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Title: The Psychology Of Parenting Through Your Own Mental Health Challenges | Ask Lisa X Rich Roll Podcast
Duration: 00:54:15
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[Music]
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hey everybody I am very excited to
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welcome or re Rew welcome I should say
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uh my very favorite expert on all things
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parenting the teen Whisperer herself the
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great Lisa deore Lisa is a graduate of
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Yale University she received her PhD in
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Clinical Psychology from the University
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of Michigan and she is a three-time New
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York Times bestselling author her books
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include untangled under pressure and the
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emotional lives of teenagers and this is
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basically the tripartite of parenting
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must reads I gotta say uh Lisa is also
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the host of ask Lisa which is the
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essential podcast for parents seeking
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guidance on raising kids particularly
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tween and teens which I'm very proud to
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announce also happens to be the newest
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addition to our new but quickly growing
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repertoire of best-in-class podcasts
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here at voicing change media and the
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purpose of today's show is to reacquaint
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you with Lisa or introduce her to you if
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you're new to the show we're going to
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share an episode of ask Lisa we're going
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to append it after our brief
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conversation here and that's it I mean
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personally I guess what I want to say is
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I can't overestimate how helpful Lisa
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has been in my my own parenting Journey
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you're sort of my decoder ring this
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Beacon of light that has helped counsel
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me through the roller coaster ride of
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raising our children into young adults
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and it's delightful to have you here
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today thank you Lisa how you doing I am
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great and I'm really happy to be with
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you and Reena my co-host and I are so so
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happy to be we're really proud to have
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you yeah this is very exciting and you
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do such a great job and we're here to
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amplify your important voice well thank
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you so thanks for coming out today um I
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can't remember how long it's been since
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the last time we got together a couple
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years at least it's like right around
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two years years right around two years A
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lot has happened since then uh one very
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interesting particular event has
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transpired since we last sat down can
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you share a little bit about that um I
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think you're talking about my
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involvement with inside out too I am
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indeed talking about that okay yeah so
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um so in May of 2020 I got a call from
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Pixar saying that Kelsey man the
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director and megal one of the writers
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wanted to meet with me so it was early
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pandemic we hopped on a zoom and they
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were holding untangled and Under
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Pressure the two books of mine that had
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come out at that point and they talked
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about what they were up to with this
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film they were thinking about and you
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know those books are about adolescent
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girls and about Stress and Anxiety and
