As we kick off 2024, it seemed like a good time to return to the basics of compassionate parenting. Plus, “Parenting 101” is a really fun title for our 101st episode! Today, I’ll walk you through some foundational principles and invite you to think about what you want to focus on as a parent this year.
In his book, The Myth of Normal, Gabor Maté talks about the two essential needs of humans - attachment and authenticity.
Attachment is what drives human behavior. It’s primal. Our nervous system is wired to seek physical and emotional closeness with other humans because we are safer when we are in a community.
This need is even stronger in children, because they are completely dependent on their caregivers for a pretty long period of time. The attachment between child and caregiver is vital to their survival. This attachment looks like physical safety, biological needs being met and emotional safety.
Ultimately, if I feel attached, I feel safe.
The second primal need is authenticity. This means being able to know yourself and express who you are inside. This is a more individualized drive to understand ourselves, and includes building our intuition, trusting our gut and knowing what we’re capable of. It is at the root of self-esteem and self-concept.
Ideally, we want to feel unconditional attachment with the freedom to express our true selves.
Tension arises when being our authentic self threatens our attachments. This can happen a lot during childhood.
Kids (and all humans) express their thoughts and feelings through behavior. What often happens is if the caregiver finds the behavior unacceptable, they detach from the child or do other things that threaten their sense of attachment and safety.
In parenting, this might look like:
Time outs are often used as a punishment, rather than the original intent of providing a break for the child to calm themselves. The message is that your behavior (and therefore you) is not acceptable, and you cannot be here with us until you can act right. It tells them that your attachment is conditional on behavior.
Spanking is another example where attachment is broken. The message is that you are going to hurt their body in order to teach them how to behave. Ultimately, they learn that they are not safe when they misbehave.
You can threaten attachment to get control over your kids and manipulate them into behaving a certain way, but they’ll likely develop a low self-concept in the process. The child only learns to be performative. They try to figure out how to get their needs met through behaving a certain way, which leads to suppressing emotion, people pleasing and insecurity. It turns into a feeling that, at their core, they are not okay.
Kids are constantly looking for reassurance that they are safe in the relationship and that they can rely on the adults around them.
Attachment should never be conditional. The process I teach allows you to acknowledge that your child is struggling, set limits around the behavior and help them handle their feelings in a way that works for everyone. You can think of this more as a “time in”.
On the flip side, when we reassure our kids of our unconditional love, they grow into adults who are secure and feel safe and worthy. They’ll be able to take risks, work toward big dreams and overcome obstacles.
If you’re using any of these strategies I’ve mentioned, I don’t want you to freak out, blame yourself or think you’re a “bad” parent. These are traditional strategies designed to get compliance.
Realize that you do these things because you don’t know what else to do with misbehavior. You aren’t intending to hurt your children. You just don’t have the tools and skills (yet). By reading this blog or listening to this podcast, you are learning a new way.
The strategies I teach are meant to give you the skills for parenting in a way that your kids won’t have to heal from. We do this by strengthening our kids’ feelings of attachment, safety and authenticity.
The most important thing to remember about behavior is that it is always driven by feelings or unmet needs.
There are behaviors that we need to work on, but we’re not going to use attachment as a way to control our kids. Instead, we reassure them that the attachment and our love is never in question as we guide them toward better behaviors.
Communicate Your Unconditional Attachment
When misbehavior happens, your kid will be upset when you follow through on a consequence. Younger kids, especially, might worry that you don’t love them.
You can hold your limit while still reassuring them. “Listen, you’re safe. You’re okay. I’m not mad at you. This is just part of learning and growing. I love you exactly as you are. You can make mistakes in this family. It's not a problem.”
Let them know that you are the grown up. You’ve got this, and they can trust you. We want to have a sense of leadership inside of us and know that we are strong enough to handle it.
To support authenticity, practice communicating to your kids, “I unconditionally love, welcome and want you. No matter how you feel, act or think, nothing can threaten my love for you. I will always have your back.”
They don’t have to do or be anything different to win your love, and nothing they do can ever threaten the relationship you have.
Validate Feelings
We can also show unconditional acceptance by validating our kids’ feelings. Letting them know that their feelings make sense (even if the behavior still needs work).
As you validate feelings, beware of falling into the permissive parenting trap. Feelings do not excuse misbehavior. We’re still going to set limits and follow through on consequences. We’re just going to do it in a way that maintains the connection with our kids.
