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The CALM Break
Episode 1226th March 2026 • Become A Calm Mama • Darlynn Childress
00:00:00 00:31:46

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If you’re a fan of the Pause Break, you are going to love the new and improved tool I’m teaching in today’s episode. And if you’re new here, the CALM Break is going to change the way you show up as a parent!

You’ll Learn:

  1. Why you feel so stressed out as a parent
  2. The 4 steps of the CALM Break
  3. How (and when) to use a CALM Break to stop yelling and feel less overwhelmed
  4. Some of my favorite thoughts for a more positive mindset

The CALM Break is the new and improved Pause Break. It’s a step-by-step process for what to do when you find yourself overwhelmed, yelling at your kid, or just not showing up as the parent you want to be. Today, I’m breaking down what it is and how you can use it to show up as a calm mama.

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Why Aren’t You Calm?

We all feel overwhelmed and dysregulated at times, especially when it comes to parenting. Understanding what’s going on can help you to be more compassionate with yourself and feel less out of control.

Your nervous system has two parts: the sympathetic and the parasympathetic.

The parasympathetic nervous system is the calm part. It's what we think of as “rest and digest”. It's a state of equilibrium and balance. For the most part, you should be living your life in the parasympathetic nervous system. These are the times when things are relatively easy, you know what to be doing, the demands on you are manageable, and you're able to keep up.

When things become stressful - there is too much demand on you and you feel overwhelmed - your nervous system says, “Uh-oh, we can’t handle this,” and it decides that you need a bunch more stress hormones (e.g. adrenaline, cortisol, epinephrine) in order to deal with what’s in front of you.

This triggers your sympathetic nervous system. That's the fight, flight, freeze, faint, fawn response. Basically, you either become activated or you shut down.

At certain times in your life, this stress response can be really helpful and useful. But we’re not supposed to stay in an activated state all the time. The stressors in our lives aren't supposed to outpace our ability to manage those stressors.

But kids (even if you only have one) create a lot of extra stress. You're constantly worried and looking out for their safety. You're constantly trying to problem solve. They’re melting down because their nervous system is immature and misfiring all the time.

And then you add the everyday life demands of time, money, work, relationship drama, physical fatigue, and it can feel so overwhelming.

A lot of the time, you can handle things as they come up. Somebody spills their juice, you clean it up, you move on. Give yourself a little credit here for not being a raging lunatic all the time!

But there are also moments when your stress response takes over. Your brain tells you this is an emergency, your stress response activates, and it takes you out of your logical, thinking response.

This is when you need to use the CALM Break to get your parasympathetic nervous system back online to manage the stress juice and get you back to a more balanced state.

The CALM Break

Listen, if you have kids under 10, it’s probably cuckoo pants all the time in your house. Under age 5, forget it. You've got kids climbing and jumping and throwing and spitting and punching and hitting. And you're gonna feel like you're going bananas (and you kind of are). Your nervous system is not ready for those demands. It’s not built to be.

CALM is an acronym that helps you remember the steps to follow when you notice that you are overwhelmed, triggered, or dysregulated.

CALM stands for:

Catch yourself

Align

Label

Move

Step 1: Catch Yourself & Pause

This step is about building awareness of how you’re feeling and when you are dysregulated. You can also think of the “C” as checking in with yourself.

This can be as simple as noticing and saying to yourself, “Oh, I’m very overwhelmed right now.” When you interrupt your stress response, you are retraining your nervous system to respond differently to those circumstances.

Step 2: Align

Align refers to getting your nervous system back online with your values and your goals of becoming a calm parent. First, delay. Don’t do any parenting in this moment while you’re activated.

Communicate to your kids that you're not in alignment. Say something like, “You know what? I'm getting upset right now. I love you, and I don’t want to yell at you. I'm going to take a CALM break.” Or, “I'm sorry, this is not how I want to act. I will talk to you about this in a few minutes after a take a break.”

When you tell your children what is happening in real time, they will feel less afraid. They will feel less activated. Plus, as you start to get calm, they might start to calm down, too.

Step 3: Label Your Thoughts & Feelings

Narrate for yourself what you're thinking and what's going on and name those feelings. I want you to do this with kindness and self-compassion. There’s no need for negative self-talk or criticism. Being hard on yourself will only activate more stress.

Some common default thoughts include, “My kid never listens,” “My kid is so entitled,” and “They should know better.” These thoughts often lead to feelings of frustration, resentment, or discouragement.