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so if you've seen the film you know
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right down the middle of what they were
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working on and that launched us into a
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four-year conversation that um was as
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much fun as anything I have done
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professionally so I went back back and
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forth to Pixar I edited or looked at
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drafts of the film and gave feedback um
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I worked with an extraordinary colleague
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daker Kelner who's at Berkeley um who
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was on the first film and um somebody
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I've long respected so it was really fun
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to be alongside him as another
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consultant on this film and um you know
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what they generated in the end I think
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is an incredible contribution what is it
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that's so special about Pixar not that
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you've been working with all kinds of
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other movie studios but uh we did have
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the opportunity to have Ed KML um join
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the podcast who was a co-founder of
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Pixar and wrote this wonderful book
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about team building and creativity and
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management um he's no longer there but
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obviously the DNA of you know his kind
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of uh leadership style I'm sure still
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persists in terms of my contact with
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them I was blown away by their Devotion
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to the Precision of the science they
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really wanted to get it right and and um
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you know made changes on really what are
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very minor points but when I said you
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know this is not quite exactly it they
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fixed it up um they had me meet with the
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entire crew working on the film to do a
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presentation around adolescent mental
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health and and how we think about
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development and so um from Soup To Nuts
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in the work on that film they had me and
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daker thinking with them about getting
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the science and the the kind of you know
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academic underpinnings of that correct
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and give given the reach they have you
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know I mean this was this is the highest
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grossing animated film of all time it's
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the eighth highest grossing film of all
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time I didn't know that I mean I knew it
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was popular and successful I didn't
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realize at that magnitude it's done
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incredibly well and so you have back end
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of course oh
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yeah uh let's we'll Return To That on
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another day boy I wish I did um but what
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is important is that it will reach
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families who no one can reach in that
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kind of way
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and and that they got it right and they
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made it entertaining and engaging and
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yet told a true story about teenagers
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and the ways in they become very intense
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with their emotions and told a true
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story about emotions and that
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uncomfortable and unwanted emotions are
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actually really important and valuable
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you know those are the messages that a
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lot of my work is trying to get across
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and so to get to partner with um such a
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huge megaphone on those messages was a
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huge huge benefit there's also a