This looks like, “Your feelings make sense. I understand why you’re behaving that way, but let’s work on it and try some new strategies.”
If you’re new to this type of parenting, you probably need support, modeling and guidance. I’d love to see you in one of my upcoming programs.
In a small group setting, I teach you how to calm yourself, validate your kid’s emotions, set boundaries and follow through on consequences that aren’t painful. There are lots of specific strategies, tools and scripts, along with a ton of individualized support.
Let’s build the relationships in your family in 2024 and strengthen your authenticity and attachment. Learn more here.
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Hello. Hello. Welcome back to Become a Calm
Speaker:Mama. I'm your host. I'm Darlene Childress. And I am a life
Speaker:and parenting coach. And on today's podcast episode,
Speaker:I've titled this parenting 101, the basics. This happens to
Speaker:be episode 101, and so I thought it would be kind of fun
Speaker:to talk about the basics and kind of
Speaker:Orient orient us into some foundational
Speaker:principles, especially as we kick off 2024 And, you
Speaker:know, think about this next year and what we're gonna focus on as parents. I
Speaker:wanted to just get it down to, like, what are the basic
Speaker:Essential needs of humans. That's what I wanna talk about today.
Speaker:So some of the work that I'm bringing up is
Speaker:from Gabor Mate's book, the myth of normal, I've
Speaker:read this over the last couple of months, and the book has,
Speaker:I think I've joked I'm like, this is the best parenting book I've ever read,
Speaker:and it's not a parenting book. It's a book about
Speaker:about humans and how they develop and the the right The
Speaker:right environments that people need in order to
Speaker:thrive, and then it kind of goes through. It's a large book. It's like 500
Speaker:pages, But then it goes through all of the different ways that our
Speaker:society is built up to prevent that
Speaker:really strong emotional Well-being that foundation
Speaker:of of true health. So I found this book so
Speaker:powerful, and I wanna talk about one aspect that,
Speaker:Gabor brings up in his book and,
Speaker:really kind of articulate these 2 essential
Speaker:needs of humans. So let's get right into it. Yeah?
Speaker:So the the 2 essential needs of humans are attachment
Speaker:and authenticity. So I'm gonna define those, and then we're gonna
Speaker:talk about the tension that happens between the
Speaker:2, how that shows up in parenting, and then how we can heal
Speaker:that tension. Does that sound great? Alright. So let's get into it.
Speaker:So what is attachment? Attachment is like a
Speaker:human drive. We all have it at all stages of our lives
Speaker:where we are driven for physical and emotional closeness.
Speaker:It's primal. It's wired into our nervous system. It's wired into
Speaker:our biology that we are safer when we
Speaker:are together. We are safer as a a
Speaker:species when we're a social species. We are safer when we
Speaker:are in a community. Now this is especially true
Speaker:with children. Right? Because as a as our
Speaker:species, our children come into the world. They're the
Speaker:most dependent specie, you know, the most dependent young on their
Speaker:caregiver, and they are immature for a very long
Speaker:period of time. And so the attachment
Speaker:with their caregiver is vital in order for them
Speaker:to survive. And so they, are the
Speaker:human the human body, the human brain, the human self
Speaker:is primed To seek attachment
Speaker:and to do anything it can to get that attachment because
Speaker:the attachment means safety,
Speaker:especially when they're young. So we have
Speaker:this very primal need to feel
Speaker:safe by Our with our caregiver.
Speaker:That means our physical safety that our, you know, biological
Speaker:needs are met, that we can stay warm, that we could be fed,
Speaker:that we can you know, we can, have well, what
Speaker:else is there? Right? You know? Like, the need for our bodies to be cared
Speaker:for and then also our emotions. So we have
Speaker:both of those needs, and it's really important for all of us that we
Speaker:feel connected. And so when you're really little, what you
Speaker:know, you're seeking care give carry being cared
Speaker:for when you're young, and you're doing anything you can to make
Speaker:sure that you keep that attachment. And then as you
Speaker:get older, you can also find attachment by caregiving. And
Speaker:we've talked about a little bit on the podcast how sometimes it can get mixed
Speaker:up. Like, my identity is in my caregiving, and that's how I feel
Speaker:safe. But then what happens if I don't give care and it gets kinda
Speaker:messy? And that's like a codependency kind of,
Speaker:drawback. But Whatever that tendency is
Speaker:is in caregiving or receiving care, it really is this
Speaker:seeking of attachment, which ultimately means safety.
