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3 Ways to Get Out of the Parenting Stress Cycle [Stop Yelling Series, part 3]
Episode 322nd January 2026 • Become A Calm Mama • Darlynn Childress
00:00:00 00:34:57

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I want to let you in on a little secret. You don’t yell because there’s something wrong with you (or your kids). You yell as a response to stress and what your brain perceives as a threatening situation. In this episode, I’m talking about the stress cycle - what it looks like, why it happens and how it shows up in your parenting.

You’ll Learn:

  • How stress shows up and why we feel activated even if we’re not actually in danger
  • What the parenting stress cycle is and how to know if you’re in one
  • 3 ways to get out of the stress cycle

But it’s not healthy for us to live in a state of chronic stress. Let’s break the cycle.

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Before we get into the details, I want you to first imagine walking your dog at night and seeing a pack of coyotes. They start chasing you. Your brain activates the stress response, quickly assesses the threat and decides that you should RUN.

You get back home, come in and close the door. You are technically safe, but your body doesn’t know that yet. It still has all of the stress juice running through your system.

Once you are inside and safe, it’s time to deal with the stress that has accumulated in your body. You do that by getting your breath back, telling someone what happened, getting a hug, shaking, crying. Stress cycle complete. YAY!

Now imagine that instead you come inside, but before you get a chance to deal with the stress juice, there is a new stressor. You walk into the house and your kids are arguing and your husband is yelling at them. Then you head to the kitchen and notice the dishes piled in the sink and there isn’t any meat thawed for dinner. Stressful situations keep popping up and the stress juice continues building up inside you.

2 key parts of the stress cycle

Notice that there are two parts of the story above: the actual threat of the coyotes and what happens after.

The stressor.

The stressor is the external situation that is happening around you. This can look like your child screaming, crying, being aggressive, arguing with you, peppering you with questions, blaming you for things, etc.

The stress response.

This is the stress juice. It’s a sort of chemical cocktail of hormones and neurochemicals that course through your body and create your stress response.

And it’s not a bad thing. It helps us respond to our environment and keep ourselves safe.

But it’s not healthy for us to live in a state of chronic stress. When stress juice builds up in you and isn’t released, it can make you more reactive, less effective and clouds your thinking.

The problem many parents face is that we are constantly surrounded by stressors, but we don't give ourselves a chance to release the stress juice and reset.

Sometimes, we don’t even realize that stress is building up inside of us. We think we’re handling things well until something unexpectedly sends us over the edge.

Parenting stress cycles

Think about some of the stressors above. If you were out in the world and another adult was screaming at you or being aggressive toward you, it would likely mean that you are in a threatening situation and that you need to do something to protect yourself.

So when your kid is screaming, crying or complaining, your brain can’t tell the difference. It thinks you’re being attacked, and your stress response is activated.

Aggressive behavior isn’t the only thing that triggers us, though. You might also notice yourself reacting to things like dilly dallying, rudeness, bad grades or your kid just being grumpy.

These behaviors activate us because we feel we’re being threatened not physically, but socially. As a community-based species, we fear rejection from others.

The type of threat might be different, but your stress response works the same way.

The cycle usually looks something like this:

Behavior → Reaction → Guilt → Nothing Changes → Same Behavior → Reaction → Guilt

3 ways to get out of the parenting stress cycle

There are a couple of places where we can interrupt the parenting stress cycle.

#1: Decrease the stressors

One of the best ways to create less misbehavior (and therefore fewer stressors) is to teach your kids better ways to deal with their feelings. To give them the tools to know what they’re feeling, how to talk about those feelings and what to do with their feelings in ways that don’t cause problems.

Creating routines and setting better limits also decrease stressors by removing some of the friction around regular, everyday things.

#2: Deal with your stress juice

The more frequently you reset your stress juice, the less it builds up over time. This is where the Pause Break and Calm Mama Break come in. Think of it as stress hygiene.

#3: Reframing behavior

Often we add meaning to a behavior, and this creates even more stress. We regret not doing things differently, feel fear around what the behavior means for our kid’s future or look for someone to blame.

