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3 Unavoidable Aspects of Parenting
Episode 12330th May 2024 • Become A Calm Mama • Darlynn Childress
00:00:00 00:36:10

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Inspired by the Netflix documentary “Stutz”, these 3 unavoidable aspects of parenting are actually unavoidable aspects of life. They’re universal truths that we all have to deal with as humans. 

You’ll Learn:

  • The 3 unavoidable aspects of parenting (and life)
  • The lies we tell ourselves that keep us doing more, more, more
  • How to cope with pain, uncertainty and constant work as a parent
  • Why the inevitability of these 3 things is actually a huge relief

We will all experience pain, uncertainty and constant work. It’s part of life as a human. If we know that these things are inevitable, we can stop fighting against them and find more peace. I’m sharing tips to help you do just that - and guide your kids to do the same.

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This podcast was inspired by a Netflix documentary I watched recently called “Stutz”. In it, therapist Phil Stutz explains three unavoidable experiences that we will all have: pain, uncertainty and constant work. 

3 Unavoidable Aspects of Parenting

As I was watching, I realized that these 3 things are also true of the parenting experience. I actually found it to be a relief that no matter what you do or who your kids are, pain, uncertainty and constant work are unavoidable. 

If we know that these things are inevitable, we can stop fighting against them and find more peace.

Pain

In this context, I think of pain mainly as emotional pain or psychological discomfort. It might look like grief, anger, anxiety or a combination of emotions. Pain can be brought on by actual situations of loss, rejection, disappointment or trauma. It can also come about simply through the nature of being a child’s caregiver. 

Your kid is also going to experience pain. We can’t protect them from all painful experiences, but we can give them the tools to be able to handle the discomforts and pains of life. 

And while pain is inevitable, it is not constant. It’s a short-term experience. Suffering is when we dwell on that pain and keep bringing it back up. We don’t need to create this unnecessary suffering for ourselves. 


Uncertainty

There are a lot of unknowns in parenting (and in life). We can try to plan or predict what’s going to happen, but we never really know. 

The real underlying fear with uncertainty is that something will happen that you won’t be able to handle. So you try to predict and plan and run scenarios through your mind. But this puts you in an anxiety spiral, because you’re trying to solve an imaginary problem. 


Constant Work

This isn’t about your job, though that is one part of it. Just to live as a human, you have to take care of your body - eat, drink, clean yourself, etc. Caring for your emotional and spiritual health and your relationships also takes work. Plus, there’s the caregiving aspect of parenting. 

When your kids are little, it can feel relentless. You are using your body to care for them all the time. You’re picking them up, carrying them, cleaning up messes. 

Then between the ages of 6-12, the work shifts to your head. You’re problem solving, managing schedules and so many details. 

In the tween and teen years, the work moves to your heart. During this time, there is a lot of worry and feeling for your kid as they go through tough times. This is also where a lot of uncertainty comes into play. 


The Brain’s Tricks

I bought into a lie that I could avoid uncertainty with constant work. My brain tricked me into believing that if I was really, really productive and managed everything, that the future would be settled. So I was hyperplanning, overworking, controlling and not letting others do things. But the truth is that uncertainty still happened, and when it did, I would get really overwhelmed.

I also thought that constantly working would help me avoid pain. I was overworking and overperforming in parenting and life because I was so afraid of pain in the future. And when pain did come up, I tried to fix and solve it immediately. 

The problem with buying into these lies is that when uncertainty and pain happen (which they will), you blame yourself. You think that bad things happen because you did something wrong or didn’t work hard enough. 

But it’s not your fault that bad things happen, even to your kids. You can’t prevent it, and you don’t even actually want to. 


Coping with Pain, Uncertainty and Constant Work

If we can’t get rid of these 3 aspects of life, we have to find hope in changing our relationship to those things. Instead of resisting, fighting and avoiding pain, uncertainty and constant work, we can allow, accept and embrace them. Our work is in changing the way we think and feel about these things when they happen.

And if we can teach our kids to handle these 3 inevitable things while they’re young, they’ll grow up to feel really capable and resilient. 