Speaker:So if I'm attached, I feel safe.
Speaker:So it's, this is primal primal need. So that
Speaker:one Seems probably pretty obvious, and you're like, yeah. Okay.
Speaker:That makes sense. Of course, they're vulnerable. The children are vulnerable.
Speaker:But then the 2nd primal need is authenticity.
Speaker:And so what's authenticity means? It means This
Speaker:the the who you are inside. Right? Being able
Speaker:to be yourself and know yourself and
Speaker:express yourself and shape your own life.
Speaker:So it's funny because we have this highly social
Speaker:Experience of being in a community and needing have have that safety and that
Speaker:attachment. And then we also have this very individualized
Speaker:drive express ourselves and to know ourselves and to,
Speaker:be our own individual person.
Speaker:So the that's like the root of intuition actually is, you know, the
Speaker:authenticity is kind of being able to know
Speaker:My gut feeling, like, what's going on and listening
Speaker:to that cue and trusting it and knowing
Speaker:myself Annoying what I'm capable of and believing in myself,
Speaker:authenticity is there at the root of my self esteem, of
Speaker:my self-concept of who I am. And
Speaker:as as a as a human, we want
Speaker:to be able to be safe in our relationships
Speaker:and also be able to express who we are
Speaker:and still feel safe. So we're we're
Speaker:we're craving This unconditional
Speaker:attention and unconditional, like, agenda free
Speaker:acceptance, and we don't
Speaker:want our self our our sense of
Speaker:self, our authentic self To threaten
Speaker:our attachment. But that is what happens a lot
Speaker:of times in Childhood
Speaker:is there is a tension because sometimes
Speaker:my authentic expression of myself, my thoughts, my
Speaker:feelings, how those thoughts and feelings show
Speaker:up in behavior, the person who is supposed to
Speaker:be my caregiver and take care of me may
Speaker:say, no. I am not going to
Speaker:allow you to behave that way or to think that way or Feel
Speaker:that way or show that emotion. And when you do that, I am
Speaker:going to take away your sense of safety.
Speaker:I'm gonna Detach from you until you
Speaker:perform or show up the way I want you to.
Speaker:So we with the child,
Speaker:Feels that they have to do something different
Speaker:in order to be acceptable or because they are looking for
Speaker:safety. If they If the attachment feels
Speaker:threatened in any way, the child
Speaker:will shut down their authentic self. They will
Speaker:try to anyway. The problem is that if you try to shut
Speaker:down emotions and you try to shut down yourself,
Speaker:You don't go anywhere. You still are in there, and you're still working
Speaker:to be expressed at all times. And so that
Speaker:Isn't it's not actually possible to shut down your authentic self, but
Speaker:you can try. You can you can try to
Speaker:to Squash who you are in order to be feel safe
Speaker:and be accepted. So what does that look like in parenting?
Speaker:The not not the original way of time out, but
Speaker:the way that time out has been used. It's starting to get
Speaker:better now. It's starting to go back to the original way. But,
Speaker:originally, you know, a time out was intended to be like,
Speaker:hey. It seems like, You know, maybe you're having some struggle,
Speaker:and you need to take a little time out to calm
Speaker:yourself. Right? But that that's
Speaker:an okay way to use time out to see it as, like,
Speaker:your nervous system is in overdrive. You're dysregulated. You're
Speaker:you're struggling. Let me come alongside of you. Let me pull you out
Speaker:of this situation. Let's give you some support and Get
Speaker:you back to a better baseline and then come, you know, come join us. And
Speaker:that can be self regulation or coregulation.
Speaker:But what happened with time out is it became punitive, and it
Speaker:became, you aren't acceptable. Your behavior
Speaker:isn't acceptable. You cannot be here with us. You cannot be in this
Speaker:situation with us until you can act right. So
Speaker:attachment became conditional on behavior.
Speaker:So we'd say, okay. You're 2 years old. Go sit in the corner for 2
Speaker:minutes. Calm yourself and come back when you're ready to be,
Speaker:like, good. And the truth is that's not
Speaker:what's happening is that the child just has an authentic expression of
Speaker:themselves, And they don't want attachment to be threatened. They're
Speaker:not they're not testing it. They might be testing attachment, but it's not
Speaker:it shouldn't be a condition. Attachment should never be a condition.