If you can think about the behavior differently, you will feel less stressed about it.

This week, I want you to practice noticing when you are in a stress cycle. And instead of judging yourself for it, get curious about why you got so stressed in the first place. Noticing is step 1. Next week, we’ll get into more tools on how to break out of your stress cycle.

Free Resources:

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:

Transcripts

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Welcome to become a calm mama. I'm Darlyn. I'm your host.

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And today I'm going to talk about the parenting stress cycle, which I'm

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sure you are very curious about. And you're

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probably thinking, does she live at my

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house? Does she know what's going on in my life?

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Am I in a stress cycle? How will I know if I am in one?

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All right, so we're going to clear up all of those questions in this

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episode. I like to start talking about stress with

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this little story or vignette. Okay, so imagine you're

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walking your dog at night. Now, I have dogs, and I do walk them at

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night, and I live in a place where there are coyotes. Imagine that you live

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in a place where there are coyotes, and you're out walking your dog at night,

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and there is a pack of coyotes, and they start chasing you,

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okay? So you're there with your dog, and then here comes a pack of

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coyotes, and they start chasing, running towards you right then

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and there. Your brain is going to activate your stress

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response. It's going to quickly assess the threat

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and decide whether you should run, stop and throw rocks

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or go hide in the bushes, right? That fight,

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flight or freeze. So you

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run, right? You're like, okay, I'm going to run away from these coyotes.

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Now, when you are running, when we think about a stress cycle, what you're doing

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is you're dealing with the stressor. You're dealing with the thing

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that can do you harm, that external circumstance that

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is creating the stress response. So you run.

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Ah. Okay. Now imagine you get back home, you

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come in, you close the door, right? You close that door. You're like,

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you're technically safe because you're coming inside,

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and you close the door, but your body actually doesn't know that yet.

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It still has all of that stress juice

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running through your system. Like, the stress response got

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activated, you ran, and you're creating all that

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stress juice to activate, to respond to the

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environment. And you get inside and you close the door, and the stressor

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is dealt with, but the stress juice is still there. So now once you're

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inside and you're safe, it's time to deal with all that stress that

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has accumulated in your body. It's time to complete the.

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The cycle. The stress cycle. So how do you do that?

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You do that by getting your breath back, you know, like, start to.

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Okay, whoa, whoa. That was it. Oh, my God. Maybe you tell

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someone what happened. You walk in the door, your family's there. You're like, you won't

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believe this is happening. What just happened? There was a pack of coyotes. It was

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chasing me. And you're like, ah, right? And your family comes around

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you and they give you a hug and you start shaking and maybe

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crying. And now when all that

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release has happened, you've let go

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of the. You're not in stress. You're not in the stressor anymore. You're not in

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that dangerous environment. You're inside and you've dealt with like allowing

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some of that stress juice to go away. That means that you've

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had a stress cycle and it has been completed, which is like a big

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yay, right? Completed my stress cycle. Now

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we're gonna talk about parenting stress cycles and what they look like in a minute.

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But I want you to imagine the same scenario. Your moms, okay?

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Imagine not all of you, but for the most part now

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you are like outside, you're getting chased by the

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coyotes, you're freaking out. You get home

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and you need a minute to like, come down

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from that stressful experience, right? You need a

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chance to deal with that stress juice. But instead you

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walk in and all of a sudden there's another stressor. You

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walk into the house and your kids are arguing and your husband is yelling at

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them. Or you deal with that stressor. And then you head to the kitchen and

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you notice the dishes are piled in the sink and there isn't any meat thawed

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for dinner, and you serve cereal instead. And you tell yourself how much you suck.

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And you get into bed and you're just like, I am just terrible at

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being a mom. And you're still, you know,

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giving yourself negative messages. You're still creating a negative,

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stressful environment with your own brain. And this can

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go on and on and on. Because what happens

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to us as moms is a lot of times we deal with a

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stressful situation, and then immediately

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there's another stressful situation. You know

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what I'm talking about? Let me give you an example from parenting, from my

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own parenting life. I love this story because it makes me laugh.