This is the piece where you get to really connect with your own heart and your own overwhelm and your own nervous system and give yourself some love. Once you label what you’re thinking and feeling, tell yourself, “Yes, this is hard, but I can get through it.”

Step 4: Move

I think of this as “move your body, move your mind.”

Moving your body is the best way to move stress juice through and regulate your nervous system. There are lots of great examples for this in the Stop Yelling Cheat Sheet.

Then, you can move your mind by working with your mindset. That means that you can shift the way you’re thinking and feeling so you get into a better state of mind. We're not bypassing or ignoring our feelings here. Instead, you’ll acknowledge them and then ask yourself:

  1. How do I want to feel?
  2. What thoughts will get me there?
  3. How can I move this moment forward with some positive energy?

The fun thing is, you can get better at moving your mind and coaching yourself when things are rough. You get better at normalizing the stage of life that you’re in and telling yourself a better story about it.

Here are some thoughts you can borrow when you need them:

  1. This is normal. This is one of my favorites!
  2. This is temporary.
  3. This is not an emergency. I have plenty of time.
  4. Kids are going to act out.
  5. This isn't a big problem.
  6. This is overwhelming, but I can handle it.
  7. I wasn't expecting this, but I can take care of it.

This is how you label what’s true and move your mind to a more balanced state.

When you are working the whole Connected Parenting Process, you will feel much calmer and your nervous system won't activate as much. When you feel confident that you can deal with misbehavior, you won't find it so overwhelming.

Resources:

  1. Get the free Stop Yelling Cheat Sheet
  2. Free Guide: 20 Ways to Reset Your Stress Response
  3. Episode 2: Getting to Calm with the Pause Break
  4. Episode 8: Pause & Reset Your Body
  5. Episode 9: Pause & Reset Your Emotions
  6. Episode 10: Pause & Reset Your Mind

Get your copy of the Stop Yelling Cheat Sheet!

In this free guide you’ll discover:

✨ A simple tool to stop yelling once you’ve started (This one thing will get you calm.)

✨ 40 things to do instead of yelling. (You only need to pick one!)

✨ Exactly why you yell. (And how to stop yourself from starting.)

✨A script to say to your kids when you yell. (So they don't follow you around!)

Download the Stop Yelling Cheat Sheet here

Connect With Darlynn:

  1. Book a complimentary session with Darlynn
  2. Learn about the different parenting programs at www.calmmamacoaching.com
  3. Follow me on Instagram @darlynnchildress for daily tips
  4. Rate and review the podcast on Itunes

Transcripts

Speaker:

Welcome back to Become a Calm Mama. I'm your host, I'm Darlene Childress.

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I'm a life and parenting coach, and today on the episode on

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the podcast, I am going to introduce you to

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a new parenting tool. In many ways, it's a

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new and improved parenting tool. It's an

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update to the pause break, which is the

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main tool I have taught throughout the podcast,

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throughout many years of how to get calm.

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And the pause break has been a wonderful

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tool. It's great, I love it. I've taught it, taught it many, many times

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and lots of you have learned it and done it and you're like, oh my

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God, it works. It's the primary thing in the Stop Yelling Cheat Sheet.

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And the pause break is a step-by-step guide

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to stopping when you find yourself yelling at your kids

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or overwhelmed or showing up as the parent you don't wanna be.

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Delaying the conversation, delaying

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consequences with your kid, and then resetting your nervous

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system. So the tool has been 3 steps:

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pause, delay, and reset. And as I've been

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working on the book that I'm writing on raising an emotionally healthy

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kid, I am really being

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so careful and really wanting to be— to

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give complete tools to parents in

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the most simple, effective, practical,

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accessible way that I can. So I've been sitting

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with the pause break, with the connection tool, with the limit

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setting formula, with the correction conversation, all the parts

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of the connected parenting process, right? Calm, connect,

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limit, set, correct. And I'm looking at each of those

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pillars of the connected parenting process and thinking,

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Okay, if I wanna help a parent get calm, what are

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the most essential things that they need and how can

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I give them a tool, a mindset tool essentially, to

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access that calm? Or with the

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connection tool, how do I give you one tool that helps you

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connect with your kids and emotionally coach them? How do I give you one

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tool to set limits and one tool to

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do consequences or correction with your kids. I wanna make

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parenting practical, easy, accessible, all of those things.