Here are some strategies to try:

Make friends with pain. We need to become less afraid of hard things happening - to us and to our kids. Because when you're working so hard to avoid pain, you miss out on the pain-free moments of life. Be present to enjoy the moments of delight. 

Model dealing with pain. When you become okay with pain, your kids will become okay with it too. They will learn how to deal with it. They will learn how to process the pain, which is the essence of resilience. Instead of rejecting, avoiding or denying pain, they’ll be able to allow for it, move through it and know that it's temporary. 

Be in the present. This is the key to dealing with uncertainty. Wherever you are, can you see what is okay about this particular moment in time? If you're out for a walk, look around at the colors, the sky, the shapes of the plants. If you're in your car, feel your hands on the steering wheel. If your kids are around you and you're making dinner, smell the smells of the spices you're about to use. 

Know that you can handle anything. Yes, the future is uncertain. And you can handle it. Your kids can also handle pain and disappointment. You’re entitled to feel frustrated or disappointed. Then, let your brain soothe itself and start to problem solve. Anchor back into the present and trust that you will all be okay. 

Make the work more manageable. Creating routines, teaching your kids expectations and how to listen will all help you, the parent, to not have to do as much work. I also encourage you to say no to things that don’t work for you and let go of people-pleasing. When you know that uncertainty is inevitable, you can lower your standards a little bit, relax and trust that you can handle whatever comes up. 

Create less work for yourself. You don’t have to do all the things. Get clear on your priorities. What is truly important to you? Don’t want to give all your weekends to travel sports? You don’t have to. You get to make your life work for you. 

Give yourself radical grace. Give yourself so much love and compassion when things feel hard. This looks like saying to yourself, “I'm okay. I'm good enough. I'm gonna mess up, and I'm gonna not always show up perfectly and that's okay. It's okay for me to struggle. It's okay for me to not always 100% know how to handle all this stuff. It's okay for me to be on a learning journey. It's okay for me to grow. ”


If you’re feeling pain and uncertainty as a mom, if it feels like a lot of work, there’s nothing wrong with you. These are all part of parenting. 

Even the mom who looks like she has it all together is experiencing these 3 things. We are all struggling and learning and figuring it out as we go. 


Free Resources:

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

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Connect With Darlynn: 

Transcripts

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Hello. Hello. Welcome back to become a calm mama.

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I'm your host. I'm A Childress and I am a life and parenting

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coach. And today's topic

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is the 3 unavoidable aspects of parenting.

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Really, this could be titled the unavoidable

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aspects of life Become the things that I'm gonna talk

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about are universally true

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if you're a human being. And I got this

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concept from watching the

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Netflix documentary called Stutz, s t u t

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z, about Philip Stutz who is a therapist, and it was

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a a documentary that Jonah Hill did about his

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therapist and the tools that Stutz teaches.

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So while I'm watching this, he says

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this sentence that there are

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unavoidable things that are true for all of us,

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and that is these three things. We all are going

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to experience pain, uncertainty, and constant

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work. And that these are the aspects of a. And

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I was thinking about it when I was listening or watching this documentary, and I

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was like, that's actually true of parenting.

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That no matter how good of a parent you are or how

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perfect you are, which is impossible, or who your kids are

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or how they're wired or anything like that, that

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no matter what you do or don't do or who your kids are or

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aren't, there the reality is that

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pain, uncertainty, and constant work are unavoidable.

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And I wanted to bring this up on the podcast because I actually

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found this to be somewhat relieving. And

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I have found that to be true in my life that when I

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stop fighting things that are inevitable, I have more

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peace. I have more calm. And this podcast has become a calm mama,

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and it really is about finding an internal

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state of being calm where we are okay

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with our reality. And when you're truly deeply

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calm, that means that you can show up

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as the person you wanna be as a mom. And part of that

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journey is becoming okay with pain.

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A I'm gonna break these down. Being okay with pain, being okay with

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uncertainty, and being okay with the constant work of

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life. Before I break them down,

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I was thinking I was talking to my coach about this and how

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I wanted to do this episode. And she said,

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yeah. As a parent, when you don't have kids yet,

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you create an idyllic version of what it's gonna be like when you're a mom.