Speaker:But we've used that time out philosophy
Speaker:as a condition for attachment.
Speaker:Instead of guiding the child through, like, the processes that you learn on this
Speaker:podcast and saying, like, hey. You seem to be struggling.
Speaker:You know, this behavior is out of bounds. Like, what's happening? Or this
Speaker:behavior doesn't work. I'm gonna put us you know, put a boundary here, then I'm
Speaker:gonna help you regulate your emotions in this way that is that is working.
Speaker:So we're always validating the emotion, and I'm getting into Strategies. But I wanted
Speaker:you to see the difference a little bit between
Speaker:sometimes people are calling it, like, a time out versus a time in.
Speaker:The other way that we see this in parenting is, you know, is
Speaker:bankings. Right? Like, Your behavior is bad. I'm
Speaker:going to hurt your body in order to teach you how to behave.
Speaker:And, again, that is the the behavior is, You know, I say it all the
Speaker:time. It's a feelings drive behavior. Behavior is an expression of
Speaker:unmet need or emotions. And When you
Speaker:use a punitive pain, like, literally hurt
Speaker:your body when you are misbehaving, You
Speaker:are telling the child you are not safe when you misbehave.
Speaker:Attachment is threatened.
Speaker:The So that's why, you know, even
Speaker:in 2018, the American Academy of Pediatrics said, hey. Guess what?
Speaker:Spanking is actually damaging. It doesn't do What you want it to do, it
Speaker:hurts your children long term. It's not good for emotional health.
Speaker:And, you know, so Okay. I'm gonna say this a couple
Speaker:times, but, like, if you're doing these strategies, I don't want you to start to
Speaker:freak out and be like, oh my god. I'm the worst mom. I'm so terrible.
Speaker:I've ruined my kids. No. That's not
Speaker:gonna help. Okay? When if you can be a little neutral
Speaker:about yourself right now and just be listening to this podcast episode and Be
Speaker:thinking, okay. I do those things because I don't
Speaker:know what to do with misbehavior. I don't know how to handle it. I'm trying
Speaker:my best. Yes. Of course. You're not intending to
Speaker:hurt your children. I know that. You can
Speaker:trust yourself. You just don't have the tools and skills. That's why you listen to
Speaker:this podcast. That's why you sign up for programs. You read parenting books. Right? You
Speaker:do these things because you're like, I wanna do it different. I don't know how.
Speaker:That's why my programs are really focused on tools, like scripts,
Speaker:tools, actual step by steps because I do believe none of
Speaker:us know what we're doing. Right? Okay. So
Speaker:we have time outs. We have spankings. We have just ignoring our
Speaker:kids. So this is like, Negative reinforcement,
Speaker:positive reinforcement kind of this idea of
Speaker:I will listen to you. I will pay attention to you. I will only look
Speaker:at you when you're doing good, when you're behaving the way I want you to
Speaker:behave, and then if you're not, I'm gonna detach. So,
Speaker:again, attachment, detachment. We're look our kids are
Speaker:looking for, am I safe in this relationship? Can I rely on
Speaker:the adults around me? Is my attachment ever threatened?
Speaker:And, you know, you can you
Speaker:can threaten attachment and get control of your kids and manipulate
Speaker:them. The problem is that in that process,
Speaker:they are developing a low self-concept.
Speaker:They are squashing parts of their identity, parts of
Speaker:themselves. They're learning to, like, be performative.
Speaker:So when we are in these strategies of, you know,
Speaker:making our connection, our warmth as
Speaker:conditional. Now I have boundaries. Some you know, I teach
Speaker:boundaries in in my workshops and things like that. And I say, like,
Speaker:listen. I'm happy to help you as long as you're speaking kindly.
Speaker:That is not necessarily, I'm gonna reject you until you're nice to
Speaker:me. It's a it's a little bit more about my own personal self respect.
Speaker:Like, You're struggling, and I wanna support you. And your feelings are
Speaker:valid. But it's hard for me to support you when
Speaker:you are screaming, I hate you.
Speaker:So why don't you calm your body, and then let's try
Speaker:again? And we'll we'll you know, I'm right here.