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personal parallel here as well correct
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because
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the protagonist in the movie happens to
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be the same age as your daughter well it
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is kind of amazing so when the first
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film came out in 2015 my older daughter
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was 12 or 11 turning 12 that year and
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now my younger daughter is 13 and now my
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younger daughter is 13 so um or was 13
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when the film came out and has turned 14
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since so it was the exact same age as
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the protagonist and so um very fun I
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actually got to take her to Pixar with
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me for some of it and get to tour around
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in the back so we had a great time did
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you get the good job you're a cool mom
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uh like certification badge or is it the
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age where nothing you can do is cool I
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don't think they think anything I do is
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cool right I mean I think that they're
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sort of like that's great mom but like
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what's for dinner you know you know and
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that's their job to be focused on of
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course what's for dinner yeah um that's
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an amazing experience uh I didn't
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realize the movie was that big but I and
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I haven't seen the second one but I did
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see the first one and I just remember
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being very impacted by by how what a
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what an incredibly creative way into
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kind of the mind and the inner
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experience of what it's like to have
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complicated
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emotions it's so smart and they did such
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a good job
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and there's things in the film that are
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so
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quick that I was so glad to see included
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so if you remember in the first film you
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know there are all these mental islands
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that are important to Riley's life and
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so in the intro to the second film or in
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the second film they're surveying the
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islands and um somebody says well
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where's family Island and family island
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has receded way to the back and it's
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like gray and sort of sad and it's like
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the parents and then Riley standing
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apart for them and it's totally crowded
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out by friendship Island which looks
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like this giant amusement park and it's
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this quick little joke and I was like
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holy moly when I saw that I thought for
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them to put up on the screen that this
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is exactly what happens in adolescence
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that it's not your kid dumping you you
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haven't done anything wrong this is the
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natural course of events I thought it
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was so amazing you know to watch them do
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that so just as healing for the parents
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as for the children like everybody can
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kind of identify absolutely and you know
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it's very clever and very funny and the
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kind of thing a lot of adults are going
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to want to see as well and it's
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interesting we actually have a long
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research science on programming for kids
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and what makes it effective and what
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makes it effective is if adults want to
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watch it too mhhm because you know we