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And I as she said that I was thinking about my friend Sue and I

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a how we, before we had kids, we thought a

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that we were going to this is funny, but that we

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could a ourselves walking along the beach

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like a beach boardwalk. We live near the ocean. So watch

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walking along the beach boardwalk with our hair

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kind of all nicely done, strollers, nice

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manicures, you know, fit little bodies about where

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that came from. And we were just gonna walk along with our kids pushing them

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in the stroller and just talking and being, like, so happy with ourselves.

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And I always laugh when I think about that image Become the

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truth is it was hardly ever, like, put together

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or, you know, looked felt felt that way. And that

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is a big truth about parenting. But if

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you don't recognize that pain, a, and

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constant work are going to be part of your experience as a

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mom, then when you are experiencing

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pain, when you are experiencing the relentlessness of

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parenting, the constant work of it, or that, like, feeling of like, oh

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my god, is everything okay? What's gonna happen? You know, that uncertainty.

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When you are experiencing those things, you start to think something's wrong with

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you. And that's the last thing I ever want you to think is

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that something's wrong with you Become there's not. The truth is

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that this is how it is to be a human being a

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the sooner or more fully we accept

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these three aspects of reality aspects

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of parenting, the more peace we'll have. So let

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me break them down just really quickly. I mean, obviously, we know what pain is

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uncertainty and constant work mean, but I wanted to talk about it

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for a second because it's like, well, what are we talking about when we talk

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about pain? And I really think it's mostly

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the emotional pain or the psychological

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discomfort when things happen or

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when you create things in your head. Right? When you have uncertainty or

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you're overwhelmed by constant work, you can experience emotional pain.

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So what does that mean? It looks it can look like a, it can look

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like grief, it can look like anger, It can look like anxiety

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or it can be a combination. Most of the time these feelings

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come from, like, actual situations of loss or rejection or trauma or rejection or

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trauma or disappointment. But in parenting, they

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actually can happen just because of the nature of

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caregiving to a young person. Because it's

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such a, like, constant work Become there's so much work

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to it. And we have a lot of uncertainty around it. And so

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we can end up having a lot of, we

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bring on emotional pain because of our own, you know, feelings

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of self worth or uncertainty or

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frustration. And so really we're thinking of,

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you know, in terms of pain, emotional pain is this

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idea. So it is inevitable. We are going

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to experience pain as humans and especially as parents.

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Then, of course, uncertainty, that seems obvious. Right? It's

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like it's the state or the condition in

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which something is not known. Right? Where you don't

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know what's going to happen. Now, this

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is always true. We never know what

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exactly is going to happen. We have an a. We

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can, you know, predict based on evidence or based on

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experience. We can make some guesses and we can make some plans.

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But in reality, we don't really know. And I can see this with a lot

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of the parents that I work with. They're like, is my kid gonna be okay?

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And I think what a lot of times you're asking is is my kid

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going to avoid pain? And the answer is no.

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Your kid is going to also experience pain. That

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is certain. And so when you recognize

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that it is an inevitable part of your child's growth

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is that they're going to experience psychological

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discomfort or psychological suffering due

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to distressing events. Yeah. That's gonna happen.

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We want to, of course, make the the

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painful experiences. We don't wanna bring those on on

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purpose. We don't wanna intentionally create anything like that. Of

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course not. But the truth is it's inevitable.

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So that is certain. It's certain that pain will

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exist. What you were often asking to me asking

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me is, is my kid gonna be able to handle the

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discomforts and pain of life, the constant work

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of life? And to that, I say, yes, I believe so.

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Let's equip them now. So the hope

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is in today. The hope is in now. The

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hope is in teaching your kids how to handle these

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three inevitable things while they're young

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so that they grow up and they feel really capable. Right? Then,

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of course, we have constant work. So we have pain, uncertainty, constant work.

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Constant work is honestly I I was telling Tiffany, you guys know my

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best friend, this concept. And I think she kinda gave me

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a funny face when I said constant work, like, kinda like, I

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don't think she liked it because she really loves, you know, free time

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and, you know, having, like, a lot of,

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flexibility in her life, and I love that about her. And I

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was I kinda challenged the concept a little bit. And I was like, no. No.

