber: So I don't want, I don't want your feelings of self value to go up and down.

Laura: Based on who's reflecting them back to you. Exactly. Exactly. Lover's life lesson is how do I enjoy my life and enjoy the process along that way, along my way, that my big goal. So I'm not just waiting to be happy until I have that those 10,000 stores I can enjoy the process. Like how do I learn to kind of get present and get connected a little bit more to enjoy the process. With dynamos, dynamos kind of gut motivator is achievement, right? Achievement, doing action, acknowledgment for that achievement, right? 

So for Dynamos, the life lesson is how do you really feel and know that you're enough already like everything you, you think you're gonna keep achieving because that's what that's what you enjoy. But when you're doing, when you're achieving out of the joy of it versus the proving, right? This like I have to prove I'm, I'm valuable. So I gotta do this next thing I got to write this next book. I gotta write this next book. Like so I always use this example like I just, this is the unflustered mom is my second book and I have the third book is like about to go under contract. The fourth book is the proposals going out. And the fifth book I'm researching, right? It's like, guess which one I am?

Laura: You’re a dynamo.

Amber: I'm a dynamo. So, right. But like if I can write this next book from a place of like, oh, you know, what would be really fun to talk about? Like, you know, what would be really amazing to teach people? Like, oh, I'm so excited to share this stuff. It's gonna be such a better book than it's than if I'm coming from a place of like, okay, well, this book sold 10,000 copies and if I do, if I partner with these other people, maybe this next book can sell 40,000, you know, like what kind of book is going to come out of that energy? Like that approach. This is like, oh my gosh, I'm so excited I have so much more to share since the last book.

Laura: Right? I really love this framing of kind of the different life lessons that the for the, the each style there's a, a lesson that you're here to learn. You know, if you have that style. I really like that. I feel like it's, it's so tempting to think like we're just gonna learn what we need to learn and then we'll know it and then we'll go on with our lives and like that's just not going to happen. And so I seeing these as invitations to get comfortable with getting uncomfortable and yeah, I really, really like that. Okay, so who's after the dynamo? Are we?

Amber: We have executive.

Laura: Okay.

Amber: So executives are also very future oriented and very strategic and practical in their decisions. These are the planners, these are, I want to feel safe and I feel safe and loved when I feel  in control, when I can anticipate what's gonna happen. Trust, dependability, loyalty, those are all really, really big important words for executives, right? And so, where executives are gonna feel, you know, triggered or you know, emotionally, not emotionally flustered, we'll say is when, you know, they have friends or loved ones who are canceling on them last minute, you know, not, not dependable, not trustworthy or who are running late all the time, right? So, you know, visionaries might be, you know, so if an executive is together with a visionary that the visionary is like, oh my gosh, I got this great idea. I'm like, in the moment I got like, I want to record a video about it right now. Or I'm gonna record, I've got a great podcast idea. Record it, you know, or I want at least make notes about it could be a few minutes late. Like, with another visionary they're like, oh, go, go, go, do it, do it. Yes, you're in the zone.

Laura: Right  now. 

Amber: You want to take advantage of that. Yeah. Whereas, you know, so an executive, you know, is if you know that about yourself and you know, what about your partner? You can say, Okay, I know them and they're gonna, it's gonna be longer than five minutes even though they said they have five minutes. So I'm going to go ahead and just change the reservation now, so that I'm not frustrated and, and anxious about it. 

Laura: And really too, Amber, what you're talking about is reconstructing the narrative that we have around these actions,

Amber: Oh my gosh, yes.

Laura: Right? And so, I mean, like if we are understanding that this is not coming from a place of disrespect or lack of love that it's coming from some, you know, something that's going on with the person and not something that's wrong with us that they're responding to.

Amber: Yes.

Laura: We're able to be more forgiving and gracious and compas compassionate and feel better about ourselves.

Amber: Right? I know. And then that, and then you're not building up that resentment, you're not building up that you're gonna blow up later. Like there's a later chapter in the book that's all about, it literally compares each two. Anxiety says, so if you have a partner, you know, so if it's like lover and a fighter together, a fighter and executive and it says like, hey, here's a, here are the areas where you're gonna maybe be in more alignment where you can connect and then here's the areas where you're gonna maybe be off in alignment and how you can, how using your understanding of, of where the coming from so that you're less likely exactly what you said to take it personally way less likely to be triggered by it. And you know, oh my gosh, it's gonna save you so many arguments and heartaches and hurt feelings and frustration and we don't have any extra energy for that. 

Laura: No.

Amber: I'd love to minimize that for people.

Laura: We don't. So I feel like I want to talk about how this applies to kids and parenting, but I, I know we need to talk about the fighter first. 

Amber: Okay, yeah. And so, and, and really, I'll do the life lesson for executives since.

Laura: Oh sure, yes yeah. 

Amber: So really, you know, executives often this feeling of like I'm not safe, like I need to have control and structure and know what's coming often that will come from something that developed early on when you didn't have that safety or dependability. And maybe now you do, but you still have that feeling of void whereas you, you're, you're safe, you're probably okay now.   maybe not. But if you are so it's about understanding. Maybe I'm safer than I thought and I can really embrace a little bit more of my, childlike, you know, some more play.

So a lot of the strategies I have around executives are doing activities that don't, you can't do right or wrong. Like, there's no writer, like, you know, painting or dancing or hula hooping or singing or whatever. You can't, there's no, like mastering it. Maybe, you know, like you're not, it's not making you money. It's not a revenue stream. Like it's, you know, and, and really like getting playful and silly and if you can like using your body in it too, like whether it's like rolling around on the floor with your pet, you know, playing with a little baby, like, you know, doing things that are physically playful and getting back into your body a little bit more are, are some of the strategies that are really good emotionally for executives. 

Laura: I love that. So I have a sneaking suspicion that I'm an executive and all of the things that you were just talked about are my go to self care things, right? 

Amber: Yeah.

Laura: But I struggle with them. So like when I start doing art, I'm like, wait, I can't sell this. It's not productive. Why am I doing this? It's a waste of paper. But then I just make myself do it because it feels really good. 

Amber: But so you've already tapped into that. It's exactly true. And that's when, you know, it's like it's working right? Because it's, it is uncomfortable. Like, you know, it's so valuable for you and you feel it but you have to like, argue with yourself together. That's how I am about meditation for me. A, a daily meditation practice and being quiet and getting present so hard. But it's, but it's.

Laura: It’s important, too.

Amber: It's a deal breaker for me. I do it every morning and every night and, it makes such a huge impact because it's not a go to, like, for my husband, he just laughs. He's like that. He does those things very intuitively naturally. Like he'll be, he'll take a bath and I'll be like, do you want a book or something? Do you do a notepad? Like, what are you gonna do in there? You know, it's my bright. No. And he's like, no, I'm good. Like he’ll.

Laura: You're just gonna be it. 

Amber: Yeah. And he can do that very naturally where I have to like, quiet and wake up early and have a little breathing, you know, thing and have like a whole mantra and I have all these different strategies I could choose from, depending on which ones I'm feeling like that. 

Laura: Yeah.

Amber: Like, it's a very different approach. But like you, like, that's what my system physiologically needs and yours, you know, can benefit. 

Laura: Yeah, I love that. Okay, fighters.

Amber: I like that, you know, love fighter. Okay, so for my fighters out there, fighters are people who tend to feel very very comfortable in the chaos, feel very at home in in trauma, in challenge, in fighting in conflict. It's kind of where they shine. They may be exhausted from because they might have been doing it a lot in their entire life. But they tend to kind of label themselves as survivors, right? As also as protectors for people, they tend to be the people who early on in their life didn't have somebody who was in a caregiver role that made them allow them to really feel safe, right?

So they learned how to do that for themselves. And now often as adults, if they see a conflict or a bullying situation or an injustice or an unfairness or anything, they will tend to move toward it, right? To get involved, right? This, this impulse to, to protect, to, you know, get, get involved and both out of a sense of like, hey, this is not, right, like this is not okay. You know, I I'm gonna do so even if it has nothing to do with them. So, so the issue with that then is that's exhausting sometimes.

Laura: Yeah.

Amber: Fighting battles on multiple fronts all the time, right? 

Laura: Or to be even looking for more drama, more unrest, you know, like if life happens to be peaceful, not trusting it and kind of going, going searching, waiting for the for the other shoe to drop.

Amber: Wait for the other shoe to drop, because that's been their experience that it's gonna drop. So it's like I'm gonna poke it then until it drops because I'd rather know what's gonna happen. You seem, you know, I'm in this new relationship. You seem really great right now. But where are your boundaries? I need to know because I don't want to be surprised when you freak out or you're mad or you're upset or, or you disappear. So I'm gonna poke a little bit, I'm gonna poke a lot at you. So I know because I'm more comfortable in that.

And so, you know, the life lesson with, with fighters then is how can I learn to get a little bit more comfortable right? In, in the calm and the joy and, and know that I'm, I'm worthy of, of maybe having financial, you know, stability and abundance, having a, a loving, healthy relationship, having a, a job that I enjoy, right? So some of the tools like that I have for for fighters are things like asking yourself. Do I have the bandwidth like checking yourself when you're just feeling that like, oh I'm going to get involved. There's this thing happening with the parents at my school, right. Just ask yourself first. Do I have the bandwidth for this right now or can I skip this fight? I skip this one. I'll catch the next one. There's gonna always be something to get involved in. Right? 

Laura: Yeah.

Amber: So make it a more conscious decision instead of this impulsive like draw to get involved in all these things.

Laura: Okay.

Amber: Make it. How do we make it a conscious choice? And then secondly is when I am feeling that kind of uh itchy, like I'm, I'm itchy, I'm itching for something. How can I make a healthy choice to add challenge in my life? 

Laura: Yeah. This is what I was thinking about with the holidays because the holidays are so filled with challenge anyway. It's easy to go looking for it and find it and blow it up. You know, how can we do it in a proactive but positive way? 

Amber: Right. Right. So you're like, I'm gonna, I'm gonna join in, I was gonna say impromptu class. What's it called? Improv? An improv class? Or I'm gonna, I'm gonna learn to play the ukulele and play this for everybody at the Christmas dinner. Right, right in front of everybody and I've never done that before or I'm gonna like, I'm gonna whatever, like, learn how to often. It's, it's like learning something new. That's a little bit scary or, you know, oh, I wanna get in better shape but like, you know, jogging every day for whatever is not, doesn't appeal to me, but I'm gonna sign up for a sprint marathon that's like in two months and I don't even barely know how to swim. Okay, like something like that or I'm gonna make travel plans to a country I've never been in and I don't even know what languages they speak there, but like, let's just do it, let's plan it for March, you know. So, how can you proactively.

Laura: Give yourself a problem to solve.

Amber: Give yourself those problems and challenges in a way that actually adds value to your life.

Laura: I like that a lot. That's really great.

Amber: Instead of leaves you feeling depleted or alone or unsupported or disconnected or broke, you know, like, or hurt, you know, because often we will surround ourselves with people who can reenact those same tra as from early life, right? So how do I stop that cycle? But also,  you know what I like, likened it to, when I was writing the book, like, it's almost like if you were born and raised at really high altitude, like, and really, really high up in the mountains and your body is accustomed to like a very low level of oxygen. And then you come down and you, like, move to San Diego where I live and you, and you like at the beach level and it's a lot of oxygen. Like, it's like, it's, it's, it feels a little off for you. And you, and this is terrible way to say it, but like, you're almost like cut off your oxygen level a little bit, you choke yourself a little bit because that's what you're way more comfortable with less air but it's not healthy for you. 

Laura: Right.

Amber: It's not, you know, we don't want that, we want you to get more and more comfortable breathing more easily and more readily and you deserve it. So how can we add that, you know, back in a, in a healthier way? 

Laura: I like, I really like that idea. Okay, so Amber, I, I feel like as I'm listening to you talk about these and as I was reading through them in your book, I couldn't help but think about my kids. And so yes, super helpful to understand myself and understand my partner. Definitely going to help with interactions, kids, of course, and you know, different personality types and stuff, they're hard to do on kids because, you know, they're, they're younger and stuff. But is there a way to use some of this information to help us support our kids and you know, help them develop kind of, I don't know, in a really healthy way, I guess.

Amber: For sure. So here's what I would say. I totally agree with you. I think they're still, they're still.

Laura: Still forming.

Amber: They’re still forming, they're still experiencing all the things that are going to make them who they become later. So I, I don't like the idea of like labeling anybody anything.

Laura: Of course.

Amber: Anything really early on. However, we can use these insights to say, to notice things about our kids and notice, oh, this when I change things at the last minute. Holy mackerel like these two kids are fine but this one loses it, you know. So, okay, they need a little bit more, you know, information ahead of time. They need a little bit more like the rest of our family all super go with the flow and this kid is, is more jarred by that. It's just different if they were in a family where everybody was like that and there was one, you know, outlier way, you know, it just is what it is. So how can I help them feel more comfortable? 

So when you read through all of these in detail and you see your kids in them, then you can think. Oh that, that's why, that's why. Oh yeah, yeah, yeah. So next time this happens, I can do this instead to help meet their needs, their emotional needs a little bit more. So that is one way you could do it. Another way is, is noticing like where it, it's like communicating with them and helping them understand your emotional needs too.

Laura: Yeah.

Amber: Like, hey, this is how I've learned about myself. And what I love about that is you're modeling to them, which is like the right like the part of parenting way more than we all like to admit it because the hardest way. But modeling to them like, hey, I, I'm learning something about myself and wow, like it's helping me show up, it's helping me be feel happier. It's helping me have more patience. It's helping me helping me have more energy like, you know, and teaching them that like when you have self awareness and insight about your emotional state and your emotional needs and then can communicate that in a kind and compassionate way. Holy mackerel, like you're giving them, you're giving them such amazing, like life ammunition. You know what I mean? 

Laura: I so agree.

Amber: Like incredible life skills. So like for instance, when we got a cat during, we adopted a cat during quarantine and stuff and for me, it was so fascinating to see how they each kind of showed their care, you know, showed it how they each like interacted with the cat. Like one of my kids, the 12 year old took on all the like logistical responsibilities, like literally like washes her bowl out every day, like make sure she has this food will tell me like, hey, we need to order more wet food because we're running low like he just was on it. You know, he just took that over. Another one of my kids constantly verbally is saying I love you so much Andy, I love you, we love you. We, you know, like and I thought, oh my goodness, like this is how my kids want to see they're perceiving love. Yeah. And so you know, watching how, what they trigger to and how they tend to calm themselves is gonna be really really good insight for parents as well. 

Laura: And I think that's really helpful Amber. Thank you so much. Excuse me. Well, I did that. 

Amber: It happens. 

Laura: Yes, it happens. So I really, I, I really like this idea and I think that there's gonna be people who want to get a copy of the book. So where can they go to find the book and learn more from you and about you? 

Amber: Yeah. Well, and I have a bunch of bonus stuff too. So you get the book anywhere like on Amazon and barnesandnoble.com at target.com and you can get it at your local bookstore.  Definitely go ask for it if you don't see it there and they, they'll order it up for you. Also if you, if you like to order from independent bookstores, you go to bookshop.org. and then you, I also have it on audible. So if you just wanna put it on and listen to it, as you're running errands or doing the laundry or going for a walk or driving to work, it, that was really fun to record the audible for it. So it's on audible as well. And I have, actually I have a card deck that I, I'll show it to you. I have like a little card deck that goes along with it.

Laura: Oh fun!

Amber: Yeah. So they're just little inspirational messages and then I have, if you go to my website, which is just my name ambertrueblood.com and you put in your anxiety style. So if you say, oh I'm an executive and you put in your email address, then I will email you all these cool like guided meditations specifically for your anxiety style and then mantras that support that life lesson, right?  

Laura: Awesome.

Amber: For each anxiety style. So yeah, so these are these little like I know we're not on video but I'm sure you are. 

Laura: Oh no, it's okay. It’s good.

Amber: It's all these little parts about, you know, being present or drinking more water or oh, this is the one that came up. 

Laura: I give myself permission to play. 

Amber: I can give myself permission to play that one. I love your playful. So so yeah, that's so funny. That was for you clearly.

Laura: Perfect. 

Amber: I love it. 