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All right, so I had like a one year old and a three year old.

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I went to the grocery store and the baby, the little one year

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old, was in the cart in the, like, you know, basket area, like the part

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that they sit in. And my 3 year old was hanging

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on the side of the shopping cart, like, okay, I know it's not you. You're

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not supposed to do that, but that was what was happening. And we were in

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the checkout line and he was kind of hanging on the side. Now he doesn't

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weigh much, right? He's three. He's hanging there. And

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the little one says, you know, like, cart starts to want to get out,

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right? They don't want to stay in the shopping cart. They don't want to go

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through the line with like the stranger checkout person. So I picked

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the baby up and I put it on my hip. And what happened was the

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balance of the grocery cart was. Was then tipped.

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There was no longer centered. And so my younger son,

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who was hanging on the side, the shopping cart started to fall

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on him. And I grabbed the shopping cart,

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full grocery shopping cart with one arm,

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pulled it up off of him so that it did not fall on him

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while still holding another baby in my arms.

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Mamas, you know, right? Like, we are incredible. We

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can do this kind of stuff. So this is why I tell this story though,

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is because finish checking out, figure out if

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the kids are getting the balloon or the lollipop or whatever's happening in the line.

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I walk to the car, to the parking lot. I'm in the parking lot

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unloading, and this person, this clerk who

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works at the grocery store, says, nice save,

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mom. And I turned to him and I was like,

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huh? He's like, nice save

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inside with the grocery cart. Like you caught it

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from catching your kid, you know, falling on your kid.

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I was like, oh my God, that's right, I

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did. That was crazy. And it

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was him acknowledging what had happened. That was the only reason why I

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remembered. Because probably right then and there, the

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little ones started to argue about who's getting the balloon. And you know,

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my three year old was really rambunctious and I'm worried he's not going to like,

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stay near the cart and is he going to go mess with all the water

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bottles and are they all going to fall and like, is he going to stay

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close when we go back to the parking lot? And how am I going to

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get two kids in the shopping cart while also emptying the groceries into the

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cart and putting the cart away? But how do I put the cart away and

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leave my kids in the car? All that chatter

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is me going into another stressor. Another

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stressor, another stressor. That's what it's like to be

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a parent. We have so

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many stressors coming at us all the time

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and we don't really have a chance

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to deal with that stress juice.

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So then what happens to us is that

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something else happens in parenting, like

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misbehavior. And all of a sudden

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we are in the pack of Coyotes like, the

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misbehavior becomes yet another stressor

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that we cannot quite deal with calmly because

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we have been in an active stress spiral

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for so long. This is one of the

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things that I see with parents, particularly moms, because then they'll

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say, like, they'll say to me, you know,

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like, oh, my gosh, I don't know what's wrong with me. You

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know, something happens with my kids, and I'm super reactive, and I can't stay calm,

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and I act nutty. And I'm like, what the hell's wrong with me? I'm

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like, you're a human being that is in a highly stressful environment,

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and you're not taking any time to deal with the stress juice build up in

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your body. Or there's moments

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where you're handling that entire parenting situation.

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You're super calm. You're not even thinking anything of it, and you're dealing like, this

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kid wants this cup, and this one kids want this cup, and this kid wants

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chicken nuggets, but he doesn't want chicken nuggets. So instead, you're gonna make a sandwich,

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but then you're out of bread. So, like, okay, what about a bagel? And then

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you're just like, I watch you moms. You're amazing,

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and you're handling stuff really well.

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But what you're not realizing is you're taking care of a bunch of external

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stressors and not realizing that the stress

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juice is being built up in your body. So then

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when your one kid hits your other kid or they start having

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a meltdown or they start screaming, then

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you're in an activated stress response. All of a sudden you're like, stop

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it. You know, don't do that to me. Or,

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stop it. Don't do that to him. Or, you know, whatever that response is. I'm

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gonna get into your responses, but what I want you to see is

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that you have these external stressors,

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right? We have these situations in our life. Some

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life coaches call them circumstances. I tend

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to call them situations because it's not like

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one. A circumstance to me is like, you know, my husband

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is unemployed or something like that. He's not. But, you know, imagine.