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No. Just to live, just to be a human being, we have

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to take care of our body. So no matter if you have, like, a

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job or not or what you have to, like, eat and clean yourself

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and, you know, clean your clothes and, you know, go to the a, stuff like

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that. So we always have to take care of our body and

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take care of our people. Right? That's part of being in

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relationships with others, especially with Childress, constant work

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is inevitable. And then a course, taking care of yourself

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emotionally, spiritually, physically, relationally,

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that requires effort. I've been

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using this phrase lately, a relentlessness

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of parenting and especially when you have younger

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kids, the physical relentlessness of it.

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I I think about, like, hand, heart, head.

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So when you're real little when your kids are real little, like,

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0 to 6, 0 to 7, you are using

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your body all the time. Like, you're in, you know,

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picking them up and carrying them and cleaning up after them and making

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meals. It is a very physical time period of parenting

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and raising kids. And then it kinda transitions where you're in

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your head because you're, like, 6 to 12. Like, you're problem

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solving. You're, like, working out calendars and who's going to camp when

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and pickups a who has a project. And, like, there's just so

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much minutia that you're managing and you're in your head a lot. And you're

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managing a lot of, like, details and coordinating

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and things like that. And then it parenting switches to your

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heart from, like, 12 to a 12 to 18, 12 to

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20, where you like, most of the things are managed. A

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lot of stuff is handled at school. You're not managing so many small

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details, like, because they're in, you know, sports and things like that

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through the school. And then you aren't really

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doing that much physical stuff besides driving and, like, making some meals, but

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you're not picking them up and carrying them and putting in the bathtub and putting

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them a, wiping Become, and all those things. Right? But what happens is

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your heart gets really,

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stuck where you're worried. You know, you feel you feel

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for them, and you wonder. And that's where the uncertainty

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really kicks in is when your kids are,

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you know, 12 to to really puberty on adolescence.

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So So there's like a relentlessness to a, especially in those younger years,

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constant work. So

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if we can't get rid of these three things, if we can't get

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rid of pain, if we can't get rid of uncertainty, and we can't get rid

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of constant work, where what's the hope?

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Right? And the hope is

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in changing our relationship to those things.

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Instead of resisting and fighting and avoiding

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pain, uncertainty, and constant work, allowing, accepting,

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embracing it, and changing the way we think and feel about it when it

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happens. That's our work. Now I wanna

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say that one of the

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traps that I personally realized while I was,

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you know, listening to this watching this documentary and hearing this

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concept is that I think at some point

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in my life, I bought into a lie that I

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could avoid uncertainty with

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constant work. My

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brain tricked me in believing that

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if I am hyper a,

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hyperplanning, overworking, controlling, not letting others

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do things, And if I had all of it managed and

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it was, like, you know, really, really productive and really

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high standards and almost like, you know, I've talked about this on the podcast,

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like, perfectionistic or, but I don't see myself as a perfectionist,

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but, like, just kinda, like, very, very put together. Okay?

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If I had it all kind of managed

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that then I would not I would the future would be

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settled. I would not I'd, like, have everything planned.

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So I thought through constant work, I could avoid uncertainty.

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And then the truth is uncertainty still a. Things happen that were not in

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my plan, and I would get very overwhelmed

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by that, like a sick kid. That would

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throw me for a loop. Oh my god. My kids are sick a again. I

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remember saying to the kids when they were littler, I'd be like, you can't be

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sick today. It doesn't fit in my schedule. You can be sick tomorrow.

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Who says that? That's crazy. Right? But I

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I really did not allow for uncertainty because I really

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wanted to, oh, like, hyper plan. A,

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also, I thought that if I was constantly working, I could

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also avoid pain. Like, if there was

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some kind of experience of pain, I just go, oh, let's fix it. Like, let's,

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you know, solve solve for the a. And I wouldn't allow for the pain. And

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I was really overworking myself

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and overdoing it and over performing

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in parenting and in life because I was so

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afraid of the future, and I was so afraid of

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pain in the future. Maybe you can relate to this. I have

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a feeling you can Become this happens a

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lot to moms. So they they're thinking,

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I just gotta get my shit together, and I just gotta, like, make, you know,

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make the plans and do all of these things. And then and then everything will

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be fine. Right? And then when things aren't fine,

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if you think I can prevent

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pain, I can prevent uncertainty, I

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through constant work, then when pain and uncertainty

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happen, you will then blame yourself

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and think what am I doing wrong?