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So I've been sitting with the pause break and thinking about how

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it relates to calm, and I recognized that it was

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an incomplete tool, that in many ways I

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have this wonderful thing, pause, delay, reset,

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but it doesn't really tell you what to do.

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Exactly. So I sat with the word calm and I thought

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a lot about that word, and I decided

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to make the word calm an

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acronym, a step-by-step

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guide to calming yourself, and updating

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the pause break and calling it the calm break, and giving

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you really easy-to-remember things to do that start

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with the letter C. C-A-L-M.

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So the calm break is the new pause break,

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and I think you're gonna love it. So I'm gonna explain it to you on

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this episode, and then I'll probably talk about each of these

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things in depth over the next few weeks or months or whatever. But I wanted

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to give you the concept right away as I step back

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from, you know, the long break as I've been writing the book and giving

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you just this Wonderful tool. I'm so excited about

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it. So, okay, it's this 4 parts, right? CALM is 4

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letters, C-A-L-M. The first is C. So

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C is catch yourself, A is align,

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L is label, and M is

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move. So I'm going to break those down for you

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in this episode, but I want to just think for a second.

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C is catch yourself. So you are

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noticing that you are triggered, or you are

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noticing that your nervous system is dysregulated. You

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are becoming aware. So that C is catch yourself

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and pause. So I've always had a

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part of the pause break that was like stop or whatever, but this is really

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catching yourself, using that letter C to catch yourself.

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If you love the word check-in, you can also use that. I'm

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gonna use catch yourself and pause. So C is catch yourself.

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A is align. So I love this

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because you are gonna align with your values and with your

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goals of becoming a calm parent. And if you are not

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aligned, you're going to catch yourself and realign with your

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own goals. And in the align

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part of the calm break, that's when you communicate to

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your kids that you're not in alignment, you're

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not showing up as the parent you wanna be. So you will

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say something very small to your children and say, you know

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what? I'm getting upset right now and I'm gonna take a calm break. I

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don't wanna yell at you anymore. And so I'm going to take a calm break.

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Or you could just say break if that feels okay for you, whatever you wanna,

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however you wanna use it with your family. But this align is really about

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you kind of getting back online and

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aligning your nervous system with goals. It's like

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part of the awareness piece is I'm not showing up as the parent

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I want to be, and I want to realign and tell my children that

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I'm taking a pause break. The L is label. I

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wanted to call it label and love, but it's kind of too

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cheesy. But essentially, I want you to label

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your thoughts and feelings. I want you to narrate

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and name, which is part of the connection tool. I want you to

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narrate for yourself what you're thinking and what's going

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on and name those feelings. So labeling

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your own thoughts and feelings, and I want you to do that with love and

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kindness. This is the piece where self-compassion comes in.

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This is the piece where you get to really connect

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with your own heart and your own overwhelm and your

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own nervous system and give yourself some love, right? So we have

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to label how we are thinking and how we are

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feeling and give ourselves a little bit of soothing there for

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that. Like, yeah, girl, I hear you. So it's a part of that self-talk

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is the labeling with love. And then move

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is move your body, move your mind. So in the old pause

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break, I really only had the word reset,

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and it was not— it wasn't enough information

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for you to really understand. You know, you're supposed to reset your nervous system, But

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I want to give you the letter M for move your body,

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move your mind. So those are moving your body is

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how you regulate your nervous system. It is the best way to move

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stress juice through your unregulated, your

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dysregulated nervous system is by channeling that with

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an intentional movement. It can be super silly. And I have a lot of different

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strategies in that Stop Yelling Cheat Sheet. So you can get

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that on the website under the resources page. There's also another

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resource on that resource page that is called

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20 Ways to Reset Your Stress Response, and that one

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is also just a lot of different tools and grounding techniques

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for you as the parent to kind of find your own

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way that you reset your nervous system. And I've taught that

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many times on the podcast, you know, move your Move your body, move your body,

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move your body. And then moving your mind is kind of moving from

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that negative thought, that negative feeling. We're not bypassing it.

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We're not ignoring our feelings. We're acknowledging them. We're aligning

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and going, okay, this is how I'm feeling, but how do I want to feel?

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What thoughts will get me there? How can I move

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this moment forward with some positive energy?