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But that's like a circumstance, like a life circumstance. But

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in parenting, it's kind of confusing because we're like, in a bunch of, like,

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a lot of situations. It's kind of like a

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saga. Like, there's just like, so many different moments, moment to moment to

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moment, and you're sort of dealing with all of these situations

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over and over and over again. And what you're not realizing is that stress

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juice is being built up now.

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What the heck is stress juice? Right? What am I even talking about?

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I want you to think about that. Stressor is the

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external. What's happening in the environment, circumstance,

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situation. You know, you take your pick what you want to call it, and

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then we have stress juice. This is the stress

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response. It's a chemical cocktail. It's not a cocktail that

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is delicious. It's a cocktail that is,

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you know, life. It saves your life, Right? It's a

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chemical cocktail of cortisol, adrenaline, epinephrine.

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These are neural hormones or neural chemicals,

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and they actually course through your body and they create that

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intense stress response. They're good. Stress juice is

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good. Like, we like it because it actually

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helps us respond to our environment so we don't die.

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But when we have a lot of stress

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juice, we have. It's not good to live in chronic stress. It's not good to

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live in this chronic place of stress juice. Stress juice, stress juice, stressor, stress juice,

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stressor, stress, right? That's a cycle that

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isn't going to feel great. Because

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when you have too much stress juice, like, it's good in short

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bursts, but when it's built up and not allowed to release,

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then it becomes. It clouds your thinking, makes you less

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ineffective, makes you less effective. It

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makes you more reactive, right? This whole podcast is, calm mama,

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Become a calm mama. Right? And so we're learning how to become less

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reactive and less impulsive. We're trying to

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figure out ways to feel more clarity, to have more

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energy for our life, to have more time to be with our

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kids and be present. So what I am

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teaching you today is that one of the reasons

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that you're in this stress cycle,

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parenting stress cycle, is because of stress juice.

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It's not because of the juice itself. It's because you never really give yourself

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a chance to reset that stress juice.

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So I'm going to teach you next week exactly how to

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reset that stress juice. But I want to talk

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a few more minutes about the parenting stress cycle,

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okay? So when you're sitting there and you have a reactive moment,

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and you're like, what the hell's wrong with me? Like, I was so calm earlier,

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and now I'm all reactive, or I'm constantly

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reacting with my kids like, that whole what's wrong with me?

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Thing, or like, I'm a bad mom or I'm

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messing up my kids, like, no, you're not. You're

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human. You're human. Being you are a normal human

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being who is responding to stressful

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situations. There are stressors when

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we raise kids. They're demanding, right? There's

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a lot going on. Now think about some of the

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behaviors that you're reactive to. A person

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screaming, a person crying,

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a person being aggressive, a person

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arguing with you, peppering you with questions,

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blaming you, lying to you. Now

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if you were like a human, like a normal adult with another adult, parents

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always say that, like I would never let another adult treat me like I let

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my kids treat me, right? Because yeah, you would put

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some pretty strong boundaries around that behavior. If somebody was

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screaming, you're like, oh shoot, there's, there's, they're in

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danger. If someone is crying, you're like, oh my God, I need to help them,

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right? In any other life situation, these

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behaviors would mean that you are in a stressful situation and

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that you need to do something. Your brain would tell you that you need to

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protect yourself, you need to get bigger or get louder or fight back or run

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away. So if you're having a normal,

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if you're a normal human, as we all are, and you're having

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a reactive moment with your kids, just like

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just letting you know, that's absolutely normal.