Laura: I love when things like that happen. Well, thank you so much, Amber. I really appreciate it. I'll have all the links to those things in the show notes. Thank you so much for sharing this kind of perspective and framework for, for families. So I get to know themselves better.

Amber: Thanks for having me on and I just know hope everybody knows that like you really do deserve to be unflustered, you deserve to be happy and it's not, it's not a luxury or a selfish thing. It really is. I think part of your responsibility as a parent. Yeah. 

Laura: And, and our birthright as humans. 

Amber: Yes. That's, yeah. 

Okay, so thanks for listening today. Remember to subscribe to the podcast and if it was helpful, leave me a review that really helps others find the podcast and join us in this really important work of creating a parenthood that we don't have to escape from and creating a childhood for our kids that they don't have to recover from. 

And if you're listening, grab a screenshot and tag me on Instagram so that I can give you a shout-out, and definitely go follow me on Instagram. I'm @laurafroyenphd. That's where you can get behind the scenes. Look at what balanced, conscious parenting looks like in action with my family, and plus I share a lot of other, really great resources there too.

All right. That's it for me today. I hope that you keep taking really good care of your kids and your family and each other and most importantly of yourself. And just to remember, balance is a verb and you're already doing it. You've got this!


Episode 175: Why Moms Need Time Away: The Transformative Effects of Retreat with Dr. Jen Riday

In this week’s episode, I have the pleasure of hosting the incredible Dr. Jen Riday, a mom of 6 with a Ph.D. in Human Development and Family Studies and the host of the Vibrant Happy Women Podcast. During our conversation, we dive into the reason time away (retreat) is so vital for women in general, but especially moms. Retreats arer a unique opportunity for women to invest in themselves, practice self-care, build friendships, and gain clarity in the midst of life's busyness.

Here are some of the takeaways:

  • Dr. Jen Riday sheds light on the transformative nature of the women’s retreats, especially her annual Vibrant Happy Women Retreat

  • My own experience, especially the welcoming atmosphere and diverse perspectives (women at all ages and stages of life) at the retreat

  • We also explore the upcoming retreat where I'll be leading a topic on Family Dynamics, exploring how to have healthy 1-1 relationships with important people in your lives. There are a few last minute spots available, if you’re interested in coming!  Click HERE for more details.

If you’d like to join us you can follow the link below to learn more! 

https://www.laurafroyen.com/retreat

And if you want to chat about it or ask some questions, email me at laura@laurafroyen.com and we can find a time to connect on the phone!

To know more about Dr. Riday and what she does, visit her website and follow her on Instagram and Facebook.


TRANSCRIPT

Parenting is often lived in the extremes. It's either great joy or chaotic, overwhelmed. In one moment, you're nailing it and the next you're losing your cool. I want to help you find your way to the messy middle, to a place of balance. You see balance is a verb, not a state of being. It is a thing you do. Not a thing you are. It is an action, a process, a series of micro corrections that you make each and every day to keep yourself feeling centered. We are never truly balanced. We are engaged in the process of balancing.

Hello, I'm Dr. Laura Froyen and this is The Balanced Parent Podcast where overwhelmed, stressed out and disconnected parents go to find tools, mindset shifts and practices to help them stop yelling at the people they love and start connecting on a deeper level. All delivered with heaping doses of grace and compassion. Join me in conversations that will help you get clear on your goals and values and start showing up in your parenting, your relationships, your life with openhearted authenticity and balance. Let's go! 

Laura: In this episode of the Balanced Parent Podcast, my good friend and colleague, Dr Jen Riday and I discuss the benefits of retreat and getting time away for women and especially moms in the process of discussing this important topic. We also discuss Dr Jen Riday’s upcoming vibrant Happy Women Retreat. This is an annual retreat that I've had the benefit of being able to go on and present at a couple of times and it's coming up again in February and there's a few open spots. So if you'd like to check it out and come with us, after hearing this session, you can learn more at laurafroyen.com/retreat. 

Jen: Hey, everyone. I'm here with Doctor Laura Froyen. I'm super excited. You're here. 

Laura: Oh, yeah, I'm so happy to be here and we're going to put this on my podcast, too. So, I hope you'll introduce us as well, so, or introduce yourself. So, yeah, I'm Doctor Laura Froyen and I have my PHD in Human Development and Family Studies. I think I've been on your show a couple of times now. But what I really love is helping kids and families find more authentic connection with each other, and more authentic connection with themselves. So I have a background in marriage and family therapy right now. I work as a parenting consultant, coach and educator and I just really love coming alongside families during moments in their lives, period stretches where they're struggling and helping them figure out what it is they actually want and how to get there in an effective way that's backed up by research and intuition. So Dr. Jen Riday, why don't you tell my audience a little bit about yourself? 

Jen: Yes, I'm excited to be on your podcast as well. This is really fun to be on a joint podcast endeavor. So before I do, my name is Jen Riday, I'm from Madison, Wisconsin. And my podcast is called Vibrant Happy Women. I want you to share though the name of your podcast. 

Laura: The Balanced Parent. 

Jen: Yes, the Balanced Parent. Okay, perfect. So as Laura said, I have a PHD like Laura in Human Development and Family Studies. And what I do is to help women with womanhood, not the specific emphasis on parenting, like Laura does so well, but helping women to figure out what they want to manage their time and balance their life and way that feels good and authentic. You know, often after we become moms or, you know, I'm empty nesting. Some of my kids, I should say after we become moms and have done it for a while, we burn out because we forget to put ourselves on the docket and to put ourselves first and pay attention to how we think and how we feel. And I, I help women with that so we can feel like life is joyous and, and awesome again, so. 

Laura: I love that. Yeah, and we need it, right. So I think that it's so easy to lose ourselves in motherhood. And I think a lot of parenting podcasts in places, talk about that specific aspect of it. But I actually really love your podcast and your work because it's not focused on just women who are mothers, right? It's focused on because we don't just do this with our kids. We lose ourselves in the surface of our jobs in the service of our partners in the surface of our friends or our family. You know, we get this cultural message that it's not okay to put ourselves. Not even first, just on the list at all. You know? And I, I really love that you teach very practical ways to do that work of figuring out not just how to put yourself first, but how to feel worthy of that, too. 

Jen: Yes, for sure. You know, I think it comes back to, I, I'm guessing most parents do this. I remember when my kids, I have six children. I remember when my first couple of children were born. I was gonna do it right. I was gonna take everything I'd learned in school about parenting and apply it all. And then you get these moments of just life where you're not getting along with your spouse or something's up with your finances or you're moving and it's so stressful and you're losing your temper and you start to assess and, or reassess and think, oh, I feel miserable. And at the end of it all, I think the best moms, the best women in general are living a life that's happy and showing others by example what that looks like because we all know what it feels like to be around someone who's unhappy and drained and exhausted and miserable and that's not really in the end what we want to give our kids. So that's why for excellent parenting, you know, why you teach, it really starts with excellent, self care and excellent boundaries.

Laura: Yeah and self mothering, right? So, being a good mom to yourself, even if you don't have kids learning how to be that good wise mother that maybe we didn't get that we always needed and always deserved. 

Jen: Right. 

Laura: Yeah, okay. So I feel, so we got together today to talk a little bit about the retreat that we have that you have coming up that I've had just the, the pleasure and the luck to be able to go to with you a couple of times. Will you tell us a little bit about the, the retreat that you host every year? 

Jen: Okay. So I host what's called the Vibrant Happy Women Retreat, similar to the name of my podcast and it started in 2018. We started in Florida. We've been in Dominican Republic, this year we’ll be in Mexico. Next year back to the Dominican Republic. Location is great. We all love beaches in February, so.

Laura: We love that. 

Jen: That's a given. But what I love about the retreat is the women I tend to attract through my work are looking to I guess invest in themselves again, invest in self care and habits and friendship and they're also very, very authentic. So I find it to be really rejuvenating for me even though I'm leading the the event. But we spend four days doing workshops, big group workshops, small group workshops, playing pickleball, eating together. The food is amazing. But just with the end goal of rejuvenating and unleashing some inner fire and figuring out what we want and getting that clarity that we sometimes miss when we're busy all the time and kind of getting out of the deep end of the pool, no longer treading water getting out so we can think and breathe and figure out what we even want for the next year ahead. 

Laura: My gosh, I love that imagery of getting out of the deep end of the pool, getting out on the edge, resting, kind of getting back in touch with yourself. You know, the first time I went on this retreat, I was, was it 2022? I think it was 2022. So we were fresh out of the, you know, the hard years of the pandemic, right? So, I mean, just, it was a really hard time for the world and it was, I think my first trip that I took after things had changed after COVID, right? And I did not know what to expect, Jen. I was really nervous. I'm a kind of shy introvert and I really did not, you know, I didn't know anyone other than you who was going, I had a friend come with me. Thank goodness. That made me feel a little bit safer. But when I got there, the people were so welcoming and kind and it was a situation too where you can do as much or as little as you want, you can kind of dip your toe in, see what feels good and then take time for yourself to journal or to meditate or take a yoga class. And I, I really love that piece of it and the other piece that I didn't know I needed was time away by myself. Whenever I've been away from my kids for the most part, it's been to go with someone to do something else.

You know, whether it is with my husband to go do something for an anniversary trip or with, you know, to go visit a friend. It's never been just myself, you know, other than I think, like one time I spent the night at a cabin or, you know, in upper Wisconsin and the cold, you know, that was very solitary, which was lovely. I need alone time, but I had never really had a big stretch of it with other women that were from lots of different places and spaces in their lives. You know, so I met women who were grandmothers, there were women with kids in high school women with toddlers and women who weren't married, who were single and, you know, just kind of a big range and I think that for a lot of my time in motherhood, I had been surrounded by other moms. And while that, that community, that type of community is so important. And so, I mean, can be so supportive. I realized on that first retreat that we need diversity in the perspectives that we hear.

A woman who, you know, perhaps doesn't have any kids and is in their sixties. And as you know, you know, moving towards retirement has a completely different world view, a completely different experience and lots of wisdom, inherent innate wisdom to share. And when you get so in your experience, your world narrows down. And so the past two years coming to this retreat with you Jen, has really helped me broaden, my view of the world. Broaden my perspective, acknowledge where I am in, in a journey in a life's journey. I think it's so easy because I feel like in the thick of motherhood, there's the saying, you know, the years are short, but the days are long and I feel like that just really has captured a lot of my experience of motherhood. This kind of the days just seem to stretch, but then it all goes by so fast and seeing different women from different places in their life, different points in the journey has helped me understand that I have a lot of time left on this planet.

You know, that I have this small experience of having my kids growing up in my home for the next 18 years, for the 18 years that we get them is a very small portion of the lived human experience of being a woman, of being Laura. And I've just really, I've never had a context for really getting to know that that's been like, I've had the experience with in your retreats. The two times I've been to your retreat has been that for me just really helping me place myself in my journey and understand that I have a long way to go. Not in terms of growth, I mean, we always have growth to do, but I have a lot of opportunity, a lot of life to live that there's stages ahead of me that it's not all behind me. Do you know what I'm saying? 

Jen: Yes. And, and, and it's not just motherhood. I feel like when we're in high school and college, there's this path in our brains like, oh, I'm gonna get married and I'm gonna have kids and there's really nothing after that. 

Laura: Yes.

Jen: But is that kind of what you're saying? You have this whole individual identity separate from parenthood that needs to be fleshed out.

Laura: Yes.

Jen: And, and hearing other perspectives helps you to do that. 

Laura: Yes. Absolutely. I really liked what you just said. Yeah, that we have this full identity outside of parenthood that needs to be flushed out. I feel like we, you know, so many of us go into having kids. And we think we know what it's going to be like and we think we know who we're going to be and our world gets rocked because it's very different than how we thought it was going to be. And we have to change our identity and then we stop, you know, and, and then I think we're going to bump up against other transitions. Our kids are going to move into teenagerhood and they're going to start looking to their peers for connections and belonging. And that's going to be a rough, it can, can be a very rough transition for parents if they haven't done that work all along the way of continuing to get to know themselves, care for themselves and mother and nurture themselves. And yeah, I just think we have transitions ahead of us and the, we're the constant in that the people around us, the jobs our daily activities will change, but we're the constant and we deserve nurturing. We deserve attention and focus. 

Jen: Absolutely. That's one of the things I do love about the retreat. Now, it might sound like I'm tooting my own horn, but it's not me. When I showed up to the first retreat. It was small, a small group of seven and everyone joined together for a dinner and we were all nervous. I was nervous. What are they going to think of my retreat that I'm hosting? They were nervous because they imagined they were going to eat a meal with a celebrity which made me laugh. And in the end, by the end of two hours at that first meal, I said, and several of them also agreed, um, it feels like you're meant to be my best friends. I don't know how this happened. And that feels similar at every retreat. The women who come are people I would want to spend time with and authentic and real and funny and not divas, not divas. Whatever that means to you. That's not who comes to the retreats, real authentic growths, minded women who just are so awesome. 

Laura: It is always an interesting experience to have folks realize that the people that they listen to on podcasts, they're just actually like real people who, you know, like to eat chicken tenders, you know, or something like, you know, I mean, so that is a very, you know, there's an aspect of that for sure. I love getting to meet, meet new people even though it's stressful for me. I found that at these retreats, having the opportunity to get to know people in some of the workshops has made it easier to see who I'm kind of drawn to and sitting, you know, sit down with, you know, at a meal. I've also given myself permission to have meals on my own, which I mean, gosh, for me as an introvert as someone who really never gets to do that, is really lovely. You know, normally, I mean, I love having meals with my family, but it, it's kind of a luxury to get to have something by yourself too.

So there is, there's space to do those things on your own. But, you know, there's, there's this thing that we go through during different periods of our lives where we're kind of forced to move into, move into spaces that make us a little uncomfortable. And after those points, you know, like new classes in high school going, you know, getting a dorm assignment in college, you know, after those points, maybe a new workplace after, you know, if we start a new job, but there's not very many opportunities for that, especially for someone like me who seeks safety and social security quite a, quite a lot. And I know it's good for me. I know it's good for me to stretch a little bit, you know. And it's nice to be put in a situation where like, well, if I don't want to just sit by myself, I've just got to go sit with some random people who are really nice and, and will be friendly to me, you know, and I mean, and that ultimately they're just lovely, lovely women, lovely women from different parts of the world and country, you know, who, have really wonderful stories to share.

You've done a lot of work on themselves, you are committed to doing more work or committed to growing and caring for themselves. It's really nice to find those people. It's hard sometimes to find those people in real life, you know? Like we know, I have a membership community. You know, we're all in line. We all have a lot in common and when we get together in our zoom room for workshops or for office hours, we all feel very comfortable with each other because, you know, we know each other so well. But it's hard to find that in person in vivo, you know, like having that like an actual physical person in front of us who's doing that work. And that is something that's really lovely about the women who come to your retreats. 

Jen: That is true in person. It seems maybe there's a distance, there's a trick to finding people who love personal growth and doing the work and all those great topics as much as we do. So, one of my. Oh, go ahead. 

Laura: Oh, yeah. I, I do think that there's people, you know, each time I've gone and I know a couple of people who are going this this year who are completely new to the idea of personal development too. So every time I've met a couple of people who are like, I just found it online and I signed up, you know, and I think that that's really cool too because so those people, there's this sense of adventure and like, let's do it, you know, which is fun and also hard for me. So it's fun to be around people who are adventurous in that way. 

Jen: I remember someone last year. I know she wouldn't mind me sharing her first name. Trisha saw the retreat one night, I think 10 days before it began, maybe even just a week. She said, is there still a spot? And I'm like, yes, we have one spot left and she said I'm booking right now, I'm going to check my passport. Okay, it's good. I'm coming. It was amazing and she fit right in with everyone. So, yeah.

Laura: Yeah, that's awesome. I was, you know, I was just um talking with the person who helps me coordinate the classes that I teach for the, for UW Madison, I teach parenting classes for them. And she is retiring at the end of this academic year. And so I was telling her about the retreat. I was kind of working through our schedule and, and telling her when I was going to be gone and she's like, well, wait a second who goes to this retreat?