Speaker:So We're staying in that attached space, but we're
Speaker:not making our attachment, our love conditional, but we can set
Speaker:boundaries. I'm gonna talk more about that next episode.
Speaker:So when we are, you know, doing timeouts,
Speaker:spankings, connection you know, keeping our connection
Speaker:conditional, Ignoring our kids,
Speaker:it ends up creating a
Speaker:a child who is
Speaker:trying to figure out how to get their needs met
Speaker:through behavior. And so
Speaker:they may then, You know, start people pleasing.
Speaker:I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry, mommy. I'm so sorry. I didn't mean to you
Speaker:know, plea plea are you mad at me? Please don't hurt me. Please don't hurt
Speaker:You know? Like, they kinda act this way, and that's just insecurity. Right? And
Speaker:if that if they show up that way, you say, listen. I love you.
Speaker:You're not everything is fine. You're safe. I'm not going
Speaker:anywhere. Right? You reanchor back into attachment,
Speaker:And then you validate, it's okay. It's okay that you behave that way.
Speaker:Your feelings make sense. We need to work on this behavior,
Speaker:But we're not going to use the
Speaker:attachment as a Way
Speaker:to control our children's behavior. We're going
Speaker:to, You know, work
Speaker:at reassuring our children that
Speaker:their that the attachment, the safety, The unconditional
Speaker:love that I have for them is never in question.
Speaker:So when we have our kids And they are
Speaker:expressing their feelings through behavior, and we're using
Speaker:strategies to control that behavior. And we're
Speaker:Squashing authenticity in order to,
Speaker:control them or we're threatening attachment in order to
Speaker:control them and and change their behavior, It does
Speaker:have an effect. It turns into,
Speaker:basically, not feeling like I'm okay at my core,
Speaker:that that The the people in my life
Speaker:who like, the love that people have and the willingness that
Speaker:they have to care for me is conditional based on how I
Speaker:behave. When you play that out into adulthood, it
Speaker:can look like oh, even in elementary school, you can look like
Speaker:perfectionism. Right? Not feeling safe enough to fail.
Speaker:It can look on look like focusing on the way you look a
Speaker:lot, you know, being really, that's, like, the root of eating
Speaker:disorders and things like that and, like, you know, low self esteem and and worried
Speaker:about how you look and how you you know, how people think of you, Can
Speaker:also turn into, like like, people pleasing, but
Speaker:also almost overcharming. Right? Because
Speaker:It's all about, can I get the people in
Speaker:my life to love and accept me? What can I do to
Speaker:make that happen? If you don't believe it's unconditional
Speaker:in your childhood, it's hard for you to believe it's gonna be
Speaker:unconditional Outside of your if your mom and dad
Speaker:make it conditional, what about people who don't even care about
Speaker:you? It it creates an insecurity, a
Speaker:core insecurity wound, and that's what we're trying
Speaker:to avoid. It it can be, I gotta
Speaker:attain wealth. I've gotta attain power. I can't show these this
Speaker:anger. I can't I have to suppress my emotion. Otherwise, I will be
Speaker:rejected. I will be abandoned. I will be neglected. I will
Speaker:be, hurt. Right? What we want our
Speaker:kids is to go through life. And, of course, when they're
Speaker:young, they're testing. They're trying to figure out this. And so your
Speaker:job as a parent is to reassure them. But they they're
Speaker:we want them to get through, you know, these early
Speaker:Elementary school. You know, preschool and elementary and middle school and, like, get
Speaker:through life. And then show up on the threshold
Speaker:of of adulthood As a person who
Speaker:feels securely attached in their relationships with
Speaker:their parent, that the love is not conditional, That the
Speaker:safety, the security, the net underneath their life is
Speaker:not going anywhere so that that they can take big risks and they
Speaker:can, You know, like, work for their dreams
Speaker:and overcome obstacles, all of those things you want for your kids.
Speaker:And that they so at their core, they feel safe, and at their core, they
Speaker:feel lovable. They feel worthy. That they don't think they
Speaker:have to perform or show up in any particular way
Speaker:in order to get people to like them.