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Now there are ways to retrain

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your brain so that you don't get activated in the first

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place, so that you don't interpret their behavior like they are

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a pack of coyotes. That's what's happening. You're like,

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your kid is like screaming and your brain is like, I'm being

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attacked by coyotes. Well, you're not. You have a three year old

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who doesn't like, you know, chicken nuggets or doesn't want chicken

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nuggets that day or changes their mind within 10 seconds, which is super

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annoying. But you're not actually in danger. So

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we had to train our brains to see

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the misbehavior or the behavior itself differently.

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So when we look at that, the behavior that's like screaming and crying and blaming

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and aggression and you know, arguing and in your face.

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Then you know, you're kind of thinking you're in danger.

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And we want to train you. That's part of why my program

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is three months, is because I want to help you really

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move through your reactivity and change,

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like really change the way you're wired, change your brain wiring

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to see misbehavior as different. So that's what I'm going to talk

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about in two weeks is like how to reframe behavior.

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Now, aggressive behavior is not the

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only behavior that happens in parenting,

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right? There's other behaviors that

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your mind might right now might be thinking like, but okay,

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what about when they're just dilly dallying? What about when they're just grumpy?

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What about when they're just being sad? What about when they have bad grades? What

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about if they're not being polite? What about if they're rude to a friend?

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Like that's not really coyote being chased by coyote

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behavior. Right? So what,

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what's that? Why are you reactive to that?

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It is also because you are human. It's not because you

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think you're in danger physically, it's because you think you're in

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danger socially. We

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are social and community based species. We

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have a need to feel accepted and included. And so when

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our kids behavior threatens that belonging,

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we will fight to get back that okayness.

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It's almost existential. We're worried that we're going to be rejected,

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that we will be rejected by our kids, that our kids will be

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rejected by society or that our family will be rejected

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by the other families because of our kids behavior. You know what I

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am talking about moms, right? This is so

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normal to worry about that. And that's because

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we're a community based social species.

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We have been a species. We're not lone wolves.

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I don't know why I have so many like coyote and wolf situations here. But

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you know, we're not lone wolves, we're pack of coyotes ourselves. They thankfully

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we don't, you know, band together and maraud. Although we do as a society.

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Okay, sorry. We as a

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species are like we, we live in a community. That's

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how we have kept ourselves alive and survive. Right?

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You've got one person tending the fire, somebody else

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tending the children, somebody else, you know, going out hunting, someone

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else, you know, making the food. Right. That is partly why we're

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also very stressed as a site, as a, as a family. Because, because we're like

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where are all the people who are supposed to help us raise these kids? Cause

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we are social beings, but yet the nuclear family is not really social. So it's

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another stressor. Just being in a nuclear family is a stressor

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on our species. Okay, I keep going off on different

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tangents. I'm sorry. The

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behavior, the dilly dallying, the grumpiness,

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the being sad, the bad grades, not being polite, that

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is triggering you as well. It's triggering

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your stress response. You're not thinking you're in physical danger,

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you're thinking you are in like social

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danger. So what Happens if you're under

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attack, right. You fight back. You show up maybe

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with your stress response and you're yelling or

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you're doing different behaviors like yelling or criticizing or

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threatening or bribing or you know, taking away

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things, you know, impulsively, right. So that's kind of like to

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get your power back. Or when your kids, when you're worried

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that your kids behavior is unacceptable, right. You might

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be soothe over soothing them to make them happy

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so that they like you. Right. You might be coming hard,

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coming down hard on them so that you know,

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none of you are at risk of being socially rejected. You might be like over

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parenting. So I think of soothing sometimes as under

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parenting. And then sometimes we are over parenting like we're

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coming on too hard, too strong. That's from a fear

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place, right? Or you could just be yelling and acting big

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and acting loud to get that power back and reestablish your safety.

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So this is the parenting stress cycle. There's different reasons why we

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get stressed. We're either kind of activated on that physical

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sense or activated on that social emotional sense. But there's an

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external stressor kids behavior. Our

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brain interprets it as dangerous and then we react to

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it. We create stress juice. We respond

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in ways that we don't love typically. Right.