And I was like, oh, you know, lots of different people, you know, sometimes it's, you know, moms with kids, sometimes it's women who are transitioning to a new phase, you know, have just gotten out of a marriage or are, you know, retiring. She's like, well, that's me and I talked, we talked about it. And 20 minutes later she came out to the, to the parent like the baby class I was leading, I lead an infant play group and she came out and she was like, well, I emailed Jen and I'm going, I booked my tickets. I mean, I'm so excited Barbara's coming this year and it's really lovely to get. I don't know. So there are those people who they see it and they go, they jump in with both feet. I think that's amazing.

Jen: For sure, for sure. So, one of my, one of my favorite things at the retreat is the workshops in the afternoons and you led a workshop last year. So many people came up and said, oh, I love Laura. She's so authentic and nurturing and soulful. But tell them about your class that you led last year, what you can remember and give them a little tease.

Laura: Yeah I’m trying to remember. So, I mean, I think it was an inner child work. 

Jen: Yes. That's right. 

Laura: Yeah. Class. So we talked a lot about our little ones inside us, how important it is to be tender and loving with them, to reparent them in the ways that we weren't met by our parents because they couldn't, you know, for whatever reason. So lots of opportunities to do some healing in the here and now I know that lots of folks are nervous to do some of that work because it feels like they're going to have to go into the past and open old wounds and that's not what I teach. So this is more about in the here and now what does this part of you need now? Not necessarily what they didn't get then, but what do they need now? And how can you meet that need for them? And so we did that and it was lovely and fun. I think the year before we talked about window of tolerance and stress response and that was pretty cool too. 

Jen: So you're leading a workshop at the next retreat as well, any hints or teasers on what your topic is? I mean, you don't have to lock it in. I know you like to feel into what feels right in the moment. 

Laura: I am a little intuitive when it comes to those things that I feel like I've been talking. So it's, I feel like I've been talking a lot with parents recently about family dynamics. Like different ways we relate to people and how kind of the, the the geometry of families, right? So, and how to set boundaries and how to have really good authentic 1 to 1 relationships. So often relationships get complex when we pull other people into them. Or we're trying to navigate a relationship, you know, between our partner and our two kids, you know that like there's a lot of relationships happening in there, there's a sibling relationship, the partner relationship, the relationship you have with each kid, the relationship your partner has with each kid. You know, there's a lot of die of relationships and it can get quite complicated.

And so I think what I would love to work with and we won't focus entirely on kids because not everyone has kids there or wants to talk about kids. But I think what I really want to talk about is how to have really healthy 1 to 1 relationships with someone. And if you start noticing patterns where someone is pulling someone in or someone is inserting themselves into your relationship, how to gently hold boundaries with love and compassion so that you can have those direct authentic 1 to 1 relationships. That's what I've been thinking about. I don't know how that lands with you. 

Jen: It lands really, really well, I mean, it, it almost reminds me of, family circle work. Am I imagining that? Do you know what I'm talking about?

Laura: I don't know about family cycle work it is. It sounds great.

Jen: Well, we'll talk about it later. It sounds, it sounds amazing, Laura. That's beautiful. Very good. 

Laura: Okay and what are some of the things you're going to be working on? I also know you like to be intuitive. What are some of the things you're looking forward to talking about? 

Jen: I have some new topics coming up, but I'm going to leave those as a surprise, but we always think about what's not working in our lives. What do we need to let go of and what are we ready to introduce? We need to always have an ending of some things and an addition of things to feel aligned and aligned with what's right for us. I guess I call it kind of listening to your intuition, but some people use the phrase aligned. We're, we're coming from the murky ocean or the deep end of the pool. We've gotten out, we're on the land, we're safe and we get to redirect our, our compass really. Where do we need to go next to feel our best? And what's the next best me?

You know, having those moments to get out of the churning waters of wherever you are and just breathe, feel the warm sand, feel the sun on your face figuratively and literally, I think it's essential and, and I've always done things like this myself. I'll, I'll often once a quarter just check into a hotel so I can hear what quiet sounds like and hear myself think and notice how I feel about different ideas. So the retreat is just a big one where you can do it for several days, surrounded with people you love and not having someone saying, mom, mom, mom or honey, honey, honey or your boss saying Laura, Laura, Laura, you need to do this. You need to do that. Having your attention always on those needs of other people. Makes it harder to hear that intuitive voice I feel like, yeah.

Laura: I love that Jen. You know, since coming to, starting to come to your retreat, I have given myself more permission to do that sort of thing to just take a day off where I block off my calendar and maybe I don't even go anywhere. But I'm just in my home by myself. I tell my husband to pick up the kids from school and go out to dinner because I'm just going to be by myself, you know, and give myself that permission to check in. It's important and, and it's, I think though, that it's hard for people to do that to give themselves permission to do that. Why is it so hard? Do you know? 

Jen: I think we have these standards of excellent womanhood and excellent motherhood coming at us through social media, through the media TV, through our relatives or older relatives, especially, my mom would never ever have gone on a trip by herself. She would go with her sisters maybe. But, or to go check into a hotel, it just wasn't done. So we see these examples of how it's supposed to be. And we also see among those examples, women who are completely burned out and not loving their roles and not loving their lives. And I don't want to live that way. Life is too short. I am going to love this life if it kills me. You know what I mean? And I think that's why it's hard is those shoulds that surround us. I don't know. What else would you add to that? 

Laura: Yeah. I think, I think we don't have a lot of models. I think you're right. And I think that we, we forget that like modern humans are living a very weird existence. Like the human beings are not meant to live in nuclear families. Like our, our kids are biologically and evolutionarily primed to make four significant attachment to have four significant attachment figures. They like our babies are meant to have four significant present caregivers. And so the fact that when we try to do it with all one person or, you know, just all two people taking care of these kids, it's a lot of pressure and it leaves very little room and we're not, it makes sense that it's hard because it's actually not supposed to be that way, you know, and this is, you know, I live in a nuclear family.

My parents don't want to live with us and help me raise my kids and that's totally fine. We just, the fact is we live in a very different way. But in the past when we all lived together and lived in close tight knit communities, we had aunties, we had grandparents who would take the kids and give you time to go off by yourself, even if it was going off by yourself to gather something, you know, for the community. You still have a stretch of time by yourself. You know, I'm involved in a moon lodge that an Anna Shanae woman hosts in our community and has invited folks into. And she talks a lot about how those traditions used to be such a place of sacred retreat for women that every month during your moon time, you would retreat to this space of rest and creativity. You did no work. People sent food into you. All you did was journal or bead or create and talk, share stories and wisdom for a week, one week, every month. Can you imagine how nourishing that would be for your partner? 

Jen: We need that. We need it. I know we need it. 

Laura: Yeah, and so there's this piece of it. That is the way human bodies are meant to work. And so we, we need this. We need this rest. Our bodies are crying out for it. And not just rest, we need community. We need a space to be with ourselves around others who are being with themselves, you know?

Jen:  True. I love that. Be with ourselves around others who are being with themselves. Yeah. Did I say that right? Oh, that's nice. 

Laura: Yeah, yeah. You said it great. 

Jen: Yeah. Wow, that's great. You're making me excited for the retreat again. Thank you, Laura. 

Laura: I can't wait to go, too. I'm so excited. 

Jen: So this will this next one, we're releasing this just before the 2024 retreat. This next one will be your third and I think my sixth. Wow, this is amazing. I'm glad you've been to half of my retreats. 

Laura: I can't even believe that. That's so exciting. When I went to my first one, a couple of years ago, it felt like you had been doing this for 20 years. I was so in awe of you, you know, I had really only ever seen you in a friend context and I, I was just so in awe of the, just the way you held a space for a room. I remember going to the you had a EFT tapping session that was just so powerful. If you've never done EFT tapping in person in a group setting, you don't know how unreal it is. I mean, I'm a scientist, okay, but there's something that happens during an EFT group session in person that just like there's just this like magnification of it. I was very powerful. 

Jen: Yeah, that's, that's an interesting kind of little tangent. I'll speak a moment too. There is something very healing about in person energy where a group is doing healing work, trying to up level their thoughts um release a trauma um change how they feel about something. So I feel like every year that I've gone to the retreat, I've up leveled kind of my baseline happiness or my baseline energy a little bit, it's a, an intensive way to just push up a notch. I'm going to be this much happier now because you experience that healing in the group. You know, sometimes I feel that on Zoom or over a podcast interview like this, but it's magnified tremendously, the healing, so. 

Laura: I agree. You can get the feeling online sometimes. But there's not, there's no replacement for in person work, you know, really at the end of the day, we're meant to be together, you know. 

Jen: Yeah. And I guess I would add that my retreat style and why I invite you as well. We're not in our heads just learning facts. We are very much experiencing emotion and energy and love, I guess I would add. Something's happening to all of us at the physical level, at the emotional level. It's not just cognitive and that's also why I love the retreat. It's really healing that way.

Laura: Yeah, I love it. I love it too. Okay, so this is going to come out right before this year's retreat. Are there as of right now as we're recording, are there still spaces available? 

Jen: Yep. This year's retreat is in Ixtapa Mexico, which is the Pacific coast of Mexico. I always love the Pacific Ocean. I feel like the waves crash harder and the water is warmer. You just fly in and club med the resort where we'll be staying, picks us up um all very safe and then we stay the whole time on the resort. So safety is locked in and then in 2025, the retreat will be back in the Dominican Republic at a resort. Similarly, you just fly in the resort picks you up. All your needs are cared for. All inclusive meals are included, room and board is included. You're just taken care of. You have this container to not have anyone need anything from you. And it's very magical. Yeah. 

Laura: Oh my God. It's so magical to just go to a place and all your needs are met and you don't have to take care of anyone else other than yourself. 

Jen: And you go to your room as needed and you don't even have a spouse to deal with as much as we love our spouses. Sometimes we need, I mean, what, tell me, Laura or maybe tell everyone why would you want to travel without your spouse? What does that do for you? Shouldn't you want to always travel with your spouse? I don't know. 

Laura: Oh, okay. So, I love my husband as a recording. I just got back from a weekend trip with him for his birthday, like a four day trip with him for his birthday. It was wonderful and fun. But it's very hard to follow your intuition when another person has their own needs that need to be met too and their own desires and their own wants, you know. And so it's very, you and especially as women, we are so, so socialized to consider others needs before our own that it's very hard to get a clear sense of what you need when someone you care about is around you because we're just, we're just so trained to not do that. And so going by yourself is, is really freeing if you can get over that.

Like, if you've never done it before, if you can get over that hump of, they're gonna be fine. You know, like, you know, I know lots of, lots of moms who carry so much of the mental and emotional load at home. They have to think about things like, are they going to have food? Are they going to eat? Do they know what to pack for school lunches? You know, all of those things, like they'll be fine, they will be okay as long as we can get that, put it in a little, you know, do what we need to before we leave and then put it away. I actually really like that it's international because then I don't even turn my phone on. I mean, you know, I don't want to pay for international calling and stuff. So I just turn my phone off entirely and I love that. 

Jen: I'm not ashamed to admit I have no interest in talking to my family while I'm gone because I know there will be something they want me to solve even on those phone calls. And so, yeah, that's fascinating. Yeah. 

Laura: And there's, I mean, and it's that, you know, secure attachment, both with kids with partners means that we want to be connected while being our own selves, right? So it's the, it's the secure interplay between autonomy and connection, right? And we have to be able to separate in order, you know, like that, being able to confidently separate is a part of a secure attachment, you know, so there's, there's that piece of it too. It's good for us. 

Jen: It is. And, and I will add, I used to be much more of a traditional woman where I was the stay at home parent and my husband worked and I didn't have host retreats or have a podcast. And at that time I like did everything. Sad to admit, not everything my husband would help, right. He would help and he would babysit. But going on my retreats was one of the best things because I didn't make myself available. And my husband has become so much more present in every way because that week where I was gone, he learned to do more of that stuff.

And now I'm happy to admit that he probably does more around the house than I do. By a long shot, he does all the cooking, he can sign forms, he can help people do their budgeting. Our kids have little budgets, I mean, he can run everything I only thought I could do in the past. And I love that it's taken so much pressure and that, that mental weight off my head to know he's got this, but it required me to detach enough to force or to allow maybe him to step in without me telling him how it should be. And he has his own ways in many, many things and the house isn't perfect when I get back, but it's decent. It's like doable.

Laura: It’s standing.

Jen: I'm not going to fall. It's scary. But, I mean, it's, it's completely worth it. It's, it's helped him really show up presently with our kids and with our household way better because he's had practice, much practice doing it. So it was a gift to myself. 

Laura:  And to him too. So the research backs this up when we do things like this when we had a sexual relationship and the person who does all of the primary caregiving takes themselves out and gives the other one an opportunity to, to really step in, it increases their enjoyment of their parenting experience too. So it's not just good for us. It's good for them. It's good for those relationships that are at home, too. 

Jen: Yes. Agreed. Agreed. And my kids are, you know, they're still prone to want to come to me to solve problems, but they're quicker to know that their dad is available or they'll open the door and see I'm busy and I'll just ask dad. So I love that, too. Yeah.

Laura: That's great. That's great. I love it. 

Jen: Well, I think we've really touched on a lot of the benefits of getting away, getting out of the deep end of the pool, stopping to tread that water and just sit on the side for some people that's with a margarita and figuring out what we want next, we get to do that. We get to decide we're more than just caregivers and wives and mothers and all the things. We are humans first, so.

Laura: Yeah.

Jen: Glad we could talk about us. 

Laura: I really, I love that. Thank you for, you know, chatting about this with me and giving me the opportunity to share kind of what it's been like for me the past couple of years. I'm so excited.

Jen: Yeah, I’m looking forward to your workshop again, in Mexico. 

Laura: Well, thanks for having me. 

Jen: Thanks, Laura.

Laura: I always, I feel, I feel like it's such a, you know, a privilege to get to go to these retreats that you set up so beautifully. 

Jen: Thank you so much. I appreciate it. Well, thanks for the chat.

Okay, so thanks for listening today. Remember to subscribe to the podcast and if it was helpful, leave me a review that really helps others find the podcast and join us in this really important work of creating a parenthood that we don't have to escape from and creating a childhood for our kids that they don't have to recover from. 

And if you're listening, grab a screenshot and tag me on Instagram so that I can give you a shout-out, and definitely go follow me on Instagram. I'm @laurafroyenphd. That's where you can get behind the scenes. Look at what balanced, conscious parenting looks like in action with my family, and plus I share a lot of other, really great resources there too.

All right. That's it for me today. I hope that you keep taking really good care of your kids and your family and each other and most importantly of yourself. And just to remember, balance is a verb and you're already doing it. You've got this!

Episode 174: True Attachment Parenting - How Understanding Your Own Attachment Can Change Your Parenting with Annette Kussin

Welcome to another episode of The Balanced Parent Podcast. This week, we're delving into the fascinating world of adult attachment and how it shapes our parenting styles. I'm joined by Annette Kussin, a psychotherapist and a social worker based in Toronto. Annette is the author of two books called It’s Attachment and Secure Parent, Secure Child. We'll explore how understanding your attachment style can significantly impact how you raise your children, fostering a greater sense of safety within your home. 

Here are some of the takeaways:

  • Explore Annette Kussin's journey into attachment theory

  • Difference between infant attachment and adult attachment

  • Influence of attachment on parenting 

  • Examples of adult attachment categories in parenting

  • Explore the connections between parental attachment and its impact on the child's developing brain

To connect directly with Annette, you can email her at akussin@bellnet.ca, and her website www.annettekussintherapy.com.

Resources:


TRANSCRIPT

Parenting is often lived in the extremes. It's either great joy or chaotic, overwhelmed. In one moment, you're nailing it and the next you're losing your cool. I want to help you find your way to the messy middle, to a place of balance. You see balance is a verb, not a state of being. It is a thing you do. Not a thing you are. It is an action, a process, a series of micro corrections that you make each and every day to keep yourself feeling centered. We are never truly balanced. We are engaged in the process of balancing.

Hello, I'm Dr. Laura Froyen and this is The Balanced Parent Podcast where overwhelmed, stressed out and disconnected parents go to find tools, mindset shifts and practices to help them stop yelling at the people they love and start connecting on a deeper level. All delivered with heaping doses of grace and compassion. Join me in conversations that will help you get clear on your goals and values and start showing up in your parenting, your relationships, your life with openhearted authenticity and balance. Let's go! 