Speaker:Right? So when we have a
Speaker:childhood, that is in this
Speaker:conditional, You know, where authenticity
Speaker:has to be squashed in order to
Speaker:receive attachment or attachment feels
Speaker:untenuous, then
Speaker:we we create these strategies, and they almost become like they're part of our
Speaker:personality. They get these these Strategies in childhood can get hardwired into
Speaker:our nervous system, and then they just show up as as how we are.
Speaker:But the problem is that The strategies can stop
Speaker:working. Right? We can, like, achieve
Speaker:great success, and it's never enough. Or
Speaker:we finally look the way we think we should look, and we still
Speaker:don't love ourselves. Or we have, you
Speaker:know, a a a huge following of of thousands of people or whatever. We're a
Speaker:big celebrity, and you see this, you know, and then the person still struggles with
Speaker:drug addiction or suicidal tendencies and things like this.
Speaker:So the truth is that these these strategies to that we
Speaker:put into place as kids to, you know, get People who
Speaker:love us so that we could feel loved and safe, they actually stop
Speaker:working and also can show up in our bodies. Like, we get
Speaker:sick. You know? We don't feel well. All of it.
Speaker:And and so when you get to that place in
Speaker:your life where you're like, well, You
Speaker:know? Is this it? Like, what is this all there is?
Speaker:I kinda talked about this on last week's episode about my own, you
Speaker:know, Healing journey from my own experiences of childhood
Speaker:trauma and how much I've had to really self
Speaker:love, become The the
Speaker:person that feels safe inside
Speaker:and and loves myself, And that's the foundation of it. Right?
Speaker:Like, I can just decide I'm worthy exactly as
Speaker:I am, and it is not easy. Even saying it, I feel silly.
Speaker:But that what all of our
Speaker:deepest desires, right, is that we wanna be
Speaker:acknowledged and loved and accepted. We don't
Speaker:want our acceptance and our lovable
Speaker:ness, our worthiness to be based on performance or
Speaker:what other people think of us. And
Speaker:so, of course, there's lots of strategies in in my programs and
Speaker:Self help world to heal your inner child and heal heal yourself
Speaker:and and all of those things. There's lots of episodes even in in the podcast
Speaker:that I talked about this. What I'm talking about today
Speaker:is really about what kind of, like,
Speaker:parenting You wanna be doing in
Speaker:order to prevent your child growing
Speaker:up and then having to heal from their childhood. Right? That's what
Speaker:so many of you say. Like, I just don't wanna fuck my kids up.
Speaker:I hear you. Like, I get it. And you don't know
Speaker:quite, like, am I doing it right? Am I not? What's happening? Like, you know,
Speaker:it's scary. And so
Speaker:When you're parenting your kids, I want you to be thinking
Speaker:of how can you strengthen their Feeling of
Speaker:attachment, their feeling of safety, and their
Speaker:authentic self. So Let me give you
Speaker:some some tips, some strategies. I'll give you some more next week. But
Speaker:when your child is Feeling
Speaker:insecure, they're they're maybe, mommy, mommy, I'm so sorry. I
Speaker:didn't mean it, and don't have don't be mad at me. And, you know, they're
Speaker:acting that way or, You know, you get upset for a second, and you're
Speaker:like, that's enough. Stop it. Right? You know, you show up in in a
Speaker:reactive state or or you have to give them a consequence. Like, You
Speaker:know what? I did say that if you, you know, that you could come with
Speaker:us to, you know, the grocery store as long as you would tidy it
Speaker:up you didn't tidy up, so you're not coming. Then,
Speaker:you know, they get really upset, and they might be worried that you don't love
Speaker:them. This is especially true with littler ones,
Speaker:like, ages 3 to 6, and they really need to
Speaker:be reassured. Listen. You're safe.
Speaker:You're okay. I'm not mad at you. This
Speaker:is just part of learning. This is just part of growing. I unconditionally
Speaker:love and welcome you and want you
Speaker:exactly as you are. You can make mistakes in this family. It's not a
Speaker:problem. We wanna communicate to our kids.
Speaker:Listen. I you can trust me. I'm the grown up. I can handle things.