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did all this research on Sesame Street a
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million years ago and what makes it
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effective is if after the show the
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parent is then later talking about so
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what would the count say right yeah and
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so same with this film the fact that
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it's done in a way that adults are going
(00:08:18)
to enjoy watching it also means that the
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adults get the benefit and the kids get
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the benefit of the adults getting the
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benefit the kids get the benefit of the
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adults not taking it so personally that
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their kid wants to hang out with friends
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all the time or there's even a very
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funny um place where you know suddenly
(00:08:35)
Riley's emotions become very very
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powerful as a function of puberty
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setting in and to have that normalized
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and put on the big screen is a huge gift
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to families are the Hollywood Studios
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now calling you all the
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time I if they want to talk to me I'm
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happy to help and and it really is
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because that's a lot of where the
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messaging comes across about teenagers
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Family Life what to expect you know I I
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love getting to do my work in the public
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space but I'm aware that there are much
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much bigger voices out there and so if I
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can help shape how they talk and think
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about young people you know I'm ready to
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do that all right Hollywood give her a
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call um I've been in the parenting uh
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game for quite a while at this point our
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youngest is 17 our oldest is 29 two boys
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two girls I've seen kind of every
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permutation you know of this uh the
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Peaks The Valleys you know kind of how
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to how to handle you know the challenges
(00:09:34)
that come your way with some level of
(00:09:35)
Grace and Equanimity and you know it's
(00:09:38)
still confusing what's the right thing
(00:09:40)
to say or do like you know should I not
(00:09:42)
say that should I say this when to be
(00:09:44)
supportive when to put up the
(00:09:45)
boundaries as soon as you think you've
(00:09:48)
kind of developed some level of Mastery
(00:09:50)
you get a curveball and you're like how
(00:09:51)
about this how you going to handle this
(00:09:52)
one and when I think about 2025 being
(00:09:55)
here in Los Angeles I think about
(00:09:57)
uncertainty and impermanence it's you
(00:10:00)
know obviously a very turbulent um
(00:10:03)
political time that is is driving a lot
(00:10:06)
of anxiety and uncertainty and layering
(00:10:08)
on top of that here like the devastating
(00:10:11)
fires we were evacuated and like you
(00:10:13)
know it's a lot for young kids I just I
(00:10:16)
found myself the other day thinking
(00:10:17)
about you know a young person who's
(00:10:19)
maybe 14 or 15 who who weathered the
(00:10:24)
pandemic you know had to endure puberty
(00:10:27)
at home you know in their room got
(00:10:29)
through through that things start to
(00:10:31)
normalize you know but all kinds of like
(00:10:34)
craziness with social media kind of
(00:10:35)
enters the picture and that gets
(00:10:37)
heightened uh and once you feel like
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okay well I'm I'm developing adaptive
(00:10:42)
strategies for this you have the fire
(00:10:44)
and there's people's homes burning down
(00:10:46)
and like you know it's just like what is
(00:10:48)
going on in the mind of that child I
(00:10:49)
can't help but think they're developing
(00:10:51)
this sense of a like the world is a very
(00:10:54)
unsafe place and B like maybe the adults
(00:10:57)
don't know anything you know what I mean
(00:10:58)
and like what ises that doing to you
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know hundreds of thousands if not
(00:11:03)
millions of young developing Minds at
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this
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point well we don't really know but in
(00:11:10)
some ways we've been here before right I
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mean I I wasn't alive when World War II
(00:11:14)
was happening but like you think about
(00:11:16)
other times in history where things were
(00:11:18)
completely upside down and and felt like
(00:11:21)
they were coming apart and the world
(00:11:23)
that you knew it didn't feel familiar at
(00:11:25)
all and and it felt really scary where
(00:11:27)
everything could head so you know I
(00:11:30)