Laura: Hello, everybody. This is Doctor Laura Froyen and on this week's episode of The Balanced Parent Podcast, we are going to be exploring how your own adult attachment style impacts the way in which you parent your children and how to kind of take that information to increase a felt sense of safety within your home. To help me with this conversation, I have an adult attachment expert who is a practicing psychotherapist and social worker in Canada Toronto. Her name is Annette Kussin and I'm so excited to have her here. We are gonna geek out about attachment so be prepared my dear listener. Annette, welcome to the show. Why don't you tell us a little bit more about yourself? You know who you are, what you do and then we'll jump in. 

Annette: Thanks, Laura. Thank you for having me. I'm so pleased to be here. So, as you said, I'm a social worker and psychotherapist marriage and family therapist. And I have been interested in attachment for many, many years and then interested in adult attachment, also many years, but a little more recently, I'm trained in it. And I've trained to do the adult attachment interview. I've worked with, Dan Hughes. I was part of a group that he started, I worked with adopted children and their attachment issues again for many years. But it certainly wasn't my original work, but that's kind of what I've been focused on, now for, oh, probably 2020 years, at least so. It's absolutely my belief system if I see the world from a detachment lands and certainly all of the issues that I see. At this point in my career, I'm mainly interested in training. So I get lots of workshops, I supervise people and writing. So I've written two books and I hope I will continue to write. 

Laura: Yeah, two lovely books on attachment. 

Annette: Mhm. 

Laura: Can you tell us just kind of before we get started? I think a lot of our listeners will be familiar with attachment theory and how it applies to young children and infants. They know the difference between attachment theory and attachment parenting, the mode of parenting popularized by the seers and how they're really not related at all. So they understand those things, but what is the difference between infant attachment and adult attachment? Can you tell us how they're related and kind of just a frame or conversation? 

Annette: So adult attachment certainly is based on your early attachment experiences, but it is also based on what happens to you in your later childhood and adolescence. So it's sort of both kind of experiences, so you can have had a difficult early childhood experience. But if you have some positive experiences later, then that might might change your adult attachment. But typically your early childhood attachment is also going to evolve into your adult attachment. And it's based on again, the work of Mary Ainsworth and Mary May, and they certainly establish the category of the adult attachment by trying to understand the mothers of the children that they had already determined their attachment. So it's very much connected but other experience after early childhood can also very much influence the evolution of your attachment. 

Laura: Okay. And so how would the average person see their own adult attachment style manifested in their daily lives? Maybe not even as parents, just adults? 

Annette: Yeah. So, again, there are three categories of adult attachment or four categories of adult attachment, similar to child attachment. So, uh what's interesting is that Mary May who established this gave them a different name in adulthood. And I'm not quite sure why I've been trying to find that out. So secure attachment in children is called autonomous attachment in adults. And it, it really makes sense because it means if you have a secure attachment as an adult, then you have the capacity both to sort of be in intimate relationships. But you also have the capacity to be a separate autonomous human being. So it just, it, it is that combination that I think is, is why the name autonomous is really useful and relevant. 

Laura: Yeah, I like that, you know, because the attachment is really all about autonomy and relatedness and the interplay between the two. And so, yes. Yeah. 

Annette: So if you're gonna be a secure adult, you have that capacity for both union and separate. 

Laura: Yeah, I love it. 

Annette: Yeah. And then there's three insecure attachments again, similar to child attachment. So the the first is called preoccupied attachment, which is anxious attachment in childhood. So people with a preoccupied attachment have a lot of anxiety or are pretty dependent kind of human beings. Their whole sense of self is based on their relationships. They are highly sensitive to being abandonment for somebody not being available and then they have real poor capacity to regulate their effect. So if somebody's not available, they're gonna become highly anxious, very angry. And we'll have difficulty controlling. So that's kind of a very basic description of, of that avoidant attachment, a child that is called dismissing. 

And again, it does make sense because it means if you have been an avoidant child, then you avoid intimacy, you, you devalue you know, attachment and connection. And then as an adult, you continue that. So you try to avoid close relationships, you're much more emphasizing accomplishment, achievement, the activities that you have, and therefore, again, you're less emotionally available. And again, there are ranges so you can have a dismissing where you're truly out of touch with feeling. So if somebody said, how are you feeling, you actually would not even know what they're asking and, and versus somebody who kind of touch with feelings, but just can't express them. So, again, very difficult for people that are dismissing to be vulnerable, to be emotionally available, but they can be very successful in their lives. So these are, you know, typically would be your workaholic, you know, highly successful in their job. But if you ask the people who are close to them, what they're like in those relationships that for you would hear, you know, he's not emotionally available, right? 

Laura: Why is that? Why, why would someone, why would an avoidant attachment style in childhood and a dismissive attachment style in adulthood? Why would that be protective or helpful for, you know, like what, why does that develop? 

Annette: Well, it, it typically develops if you have an avoidant attachment means you have parents that really are not emotionally available to you. So you end up shutting down your needs, your wants, your feelings because nobody is available to meet them. But you might come to believe, but if I'm really good at what I do, if I really become the perfect student, the perfect sports person, maybe that will bring some closeness to parents. So typically if you have those kind of narcissistic parents or parents who are also dismissing and overvalue achievement, that child will do anything. I mean, all of attachment is we do anything to get close. And that's how again, it's all in the service of getting both to parents, but it does mean you don't you're not in touch with and you don't value your own needs, your own, wants your own interests. So just repress all of that. 

Laura: Oh, I thought, you know, it's interesting as I'm hearing you describe these and I know we have one more to, to look at, but I'm just thinking about the listener, and I for me it's so much easier to see my parents in those to like not like notice my experience and I feel like it must be hard sometimes to see yourself to give that like kind of a, a self assessment. It's hard for us to be honest and aware and introspective on kind of what's going on for us. So maybe after you tell us about the kind of that last adult attachment style, maybe we can talk about how we can figure out for ourselves because it's so easy to look at other people and see their patterns, you know. But much harder for ourselves. 

Annette: Yeah. Okay. So the la the last one is on. Oh, go ahead. Sorry. 

Laura: I'll share you my own experience because when I was reading about adult attachment and, and how useful it would be to see clients. I read about myself and I was totally, I mean, I didn't in therapy, I've been a therapist and when I read about dismissing because that's kind of part of what I am I thought oh my God, that describes me. And I wish that I had known about that particular category or been able to understand myself from that lens because it turned out to be very helpful. 

Laura: Yeah.

Annette: So I actually think it's a very helpful and useful way of understanding.

Laura: Oh, me too 100%. 

Annette: Yeah. 

Laura: Okay. So the last category it for infants is disorganized attachment, right? So no clear strategy for how to bring a caregiver closer. What a what, how does that manifest in adulthood? 

Annette: So it's called unresolved in adulthood because typically it means you had traumatic experiences that never got resolved in your childhood, in your later childhood, in your adolescence. And so they're kind of still getting played out and you're right, people kids that have disorganized attachment, it means but there's no strategy that they developed to be able to get close to the parent because the parent was pretty frightening or unpredictable. So these are kids that just did not have an organized way of getting parents involved and that continued. But in adulthood really is that you see the world in relationships is pretty dangerous. So you might have a little more of an organized strategy. And that's really gonna partly depend on how you responded to the frightening experiences in childhood, how your brain responded, like, like freeze. Right? So, so by adulthood, you might have one of those that's a more organized strategy, but typically you're still pretty disorganized internally and that's how I was, all people would describe themselves if they just feel that disorganization internal. And so again, they have a really difficult time in relationships. They're triggered by all kinds of experiences that they never got resolved. So it is a really painful and difficult attachment category that.

Laura: Yeah, I know when I was before I went to grad school, I worked in a lab that in, in an attachment lab. And a it was in a, a marriage conflict research project, like a marital conflict research project, but they did strange situations with the families that were in the in the study. And so I got to code strange situations with older children with. And so it was a, a kind of an adapted protocol that mean put together. Anyway, so I there was one child who had a disorganized attachment in it and it was really just disconcerting to see her response to when she was left alone in the room, she had a freeze response and she just froze and stood like a statue the entire time and it was really sad and really hard to see and I can imagine that painful feeling within, within a person, that sense of that, of disorganized, not knowing what to do overwhelm could be really intense as an adult too. 

Annette: Well, absolutely. But as a parent, if you haven't, so attachment, it means you're going to pretty much repeat but having as a child, you don't have an organized way of being a parent either. 

Laura: Yeah. Yeah. Okay. So I feel, I feel like it makes complete sense to me that understanding these aspects for yourself would be really helpful in understanding kind of the default language that maybe comes out of our mouth. When we're in tricky moments with our kids and but before we get there, I would really love to know. So how can a parent, you know? So they heard themselves a little bit as we were talking here. But how could a parent go about figuring out their own adult attachment style so that they can understand, kind of where they're coming from and meet themselves with a little bit more grace and compassion and awareness

Annette: Yes, I'm glad you added that piece because what's really important in understanding adult attachment is it's truly a nonjudgmental way, understanding yourself. And that's the baseline. So it's really important that you don't do this critically even if you're in an insecure category. That you have to be kind to yourself. As you begin to understand, I have these, you know, limitations in the way I'm parenting and the way I'm being in a relationship.

Laura: So I, I'm so glad you brought like that you held that up to the light and I, I really appreciate it. My favorite phrase to use when we're talking about things like it, this is, and it makes sense. It makes sense that a person would have these strategies, given what they went through as children. It, these all of these things make really good sense. 

Annette: So that's exactly right. It makes sense. It's non judgmental and it's also important that you don't judge your own parents. 

Laura: Yes. Does that make sense too?

Annette: Got passed down to them. We wanna certainly break the generational, you know. 

Laura: Yeah, I mean, that's what so many of the our listeners are attempting to do. I call them my inflection point parents. They, they're the point in their family history where things are gonna change and that's what they're wanting to do. And so we can't do that without awareness. So if we're at that stage, we're looking to see okay, so what is my adult attachment style? How can they go about finding, finding out? 

Annette: So, I mean, the most accurate way is to have somebody do your adult attachment interview. So that's a structured questionnaire that somebody has to be trained to do it. And then it is scored and that when somebody offers you the feedback. Now, the limitations of that are that there are very few people trained to offer and score the adult attachment interview and it takes hours so it is expensive. Most people in public service, I mean, if you work for an agency, I don't imagine any agency is gonna give you hours and hours and hours to do this. If you're in private practice, you're not gonna be able to charge somebody hours and hours and hours of your time. So, if it is more limited, however, I think we started to use it more flexibly. So when I started doing this, I was sure that Mary name is going to come and find me and see me because I've been using it more flexibly. But I think, you know, since Dan Siegell and, and lots of other people have come to really say we have to be able to use this more use, you know, in a, in a more clinically useful way and in a more flexible way.

Laura: It can't just stay in the ivory tower of our literature, like, you know, in journals that the public can't access. And that's one of the primary reasons why I left academia because I was, I was, I wanted to be on the ground with parents. 

Annette: So it is a research tool and a very valuable one.

Laura:  Of course.

Annette: But I really like it to really help people want a therapist to use it, you know, more flexible clinically and I trained people to do it. So I train people, but I make it very clear what we're getting is an impression of one's adult attachment. This is not like this, you know, research that would be absolutely accurate. It is an impression. So that's certainly one way to learn about your adult attachment. And the other thing is really to look at the different categories and the behavioral descriptions. And to see which fits now, sometimes people don't fit into one category, but I tend to think that you would really identify with one particular category over another and you can have more than one. So you can have a primary and then you can have a secondary, maybe even tertiary. But typically we have one particular way of being in relationships that we use, you know, in our most intimate relationships so, and in our parenting. So in my first book, it's attachment, I certainly list, you know, the descriptions in a pretty, yeah, clear kind of way. So thats so people can really begin to see themselves in, in a particular category or not. I repeat that a little bit in this book. So, you know, again that I think.

Laura: Her first book was It’s Attachment and then her second book is Secure Parents, Secure Child. 

Annette: So that's, that's I think the best way for most people is to look at the behavioral descriptions of each category and see which kind of applies to you best, you know. And that, and makes sense to you. Again, it really is, makes sense. 

Laura: Yeah, I love that makes sense, little line.

Annette: And then you will see how it also makes sense in the way that you parent. And again, it is nonjudgmental. So I've got to keep emphasizing that. So, you know, even if you see yourself in a really insecure category, it's just a kind way of understanding yourself and it really will offer you ways to change. 

Laura: Okay. So I feel like we could go one of two ways right now, Annette. One is to go into the i the prospect of changing of becoming more secure within ourselves and having that be reflected in our parenting. And the other one is to kind of give some examples of what different parents look like in different scenarios. And I know you have tons of examples in your book. So we certainly don't want to give them all right now, you know, because it would just would take too much time. But I think a couple of examples would be really helpful. So maybe we'll go there first and then we can talk about how we can maybe move and shift into more secure interactions with our kids. 

Annette: Okay. So maybe we can look at the different categories, I'll kind of do a brief description of them and give you an example and then we'll, you know, then we'll look at how do you change that. 

Laura: Yeah. Yeah, sounds good. 

Annette: So the first of course, is preoccupied attachment and, and as I was saying, that's where people really have poor ethic regulation, they're typically very dependent people. So again, their whole sense of self is based on relationships and they're hypersensitive to somebody not being available to them. So those patterns of that kind of neediness is really gonna be in your adult attachments. However, if you are really worried about where is my husband, my partner, why didn't he call me? You know, he said he would call me at noon and he didn't call me and you're just preoccupied with that, that's going round and round in your brain and what I call the limbic loop. So you're just thinking about that all the time getting angry or more resentful. Well, if you're really stuck in that loop, you are not available to your children. In fact, you become annoyed by your children because you're worried about your own needs, right? And preoccupied with that and your children pick up, of course, you're not consistently available to them because you're somewhere else in your brain. So they start, you know, mommy, mommy, they're gonna do what they need to do even cause some problems all in the service of getting you involved. 
Laura: Getting you closer, yeah. 

Annette: Very hard and you're gonna get angrier and angry kids because you're worried about something else. So that's that dynamic. And you have to learn to really somehow pull yourself out of that preoccupation and be available to your children. And it just helps if you know that. And again, in a really kind way that. I know I'm really worried about why, you know, my husband John haven't called me but. 

Laura: And that makes sense, but.

Annette: I have to pay attention to my kids because they're my priority. 

Laura: Yeah. Can I ask a question? Do you ever see parents engaging in preoccupied be behaviors with their own children feeling insecure about their parenting wanting reassurance. Am I a good mom? You know that, you know, am I, you know, do you like being my kid? You know, that that kind of preoccupation, like having it flow that direction? 

Annette: Right. So there is sort of different ways preoccupied parents, parent, one is that they're really inconsistently available and the other is they're over involved.

Laura: Over involved. 

Annette: Because when I say your whole sense of self is based on relationship, it's also based on   your relationship with your kids. So you need them to be, you know, successful actor, but it really is for their own need. So I had a case once where this parent was to the the AI was telling me that her mother was like really involved in all these school activities. She went to every game she would be on the bus, organizing trips to wherever her kid, you know, was in this in the league hockey league or whatever. And this woman said to me, all I wanted was for my mother to leave me alone and.

Laura: A little space.

Annette: Not come on this trip because what gave this mother a sense of self and meaning in life was her kids activities and she needed her kid to be successful and being busy in all these activities for her needs, not her kid. So that is an example of again of a preoccupied mother who really is too occupied, too involved in her kids activities to meet her own. So then I. 

Laura: Yeah, yeah. So such a good example. Can I provide a personal example of, of this and what this can look like when you are aware and you're bringing that awareness to kind of the in the moment interactions. So I I definitely identify with leaning, preoccupied in my own attachment style. I have to be aware of it a lot. I feel very secure in my my relationship with my partner, we've done a lot of beautiful therapy, a lot of healing has happened there which is really good. But with my kids, I, I just have to be aware of it. I'm just not getting sucked into that feedback loop. I had a very preoccupied dad. He was exactly like the parent that you were just describing. And so I have to be just really aware of those things. So I go to my, when I'm feeling a little insecure about my relationship with my children instead of turning to them, I turn to my partner and I, and I help, I explain, I'm feeling insecure. I know I can get that reassurance for myself, but I'd love some reassurance from you. Am I a good mom? So I go to an adult to get that reassurance me and that and then I also have to be really present with myself in moments where I'm witnessing  other feedback in relationships. 