Speaker:I'm strong. I've got this. That's why
Speaker:we don't really wanna, like, dump a lot of, like, oh my god. You kids
Speaker:are driving me crazy. This I can't handle this. Like, We don't really wanna
Speaker:bring a lot of that energy to our parenting because
Speaker:it it it makes our kids feel like, uh-oh. There's no grown ups
Speaker:around. I'm not safe, and then they might
Speaker:develop strategies to make themselves feel safe. And some of
Speaker:those strategies Might be healthy in the short term, but not healthy in the long
Speaker:term. So we kinda wanna have this internalized,
Speaker:Like, leadership inside of us, like, I've got it. You're in
Speaker:good hands. I'm the adult. You're safe. No matter what happens, no
Speaker:matter how you act, No matter what goes on in the world, I've got
Speaker:you. You're okay. I can handle it. Right? So we
Speaker:wanna hold that. We wanna Let them know that
Speaker:for for that's for attachment. And then for authenticity,
Speaker:being able to say, I unconditionally love, welcome, and want you.
Speaker:Like, getting used to communicating it.
Speaker:No matter how you feel, no matter how you act, no matter how you think,
Speaker:honey, nothing you can do Can threaten my love
Speaker:for you. I will always have your back.
Speaker:Practice saying it out loud. You wanna
Speaker:communicate to your child that they don't have to do anything
Speaker:or be different to win love or to win security,
Speaker:That nothing they do can ever threaten the relationship you have.
Speaker:You're not going anywhere. Your love is not going anywhere. Your
Speaker:care is not going anywhere. I think of it sometimes, like, unconditional love is
Speaker:easy. Unconditional acceptance is hard. So it's
Speaker:like, how can you communicate? I unconditionally accept you.
Speaker:And the way we do that in my programs is we validate emotion.
Speaker:We say your feelings make sense. Your behavior isn't working.
Speaker:So we're not giving you're not giving in. It's not not permissive parenting.
Speaker:We are saying you have permission to
Speaker:have these feelings. You have permission
Speaker:to express these emotions. The way you're doing it right now by
Speaker:hitting, kicking, punching, you know, doing all these behaviors, Spitting, yelling, mommy,
Speaker:I hate you. All this. That is not the healthiest way to
Speaker:express these emotions. We there are better ways, and I'm gonna teach you
Speaker:how. But the feeling makes sense. Your feeling is valid,
Speaker:and we're gonna make it safe for our kids to be
Speaker:vulnerable. And I want you to remember that their behavior
Speaker:is their expression of their emotion. So
Speaker:we're validating your emotion makes sense. Your behavior needs work.
Speaker:Okay? Because the behavior is a strategy. So when
Speaker:you do When you do these things, right,
Speaker:you can you can end up falling into the permissive parenting
Speaker:trap, and there's a lot in, parenting
Speaker:right now of a a little bit of a backlash about compassionate
Speaker:parenting. And I I want you to know, like, if you're following
Speaker:along with my program and you're, you know, implementing limits and and
Speaker:you're learning, like, the way that I talk about consequences, We're not airing
Speaker:we're not going to permissive parenting in this in like, you're not at
Speaker:risk of that if you, you know, follow along with what I teach you because
Speaker:I do have connection on one side and correction on the other. So
Speaker:we're, validating the emotion. We're we're
Speaker:allowing for internalized security. We're letting our kids know you're
Speaker:safe. Your your feelings matter. Your feelings are valid, and
Speaker:your behavior is my job to help you figure out better ways to communicate
Speaker:Your feelings, better ways to cope. You don't
Speaker:have to, you know, people please or be aggressive
Speaker:or any of these other strategies. And so if
Speaker:so those are the things I want you to be doing is just really, like,
Speaker:communicating you're safe, Communicating, you
Speaker:can't threaten this relationship. There's nothing you can
Speaker:do to make me love or accept you less. I'm
Speaker:not going anywhere. I've got your back. Practicing those things
Speaker:and then validating that emotion. Feelings make sense. Behavior
Speaker:needs work. I've just made that up, but I kinda like it. Like,
Speaker:if if your behavior needs work. It's like I don't
Speaker:know. Kind of is a little bit hopeful For me to think about it that
Speaker:way, it's like, yeah. Yeah. Yeah. No. Of course, you're behaving that way, but, like,
Speaker:let's work on it. Like, a little bit more loose about it, a little less
Speaker:tight, a little bit less fear, a little less Anxious. Right? Just like, yeah. I
Speaker:know. That's how you're showing up right now, but I'm not worried. You're gonna, like,
Speaker:you're gonna learn. You're little. You're growing. Even with my, like, 20 year old, I'm
Speaker:like, Oh, he's not quite 20. He's 19. But I'm like, no, bud.