think every generation has its own
(00:11:32)
version of this and we're in this you
(00:11:34)
know we don't know where this will go we
(00:11:35)
don't know what it means down the
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line my world my training is about the
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power of the relationship between adult
(00:11:43)
and child between parent caregiver and
(00:11:45)
the child and what I know is that the
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best thing we can do under these
(00:11:51)
conditions is to try to be a steady
(00:11:52)
presence for our kid we have been around
(00:11:55)
longer we have seen things be very bad
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and correct
(00:12:00)
um we can offer some perspective that
(00:12:03)
kids cannot have I think what is hard is
(00:12:06)
that the adults feel pretty undone right
(00:12:07)
now too and so being a steady presence
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isn't so easy we can feel pretty
(00:12:13)
overwrought ourselves and and I think
(00:12:15)
then if you can't be a steady presence
(00:12:18)
then the next step is to remember that
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being emotional is not necessarily the
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same thing as being
(00:12:24)
fragile as tell me more yeah as a
(00:12:26)
culture we've become very very uneasy
(00:12:28)
about any emotional discomfort we have
(00:12:31)
come to equate being mentally healthy
(00:12:33)
with feeling good and and we've talked
(00:12:36)
about this before right you know that's
(00:12:37)
not how we think about this as
(00:12:39)
psychologists and so one thing that we
(00:12:42)
can give our kids is the understanding
(00:12:45)
that you're supposed to be upset in
(00:12:48)
upsetting conditions it's actually
(00:12:49)
strange I mean if you went through
(00:12:50)
everything that you just described and
(00:12:52)
you were like yeah no we're great it's
(00:12:53)
cool right that's actually pretty
(00:12:55)
weird and and so allowing for sadness
(00:12:58)
allowing for worry allowing for some
(00:13:01)
anxiety without quickly slipping into
(00:13:04)
the idea that that means that
(00:13:05)
everything's awful that we have mental
(00:13:07)
health concerns or that we're never
(00:13:08)
going to be okay again I think that's
(00:13:10)
actually where the adults can be most
(00:13:12)
useful to kids which is to allow for
(00:13:13)
distress but to not equate it with the
(00:13:15)
Mental Health crisis well that kind of
(00:13:17)
perfectly sets up the episode that we're
(00:13:19)
going to share which is all about
(00:13:21)
answering this question like how much of
(00:13:23)
my mental health challenges should I
(00:13:25)
actually CH share with my children and
(00:13:29)
I'm of two minds on this and it you know
(00:13:31)
it kind of fits into exactly what you
(00:13:33)
just said like I'm of the generation
(00:13:35)
that has learned over time that
(00:13:38)
transparency is better you don't want to
(00:13:41)
just put on the strong face and pretend
(00:13:43)
like everything's fine when it isn't
(00:13:45)
because then you're breeding distrust
(00:13:48)
and it's better to like let the kids in
(00:13:51)
and like this is what we're going
(00:13:52)
through um but at the same
(00:13:55)
time uh you don't want to kind of
(00:13:58)
overshare to the point where the child
(00:14:00)
feels unsafe or like that you you don't
(00:14:03)
got this like they need to feel like
(00:14:05)
even yeah okay I recognize you're having
(00:14:06)
a hard time but I'm going to go to sleep
(00:14:08)
tonight you know confident that you have
(00:14:11)
a handle on whatever it is that's going
(00:14:13)
on is that is that like kind of Fairly
(00:14:17)
uh accurate description of no I think
(00:14:19)
you describe the tension really well
(00:14:21)
right we want to be honest with our kids
(00:14:22)
but we also don't want them to feel like
(00:14:24)
there's not a grown-up in the room right
(00:14:25)
that's that's they want both um you know
(00:14:28)
and in this episode think through is you
(00:14:30)
know when does it make sense to talk
(00:14:32)
with kids about what you yourself have
(00:14:33)
been through how do you do it in a way
(00:14:35)
that is going to work
(00:14:39)
um what is it you know what should drive
(00:14:42)
it what should it be about you know and
(00:14:44)
and and when should you do it if you're
(00:14:46)
going to do it um we talk about some
(00:14:50)
mental health concerns that can have a
(00:14:51)
biological underpinning that at some
(00:14:53)
point kids may want to know about just
(00:14:54)
by way of being aware you know of some
(00:14:58)
genetic vulnerability that may be a play
(00:15:01)
but um we really you know I love talking
(00:15:05)
and thinking with Reena because she does
(00:15:07)
such a good job of really sitting in the
(00:15:10)
role of the parent who's like but what
(00:15:11)
about this and what about that and and
(00:15:13)
through that process I think we um tease
(00:15:16)
apart really really complex questions
(00:15:19)
and get to Big principles that's
(00:15:21)
actually my favorite thing about our
(00:15:22)
conversations is that we are always
(00:15:24)
asking a question from a listener but in
(00:15:27)
answering or we're always answering a
(00:15:29)
question from a listener but in
(00:15:30)
answering that question we always try to
(00:15:33)
like pull back the lens a little bit and
(00:15:34)
think like what's the big parenting
(00:15:36)
principle at play here and she sort of
(00:15:39)
inhabits the perspective of the parent
(00:15:42)
who's going to be asking the typical
(00:15:43)
questions to make sure that their the
(00:15:46)
audience is getting the takeaways that
(00:15:47)
they need yeah yeah she's doesn't she's
(00:15:49)
you know journalist by training and just
(00:15:51)
does an incredible job of but what about
(00:15:54)
this and what about that and pushes my
(00:15:56)
thinking and and I hopefully above all
(00:15:59)
just puts it all on you know into
(00:16:01)
practical every day in your kitchen
(00:16:02)
terms as opposed to you know here's
(00:16:05)