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We either are too permissive or too harsh or

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yelling, too reactive. And then we feel

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like crap. So the cycle itself is

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the kid's behavior. You're over

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or under reaction to it, mostly overreaction,

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then you feel guilty and then nothing changes.

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So then you have the same behavior. You overreact

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and then you feel bad and nothing changes. Same

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behavior, you overreact, you feel bad,

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nothing changes. So

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that cycle is what feels

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like cuckoo for us. Like we're just like, what is

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wrong? Why, why? What is wrong with me? Like why can't my kids

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just behave differently? Or why I, why can't I stop

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reacting to them so that I don't have to feel

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guilty so that I can actually deal with their behavior. Right.

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So where we, there's a couple of places where

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we can interrupt the parenting stress cycle. So I'm going to give you

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three ways to get out of that parenting stress

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cycle. And then over the next couple of weeks, I'm going to

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go in deeper on those strategies. So this week we're just

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talking about what is the stress cycle? Why do I get so

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upset? Where's the fear coming from?

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And then how do I respond? And like, how can we change it?

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And then we'll get into more of the how next time. So

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the first way to get out of a

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parenting stress cycle is to decrease

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the stressors. Now, how do you do that?

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One is teaching your kids better ways to deal with

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their feelings so they don't act out so much.

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Emotional coaching your kids, helping them build up emotional literacy

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tools is one of the best

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ways that you can create less stressors, less

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misbehavior is by giving your kids the tools

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to know what they're feeling, know how to talk about those feelings, and know how

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to communicate those. Know what to do with those feelings in ways that

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don't cause problems. For example, if you have a kid

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who's hitting because they are angry or they are

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overwhelmed or highly stimulated,

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and they're hitting, and then that creates an external

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stressor. Imagine if instead of hitting their sibling, they

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knew to go hit a ball outside or they knew how to, like,

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take a balloon and, you know, bat it around the house. Or like

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those little. Those, like, look like little paddle tennis. Tennis.

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Tennis rackets that are wooden with a little pink ball.

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I always think, like, like. Like how much saddest, how

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satisfying that is. I mean, little kids have trouble, but they can clap their hands

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together, they can throw stuffed animals, they can hit a pillow.

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So we want to teach our kids better ways to deal with

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their feelings, and then we don't have so many stressors. Right?

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Yay. Another way to

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decrease stressors in your life is by creating more routines,

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setting better limits so that there's just less friction,

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you know? And you're like, yeah, darling, of course, like, if I could get my

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kids to listen, I would be so much better. And it's like,

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yeah, that's what parenting is, right? It's setting limits. It's

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communicating those limits to your kids and then letting them

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experience the impact of those limits, which are often called

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consequences. And then when they have feelings about the

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consequences, we emotionally coach them without changing

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the situation so that they learn how to cope and deal with

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hard things. So

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the decreasing the stressors is really like, okay, I

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want to decrease this. The level of chaos and

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behavior in my family. Having routines for

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bedtime, having routines for the morning, having. Having routines for meals,

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having routines for cleaning up, having routines for hygiene.

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These are the types of. Having routine for clothes. These are the types of things

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that kind of create a lot of stress in

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us because they're just like, a lot of friction around these basic. Not

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basic, but these everyday things.

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Like I always say, do not weaponize

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that strategy against yourself.

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Don't give up. Oh, that's why. Okay, well, I'm not good at routines. Oh, well,

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I don't know how to help my kids with their feelings or my kids really

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reactive or. You know, instead, I really want to invite you

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to either work with me, you know, connect with me, reach out,

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Instagram, DM me, or go to the website

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calmmamacoaching.com you know, and book a call

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with me because I can help you.

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Like, that's. That's parenting tools, right? It's not something

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you're supposed to know. Nobody teaches this stuff.

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So, you know, getting those parenting tools, how do you set a routine up? How

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do you create a limit? How do you help your kids with their feelings?

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Okay, so you can get support for that. But that is what that is.