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And that is going to be moving your mindset. Moving

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the way you're thinking so that you can move the way you're feeling

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and get to a better state of mind. So that's the

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calm break, you guys. It's catch yourself, align,

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label, move. Isn't it great? I really think if

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you kind of practice the letters, you'll go

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through the pause break or the calm break in a way that you'll

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understand what you're supposed to be doing to even higher degree

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than you had before. Like, if you've been practicing the pause break,

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like, amazing, and I love it. It's a good tool. But

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I wanted to give you, like I said, something that gives you a lot

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more specific things in your mind that you're supposed to

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be doing. Because pause and delay are just

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some words, but now we're having catch yourself, align

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with your values, label what you're thinking and feeling,

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moving your body and mind. So let's talk for

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a minute about why you're not calm and like what

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happens that creates that overwhelm or that

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dysregulation. I've taught it a lot of times. It's kind of

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popular in, you know, neuropsychology. We

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all sort of understand the nervous system to some degree, but I just want to

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remind you that your nervous system has

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these two parts, okay? So you have your sympathetic nervous system

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and your parasympathetic nervous system. And

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the parasympathetic is really the

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calm part. It's like when nothing's activated,

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your parasympathetic nervous system is in what we think of as

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rest and digest. It's just a state of equilibrium,

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a state of balance. And for the most part, you

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should be living your life in that parasympathetic nervous system.

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You're in that calm part of your, your life,

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like you're just going through the flow, things are easy, you know what to be

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doing, the stress, the demands, the

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stress requests on you are manageable, and you're able

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to keep up with the demands, right? It's like you're in

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a state of balance, you're balanced, okay? So that's your

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parasympathetic nervous system. Now when

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something becomes stressful, like

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you become too much stress or too much demand or

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too much overwhelm, or for whatever reason your nervous system

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says, uh-oh, we can't handle this, we need a lot more

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adrenaline, we need a lot more cortisol, we need a lot

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more epinephrine, we need a lot more to

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deal with what's in front of us, and you get that surge of

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stress hormones that, you know, trigger your

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sympathetic nervous system. That's that fight,

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flight, freeze, faint, fawn, right? We all have different

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kinds of ways, but in general, you either become activated

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or you shut down, right? You become that fight or

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that flight. So you need

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your stress response, like you need your parasympathetic

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nervous system. It is helpful, it is useful. It's an important

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part of how to deal with things that come in your

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life. Like, we need to have extra cortisol bursts sometimes,

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and we need to have a little bit of extra oomph

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in our, in our nervous system so that we can deal with kind of all

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the stuff that's going on. But we're not supposed to stay

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in a state of activated nervous system

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all the time. The stressors in our life

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aren't supposed to outpace our ability

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to manage those stressors. But when you

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have kids, especially if you have like, you know,

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more than one kid, but even just one kid, a child

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creates a lot of extra stressors on your nervous system.

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You're constantly worried, are they safe? You're constantly trying

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to problem solve, like, what's going on here? Why are they all of

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a sudden spitting? Like, why did they just throw all that stuff on the ground?

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How come they're screaming for no reason. Like, why is this

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such a big deal? Like, they're melting down. Their nervous systems

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are immature and they are misfiring all the time,

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and they have a lot of trouble staying in that parasympathetic

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nervous system. They're, they're like growing, and

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so they're kind of learning how to manage going back and

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forth between stress response and then parasympathetic. Like, that's just part

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of having children around. But then you add the

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time, money, relationship drama, physical

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fatigue, your period, like all these different factors

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that come into place, work demands, a big mess, the dog

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takes a poop in the house, like, oh my God, all of a

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sudden it can feel so overwhelming and your nervous system is going to

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activate. So what would normally, if you have a

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parasympathetic nervous system, like somebody spills juice,

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or they— you realize they're getting a bad grade, or, you know, a kid

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like hits you or something. Half the time, or maybe more than that, you're

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fine. Like, you handle it. You're like, don't do that, that's not okay. Or you're

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like, oh my God, I gotta clean this up, everyone go wait in the car.

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Like, there's lots and lots of times that you're not

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activated. Like, I want to just give you credit for the fact

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that you're not just a raging lunatic all the time.