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And that's such a trap.

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It's not your fault that shit happens in the

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world that that bad things happen to your kids. It's not

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your fault you can't prevent it nor would you want to.

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And I'll tell you why in a second. But what I've noticed is that

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sometimes, you you're you're as

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a parent, you're like, where can I go to

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find some kind of guru or somebody who's gonna help me

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make it make my life easier, right, which I do help you

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do, but not by getting rid of pain, not right getting rid of

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uncertainty, not by getting rid of constant work, but by changing

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your relationship to those things?

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So let's talk first about pain.

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So learning how to well, first, see the inevitability

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of it. Becoming okay.

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Like, I I was thinking, like, we need to become less afraid

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of hard things happening, less afraid

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of, you know, of pain and and

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discomfort for our kids. We wanna see it

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as inevitable and allow for it and become

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okay when it happens and not try to work so hard to avoid

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it. Because when you're working so hard to avoid

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pain, what are you missing is the pain free moments

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of life. Yes. Pain is inevitable but it's

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not constant. So if you're working

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so hard to prevent it, you might be missing the moments when the

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joy is there, when the a is there. Those small a

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delightful moments when you're sitting around the table and all of your kids are there,

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or maybe you just have one or whatever, and you're just laughing

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about something funny. Those are pain free a,

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and we have to be present to to see them. But

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if we're in the future trying to micro macromanage

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and and, you know, predict the future and plan for it and solve for it,

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we end up not, not

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enjoying those pain free moments. So we wanna make

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friends with pain. We wanna allow pain to come in not as

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a permanent part of our life, not as a a permanent, like,

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resident, but as a guest, one that comes and visits.

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One of the questions I always ask is what does one do with sadness?

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And he a read this beautiful explanation of like, I invite sadness to come

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in and have a cup of tea with me And we sit and we sit

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in it and we allow for it. And then when the cup of tea is

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over, I say, goodbye, sadness. We'll see you again next

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time and allowing for it to come in and

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come out. And when you become okay with pain,

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your children will become okay with it too. They will

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learn how to deal with it. They will learn how to process the pain.

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That is the essence of resilience is

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handling pain, not rejecting it, not avoiding it, not

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denying it, but allowing for it,

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moving through it, and

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doing knowing that it's temporary, knowing that it's okay, that you can

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that you're resilient, that you can handle this discomfort, this pain. It's not

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forever. That's having hope and a positive

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a. And that really is the key to emotional

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health. And when your kids have something

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hard or you have something hard and you wanna push it away, you wanna reject

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it. You are actually creating more

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because you're you're creating more work for yourself a

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you're creating more distance from what is reality and you're

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missing the present moment. There's that

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old quote, right, that pain is a. Suffering is

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optional. So pain is like a short

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term experience. It's an in the moment thing.

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Suffering is when we dwell on pain, when we keep bringing it

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up and rehashing it and rethinking it or trying to

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avoid it in the future. You are creating unnecessary

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suffering. A pain is inevitable.

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Suffering is optional. I think this quote's been attributed to,

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like, Dalai Lama, Haruki Murakami, like, different people.

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It's like a Buddhist saying. But the idea is, yes, pain is

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gonna come, but you don't have to, like, get stuck in it.

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Okay. Let's talk about uncertainty for a few minutes

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Become, like, I talked about what

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isn't what is uncertainty. Right? It's like a state or a condition

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in which something is not known.

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Right? That you don't know what's going to happen. Now, of

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course, that is true. We know that on a

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psychological like, on a, like, a, like, a, you know, practical

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level. You know, you don't know the future. Right? You don't think you're, like, a

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psychic or whatever. Maybe you do. I don't know. If you do, tell me because

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I wanna know. But okay. The what happens

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with uncertainty is, like, sometimes there's, a little bit

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more of a, like, a psychological fear that

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something's gonna happen and that you're not gonna be able to handle it.