So just as an example, my daughter is just turned 11, today is her birthday. And her class went on a camping trip and she asked me to be the shop at be a chaperone because she wanted me there at night. I slept in my own tent. That was the plan, but she wanted me at their night. But then she asked me, she goes, but mom, I want you to treat me like I'm one of the all other kids like you. I'm not your daughter that I'm just one of the other students. And that was of course heard from me. There was another mom there who I had has a sweet relationship with her daughter and they were cozied up by the fire, you know, it was really rainy, terrible camping trip. I mean, it was a good camping trip, but it was terrible weather. So they were cozied up by the fire and my daughter wanted nothing to do with that. And so I had to be very aware and very present with myself in the moment while that was happening of meeting her stated need for my presence and what I needed versus my own kind of inner like, anxious need to be close to her and kind of have that feedback about a relationship. Do you know what I'm saying? So, I mean, that's exactly what we're talking about here, right? 

Annette: We're talking about. That's exactly right. 

Laura: And it's not easy. It, it was hard, a lot of like little self conversations, you know, our my parent relationship does not have to look like other people, you just lots of self reassurance, you know, but. 

Annette: But, but what you described is a great example of your own awareness. Yes, I mean, so that's what's really crucial  changing how you are with your kids. So, one of the things that I talked about in this book is that you may not fully change your attachment category. Like that takes a lot of years of therapy. But if you have the awareness, then you can say I have to, you know, not get over involved in my kid. That's my need. Just like you're saying, you have that self examination and self awareness that in itself will help, just not transfer your attachment to your child. 

Laura: Yes, that's always been my hope. 

Annette: Yeah, it's a great example. 

Laura: Yeah, okay. Thank you. Oh, that feels good, to my anxious little heart. Okay. So we talked about preoccupied parents. What about dismissing parents? 

Annette: Yeah. So dismissing parents are quite the opposite. So they're truly unemotionally available. Emotions are not, you know, something they're comfortable with themselves and have a really difficult time expressing that with kids. So again, they're the parents that are going to really emphasize achievement in their kids. They're going to be what we call executive functioning, loving parents. So they're gonna be good at, you know, having a wonderful meal and making sure your kids are in activities and taking your kids to activities. It can be well dressed and, you know, all of those things that aren't.

Laura: Also outside markers. Yeah.

Annette: But they, but it's not like real emotional love and being there for your kid in an emotional way, but they can appear to be good parents, right? And so we hear about that oh wow she's just an amazing mother, you know, she, her kid brings the best lunches to school and.

Laura: She’s so together, she's put together, right? 

Annette: But then you ask the child who would you go to for emotional support? And it wouldn't be mommy and it might not be daddy, right? So and then again, these are parents that are going to emphasize achievement in their children so they need their children, either to be, you know, high academic achievers or just to be a certain way, so it isn't necessarily academic achievement, it is to be the good child, it is to be the pretty child, whatever that is. That's how that gets passed on, but they really, are not emotionally available kids will come to know that pretty early in life and won't go, to their parent when they're emotionally upset and vulnerable.   And again, they learn to repress that as well. So, you know, a great example of that is I also had a, a client that it was a, his daughter had been a really high achiever and then suddenly stopped initially going is like a skipping classes, not being with her peers so much to the point that she actually withdrew from school and didn't, wouldn't get out of bed. 

And when I met with his father, because the mother was really concerned and really trying to emotionally support her kids when I met with the father, I actually did an a on him. But even before I did that, it turned out he was like, really dismissing and always felt terrible because he tried to be again, the best kid of the highest achieving and he never made it to the best university where he was and always felt like a failure, even though he was highly successful. And he had passed this, these values and this belief his daughter had that the way she got daddy loved. But she had to be like at the best marks in school and she got a really poor mark in one course, course and that just started this downward spiral where she felt she was not good enough. She was not going to start failing   and began to just withdraw rather than be able to go to her father and say daddy, I did really badly and this mark, I'm feeling badly about it and he would have supported her and said, you know, sweetie just, you know, I'm bad mark. You need some help in that savage. Mm mm mm She felt she was underachieving and just started to give up and tire. 

Laura: Yeah. 

Annette: So it was very sad now it turned out to be a good outcome. But you know that   because his father actually cried when he began talking about that. And was devastated to think he was passing this on to his child when, when he wanted to, to really, he wanted to protect his child. 

Laura: Of course he did. 

Annette: Yeah. She didn't have that, you know, feeling of failure, but in fact, he had passed, you know, his own beliefs on to this kid. So that's just one example. So, you know, when you talk about yourself, so I tend to be dismissing attached and I had to really look at that too and not, pass out on, you know, to children, because, I mean, one of the reasons I'm highly successful and write books is because I'm just missing attached and I can withdraw from everybody and focus, you know, on the app and then make sure, you know, I write, you know, for hours and do well. And I have to sort of say, oh, oh, wait, oh, no, I have to start with it, you know, checking and checking with all my friends I have ignored, you know, for.

Laura: I mean, I, I think I, I, so enjoy that you brought that up though because these, these parts of ourselves have been helpful for many of us. You know, they are, they're there, you know, for it to serve a purpose to keep us safe, to help us feel like we can, you know, belong in a world that's hard to belong in that we can be worthy of love and connection. That's what they, those parts are all there for, to, to protect us, keep us safe. And then they just become maladaptive over time when we're trying to have really meaningful connections. 

Annette: They were meaningful at the time. They were our belief about how we connect to our parents. But eventually again, they are not helpful in our intimate relationship and in our lives and we just have to look at that. And again, we are all capable of changing. We have to work hard to do that, but the first step is have that awareness, right? So if you are aware that you are   you know, dismissing parent, then you have to really know the way you're gonna have to work at is getting more in touch with your own healings, allowing yourself your own vulnerability. So then you'll be able to allow that  in the relationship you have with your children. 

Laura: I, you know, so a lot of the parents that I work with one on one. And in my, I have a membership community, a lot of them understand the principles of respectful, you know, conscious, you know, healthy parenting and they find it incredibly hard to put into practice because it's not their default wiring. And so we spend a lot of time kind of getting curious about your defaults and doing that healing work. And I, I think that for some parents out there, they hear the like they hear, oh this, I shouldn't, you know, use time outs or punishments. This is how I should, you know, help my child learn, you know. And then they just put it into practice. I feel like those parents probably have secure attachment relationships and are, are kind of already there and just need a little nudge in the right direction and it's easy. 

And for those of us who, for whom it's hard. And, you know, so I I teach this every day. Right? But it's not easy for me, you know, there's other people who teach things and it seems like it's very easy for them, you know, to , to, they, they teach respectful parenting and they live it and it's easy. That isn't, that is not my truth. That is not my lived experience and I think it comes down to that we have these things kind of going on under the surface that where we are attempting to work counter to kind of our wiring that has been laid down in childhood. And so doing that work of starting to change your parenting, changing maybe your attachment style. Where can we start with that? After awareness? Okay or becoming aware, after awareness.

Annette: You really pointed that out because one of the concerns I have is that all of the parenting courses that are out there and you know, the concepts are great, but you know, this whole concept of being present for your children. That's a lovely concept. But if you're a preoccupied attached parent, it's like a setup because you're.

Laura: What the heck does that mean? 

Annette: You know what you can get it intellectually, but for your brain to be present, you know, when it is in that.

Laura: Yes, exactly. 

Annette: Occupied loops. It is impossible. If you don't understand at first, what you just have to do is accept that that's how your brain works. And you have to work really hard. Okay? Or you, I want to say to your partner, listen, what really will help me be available to our children is if you, when you say you're gonna call me that you really call me or that some signal that, you know, you're really thinking about me. That's all that I need to kind of calm down and then I can be more available to our children. Like, you know, once you sort of both, you understand that in a couple, then, you know, then you can work out things that help somebody be more available. But just to, you know, that concept, you have to be present for your children. It's true. 

Laura: I, so I so agree. That's why I made, I, I made a course called Parenting From Within. That is all about like figuring out how to have this come authentically from within you, so that you don't have to fake it because so many of so many folks are just out there faking it, they get the scripts from Instagram and they say it to their kids and it means nothing because they're just saying what they think they're supposed to say. And not, it's not really coming from a deeper self understanding.

Annette: Right. But even if you, you know, again, you have the self understanding, it certainly helps you change. It's not easy. Again, if you're dismissing no, you have to be more emotionally available to your child or you have to say, well, how are you feeling that you did it? I was in that course leading, right? Okay, okay. Come naturally. So, but again, you need to know it's hard for your brain not to say, well, you didn't do well in that course, right? And even if you do come out with that, you know, your instinctive way of, of responding, you can say, I'm sorry, sweetie, you know what? I know I was really harsh but you not, not helpful. So like you can always prepare like.

Laura: Yeah, I was, I was gonna ask if we can talk a little bit about repairing. Before we jump in there, I just wanna keep talking just for a second about kind of changing. So, I mean, I think one of the greatest ways you can be working on changing these things is to be working with a therapist, working with someone who can guide you and really dig into stuff and dig into these pieces. Are there other ways folks kind of you that you would recommend folks seek about going through the changing process? 

Annette: Well, so that's what I talk about in my book. So I think yes to do the deeper work would be the most helpful way for you to be a pick. But again, not everybody has the luxury and the whatever. So again, what I'm kind of saying in my book is that if you could figure out your adult attachment simply from a description and who knows to come out, you know, if you decide or come out, recognizing that you're preoccupied, you know, you have to work really hard to get yourself, regulate it, to really work hard to be present for your kids. It's not easy for you. But there are guidelines that you really can use to help you start to parent differently while you're either working on yourself ideally or you might not have that blood sugar, whatever. It doesn't mean you can't really work on changing or parenting habits, whatever, you know. 

Laura: Yeah. Yeah. 

Annette: So I, I really make, make that clear in the book because I think again, we don't wanna set people up to say, well, if you don't really do the deeper work, then you will.

Laura: No, yeah.

Annette: Your parents, well, you know.

Laura: I mean, i, it's, you know, it's interesting. So my mom is likely dismissive, obviously never done me and her. But it's, it's interesting that she did not, she did not start becoming really aware of that until I became a parent and started really working on myself and on my own relationship with her. My dad has been unwilling to kind of do that work with me, but my mom is willing to step into the arena with me and now she has this awareness of like, oh gosh, Laura, I just shut down your feelings, didn't I? You know, I mean, and it's just so lovely and I'm, I'm turning 40 this year. You know, she's in her seventies. It's never too late to start doing this work, you know. The relationship I have with her is ever deepening and, you know, just delightful and so much better than it was in my teens and twenties. You know. It was great then too. She's a wonderful mom but I feel much more seen and heard with her on a regular basis now. Oh my gosh, it's such, it's such a gift. Yes, she doesn't listen to the podcast, but she has given me permission to, to talk about it sometimes. So let's talk a little bit about repair, ruptures and repairs which, you know, are a part of all relationships, healthy ones, secure ones, you know, mi there's missed cues even for secure parents and should we miss their cues and need to repair?   So let's talk a little bit about rupture and repair. 

Annette: So listen, we all have ruptures with our children. When you, you know, discipline your kid, you get angry at your child because we're all normal humans. You know, it inevitably happens. There is a rift. So in, in that moment you're really angry your child, you don't feel love for them even, even though you know, people, they, well, I love my child. Of course, I love my child traditionally, but in that moment, you don't feel it and your child doesn't feel it, uh that's normal. What's really important is the repair. So again, what we know where kids have not had that experience of repair. So kids from orphanages, I mean, well, you know, because I worked a lot with the doctor, kids came from orphanage or just, you know, non healthy functioning families that repair doesn't have. So parent, you know, that is again a use of parent, you know, yells and screams or at their kid and then doesn't next day say I'm really sorry, sweetie. Kids that don't have that repair really feel pretty terrible inside. They often hold a lot of shame because they think they are bad kids, right? Because they did something and your parent created this rift that doesn't get impaired. So what is really important is the repair. 

So then that child knows, well, I did something I shouldn't be doing but it didn't rupture the love that I have with his parent. So then they learned something. No, I guess I shouldn't have pulled those wires out of, you know, the TV or whatever, right? So that's the idea. Again, there's a rupture when you're angry at your kids. It is a rupture. You always can repair that and you can repair it even the next day. Let's just say you're so angry at your kid. You just cannot go and say, okay, sweetie, I wanna talk about what happened. I know mom got really, really mad at you let's just say you're just so angry at your kids. You just are not able to do that for a long time. That's not the best scenario, but you can repair at any time. So the case that I was describing where this girl, you know, for a long period of time felt that her father was rejecting her because she did poorly in the mark like that got repaired months later. But this father really was able to say, I'm really sorry. I didn't mean, you know, to pass this on to you. So you feel really terrible because he just got it on work so we can do repairs. You know.

Laura: Especially as the kids get older. Right? So they're younger. It maybe needs to happen a little bit more quickly because they have shorter memories. But as they get older, you know, one of the things I have to do for myself as. Oh go ahead.

Annette: But, but do you want to repair a rift as soon as possible as soon as you can? Yes. Because what if you are an adult and you have an argument with your partner or your spouse, whatever if you kind of believe? Oh my God, that's the end of this relationship. It's because you probably didn't experience repair. 

Laura: Yeah. 

Annette: If you have, and you know, you have a conflict with your partner, spouse and you think, well, okay, we're just fighting about the dishwasher. We're fighting about this, you know, it's not the end of the relationship. It's not gonna harm the relationship, it is about a particular   item issue we're fighting about if you, you know, again that just because you experience in structure and repair as a child. 

Laura: Yeah. 

Annette: So, so very much impacts on us as outs. So that's why it's so important. 

Laura: It is, you know, I noticed for myself as a preoccupied person, I, I sometimes rush to repair with, especially with my kids because I'm seeking that reassurance from, from them. And so I have to be really aware and careful with myself around. Am I seeking to repair so that I feel better or am I seeking to repair because they're ready and available so that I can, you know, and it's for them and for our relationship. And so I have to be super, super aware and careful with myself on that piece to, to not rush it. Whereas my husband who tends to be a little bit more dismissing, he has to be aware that it needs to happen at all. You know, he sometimes is just not even aware that there was a rupture, you know, he has to be kind of noticing those things more, but it's good to be aware of those things. 

And what's nice about for my husband and I is that we're so aware of each other that we, we help each other too, you know. So sometimes you know, I've had a, you know, conflict with one of the kids. My husband will, you know, hold me back and say, I know you really want to go make up with them right now. They need a few minutes to calm down. Why don't you just come with me, sit with me, talk with me and he'll help me regulate myself so that when the kids are ready, then I'm ready to, they, you know, the repair is happening at their speed for them. You know, because really that's what it's for. It's for them. We're adults, we need to be able to handle our stuff. 

Annette: Absolutely. Exactly. Well, good. That's very good relationship. Right. Oh, gosh, I'm so, I'm so lucky. He's, he's definitely been willing to, again, do, do the work with me. We got married while I was in grad school though. So I was in grad school for, marriage and family therapy. So that was kind of a, when we got married. I was like, you do know that we will most likely go to therapy multiple times. 

Laura: Okay. Well, so Annette, I feel like this conversation was super helpful. I wonder, I just wanna make sure that, our listeners can know where to go to find your book or to find you and learn more from you. So the books, your first book is called Its Attachment. And the next one is Secure Parents, Secure Child. And they're, they're lovely, like small doable books too. You know, they're not like, it's like heavy tomes. You know, most parents I know have like, a stack of 20 books on their bedside table that they're supposed to be reading. These ones are small and practical and with really good, illustrative examples which are really nice, you know, to read. But where can they go to find? I mean, so they can find these books wherever they get books. Yes?

Annette: They can find these books on Amazon. You know, most bookstores, I think.

Laura: Like independent bookstores. We love supporting those.

Annette:  And certainly get them for you. But the Amazon is the just the easiest way or the publisher of the books is Guernica but it's Ontario Canadian publisher, but you can get it from them. But I think the easiest way is through Amazon. 

Laura: And do you have a website or social media where you teach or where they, people can learn more? 