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But there are moments when your— the stress

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response sort of takes over and your

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brain tells you this is an emergency, we have to activate our stress

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response, and you're not really in your thinking brain anymore,

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right? That's when you need that calm break. The calm

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break is designed to get your parasympathetic nervous

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system back online. To manage the stress

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juice, push it through, and then get

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back to a state of equilibrium in

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real time. Like while you're in the middle of dealing with the,

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I was gonna say bullshit, like the stuff that comes up in

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being a parent. It is like, especially if they're under 10,

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it's just like cuckoo pants all the time. Under 5,

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forget it. If you have a kid under 5, especially if you have more than

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one, It is like, wait, what is happening right now? You've

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got kids climbing and jumping and throwing and spitting and punching and hitting. And

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it's just like, you're, you're gonna feel like you're going bananas and you kind of

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are. Like, your nervous system is not ready for

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those demands. The fun thing is actually you get better

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the more you normalize the stage of life that

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you're in, the more you tell yourself a better story about the

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stage that you're in. The easier it will

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be when these really rough times come up. So

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being able to remind yourself, like, that's what moving your mind is like.

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This is normal, this is temporary, kids are going to act

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out, this isn't a big problem, I can handle it.

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Like, when you have that positive self-talk and that

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coaching of yourself, like, yeah, this is overwhelming,

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but I've I can handle it. Like, yeah, this sucks, I wasn't

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expecting this, but I can take care of it. That's that

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labeling and moving your mind. Labeling what's

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true and then shifting your mindset so that you can cope better.

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Labeling what's true and moving your mind and moving your body

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is how you get back to your nervous system back online.

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Moving your body, moving your mind, that's really

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all that it is, is to get yourself back online.

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But don't be mean about it. Like, I hear moms

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all the time like, oh my God, I'm so terrible, I yelled at my kids,

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I've been such a bitch lately, like, I don't even know what's going on with

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me, you know. And usually I'm like, well, are you on your period? And they're

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like, yes. And then like, well, that's why. Um, and then you can have

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compassion for yourself. So being mean or

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criticizing or thinking I should be better at this or I should be a

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better mom, that's not labeling with love. That's

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actually just self— like negative self-talk. That's self-criticism.

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And that's not going to help you get out of your sympathetic

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nervous system. It's not going to help you calm. It's only going to activate more

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stress. Now, it might activate more stress that gets

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you to like get your shit together, sure. But

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long term, that's not going to be stress that you want to

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have in your nervous system pumping all the time. That's too much cortisol.

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So let's instead learn how to

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catch ourselves. So noticing

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that you are in a stress response is

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probably the most important thing you can do. That's that C

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in the calm break. Catch yourself and pause. Catch

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yourself. Notice, oh, I'm very

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overwhelmed right now. When you interrupt

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your stress response, you are retraining your nervous system

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to respond differently to circumstances. If you

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are able to do this in real time, even if you've already been

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like kind of in a parenting temper tantrum for a minute or two or

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three or whatever, like if you've already been in

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one, it's still fine catching yourself like, oh my God, what am I doing right

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now? That's that Catch yourself and align. This is not

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how I want to parent. And then you turn to your child

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and you say, this is not how I want to act.

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I'm sorry, I'm going to take a calm break and I will talk to you

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in a minute. I will deal with this in a minute.

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I wanna calm my body. So when you are aligning,

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you're also delaying parenting.

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Like literally not parenting in that moment, because

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if you parent from a stress response, it's going to

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become chaotic and you're not going to show up as the parent you want to

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be. You're going to be punitive, shameful, mean,

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or you're going to give in, become overly permissive. Any

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of those things that happen when you parent from your

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like activated nervous system tend to not go so well.

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So just kind of pausing, catching yourself, pausing, right, that

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C, catch yourself, align, and delay.

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Like, get back online, wait till you are

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ready. Wait till you're ready to

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show up as the parent you wanna be. And how you do that

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is then labeling, right? So saying

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to your children, I'm upset and I need a minute to think.

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"so I'm taking a calm break." Or turning to them when

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you're in alignment, saying, "I love you, I wanna talk to you, and I will

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after I take a calm break. I don't wanna say or do

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anything to hurt you. I'm gonna talk to you in a few minutes after I've

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calmed down." This, you can even say to your

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children, "What you're doing doesn't work, but I don't wanna

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yell at you, so I'm going to take a calm break."

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When you tell your children what is happening in real time,

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they will feel less afraid. They will feel less

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activated. They will probably start to

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borrow your nervous system because yours is starting to get calm. They might

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start to calm. So when you get back online, when you

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align with your values and you bring your body back into

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alignment with your, you know, your nervous system,

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your children will actually start to see

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your self-regulation, borrow that self-regulation, and learn to do

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that for themselves. So alignment is really, really

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powerful. Then noticing your

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thoughts and feelings, okay? Labeling your thoughts and feelings.