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Right? And you're you spend a lot of time in the future

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planning and processing and predicting and having make

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believe conversations and make running scenario, a scenario,

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running scenario. When you're in that state of trying to

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solve the future, you're actually in an anxiety

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spiral because your mind is

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trying to solve for something that it can't solve. And so

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you're gonna keep, you know, going in a in a cycle trying

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to solve a problem that's not solvable. The problem is actually in

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your mind. I love this quote from

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Eckhart Tolle from the power of now, which if you've never read it,

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it a lot of the the strategies to handle uncertainty

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and handle pain are discussed in his book.

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So I'll just read this quote because I really think it's helpful. He says,

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this kind of psychological fear is always of something that

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might happen, not of something that is happening

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now. You are in the here and

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now while your mind is in the future, this creates an

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anxiety gap. And if you are identified with your mind

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and have lost touch with the power and simplicity of the

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now, that anxiety gap will be your constant

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companion. I love this. He says, you can

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always cope with the present moment, but you cannot

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cope with something that is only a mind projection.

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You cannot cope with the future.

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This is so important because what we're doing is not making

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friends with uncertainty. We're trying to

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solve trying to become certain in order to

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soothe our own anxiety, to soothe our fear, to soothe

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our nervous system. And the

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truth is that when the future shows

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up, you can handle it. That's called

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now. That's called the present. You are

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always equipped. You can always handle anything. I promise.

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I have had so many very, very, very hard things

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happen in my adult life, in my childhood, and I have

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survived every single one of them. I am okay.

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You right now are okay. Wherever you are this

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moment, can you be here? Can you be now? Can you

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see what is okay about this particular moment in

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time? If you're out for a walk, pause my

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voice and just look around at the colors, the

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sky, the colors of the plants nearby you, the contrast

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between the concrete and the green, you know, grass,

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small things. Look for a bird. Look for some

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beautiful color, pop of color. If you're in your car,

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just notice. Feel your hands on the steering wheel. Feel your bottom

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on the chair. If your kids are around you and you're making

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dinner, just smell the smells of the spices you're about to

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use. Just try to find a place to

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become okay with right now. That is the

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key to dealing with uncertainty.

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It's being present now.

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And this is what how how it actually works is you

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go you go present in the now, and then you go, boop, to the a.

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And then you have to remind yourself to come back. And then you go boop

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to the past and you remind yourself to come back. That's the whole

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thing what meditation is. Meditation is just training your

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brain to come back. Come back. Come back. Come back. It's like you with your

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little kids. Come back. Come over here. Come back. Right? That's what you're

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doing with your brain. So coming

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to this mama, being okay now, and then another

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mindset trick for dealing with uncertainty is

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being able to say, I can handle whatever

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happens. Anything that comes,

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I can handle it. Not because you are, like,

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you know, super productive and you plan for everything and all of that.

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It's like when a moment comes, I can take care a. I can handle it.

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That's just trust. It's just trust, and you need to be able to have that

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in yourself and your kids. If you believe that your kids can

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handle pain, they can handle disappointment. They can handle not being

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invited to a friend's birthday party. They can handle a skid, you know,

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like a hurt knee. They can handle a bad grade. They can handle being cut

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from a team. They can handle, you know, not getting

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all the favorite things they wanted for their birthday present, having rain, have something

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a, whatever. If you trust that your kids can

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handle that that that frustration and you're like,

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okay. I know you can feel these feelings. It's okay. Yep.

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You're entitled to your a. You're entitled to your

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frustration a knowing that feelings are temporary and they

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pass, and then the brain will problem solve and go, oh, well, okay. At

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least we can go tomorrow or whatever. It starts to solve and starts

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to soothe itself. You can trust

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that you can do that and your kids can do it. So

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uncertainty is all about anchoring back into the present

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moment instead of going into the future and trusting that whatever

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present moment you're in, you can handle it. Isn't that beautiful? I think that's

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so beautiful. Alright. Constant work.