theoretically how we think about these
(00:16:06)
things that's not really what people
(00:16:08)
need people need like what do I say to
(00:16:10)
my kid and and and we work really hard
(00:16:12)
to get to
(00:16:13)
that where do uh our parenting
(00:16:17)
intuitions lead us astray like what are
(00:16:20)
common examples of situations you've
(00:16:23)
seen where where we feel like the right
(00:16:26)
thing to do is x when actually it's y I
(00:16:29)
guess I'm just imagining you know in the
(00:16:32)
context of sharing your mental health
(00:16:33)
stuff it's like oh we should be
(00:16:35)
transparent and like not knowing where
(00:16:36)
the boundary of of that is or what are
(00:16:39)
some kind of principles that you could
(00:16:41)
you know kind of quickly share before we
(00:16:43)
turn to the episode itself well so one
(00:16:46)
thing that I think is gerain to this
(00:16:48)
topic but stretches across others is you
(00:16:50)
know there's so many important
(00:16:52)
conversations we want to have with our
(00:16:53)
kids before they leave home you know and
(00:16:55)
and we we they weigh on us and they feel
(00:16:57)
big and important and sometimes they're
(00:16:59)
our own mental health concerns but
(00:17:00)
sometimes they're just about other
(00:17:01)
things in the world that we want to talk
(00:17:03)
about and there are moments in parenting
(00:17:06)
where we're like okay I'm ready to have
(00:17:07)
the conversation and we find our
(00:17:09)
teenager and we're like we need to talk
(00:17:10)
about you know and then fill in the
(00:17:12)
blank and what we forget is that kid did
(00:17:14)
not see a coming has 400 other things
(00:17:17)
going on doesn't know why you are
(00:17:19)
bringing this up now almost always
(00:17:21)
assumes like what did I do that you have
(00:17:25)
you know felt compelled to have this
(00:17:26)
conversation and so what I would say
(00:17:28)
just on a very easy X to Y for all
(00:17:31)
parents everywhere is if you have
(00:17:33)
something big and heavy that the time
(00:17:35)
has come that you feel you need to talk
(00:17:36)
about it give your kids some warning and
(00:17:40)
see if um if they're open to it at that
(00:17:43)
time or make a plan to talk about it but
(00:17:47)
um I think the uh not very sophisticated
(00:17:49)
but I think kind of direct way I would
(00:17:51)
say this is like no sneak attacks on
(00:17:53)
teenagers like it never goes well if you
(00:17:56)
have something big and heavy say to them
(00:17:58)
you know you're headed off to college
(00:18:00)
and we've never really talked about you
(00:18:01)
know x sex drugs drinking whatever
(00:18:04)
there's some things I want you to know
(00:18:06)
when's a good time for us to have this
(00:18:07)
conversation yeah yeah yeah you'll get
(00:18:09)
much further that way I I find that even
(00:18:12)
when I do that it's still challenging
(00:18:15)
and like what I'm actually trying to
(00:18:18)
communicate by Dent of that type of
(00:18:20)
conversation is kind of more effectively
(00:18:24)
transmitted when I'm in a casual
(00:18:26)
environment and I'm like we're in a car
(00:18:28)
in a long drive or we're on a trip and
(00:18:30)
I'm you know we're on a plane or like
(00:18:32)
hey tell me you know when I'm curious
(00:18:34)
about them and then it moves into a
(00:18:37)
place where it feels natural to kind of
(00:18:39)
share well you know this thing happened
(00:18:41)
and then just it kind of percolates up
(00:18:43)
out of something organic as opposed to
(00:18:45)
like you come in with an agenda and
(00:18:47)
here's what's going to happen and here's
(00:18:48)
how we're gonna here's how you're going
(00:18:49)
to come out on the other side of that um
(00:18:52)
I agree with everything you said I think
(00:18:54)
it's true I think um rolling up on a
(00:18:57)
teenager with an agenda pre-planned
(00:18:59)
rarely has the outcome we're hoping for
(00:19:02)
the other thing I will say and I've seen
(00:19:04)
this
(00:19:05)
consistently kids open the door to these
(00:19:08)
conversations kids will say you know
(00:19:10)
there's ninth graders using weed gummies
(00:19:12)
at school right or they will say oh you
(00:19:14)
know so and so they're like having sex
(00:19:16)
with a lot of different partners right
(00:19:18)
they they
(00:19:19)
will throw the door wide open to
(00:19:21)
conversations that we mean to be having
(00:19:24)
and in my experience that's actually
(00:19:25)
when you're most likely to get some
(00:19:27)
ground in that conversation to say like
(00:19:29)
well what do you know and what do you
(00:19:30)
think and what are you hearing and what
(00:19:32)
do you make of that right asking them
(00:19:33)
their thoughts and then you'll learn a
(00:19:36)
lot based on their response when you ask
(00:19:38)
questions about what do you think about
(00:19:40)
that and then you may be able to get
(00:19:42)
your two cents in um but I will say in
(00:19:46)
all of parenting I don't ever think you
(00:19:48)
have very long to say very much I think
(00:19:52)
these are conversations that we dip in
(00:19:53)
and out of I think kids can only
(00:19:55)
tolerate so much at a given time I think
(00:19:57)
car rides plane rides walks when they
(00:20:00)
don't have to look at us are invaluable
(00:20:02)
but it's um there's no such thing in my
(00:20:05)
world as the talk mhm it's it's an
(00:20:07)
ongoing conversation because kids change
(00:20:09)
and actually how you think about it
(00:20:11)
yourself as a parent changes the slow
(00:20:14)
Dre as opposed to the you know fire hose
(00:20:17)
the Monumental talk where we're GNA
(00:20:18)
solve all of these problems I think
(00:20:20)
that's really that's really good advice
(00:20:23)
and when the child kind of lobs it's
(00:20:25)
sort of like lobbing a grenade and it
(00:20:26)
it's a litmus test like what are you
(00:20:28)
going to do are you shame me and say
(00:20:30)
well you better not do that you know
(00:20:31)
like a more kind of like typical
(00:20:33)
response can you resist that and instead
(00:20:37)
like approach it with
(00:20:39)
curiosity it's really hard sometimes
(00:20:42)
right I mean if kids are like there's
(00:20:43)