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We all have default thoughts. We all have default

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feelings, things that we respond to, like

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thoughts that we have, like, my kid never listens to me, or this kid

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is such a brat. This kid is so entitled. You know, they should

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know better. Like, I've already told them 5 times. They shouldn't keep asking

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me., right? It's that critical thought that you have

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about yourself or about your children.

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And those negative thoughts, those are programmed, right?

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They come, they're default thoughts at this point. You've practiced

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them enough times. You know, this is so like, you know,

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people are looking at us, like I'm not a good mom. Any of

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those thoughts that you have create emotion in

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you. So if you're thinking, "My kid never

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listens," label that thought and then label the feeling.

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"I'm annoyed." "My kid is so entitled.

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I'm feeling resentful." "They should

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know better. I'm feeling

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discouraged." Most of us are really not great at labeling our

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emotion. We think that when we say,

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I feel that my child is being a

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brat, that that's labeling a feeling, but that's a

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thought. The thought is, my child's a

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brat, or I'm thinking my child is a brat, or my child's

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being bratty, okay, if you want to be more generous. And then

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the feeling I have when I'm thinking, God, my child's being so bratty,

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is I'm gonna feel annoyed, right? If I'm

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like, oh my God, I've taught this 100 times, they should know better,

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I'm gonna feel discouraged. So learning how to label your

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feelings and then give yourself a little like love pat,

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like, ah, yes, this is hard, this is

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frustrating, and then start to like, okay, but I can handle

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it. I can get through it, I can figure this out. This

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is temporary. I know what to do

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here, which is move my body. Like,

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going into a new set of feelings and a new set of

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thoughts requires intentional thinking.

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So if, if you need to move your body to get to that

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better mindset and like shake it off or do a little

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shimmy shake or do some jumping jacks or clap your hands

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together or go drink some water, wash your hands, tidy up

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some pillows on the couch. Like, doing something with your

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body will help you regulate your nervous system, push some of

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that stress juice out. And while you're doing that, you can be

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coaching yourself to better thoughts and feelings.

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So negative thoughts, that's often what triggers your

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stress response. So when you start to do

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some positive mindset work, when you start to work

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through some of your negative thoughts and actively choose

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new thoughts, you will feel different. So one

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of my favorite thoughts that I love

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is, um, this is normal. Like, this

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is normal. This is normal for a 5-year-old, or this is normal for a family

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with a couple of kids, or this is a normal response

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to this situation. A lot of times we

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judge our kids or our responses or how

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they're behaving, and we think that everyone else is better

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or they all know better or they have better kids than us. And it's like,

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I work with hundreds of families at this point. Everyone is

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pretty much the same. We all get overwhelmed, kids

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misbehave, this is all normal. So normalizing

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it can help you not be so overwhelmed or angry

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or frustrated. Another thought I love is like, this

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is temporary. Like, it really helps me

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to remember that this is a moment in time and this is a lot, but

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it's going to end. Like, this is

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temporary. Like, this, this big feeling cycle that the kid is having, it— they're gonna—

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it's gonna get They're gonna end it. Like, no child is

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still crying like 4 years later, right?

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Not even 4 hours later. Like, that— if they are crying for

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4 hours, there's probably something physically wrong. Like, most

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big feeling cycles end within 10 minutes, even

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shorter. But in the middle of it, it will feel like it never will end.

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This is your— this is always happening, right? We go to like

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those extreme worst-case scenario thoughts, and those get

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us stuck. So thinking this is

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temporary, this is normal, this is not an

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emergency. That's another one I like to think about a lot. Like, nothing is

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an emergency here. Like, I have plenty of time. Your brain will

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trick you that you have no time, that everything is a rush, everything

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is important, you've got to get out the door, like, or

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else. And then when I coach parents, I'm like, or else what? They're like, or

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else I'll be late. I'm like, and then what happens? Like, the

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teacher will get mad. Like, and then what will happen? They're

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like, I don't know. I just don't like to be that type of

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person. And it's like, well, you're not that type of person most of the time,

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but in this moment, you might need a little extra time.

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Like, somebody made up that school starts at 8:10. It's made up.