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One way to get out of the parenting stress cycle is to decrease the

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stressors. The second strategy to get

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out of parenting stress cycle is to deal with your stress juice

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the more frequently you reset your

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stress juice. Like thinking about that early example, the coyote, right?

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Like coming down from a moment where you're like,

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oh, my God, that was intense. Like, I

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think about, I saw this Instagram reel that made me

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laugh so hard because it's so true. It's like the

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10 seconds that you get as a mom after you

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buckle your kids in the backseat and you walk to the driver's side and

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you get in your car. That. That can be 10

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seconds of reset. Or when you

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finally get those buckles on, buckle, right.

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I'm terrible at sounds, but when you finally get all those buckles

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and then it. It's time to drive off. Take a

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beat. Exhale. Jeez, that

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was a rough morning, girl. You

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did it. Give yourself a little pat on the back.

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Exhale. Shake your body. If you saw me right now, I'm like shaking my shoulders.

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I'm like moving my belly a little bit, move my hips

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around. That is a way to reset

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that stress juice. Taking a pause, break. I've

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taught that many times, and we're going to talk about it again next week. But

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thinking about, how can I walk away from this moment without reacting

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and going in and reset myself, moving my body,

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doing mindset work, right? That is how we do

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the. That's how we reset our stress juice

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either in the moment or like, I'm going to talk about next week. Calm mama

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breaks. Super important, super valuable. And it's the way we

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regularly. It's like, it's like stress hygiene, right? Just like

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you take a shower however frequently you do or you eat or

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you go poop Right? You do these certain things because you know

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that they're good for your body. And so taking a break, a mama break,

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is also good. So I'm going to teach you how to do that.

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That's the second way to get out of a parenting stress cycle. And the third

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is reframing behavior. So

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right now, our brain looks at an aggressive

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behavior or looks at a bad grade

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or looks at, like a kid who's sad, and we

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make that mean a bunch of things. We add

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meaning to the behavior that then creates stress.

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We make it mean something about us. We make it something about

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the future. We look at that behavior and we create a bunch of regret

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about what we've done in the past. Or we look at that behavior and we

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use it to blame our partner or the nanny or the teacher.

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So reframing behavior,

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changing the way that you think about misbehavior

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helps you not feel so stressed by it. So I'm going

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to go through in two weeks and talk about how we

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reframe behavior, because that is a very, very

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powerful, powerful tool. But we do

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all of this. We get out of our stress cycle so that we can feel

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better and have a better relationship with our kids. Absolutely.

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But really, the big picture goal is to raise emotionally

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healthy kids. That's why we do this hard work of

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parenting, is because we want our kids to grow up and not be messed

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up. Right? All right, so this week,

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I want you to notice when you are in a stress

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cycle. That is one of the most important pieces

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to getting out of one is just noticing that you're in one,

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inviting you to stop judging yourself with that guilt.

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Right. Behavior reaction. Guilt is the cycle.

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Instead of that guilt when you're like, I'm such a piece of

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shit, mom, instead of doing that, I'd like to invite you

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to ask yourself, wow,

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why did I get so stressed in the first place?

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What could I have done differently? How could I have paused?

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What am I making this behavior mean? And just starting

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to get curious with yourself. And then next week, you'll get some

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new tools on how to break out of that stress cycle. So this week, I

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want you to notice when you are in one. That's your only job for the

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whole week is just notice when you lose your shit. That's pretty

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easy, right? I'm not telling you to stop losing your shit. I'm just telling

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you to notice when you do. So hopefully that will be easy for you.

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And if you're not losing your shit, awesome. Good for you.

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That means that you have really created a lot of room

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for you to reset your stress juice as a parent. Be proud of

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yourself. If you have a lot of stress juice, just know we're going to deal

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with it over the next couple of weeks. All right, everyone. I am always so

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grateful these times to chat with you and to be with you during

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the week. Wherever you are in your car or like on your

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making dinner or wherever you are on your walk.

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I am honored to be in your ear and to share this

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time with you. Have a great week, Mama. I will talk to you

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next time.

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