Annette: Yeah. So it's Annette Kussin, there annettekussintherapy.com. 

Laura: Okay. 

Annette: And people can contact me directly at my, so my email address is on my website or it's akussin@bellnet.ca. So people have questions or, you know, just wanna get in touch with me. Now I offer lots of workshops but it's mainly to professionals. So that's I don't do it for parents yet. 

Laura: Let me know if you ever want to break into that scene. It's lots of fun. Parents are just the best. Oh, my God. I love getting to work with parents. They're just, I love them so much. 

Annette: And you know what I do want to emphasize that, that the whole intent of the books because I teach professionals a lot. And as I was been doing that so much, I thought, you know, I really want to also bring this to people and parents. So I really tried to make these books easy to read, practical, understandable. So that's been the whole intent is because these are self help books. 

Laura: Well, we really appreciate that. It's one of the ways that we can broaden access, you know, all parents deserve access to the support, they need to kind of meet their goals and their hopes for their kids and for their families. So thank you so much for that and for coming on this show and participating in that.

Annette: My pleasure, Laura. Thank you so much for having me. I really appreciate that.

Laura: Take good care.

Annette: You too.

Okay, so thanks for listening today. Remember to subscribe to the podcast and if it was helpful, leave me a review that really helps others find the podcast and join us in this really important work of creating a parenthood that we don't have to escape from and creating a childhood for our kids that they don't have to recover from. 

And if you're listening, grab a screenshot and tag me on Instagram so that I can give you a shout-out, and definitely go follow me on Instagram. I'm @laurafroyenphd. That's where you can get behind the scenes. Look at what balanced, conscious parenting looks like in action with my family, and plus I share a lot of other, really great resources there too.

All right. That's it for me today. I hope that you keep taking really good care of your kids and your family and each other and most importantly of yourself. And just to remember, balance is a verb and you're already doing it. You've got this!

Episode 173: Why It's So Hard to Stay Organized and What To Do About It with Star Hansen

In this episode of The Balanced Parent Podcast, we will dive into the timeless struggle of maintaining organization as a parent and what to do about it. Joining me is Star Hansen, a Certified Professional Organizer (CPO©) and author of “Why The F Am I Still Not Organized?" We explore the unique challenges parents face and discuss empowering our kids to manage their time and belongings positively.

Here are some of the topics we covered in this episode:

  • Discover powerful strategies for teaching your child essential organizational skills

  • Uncover the reasons why kids often find it tough to stay organized

If you wish to connect with Star Hansen, follow her on Facebook @starhansen, Youtube @starhansen, Twitter @starhansen, Instagram @starhansen, TikTok @starhansen and her website starhansen.com.

If you're eager to dive deeper into Star Hansen's insights and grab a free copy of her book, head over to starhansen.com/podcast.

Resources:

  • Why The F Am I Still Not Organized? - A book to tackle clutter head-on and find lasting solutions


TRANSCRIPT

Parenting is often lived in the extremes. It's either great joy or chaotic, overwhelmed. In one moment, you're nailing it and the next you're losing your cool. I want to help you find your way to the messy middle, to a place of balance. You see balance is a verb, not a state of being. It is a thing you do. Not a thing you are. It is an action, a process, a series of micro corrections that you make each and every day to keep yourself feeling centered. We are never truly balanced. We are engaged in the process of balancing.

Hello, I'm Dr. Laura Froyen and this is The Balanced Parent Podcast where overwhelmed, stressed out and disconnected parents go to find tools, mindset shifts and practices to help them stop yelling at the people they love and start connecting on a deeper level. All delivered with heaping doses of grace and compassion. Join me in conversations that will help you get clear on your goals and values and start showing up in your parenting, your relationships, your life with openhearted authenticity and balance. Let's go! 

Laura: Hello everybody. This is Doctor Laura Froyen and on this week's episode of the Balanced Parent podcast, we are going to talk about organization and why it is so hard for us as parents to not only be organized for ourselves but also keep our kids organized and what we can do about it. So I'm bringing in a new guest, we haven't had her on the show before, but we were connecting before I hit record. And I'm really delighted and so excited. Her name is Star Hansen and she has a new book out called Why the F Am I Still Not Organized? And I think she's really going to help us get clear on, on how to not only help ourselves but help our kids learn how to manage their stuff and their time without shame, blame and guilt that has made this topic kind of heavy for folks in the past. So, Star, welcome to the show. I'm so excited to have you. Why don't you tell us a little bit more about yourself, like who you are and what you do? 

Star: Thank you so much, Laura. It's so great to be here with you today. So, yes, my name is Star Hansen. I'm a certified professional organizer and clutter whisper and I am here to help people understand why the why the f their clutter won't go away. And that's a really important conversation because I think, you know, we look at the world of organizing and its boxes and labels and books about getting organized and bins and the organizing industry is a $2 billion a year industry and growing. Now, if those boxes and bins were going to get you organized, that industry would be shrinking, not growing. So we have to look at the fact that there's something going on beyond the need for paring down or creating, you know, strategies for how to store your stuff. And that's what I do. I help you figure out why your clutter won't go away no matter what you've tried. Because my experience is that you are an incredible person who does a lot and you know, so much and why should clutter mean that there's a defect in you? It actually means that you have genius, untapped genius. And my job is to help you bring that to the light. Laura: Okay. Tell me more about that. What do you mean by that? Because I have lots of clutter. I have gone through, you know, the Marie Kondo, I've sparked joy and gotten rid of lots of stuff and then it just creeps back in what is up with that.

Star: Totally. So it's, it's common wisdom that it's, you know, I should be able to do this. It's so easy. Just follow A B and C and yes, but the problem is that if you don't understand the cause of your clutter, the root cause of your clutter, no system is going to work. And if you understand the root cause of your clutter any system will work whatever system you choose. And my job is to help you figure out how is clutter helping you. And that at first sound can sound like shocking if you're not watching her eyes just bulged out of her head when I said that. And so yours might be also. But it's in my experience and I've been organizing for 20 plus years. If you have recurring clutter, there is something that it is doing to help you. It's why it's staying. If we look at what clutter is clutter is really us having a conversation with ourselves non verbally. It's us having a conversation with our loved ones, non verbally. It's us processing and if we can start to really kind of dig in and figure out how it's helping us, what we can do is we can get that need met without the clutter and then the clutter isn't needed anymore and it falls away so much more easily. 

Laura: Okay, so Star, can you give me an example? What, like what are some of the ways that clutter serves folks that you work with? 

Star: Absolutely. So there's a few ways. So one is communicate. I, I did a TED X talk a couple of years ago about this couple whose kitchen was cluttered. And at the end of this big kitchen overhaul, we came across this broken teacup and that broken teacup was the crux of their clutter and it had been left out for over a year because the two of them were blaming each other for the teacup being broken. It was a significant cup for them. And you know, that's just one of the many ways we use clutter to communicate. You might use clutter to remind yourself of things. Like, for example, you might leave your weights out in the living room or your yoga mat and maybe you haven't used it, but it's your reminder for yourself or I don't want to forget to be this person. We also use it to create, like some people surround themselves with stuff because they feel inspired and creative and even empowered because some people grew up in poverty and, you know, had a lot of scarcity in their lives. And then when they become an adult, and if we just look at the trajectory of consumerism in the last 20 years, you can be in poverty and still have, have a lot of clutter. 

So it's, you know, things are cheaper than ever easier to source. And so now we have, you know, a lot of stuff and people can surround themselves with stuff and that can make them feel safe and secure. And if you understand that you're using clutter to create a feeling of safety and we can discover how to create that safety or security without the stuff that's helpful for some people. Clutter is their friend. If you grew up in a military household and you traveled the world and people were not consistent. Your stuff was probably your one constant and you've learned that that's becomes your, your friend, your cuddle buddy. For some people, they use it to protect themselves. They'll use it to set boundaries. Keep people away, keep people out of their homes, create space within pe, you know, within their household. I've even seen people use it as a way to deflect or, you know, act as a, an actual wall. I have one mother that I work with and if there's ever anything she doesn't want her kids to get into, there is a giant pile of clutter in front of it because that acts as a deterrent for her kids to find the things that she's trying to hide. So it's, it's, it's fascinating to see how people use clutter and, and this is just a couple of examples. I could, we could spend 12 hours talking about that today. It's just super fascinating. 

Laura: Yeah, that is fascinating. You know, it's interesting. So I've always attributed some of my clutter stuff to my ADHD which has gone undiagnosed my entire life. And I kind of really just figuring it out right now. I got diagnosed last winter. I've always been really good at creating systems to keep myself organized in other areas of my home. So, like my kids playroom, super organized, every single toy has a home, it goes in the home, the kids know how to put it all away. Same with the kitchen, same with all these kind of public areas. But in my domain, if you could see right now the other sides of, I mean, I have a beautiful background but if you could see, I have piles of, you know, so, like I do water, watercolor painting and other art as a form of relaxation. I've just piles of art next to my knee because I do, I take five minutes here and there to do a little bit of painting or a little bit of coloring or I have just stacks of books like yours, you know, to, to read because they give me inspiration and I really like that reframe that those things are not necessarily cluttered. They're expressing a need of mine to be creative or to be inspired. Thank you for that reframe. 

Star: Oh, of course. And also I'd even venture to say it's also you inserting yourself in your life as a mother. Most moms I know you think about yourself last, absolute last. And so you kind of have to like get in where you fit in, right? It's like, okay, I have no time. Where do I find? Where do I place myself in this world? And oftentimes if you look at your kids stuff, it's so curated and your family stuff is so curated because you require that to function. And of course, you put your family first and so strongly and we put ourselves last.

Laura: Oh, you're making me tear up. You know, I've, I love to do arts and I don't get to do it very often mostly because it's tucked away in my office. And I feel like I can't be, leave it out in my spaces because those spaces are for other people, not necessarily for me. And I think about too, you know, so I have play is hugely important as a value for my family. And so our, a large portion of our house is dedicated to, to their play spaces. And I think about when they're done playing what I'll get to do with those spaces instead of being tucked into corners. But I think that you're really speaking to something that, that idea that there's one of the reasons why it's hard to keep my office organized is because I'm trying to fit a whole life into one little place instead of being seen and present in my whole house. 

Star: Yeah. And what happens a lot of times for moms is, you know, when your kids were younger, your kids are now at an age where they can manage themselves a little bit more. You're not worried about, you know, them drawing on the walls with crayons at the moment, you know, or ripping up maybe. Well.

Laura:  I'm just joking.

Star: Totally. But it's, you know, there was a very long time where your body was theirs, where the home was totally devoted to them. And it was about their safety and then it was about their exploration. And oftentimes we're moving so fast that we don't take the time to recalibrate and say, okay, can I re invent how I show up in the house? Because it's not just that you are shoved into one room, you are also teaching them to shove themselves into a room, you're teaching them because role modeling is the first thing that happens like whether we mean it to or not. So they see you and they're like, oh, when I'm a mom, I take care of everyone else and I put myself in a corner. And what if you got one of those rolling carts from Target or Michael's and, or IKEA and you filled that with, with art supplies and you just rolled it around the house wherever you wanted to work and you started showing up because it's exactly what you said. It's like we're waiting for some future day to start to live our life. And the best thing you can do is start to live your life today and not wait for the kids to launch. 

And because, you know, this is a challenge in this day and age. But, but you know, like, why do you have to wait to embody yourself, to embody your life and you teach them to take up space. And I think as women in our society, that's something that's really difficult. We've been conditioned to turn within to be really small, to be of service, to serve and not take up space. And yet the power your power lies in you, like fully standing in your power and your kids fully standing in their power and your partner standing in their power. And like imagine the four of you like beacons in your home, like just the magic of that. And I just want to like throw in there also. Congratulations on your diagnosis because most people view that as like, oh I got diagnosed. But the truth is it's a relief for a lot of people who are right. It's okay. I'm not behind my brain as a superpower. Like your brain with ADHD is a superpower. You are genius in unexpected ways. 

But most people that I know who had late, late diagnoses have spent the bulk of their life thinking that they're behind. Why can't I perform like everyone else? Why am I not keeping the house the way that someone else does? Because your brain is a supercomputer. Most of the organizing systems that are out there are not built for how your beautiful brain works. They're actually too small, they're too little. And with the  ADHD brain, your brain has the ability to do such complexity. And if your systems don't have the right level of complexity for how you think the systems are not going to work. And so again, it's this lesson of like embodiment and expansion. Like how much room can you take up? Because you deserve to take up room and your brain requires more space than just a simple. Does this go into, you know, keep or toss keep or toss. It's, you have so many more layers. 

Laura: Yeah. Oh I really like that. Okay, so one of the things that I've been noticing in my family and this is, I mean, one of the benefits of getting to have your own podcast where you have experts got money, you get to ask them questions for your own family. I, you know, I've seen echoes of this exact thing happening in my kids' rooms where they, they have their special hobbies and interests and sometimes they like, bleed out into the house. But oftentimes they do their special stuff that they're kind of their safety, their self care in their rooms for one kid that's reading and the other kid that's drawing or playing with these little figurines that she has her with dolls. And so for one kid, it's a stuffy explosion in her room more than we can ever hope to store. You know, all these little like doll things that don't have a home and the other one is just piles and piles of books with an completely empty bookshelf, like the books come off, they get read and put in a pile and not back on the bookshelf. 

So what can I do as a mom to help my kids? Because I don't want to be, I don't want to be in there in their space that they have ownership bugging them, nagging them. I periodically go in if they ask me to and help them get reorganized. But the systems that I put in place make sense for me. And I think that they don't maintain them because those systems don't make sense for them. You know, I've managed, you know, when I'm doing their playroom, I, I sit down with them or they're playing usually and I'm doing it, but I asked them if you're going to go play with this, where would you go and look for it? You know, and then I put the things there where they say. You know, but I don't know how to do that in their rooms and their tolerance for doing it in their rooms is really low because it's their private space and they feel like I'm like getting in there and controlling things and they don't want me to do that. So what can I do? 

Star: No, you're doing it. Great job. I mean, the questions that you're asking, how would you use this? That's a great question. Like, how would you use this? Where would you link to look for this? It's so often people are focused in organizing about putting things away, not the retrieval and your system should be based on retrieval, not necessarily making it pretty. 

Laura: See, I didn't even know I was doing that. But that's what my ADHD has made me do.

Star: Super genius. Like, super genius. Well, one of the things let me lead with the, don'ts. So like, don't tell your kids to clean their room in some blanket statement if they've never learned how to clean their room. Right. That's, it's so stressful for kids and it's, and I'm not saying that you're doing this. But I think just in general, I have so many memories from my childhood of being told to like clean my room, but I don't have any memories of being taught how to clean my room. So when it comes to kids, we really have to do two things. One, we have to impart that wisdom on them, which is how to do it. Most of us were never taught how to organize or clean and we just expect them to do it because they've watched us and role modeling is big. But so that's a big part of it. The second part of it is we have to meet them where they are. So every kid is different. I've had kids, I've had siblings where one of them needs three categories for the items in their room. One of them needs 13 categories for the items in their room. And we want to meet them where they are. And I think it's tricky because we want to remove ourselves from the, the desire for the outcome to be the star of the show, the outcome is not the star of the show.

Their room being cleaned is not important when they are under your roof as a, you know, as your child, they are learning how to do the world. They are learning the skills that they need to launch. And so what we need to do is we need to be able to show up for them and with them and say, let's create a bedroom that feels great for you. We're not cleaning up your room, we're not organizing your room. Does this feel great to you? Do you like? So the one, you know, your daughter who has the book stacked all over? What if she loves that? And then what if instead of trying to use that bookshelf, you get rid of the bookshelf and instead you do intricate creative fun stacks around her room and it gives her that feeling of being, I mean, and maybe there's stacks that are on shelves on the wall from everywhere, from like knee height all the way to the top of her head and she's surrounded with interesting configurations of books. 

Laura: What's fascinating to think about, you know, we were in Vienna for spring break last year and we went into this bookshop that was this old tiny bookshop with just like tunnels of books and she was in heaven. You know, she was just, I mean, she thought it was the most amazing, like it was the only place that she really wanted me to take pictures of her in it. 