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It doesn't really matter. Like, of course, I want you to be respectful and

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be on time, and that helps kids be regulated, have smooth mornings, get

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them to school in time. They don't feel rushed. They get to join the class

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at the same time. The teacher gets kicked off in the right

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way. That's all really, really good. I want you to have good morning

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routines. But if you feel like you

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can't take a pause break or a calm break, I'm going to go back

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and forth between the two because I have so many years of calling it the

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pause break. When you don't think you can take a calm

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break because you don't have any time, Like, believe me, you're

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gonna respond to your children in a way that escalates their

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behavior, dysregulates them further, and it's gonna cost you

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time. Like, you have plenty of time. This is not an emergency.

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I can figure this out. So a lot of these thoughts that I'm

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offering to you can become your new default

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thoughts, and you just practice them. So eventually you won't need to

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take calm breaks. That's actually the goal,

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is that you become emotionally

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regulated and your nervous system is in your parasympathetic

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nervous system most of the time, that even when your

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kids misbehave or like crazy shit goes down in the morning

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or after school or at bedtime or whatever, you're able to be like, okay,

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I'm gonna have to deal with this like pattern tomorrow. This is

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not going well. What's my goal here? Being calm.

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I'm going to stay in alignment. I'm going to move this moment along. I'm going

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to practice connection tool. I'm going to practice limit setting. I'm going to

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delay consequences for tomorrow. Like, when you are working the

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whole connected parenting process, you will feel much calmer

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and your nervous system won't activate as much. When you feel confident that you

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can deal with misbehavior, you won't find it so

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overwhelming. When you know what to do with it, then you don't

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panic, you don't get upset. Now, of course, you're still gonna have

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moments when your kid— you're trying to regulate your kid and they're just way

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too off balance, like you can't get them back online, and you

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get frustrated. Then I want you to catch

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yourself being frustrated, align with your values,

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let your kids know, this isn't working, I'm not going to talk to you right

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now, I'm just going to get you you know, in your seatbelt. Or, I'm

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gonna close the door for a minute, I'm gonna take a deep breath, I'm gonna

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take a calm break. Labeling what the heck is going on for you. This is

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so frustrating, I'm so overwhelmed, I wish this was easier, this

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is not great, I don't like this. Like, you can have a little rant

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in that labeling, and then like, then go to move

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though. Okay, I need to move my body, I'm gonna do some jumping jacks, I'm

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gonna clap my hands together, I'm gonna drink some water. You You know, you're going

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to do something with your body, not all those things, but just do one or

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two little things with your body. Just put your hands in the air,

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go, then exhale. It will feel so much better. And then go, okay,

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I can deal with this later. This is not a problem. I'll figure this

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out. Let me get this kid to school. So that's the

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calm break. I love it. I'm so excited. I can't wait for you

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to get this book into your hands. Uh, it's It's gonna be

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so good. I'm really excited. It's like everything,

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not everything in my brain, but so much of my

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brain and what I carry and like what I've taught on this podcast and what

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I've taught in my courses and with my clients is going

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to be in this book. And it's probably gonna not be very expensive. So I'm

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so excited to be able, like, what if it's $20, right?

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Like, here's, spend $20. That's like less than you'd buy

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pajamas at Target, right? Here's $20, here's a

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book. You can read this and you can learn how to raise an emotionally

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healthy kid who's also responsible while not losing your shit.

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Like, that's incredible. And I'm writing it in such a way that I

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want it to be short, like

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pretty succinct and specific and

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like accessible so that you don't have to read this like

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giant parenting book. I want you to be able to like skim it almost

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and get it or be able to hand it to your partner and say like,

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can you read these 7 pages? And then they get the

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connected parenting process. You can be aligned, you can give it to grandparents, like,

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or nannies or housekeepers or, you know, babysitters,

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whoever. So anyway, I'm so excited. I still have so much

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work to do, um, but as I

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update these tools, I'm going to be updating you on the podcast, letting you

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know, you know, like, what to expect when you get the book so that you're

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like excited about it. Literally have no idea when it's coming out.

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But I know it will come out. It will be published and someday you'll be

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able to have it in your, you know, hold it in your hands. And I'm

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so happy about that. Okay, I hope you practice the calm

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break this week and it's really fun to be back

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doing episodes and recording again and, you know,

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getting back in the groove of that. So yes,

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have a great week and I will talk to you next time.

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