Speaker:No. You've got plenty of time. Like, this is fine. No problem. We're gonna
Speaker:figure it out. Like, what's going on? Why are you acting this way? Okay. Great.
Speaker:Your feelings are totally valid. They all make sense. All these strategies make sense. Let's
Speaker:do new strategies. So much more loving
Speaker:and welcoming and kind. Now if you're
Speaker:if you're learning this type of parenting, and you didn't
Speaker:come from a family where
Speaker:attachment was secure and authenticity was secure,
Speaker:You probably feel a little bit out of, like
Speaker:like, your your depth. Right? You're like, you're not sure what to do. Because
Speaker:you're in the process of breaking toxic parenting cycles, you're
Speaker:in the process of recovering your own authenticity. You're
Speaker:in the process of developing internalized security,
Speaker:and that is beautiful. Beautiful.
Speaker:It is amazing. Look at you. You're, like, you
Speaker:know, Reparenting yourself. You're breaking cycles. It's
Speaker:incredible. But you probably need support.
Speaker:You probably need some modeling. You need some guidance.
Speaker:So I strongly recommend that you,
Speaker:you know, do, Sign up
Speaker:for my programs. The emotionally healthy kids class starts January 18th. It's a
Speaker:6 week program. I teach you how to calm yourself, How do
Speaker:you emotionally coach your kids validating their emotions, how to set
Speaker:boundaries, we call that limit set, and then how to follow through with consequences
Speaker:that aren't painful. I I go through the class
Speaker:in the 6 weeks. Like, we cover the basics, the foundations, and
Speaker:then you have 4 months to work with me in the call mama club.
Speaker:That's my membership, and you get, like, a taste of that. You get to be
Speaker:in there for 4 months, and you get to book private sessions with me every
Speaker:week, 15 minutes. We have group chats. Like, you know,
Speaker:there's community. There's an online portal. There's email support. There's lots and
Speaker:lots of support. So you're in with me for 6 weeks, and then we stick
Speaker:together for a couple months to just let it all settle. And
Speaker:then you can just stay in the club. Like, your,
Speaker:membership ends, and then I ask you if you wanna stay. And if you love
Speaker:it, you stay. It's $500 for the year. So the class is 500.
Speaker:It includes the, the 6 week course and the 4
Speaker:months in the club. And there's a payment
Speaker:plan if you need it, and I'm here for you. And you get to learn
Speaker:these tools because that's the thing I'm really focused on is, like,
Speaker:actual strategies, actual scripts, Actual
Speaker:process. And then you can ask me questions in those sessions,
Speaker:either they're in the group or in the privates where you're like, okay. This is
Speaker:my problem. Let's solve it, and then we solve it. That's beautiful. I love
Speaker:it. I love the program so much. I love every mama and and
Speaker:dad that comes through and The relationships that are built within the
Speaker:program, it's really incredible. So if you're in
Speaker:to developing and raising emotionally healthy
Speaker:kids, Keep listening to the podcast.
Speaker:This week, your takes takeaway are how can I strengthen attachment
Speaker:here? How can I strengthen security? And then how can
Speaker:I strengthen authenticity? So these are your
Speaker:takeaways. And, but if you if you're just loving it and
Speaker:you're like, yeah. No. I love everything How well, everything you teach, like, let's let's
Speaker:get together. Let's, you know, join one of my programs. Let's build this
Speaker:relationship and, and grow your family. It's It's
Speaker:incredible. I love it. I love it. Love it. Love it. Okay. So if you're
Speaker:listening to this as the podcast comes out, happy New Year.
Speaker:Parenting 101, the basics. We did
Speaker:it. Authenticity, attachment, strengthen those,
Speaker:and Push those into the new year. You know, people love words of the
Speaker:year. Maybe that's what you wanna pick. Maybe you wanna pick authenticity.
Speaker:Maybe you wanna pick attachment. My word for the year It's internalized
Speaker:security. It's basically attachment within myself. That's what I'm
Speaker:working on in 2024. I'm healing some of
Speaker:that insecure attachment. So that's what I'm about. And
Speaker:if you wanna be about that, I you know? That's cool. It's
Speaker:great. So have a great week. Happy New Year,
Speaker:and I will catch you next