Star: And it's so interesting because when books are on the shelves, they feel like they're demonstrative. I'm here. Look at me, don't touch me. When books are stacked. It's like, oh, your mind, like an invitation. You can have all different styles. You could have reading, you know, trays, set up those cute little like nooks that they have now where you can, like lean a book over it, but you can just set up the whole room where the whole theme would be. I mean, get rid of the bookshelves and switch the style and see what she thinks. And what will, what's interesting is she'll probably think you're redecorating her room and what you're doing is is allowing her more access to the things that she loves the most and teaching her. So like obviously what we're, what she's going to be learning in that scenario is the floor has to be able to be cleaned. So we need to not have books stacked on the floor because I can't clean when there's stuff there. It makes because that's a long life lesson. We need to be able to clean the space and we need to be able to walk through our spaces without injury. We need if there's an earthquake or something and someone's in a rush that we're not gonna trip and break something. So we want like safety to be there, but we also want their imagination and their creativity to be present and to say yes, like something about her system is working and what you're saying is yes and yes. 

And let's take it to the next level, let's play. And then what we also have to do is this is not a one and done. Like, right now she's obsessed with books and in six months or five years, she might be obsessed with something else. And if her room still looks the same as it does today, it's going to feel like an incongruity. And so maybe once a year when you all have a little time in the summer or in the winter, then you reimagine like, okay, great let's see how do you want to evolve your room? And then it doesn't feel like, oh, I have to clean and I'm in trouble and I'm doing it wrong, but it feels like let's evolve the room to evolve with you. Does this still feel good? What do you want different? How does this go? And then you can also, you know, open up the kids to see the different layers. So you get a lot of kids in their teens and twenties who instantly want to purge everything. I don't need that anymore. I don't want it anymore. No. Thank you. Get rid of it. Get rid of it. And then you talk to them at 26, 27. I regret getting rid of that stuff. Because they didn't know that they could create a memory box for items. It doesn't have to be out. They can be in a memory box that they take with them when they move into their own place. But we want to start, like, teaching them the different layers of engagement with their stuff. What's decoration? What's memorabilia? What's active functional stuff? What is for the future someday stuff? What gets rid of, you know, it's like this is like a wonderful experience to learn with them. 

Laura: Hm, I love that. My, my mom gave my sister and I each a, a hope chest when we were, when we turned, I think 12 is when we got, got it for just that purpose to start kind of putting away some things from childhood. And, you know, we both took it with us when we bought our first homes, finally took longer than I think my mom was expecting it to take effort. 

Star: But it always does. 

Laura: It always does. But I really like that idea. I like that idea of, you know, kind of asking the child, how do you want to feel in this space? What purpose do you want the space to serve? What do you like to do in here? And kind of really understanding how they're using the space? Okay, so what about the kiddos with the tons of stuffies all over the place? Because I know lots of our listeners have stuffy explosions in their room too.

Star: Yes, I know. And there's a real attraction or connection to the stuffies. Like I have a name and yes, and they know where they belong and what they do. So, I have clients who are in their sixties who won't get rid of their stuffies. And not only that, but they need their stuffies if they go in a plastic bin to be facing out because they don't want their stuffies to be shoved in a box. They want them to feel like they're an active, engaged part of the world. So it's, it's very normal to anthropomorphize objects in our lives. This is, we all have done it and many of us still do it. I definitely do it and when it comes to the stuffy, so I feel like it's, it's the exact same thing. Tell me about your stuffies, like, tell me about, do you want them all in your bed or who gets a space in your bed? Do you want the rest of them, like on a really high shelf along the perimeter of the room looking out for you? Do you want to hide stuffies in different places so that they're infusing the room with their stuffy energy? Like again, like it's like, how do we approach it as a play is a play game? And one of the things that as parents, it's sometimes very hard to do because we're so busy and there's so much going on is we really have to take the time. We have to invest our time in playing with them and exploring with them. The idea of clean your room if I could eliminate anything from the conversation. Yeah, I would be like, just eliminate the statement, go clean your room because that it so does nothing. And at a certain point, they will be able to go clean their room. But most of the time we have not given them that foundation. 

Laura: No. And even if, I mean, just, I also really dislike that phrase because it's super unspecific. Like, I mean, it's so important to give kids really crystal clear expectations and cleaning your room is a complicated endeavor. You know, there's lots of steps that go in it. Lots of people have different ideas about what clean your room means. So yes, I, I always inform parents being more specific on what our expectations actually are and then setting the kids up for success. So they actually know how to do those things. Oh, go ahead. Sorry. 

Star: I was just gonna say, yeah, I know tracking the routines, like the difference between the one off cleanups, right? Like you vacuuming once a week is different than every, every morning, making their bed or every night re reassigning where stuff he's got like, like baselining the room. So it's, yeah, you're right. It's like exactly like how do we give them the small bite size tasks that they can accomplish and feel good about accomplishing. 

Laura: Okay. So what are the steps of clean for a kid of cleaning their room? Like what is, how do you clean your room when you're a kid? 

Star: Yeah, I mean, so the first thing and the most important thing is they have to have a baseline. And what I mean by baseline is a state where everything is in a home. So if you have never, if you and most of us when we move, we just land and we're like good enough and we just like barely unpack our boxes where like it landed. But you want to really make sure that there has been an initial organizing, that's happened that every object has a home. And I'm just going to name I am talking about a very idealistic world right now. My beautiful listeners because I understand that's not always the case and many times we haven't had that, but imagine there's no foundation for your kids to build a house on every time you say clean your room, you're asking them to construct a house. But if there is no proper foundation, it's very hard for them to do it. I think about when I go into someone's house and I want to help them unload their dishwasher, but I have no idea where their bowls go. I end up acting like a Roomba like this way, this way, like, you know, so we, we want to offer them like the stability of like okay, great, this is everything has a home and there's a clear idea of where we're going. 

Laura: And even I just want to like, can I interject you, please? Even if that home is something that does not look perfect for Instagram? Right? So like home for your child's clean clothes could be a laundry basket that they just stay in and pull clean clothes out of like it could be that, you know, so there's lots of possibilities of what home looks like.

Star: The other. Yeah. And like I just want to say the other thing I'd like to just like, remove from our vocabulary is like, or the concept of this world is like the idea that like a Pinterest completed Instagram completed version is what it's supposed to be like. That's absolutely not what it's supposed to be like, you're like, we need to, yeah, you're not. It's like, like we need functional. I'm always very leery. You'll never see anywhere on my website or IG or anything before and after picture. My after picture is you living your best life, spending time with your family. That it's like, I don't care what your house looks like. I care that it's not hurting you, but it's more about like, how do you set it up so that it's functional for you not so it's pretty for someone who is never going to step inside your house. That's our values are just a little skewed at the moment with this external demonstration of style, like this demonstrative world we're in. But yeah, like setting it up. 

So it's like, okay, great and knowing again the systems just like you so beautifully explained earlier, it's how are you going to find things when you need them? And is it easy to put them away? Not how do you put it away in a beautiful way. But so you want first and foremost to have everything has a home and then secondarily, it's like, okay, when I think of it, if you tell me, go clean your room, I'm picturing I'm dusty cleaning the windows with, you know, glass cleaner vacuuming. But a kid you're talking tidying, you're basically saying, put everything that's out and where it doesn't belong away where it belongs. You're not probably asking them to dust into their windows and baseboards, right? So like, and kind of explaining that and maybe there's even a, a reframe there of like, okay, let's go tidy your room and I call this a lot of times with clients baselining. I want to take things back down to zero. I want everything to go back to where it goes. Like take every like let's put everything in its home so that they know.

Laura: That’s what I say. I want you to go to your room and make sure everything's in its home.

Star: Totally. And that makes perfect sense. Make your bed, make sure everything's on its home, clear up your desk, put things back in your backpack, prep for the week ahead, lay out an outfit for school like whatever it is. Yes. The more specific we can be the better and really taking the time to reward the effort not the outcome. If you know, depending on the age, like a lot of times we don't let our kids clean or tidy up because they're not going to quote unquote do enough compared to what we would want to do. Reward them for being a part of the family and doing it. Like have it be that okay, everyone for the next 20 minutes, everyone's going to tidy their room and then the whole family goes, not just the kids, but the whole family goes and then maybe you do show and tell. Oh wow, look at mom. You did this. Okay. Great. What I really love about your room being done is this and you know, it's like you really can start to play with and see what they've done well. And then they feel like they're part of a community and they're being rewarded for doing it, not for doing it perfectly or doing it just right because everyone's version of done looks so different and we need to start normalizing, embracing whatever that is for each individual. 

Laura: Yeah, I love that. I really like the idea that, you know, a family is a community and we all pitch in. We all have, you know, important jobs to and contributions to make, I really like that a lot. 

Star: Well, and, you know, it's funny, like, so I don't know about you, but no one has paid me for making my bed as an adult. Not a single time. So, like, there's such danger in, like, teaching kids that, like, they should do these activities that are just day to day hygiene because they'll get paid or a reward. 

Laura: I so agree. 

Star: And I, right, like, it's like, no me for doing my dishes, although it probably wouldn't make me want to do my dishes anymore. But, but, like, just, and then knowing, like, some of my favorite times growing up or when we were cleaning the house as a family or doing dishes with all of my cousins, like, and then they learn, like, I learn that I do dishes better if I'm playing music and talking to someone that I love, like, that becomes like a cheat that I used to make me want to do the dishes when I don't want to do it. 

Laura: Yes. Oh, I love those things too. I think it's so important that we recognize that we're modeling how to be adults. Right? And that if we can figure out how to make it fun and enjoyable and not grumble the entire time while we're, like, putting away their toys and stuff, then that would make it easier for them to also have a positive attitude about the kind of sometimes not great things that come with being human. 

Star: And the idea of leaning into the good enough, you know, I know you talk a lot about perfect imperfection like that's a concept I love in my own life. It's what's your good enough version? Hey guys, we have 10 minutes. Do the best. Good enough version you've got in you and that will teach them not every time has to be Instagram movie. 

Laura: Yeah, I really like that. Okay. Star, this has been really a fun conversation and super helpful. I'm wondering if you can just make sure that all of our listeners can know how to find you, where to find you and connect with you and learn from you. 

Star: Absolutely. So I'm everywhere, I'm everywhere. You can find me at on, on all the major platforms @StarHansen. But if I also wanted to offer your listeners a gift, so a free download of my book, if they want to get a free copy of my book, it's available on Amazon and audible and all the normal places. But if they go to starhansen.com/podcast, and that’s HANSEN.com/podcast, they can download a free copy of my book and learn all the, all the wonderful juicy details for how they can get out of that, you know, chaos cycle with their clutter. 

Laura: Oh, awesome. Sorry. Thank you so much. What a gift. I really appreciate your time and your wisdom. It was really fun talking with you. 

Star: Thank you. 

Okay, so thanks for listening today. Remember to subscribe to the podcast and if it was helpful, leave me a review that really helps others find the podcast and join us in this really important work of creating a parenthood that we don't have to escape from and creating a childhood for our kids that they don't have to recover from. 

And if you're listening, grab a screenshot and tag me on Instagram so that I can give you a shout-out, and definitely go follow me on Instagram. I'm @laurafroyenphd. That's where you can get behind the scenes. Look at what balanced, conscious parenting looks like in action with my family, and plus I share a lot of other, really great resources there too.

All right. That's it for me today. I hope that you keep taking really good care of your kids and your family and each other and most importantly of yourself. And just to remember, balance is a verb and you're already doing it. You've got this!

Episode 172: Mindful Parenting During the Holidays: Staying Present and Enjoying the Moment

Welcome to another episode of The Balanced Parent Podcast. This episode holds a special place as it's our last one before a brief holiday break, and I'll be back to connect with you in 2024. As we approach the holiday season, I wanted to share some thoughts on how to stay present and enjoy the moment in mindful parenting during this festive time. 

Here are some key takeaways:

  • Mindful parenting and its key components 

  • Sharing my simple, daily activities that keep me present and joyful

  • Holiday-specific practices to cultivate mindfulness

I hope these practices bring you peace, magic, and joy during the holidays. May you savor the moments and create memories that last a lifetime. As we wrap up this episode, I want to express my gratitude for being part of The Balanced Parent Podcast community. We'll be taking a break for the holidays, but I'm sending you warm wishes for a mindful, joyful holiday season and a fantastic New Year. Feel free to share your thoughts and experiences with me, and let's make 2024 a year of balance and presence.


TRANSCRIPT

Parenting is often lived in the extremes. It's either great joy or chaotic, overwhelmed. In one moment, you're nailing it and the next you're losing your cool. I want to help you find your way to the messy middle, to a place of balance. You see balance is a verb, not a state of being. It is a thing you do. Not a thing you are. It is an action, a process, a series of micro corrections that you make each and every day to keep yourself feeling centered. We are never truly balanced. We are engaged in the process of balancing.

Hello, I'm Dr. Laura Froyen and this is The Balanced Parent Podcast where overwhelmed, stressed out and disconnected parents go to find tools, mindset shifts and practices to help them stop yelling at the people they love and start connecting on a deeper level. All delivered with heaping doses of grace and compassion. Join me in conversations that will help you get clear on your goals and values and start showing up in your parenting, your relationships, your life with openhearted authenticity and balance. Let's go! 

Laura: Hello everybody. This is Dr. Laura Froyen. And this week's episode of the Balanced Parent Podcast is our last one before we take a small break for the holidays. So after this episode, I will see you in the New Year in 2024. And I wanted to leave you this week with just a quick episode on how you can bring more mindfulness and presence into your holidays and how that can increase your enjoyment and decrease your stress. As I'm recording this, we are approaching Hanukkah. You'll be listening to this in the midst of Hanukkah and Christmas will be approaching solstice and a variety of other winter holidays are looming on the horizon for so many parents around the world. And I know, oh, believe me, I know how much pressure is on us as parents. We moms especially carry the load of creating magic and delight and joy for our families. And I want to hopefully have a minute before we kind of get into the meat of this episode to just relieve you of some of that burden. It's an unfair burden. It's unfair to expect us as parents to create out of thin air, the sense of joy and magic. It's really, sometimes I think that this idea is driven by a lot of consumerism and capitalism. And ultimately, it's not rooted in the truth of children and childhood. Children are naturally inclined to find magic joy and wonder to engage in the process of awe very, very naturally. They do not need very much to get there. And so we'll talk a little bit about how your mindful presence can actually amp up their experience of being in the present moment, their experience of wonder, joy, awe, and magic. 

We'll talk about that, but really, I just want you to know that these are not things you need to do. I'm not going to be adding anything to your, to do list or anything to your shopping list. I actually think kids need far less than what they're inundated with in order to experience that joy and magic. And the other piece that I want for you is to know that you are worthy of that sense of peace and magic and joy and wonder and delight as well. And that you actually learning how to experience that for yourself, how to be with that for yourself in the present moment will enhance the experience of those around you. And even if it didn't, you're worthy of it just in and of yourself. Before I sat down to record this message. I was enjoying a cup of tea. I don't know, it's like the winter blend that Trader Joe's puts out at this time of year. I only buy one box when it's gone. It's gone. It creates a little bit of kind of specialness and ceremony to it. And I was just sitting there in my house alone. The kids are at school savoring that and thinking about how often we as moms, dads too, don't allow ourselves the gift of just sitting in a moment, engaging with our senses and drawing pleasure out of it, drawing enjoyment, drawing delight out of it. I was feeling the warmth of the, of the mug in my hands, smelling it. You know, it was a complete sensory delight to engage in drinking this tea. It didn't take a long time, you know, really 60 seconds is all I needed to really kind of savor it and be in it before I came in here to record this episode for you. And so I think bringing that spirit that we get to have pleasure and delight and wonder and joy in our holiday season can relieve some of that burden. 

Finding ways to incorporate that I think is so so important. And in doing so, our kids will join us in that. So if our kids see us having a moment in front of, you know, the Christmas tree or in front of the fire where we drop into the present moment, our phones are away and we're really just reveling in the beauty that we've maybe helped create in our home or the coziness of a soft blanket, they will join us, they will be drawn to that. And those are the things that create that sense of magic, wonder and delight for our kids. Not big activities, not big objects, big shopping lists, you know, big things. It's, it's about those moments with each other that are so important. I think it's also really important to know that the act of engaging in mindfulness practices is just good for our nervous systems. So we know this, we also know that it's hard to, you know, parents always tell me that they just don't have time to meditate or they can't find their way into it. So I'm not even talking about meditation. I'm we are talking about mindfulness. So let's talk for a second before we dive into some specific things you can do this holiday season to be more fully present. 