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Like I said, taking care of your body, taking care of your

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people, taking care of yourself, these are the requirements of

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living, and there will always inevitably be constant

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work, especially when you have young

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children. Children in general, but I do promise you

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it doesn't it's not as much work. Like, I have

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a kid who's about to graduate from high school, and I have another one that's

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already in college. And I don't have that much work to do for them

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anymore. Like, it's it's amazing. Okay? It's, like, super

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intense for a really, really long time. And then

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your list isn't just their stuff. Like, my list right now

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is a lot of stuff that has nothing to do with my children. Like, one

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of it is, like, I wanna look into buying a new A plant

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for my front yard. Like, fun stuff like that. So

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it's not always going to be kid kid kid kid work work

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work work, but you're always gonna have work to do because you're a

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human being. But the relentlessness of parenting

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does lessen. That is certain. I'm

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gonna tell you that. Right? It gets better. It gets easier

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physically. Emotionally, it's just hard because you're always gonna

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have uncertainty and your kids are always gonna have pain, and that's going to be

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true. So a the work of life is sometimes

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it's, you know, actual physical work a then other times, it's

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act it's emotional work. It's learning to

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manage your own anxiety, learning to manage your own feelings, learning

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to allow and process hard things,

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taking really good care of yourself, taking care of your body, moving

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your body, eating foods that feel nutritious for you,

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reaching out to your friends, building relationships, reading books,

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or or having a hobby, or spending time in the

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sunshine. Whatever it is, you you are

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entitled to take calm of yourself, and

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that is part of constant work. It's taking care

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of your body, taking care of your people, taking care of yourself.

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So those are the basics. So

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how do we make constant work

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less work? Right? Isn't that the question? We

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wanna make our work more manageable. So, of course,

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I teach a lot about creating routines and,

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you know, being able to teach your kids what's

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expected and how to listen and, like, how to follow your directions because

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it does make it a lot easier if your kids

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are good are, like, they know what to expect. So

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a small example is when my kids were young, I trained

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them. Sounds weird, but I did. I taught them that when they came

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home from school, they put their shoes in the shoe bin

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and their socks, like, in the laundry downstairs in

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the in the laundry room. So they put their socks and shoes away. They bring

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their backpacks to the counter, take their lunch or take their backpack backpacks

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to the little backpack spot, take their lunches out. They would take

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their all their plastic containers and put those in the sink. They

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didn't have to put them in the dishwasher. They put them in the a, and

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they would put their lunch boxes on the counter, and then they would empty the

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dishwasher. And I started this young. So we had this whole

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routine that they would come home, and they would put their socks and shoes away,

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put their backpacks, put their lunch boxes, the containers, and then empty the

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dishwasher. And while they were doing those things, I was putting snack on

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the table. Obviously, didn't, you

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know, I didn't they didn't go to aftercare or anything like that. That was

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just that rhythm worked for me. And even if we

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went someplace after school, like, we went to, you know, the park

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or we went to practice straight a or went to the grocery store or whatever

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it was, they still were expected to do those things regardless of when we

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came home. And that made my constant work

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way easier because I wasn't putting

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shoes and socks and lunchboxes and gathering stuff and finding water bottles and all that

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stuff. Oh, also, I did not send water bottles to school with my

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children. Straight up, you can argue with me. I was like,

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they're fine. They're not gonna drink that much water. They, you know

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and if they ever wanted water, they could bring it, but I just did not

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make that part of my work was theirs. There was like a water

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fountain at school. They just drank, like, at lunchtime in recess. That's

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what I did as a kid. I'm like, I survived. So, anyway,

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that creating routines like that is really helpful for a parent

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to not have so much work. My kids knew they had to put their laundry

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in the laundry bin. They had to do there's just stuff they did around the

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house, and they had to clean up before dinner and all the

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stuff. I just trained them how to live in my family and live in my

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life, and they did. You know? And a had ADHD, one had sensory

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processing. They still did it. It's okay. It's just

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commitment. So sorry to rant, but creating routines, teaching your

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kids to listen. Also, like I just modeled saying no to things

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that don't work for you. Managing water bottles did not work for

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me. I was just kind of a hard no on it. I was just like,

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this is I cannot keep track of this. I cannot fill these up. They're always

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losing them. This is so annoying. I'm out. I'm out of the water bottle

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game. So we didn't do them.