What is mindfulness in general? What are the benefits and then how to bring it into your your holiday this year. So the key components of mindfulness are present moment awareness. So this is about being fully present in the current moment, paying attention to one's thoughts, feeling sensations and the surrounding environment, nonjudgmental awareness. So, mindfulness encourages a curious, open and noncritical mindset. As you observe thoughts, motion, sensa sensations that roll through your body. So rather than judging those experiences as good or bad mindfulness is really about accepting them as they are. Another aspect of mindfulness that's important is focused attention. Often, mindfulness practices involve directing your attention to one specific element of your environment or your current being. Breathwork is kind of the easiest to access because you have your breath everywhere, it can be a home for you to go to and we will talk about a few other ways to practice mindfulness during the holidays beyond breathwork. Another aspect of mindfulness that's really important is acceptance. Mindfulness involves accepting the reality of the present moment, including any challenges or discomfort or stressors. And as we know, as we move into the holiday seasons, those can be plentiful. In addition to the joy and fun, the stress is coming right along with it. And so mindfulness is about accepting the reality, the lived experience that you are in the midst of. And about it's, it's really, this acceptance is really key to cultivating a non reactive and a kind of a non struggling attitude when we are resistant to what's happening if we are laden with the shoulds of how things something should be going, how our kids should be acting, what our house should look like, what our food should be like. We are stuck in that resistance and it causes pain and suffering. And so acceptance is, is not about like laying down and being a doormat or, you know, giving up, but it's about noticing what is and approaching what is, how it actually is in the moment with peace and awareness without the desire to change it in that moment. You can have the desire to change it later, but in the moment when we're noticing, we're just accepting it as is. And then the last piece that I wanted to touch on is intentionality. 

So, mindfulness is a deliberate and intentional practice. It involves making a conscious choice to bring attention to the present moment and to do so regularly. And again, when we're, we're thinking about mindfulness, you don't have to be perfectly mindful. The the reality is is that your attention will wander, it will move to other things, it will move to your to do list, it will move to your inner narrative. It will, you know, the voices will start chattering in your head. You, you know, you will be distracted and mindfulness is not about achieving some perfect state of not being distracted. It's about exercising that muscle of returning attention intentionally choosing to let go of the distraction, say, you know, you can come back to it later and coming back into the present moment and that muscle exercising that muscle has huge benefits, especially for parents. So there's lots of research on the use of mindfulness practices to reduce stress, to increase patience, to enhance our ability, to attend and focus on the things that matter to us. But for parents and especially mindfulness can help you increase your ability to stay emotionally regulated. It can help you not get caught up in the stories, the narratives that perhaps are coming from your past and pulling you out of the present moment with your kids or kind of whatever is happening in the moment. And so by exercising that muscle outside of the moment, you increase your capacity and your access to that ability in the moment. That's why self emotional regulation is increased. You're able to be in better, more conscious communication patterns when you are well regulated and when you've practiced this outside of the moment, because you're able to stay kind of in the here and now and the words you choose are can be more, you can be more actively intentional in the words that you choose to say to a partner or to your children or to other loved ones. And they will be coming from a place that's grounded in the present as opposed to the past or worries about the future. Practicing mindfulness can also really increase the resilience that you have as a parent, your capacity to handle the ups and downs and those stressors. So it might not necessarily change the amount of stressors in your life, but it can improve your capacity. And it's also a really great way to model healthy, a healthy self relationship. So we'll be talking soon about some specific practices you can do during the holiday to to bring some mindfulness in. But these are lovely things to, to be modeling for your kids. 

And finally, the last two that I wanted to just make sure I mention is that mindfulness practices can actually really increase your felt sense of an enjoyment and connection in parenting. So parents who regularly practice mindfulness, practice dropping into that present moment, allowing themselves to become fully aware of what they're experiencing in the good times and in the hard times express deeper, more authentic connections with their children and with their partners and tend to enjoy their lives more. I don't know about you, but I did not. Well, gosh, you know, when I became a parent, I had, I had no idea what I was in for. I don't know that any of us really do. I was not expecting it to be as difficult for me as it has been. I've faced plenty of challenges over the years of my, you know, my 11.5 years of parenting. And I will say the times where I am more distracted, more resistance to what's going on. More likely to slip into numbing behaviors, the numbing of social media or technology, food. Those are the times when I'm least happy in my, in my actual parenting versus the times where I am actively pursuing, being in the present moment with my family. Tho those periods of my life are the ones that I look back on with my kids with the most joy. And that's really what I thought parenting was going to look like. And of course, you know, it can all be positive, right? We have to have the ups and downs of life. That's just the reality of being a human. There will be ups and downs and thank goodness that there are that we get the the awesome gift of being full humans able to experience the full range of human emotion. That's wonderful. And I, I just know for me personally that when I'm making a concerted and intentional effort, things are so much better for my own experience in parenting and I think that they're better for my kids too. I definitely have more patience. I'm less snappish. I'm able to be my best self. 

So I wanted to share some of the things that I love to do. Things that are really easy for me. They, you know, they might not be easy for you and that's totally okay. But these are some of the things that I find are easy to weave into the fabric of my day and that really helped me stay present. Okay, so first is just a breathing exercise. I like to do box breathing. Sometimes it's called four wall breathing. But I also really love 478 breathing. So box breathing or four wall breathing is taking a breath in for four, holding it for four, breathing out for four, holding it for four. So that's something that's easy and accessible and it's right there. I like doing that at transition times. So maybe like the start of my shower in the morning or as I my body wakes up in bed in the morning. That's something that I will sometimes share with my kiddos. But 478 breathing is similar, but it's really good at getting kind of all of the the oxygen out of your body and helping kind of reset some of your breathing patterns. So it's really good for reducing anxiety, really good for reducing stress. It's evidence based. So it involves breathing in for four seconds, hopefully through your nose if you can, holding the breath for seven seconds and then exhaling slowly through the mouth or the nose. It doesn't, I don't think it matters for eight seconds. And it can really help get to you, get you to sleep. So I use that one when I am attempting to fall asleep. So just focusing in on the breath and I also use that one during high stress times. So if I for example, know someone who kind of activates me or triggers me is going to be coming over, like a loved one who I find challenging to be around. I will do some of that breathing while they are walking to the door. Or I will excuse myself and have some of those that breathing so that the 478 breathing that was recommended by my doctor who has been helping me get through my adrenal fatigue. And it's been wonderful for me. So yes, 478 breathing, you can do a Google too if you want some more information on that one. 

I also love to do body scans as I'm waking up and falling asleep, kind of coming back into my body. So a body scan is starting at your toes and gradually working your way up, paying attention to each part of your body, noticing any sensations or areas of tension and then consciously releasing tension as you go. I mean, you can also do it with an intentional kind of muscle activation and then release that can help release tension in your muscles. As a trauma survivor, I found body scans very difficult and challenging for a long time. I needed to do them, supported with a body worker or a breath work coach while I was learning to do them to feel safe. So, if you don't always feel safe in your body and those that can be challenging. So do that with care for yourself and allow yourself to, to pass on that one if it doesn't feel good. I've spent a lot of time and work with my various therapists to help my body feel like a safe space after traumas. And so now it feels good, but it didn't always. And that took work with professionals to get there. So again, be compassionate with yourself, take the low hanging fruit, do what's easy this time period during the holidays is not the time to take on a new practice that's really challenging. Okay, so I'm offering you some options. There's lots of other options out there, find ones that are easy for you. But that is one that for lots of people, it is quite easy and accessible. Both of my kids like to do that when they're having trouble sleeping. 

I also really love mindful walking. So having a date with nature where you are, you're not using headphones, you're fully present in your body as you walk. Your goal for mindful walking should not be to elevate the heart rate or get your exercise in. It's about being fully present in your body and in nature. So usually these walks are short and you are really attending to your body in motion. You are noticing the how your foot rolls onto the ground with each step. You're noticing the feel of the air as it brushes your cheeks as you move you're really paying attention to your body and or your surroundings, you're really noticing the rustle of the trees or the, the chirp of a bird nearby. So the mindful walks are one of the things that are just so good for my nervous system. And I find that my children often love to join me on them. If you are a parent of a toddler, we know that when we go out for walks with toddlers, they go at their own pace and they cannot be rushed. Learning from them allowing them to teach you how to slow down and be in the present moment. Oh, man, toddlers are such a gift for that. So if you have the opportunity to go for a walk with a toddler, take it, I, you know, when my kids were in that stage and we had, we were walking to the park, sometimes, you know, we had an hour and a half to go and play at the park. We sometimes wouldn't even make it there because we took so long and that was okay, because kids are so good at being in the moment and enjoying the process, enjoying the journey. And so, it's really easy for us as the adults to put on our kind of goal oriented culture onto kids. Kids are very good at teaching us how to release the end goal and be in the moment for the journey I highly encourage you to, to practice and let your kids teach you how to practice that. 

And then another mindfulness practice that really that I love to engage in on a regular basis is gratitude. So setting aside a few minutes each day to reflect on things that you're grateful for. Sometimes, you know, when you're starting, you know, three, a small number is good challenging yourself to list more than 10, can be really good practice because to do so you have to get into the nitty gritty of things. You know, you can, it's easy, you know, three or five. You know, we have, we have that many people in our family, we're grateful for them. It's easy to put those down. But when we get into 10 or 15, we really have to start noticing the small things that we're really grateful for that. We appreciate that we, that we would miss if they weren't there, the smell of our coffee in the morning, the feel of our child's head pressing against our shoulder. You know, when we are snuggled up in the back seat of the car with them, you know, I mean, just, there's just so many things to be grateful for that we don't even notice or pay attention to the human brain is really good at noticing threats and noticing things that they want it wants to change. It's less good at noticing the positive things that are already happening. And that makes sense, right? So our human brain is tasked with keeping us safe and alive. So it makes complete sense that that this helpful human brain isn't great at noticing the things that are already positive and great in our lives, but we can train it to do so, we can help help it, help us start being more aware of the the blessings that we have in our lives. So those are some general practices that that I enjoy and help me and my family. 

I just wanted to tell you a few that I do specifically during the holiday season that really increase my pleasure and joy and allow me to be a better and more present parent. So the first one is the act of decorating. So when I'm decorating our house, we are, I don't know that we necessarily identify as Christian anymore. I mean, we totally celebrate Christmas. We have a, a manger scene. I grew up Catholic and so did my husband. But I don't know, you know, we don't really go to church anymore. We celebrate the solstice where my husband is Polish, I'm Norwegian by descent. So we kind of bring in some Scandinavian traditions like we celebrate Santa Lucia day. So we kind of dabble in a variety of things. I love, I love the decor for this time of year. I love the twinkling lights. I love the evergreens. I love, I just love all the sparkle and the glitz and, and it's ok if you don't love those things, right. We're individuals, we're able to be ourselves. It's okay for me to love those things and it's ok for you not to, but when I am decorating my house, when we're working together as a family to decorate my house, I like to put my hands on every single thing that goes up. I appreciate it. I notice it. I discussed with my family where we got it. So all of our Christmas ornaments are labeled with who gave them to us or where we got them for what event, you know, each ornament that goes onto our tree has significance and meaning and I touch each and every one of them and discuss it with the family. So decorating our tree is just this like delicious moment of mindfulness and presence and love and enjoyment for our family and to you that might sound exhausting and burdensome to hear me describe that. 

And I want to tell you that's okay, if you never do your Christmas tree or you don't have a Christmas tree or you never do any decorations like that. It's, it's totally okay if that feels overwhelming and not your cup of tea, that's okay. But I would encourage you to find, you know, if you do decorate for holidays at this time of year to find some opportunity to drop into the present moment with the objects you're choosing to put around your home, to really connect with him and think about why am I choosing this? What pleasure does this give me over my, my kitchen where over our kitchen sink, we have this ledge and normally that ledge is filled with plant cuttings that I'm propagating. But during Christmas, I fill it with pink colored Christmas decorations. It's the only part of the house that has pink in it. And it just, each little piece has been carefully chosen and curated over the years to bring me a lot of joy while I'm so that I have something so beautiful to look at during this season, while I'm doing dishes and I just encourage you, you know, again, like there's no pressure to decorate your house, there's no pressure to do any of this. But if you are just look at these things as an opportunity to drop into that present moment and, and handle, you know, if it means you're putting out a candle, you know, you're placing a candle in a candle holder, hold it in your hand and think about the beings, the bees that worked together to create that wax. The humans who perhaps dyed it and formed it. The workers who packaged it and put it on shelves, the person you who chose it and brought it to the cash register, the worker there who checked you out, you know, I mean, there's just in a candle that you're putting in a menorah, there is just so much that goes into that candle. Allow yourself to witness it, allow yourself to see it, to experience that whole kind of production, really notice it. And if you have the capacity, do it out loud. So you can model that for your kids and feel that gratitude well up within you. 

Okay, so I feel like I went a little deep on that one, but I just, I really do love this idea that you know what we choose to put in our house has meaning to us. Maybe not everything but certain things do. And so it's okay to drop into the present moment with those things and savor that meaning. Okay. Another practice that we do at the holidays that I really enjoy is we have this Advent Calendar. It's shaped like in a triangle, kind of like a tree and has these little compartments that you can put things in and we set it out. And we set it out empty. I know advent calendars are supposed to open it and take something out. But instead we set it out empty and over the course of our lives together, we've collected little rocks and acorns, shells, you know, just little pieces from our family walks. And so what we do with our advent calendar is, we fill it as we count down to Christmas. And so we, you know, each evening the children get to choose one thing we talk about where we collected it from what we were doing as a family and we place it in the calendar. So that like that practice really helps us kind of review the year, savor our family memories, appreciate nature. We really enjoy that one. 

Another thing I invite you to do is to engage in mindful eating this holiday. So during the holidays, we often have lots of food and drink experiences that we don't get to have throughout the rest of the year that feel quite special. Allowing yourself the gift of savoring those things, really sitting down and being fully present with your body, with your taste buds, with your, with your senses of smell and touch. Kind of really getting into all of those things can be really delightful, inviting your kids to be a part of that. There are really many kids are very, very good at this, very naturally. It might seem weird to them at first if you don't do this often. But they just need the smallest invitation, just the smallest little like if you're having a cup of cocoa together, the smallest little invitation to smell it before you drink it and really like like really just talk about what do we smell, you know, like, oh look, I'm noticing how the marshmallows are starting to melt in there and it's creating these rivers of white and I'm just wondering what that will taste like. You know, really heightening that experience. It doesn't have to be for every meal. It doesn't have to be for everything you are consuming, you know, or drinking over the holidays, but take a couple of moments to really do that with, for yourself and for your kids. 

And then the last thing that I think can be really fun this time of year is going for walks as a family. So whether it's a nature walk, or a walk through your neighborhood, noticing the other decorations that other families have put up or noticing kind of what's going on in your, you know, your world, your part of the world during this time can be a really lovely thing to do. Here in the US, it's quite dark after dinner, we like to do those walks in the evening. Sometimes we bring a lantern but sometimes we don't, we do wear reflective gear, and being out in the quiet with the snow, can be quite magical just being fully present with each other with the warmth of each other's hands as we're holding them. And, you know, just noticing what we see. Okay, so I know that the holiday season can be both joyful and hectic. So I'm hopeful that you can take some of the things that you learned here in this episode and apply them to your life and that they can help you savor the positive stuff that's happening while managing and coping and navigating the stressful stuff. I think it's really a great idea to start weaving some of these practices just into your daily life or into the fabric of your holiday celebrations. So let me know what you think. I'd love to hear from you. And, if I don't, I hope you have a wonderful holiday season and a joyful New Year and I'll see you in January.

Okay, so thanks for listening today. Remember to subscribe to the podcast and if it was helpful, leave me a review that really helps others find the podcast and join us in this really important work of creating a parenthood that we don't have to escape from and creating a childhood for our kids that they don't have to recover from. 

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All right. That's it for me today. I hope that you keep taking really good care of your kids and your family and each other and most importantly of yourself. And just to remember, balance is a verb and you're already doing it. You've got this!