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Not people pleasing. So if you wanna get out of constant

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work, like, not get out of it, but you wanna lessen your

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workload, don't say yes to things that you don't wanna

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say yes to. Don't volunteer for stuff. You

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it's okay. I was like Uber volunteer. I did all the

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things. And great. It gave me some purpose and meaning and

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I liked a. But it's also okay if that's not your

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jam. Like, you don't have to say yes. You don't have to host birthday parties

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or say yes to driving kids to, you know, the playground and all that

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if it's outside of your capacity.

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Lowering your own perfectionistic standards. Right?

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Usually, we have these high high standards because we're trying to avoid

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pain and uncertainty. But when we're like, oh, pain is a.

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Uncertainty is inevitable. I can lower my standards a little bit,

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relax, and just, you know, trust that I can handle

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whatever moment comes. That is another way to manage

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constant work is just by creating less work for yourself. Right? Isn't

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that amazing? So, having

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priorities is really important. What's truly important to you?

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Like, our a, we did not

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do club or travel sports. We did a

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little tiny bit of, like, all stars or some extras

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and stuff like that with soccer. But in general, we were sort of

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a hard no on giving our weekends away. I'm not

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saying that you have to do that. What I'm offering to

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you is that my children are okay

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regardless of whether they did team sports. I mean, like

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a sports. They did sports, but we just didn't devote our

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lives to their sports because we didn't want to.

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To be perfectly frank, my husband worked a ton of hours. He did not work

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on the weekends, and he wanted to be at home. And I wanted to be

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at home with him watching our children so I could

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relax. And he wanted to spend time with them a my kids

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wanted to spend time with them and and they didn't wanna be over,

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over scheduled. So we just don't do

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it. It was great. I don't know. I'm

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just offering to you that you get to make your life work for you. So

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a what's important for us, it was downtime. We

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called it work recovery. So work has

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always been a big priority, especially for my husband and then work recovery

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because he needs time off from work. Not every

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person needs that much downtime. So, you know, do your thing.

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But you can also say no. You can say say no to things

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that other people do, and your kids are gonna be

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okay. Right? Because what makes someone okay? That they know how to deal

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with pain and uncertainty. So that's it.

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They don't need all the extras. The

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last thing I think in all of this that's really important

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is what I'm thinking of as radical grace.

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I think you a a mom,

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or a dad, if you're a, your grandparent, is

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really saying to yourself, like, I'm okay. I'm

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good enough, and I'm gonna mess up, and I'm

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gonna not always show up perfectly and

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that's okay. This is okay for me to be a. It's okay for me to

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struggle. It's okay for me to be on a learning

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journey. It's okay for me to grow. It's okay for me to not be

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a 100% know how to handle all this stuff. Right?

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That it's okay for you to be human and giving yourself so

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much love and grace and compassion instead

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of saying a wrong with me? A I'm you know, everyone seems to have

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it together a me. I talk to moms all day, every day,

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week in week out. No one has it all together. Even the

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mom that looks like they do. Like, I probably look like I had it a,

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and I didn't. You know? We all are

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struggling and figuring it out and learning, and so extend

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grace to yourself and extend grace to a. And you'll

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find that you have a lot less pain, to be

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honest. Okay, mamas. If

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you are struggling with anything

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and, you know, you're just in uncertainty and it's

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overwhelming or you're in pain and it's overwhelming, or

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you really are like, hey. What did she say about those routines? Oh, I don't

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know a more about that. Reach out, book a complimentary

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consultation with me, and we can talk about what how to

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work with me, what my programs are like, a, you know,

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or I'll just listen to you and find out what's I'd like to get to

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know everybody. So I'd love to chat with you and get to know you,

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and help you with the 3 unavoidable aspects of

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parenting. So this week, I want you to give yourself lots and lots

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of calm mama grace, and I will talk to you next week.

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