weed gummies going around school I mean
(00:20:45)
a lot of adults would be like whoa don't
(00:20:47)
let me catch you but even with that you
(00:20:50)
can come back and say you know I had a
(00:20:52)
really strong
(00:20:53)
reaction tell me more about you know why
(00:20:56)
why that came up you know that I I think
(00:20:57)
it's okay um for us to apologize and
(00:21:01)
return to it um because I think
(00:21:03)
sometimes when kids are putting those
(00:21:05)
things on the table they are seeing like
(00:21:07)
if I had an issue how would you react so
(00:21:09)
let me start by testing the waters with
(00:21:12)
you know that kid over there you get a
(00:21:14)
crazy reaction okay it's not safe for me
(00:21:16)
to share that thing never bringing this
(00:21:18)
up again the door is shut and like I'll
(00:21:20)
go to somebody else yeah yeah and that's
(00:21:23)
the last thing you want it is I will
(00:21:25)
tell you in those clutch moments there
(00:21:27)
is a phrase that parents can use while
(00:21:30)
they're getting their heart rate down
(00:21:32)
which is just to say to the kid what do
(00:21:35)
you think about that like you can't go
(00:21:37)
wrong with that phrase and it will help
(00:21:39)
you collect yourself and help you know
(00:21:41)
where the conversation needs to go yeah
(00:21:43)
neutrality becomes like a superpower yes
(00:21:46)
right um I'm thinking of a scenario in
(00:21:51)
which uh you know there's a there's a a
(00:21:55)
conflict between kind of what you say
(00:21:57)
and what you do because if if you're
(00:21:58)
kind of saying like well you better not
(00:22:00)
and this is that and this is bad and
(00:22:02)
like you know no daughter of mine no you
(00:22:04)
know whatever uh but then later you come
(00:22:07)
and say you know you can talk to me
(00:22:08)
about anything like I'm available to you
(00:22:10)
like you know you're speaking out of
(00:22:12)
both sides of your mouth at that point
(00:22:13)
right it's true and and you know one of
(00:22:16)
my favorite things in the whole world is
(00:22:18)
to get with a bunch of teenagers and ask
(00:22:20)
them questions about things that I've
(00:22:21)
been wondering about and so one time I
(00:22:24)
got with them a bunch of teenagers and I
(00:22:26)
was like you know that thing where
(00:22:29)
you're clearly upset and your folks can
(00:22:31)
tell you're upset and they're asking
(00:22:32)
what's wrong and you won't tell them and
(00:22:35)
they're all like yeah yeah yeah I'm like
(00:22:36)
what's the deal and they were like well
(00:22:38)
there's one of four reasons right I mean
(00:22:40)
they have so much knowledge of us and
(00:22:42)
they said first of all we know what
(00:22:43)
you're GNA say you know and they do know
(00:22:46)
us they know us inside and out right so
(00:22:48)
they were like you know maybe it's that
(00:22:51)
I um messed up a test that you asked if
(00:22:53)
I'd studied enough for and I reassured
(00:22:54)
you I had and apparently I hadn't
(00:22:56)
because I got my test back and so if I
(00:22:58)
tell you that's what I'm upset about I
(00:22:59)
know what you're going to say and I
(00:23:00)
don't want to hear it right so we think
(00:23:03)
we're so context free they have us dead
(00:23:05)
to rights you know um another kid said
(00:23:08)
you're going to blab you're going to
(00:23:09)
blab I'm going to tell you and it
(00:23:11)
doesn't feel like a big deal to you so
(00:23:12)
you'll tell the neighbor but it feels
(00:23:14)
like a state secret to me so I don't
(00:23:15)
want to do it another kid said this was
(00:23:18)
so funny they were like well it's
(00:23:19)
complicated it's
(00:23:21)
complicated this girl said you know
(00:23:23)
maybe it's like this maybe the thing I'm
(00:23:24)
having a problem with is that I got into
(00:23:26)
a fight with Susie today Susie and I
(00:23:28)
been going hot and cold for 10 years and
(00:23:30)
I know my family can't stand Susie
(00:23:32)
Susie's having a party in two weeks and
(00:23:34)
I really want to go so if I tell them
(00:23:36)
today what the issue is in two weeks
(00:23:38)
we're going to have a problem so again
(00:23:40)
they know us so well and then the last
(00:23:43)
one and I think this is what parents and
(00:23:45)
caregivers should always assume if they
(00:23:47)
can't get their kid to tell them what
(00:23:48)
the story
(00:23:49)
is this kid said to me you know by the
(00:23:52)
time I get home I'm like 90% of the way
(00:23:55)
past it and rehashing the whole thing
(00:23:56)
for my folks is not going to help me
(00:23:58)
feel better yeah yeah so I mean there's
(00:24:00)
always a reason for their behavior what
(00:24:02)
they do make sense and I think what I
(00:24:05)
love so much about teenagers is that if
(00:24:08)
you ask them a straight question if
(00:24:09)
you're asking asking they will tell you
(00:24:12)
exactly what is behind behavior that
(00:24:15)
seems confusing on the surface the other
(00:24:17)
thing that I found very helpful is
(00:24:20)
always asking myself the question like
(00:24:23)
am I trying to help them feel better or
(00:24:26)
solve their problem or am I trying to
(00:24:28)
resolve my own uncomfortable emotions
(00:24:30)
about what's happening like I think
(00:24:32)
there's a lot of transference in there
(00:24:34)
um and so much of where parents
(00:24:37)
instincts drive them in the wrong
(00:24:39)
direction is when they're really trying
(00:24:40)
to solve their own internal emotional
(00:24:43)
like turmoil over something rather than
(00:24:45)
the child's absolutely right and and you
(00:24:48)
know luckily kids are pretty durable we
(00:24:49)
can get it wrong and and it doesn't mean
(00:24:53)
that they're going to come to harm but
(00:24:54)
that is something Reena and I think
(00:24:56)
through in this episode right if if it's
(00:24:57)
if you feel compelled to talk with your
(00:24:59)
kid about your sufferings in the past
(00:25:01)
like why you know what's behind it who's
(00:25:03)
it serving what's it for and you want to
(00:25:05)
be really clear in your mind because
(00:25:07)
it's it's not your kids's job to help
(00:25:09)
you work this out right you're not if
(00:25:11)
you're just going to vomit all your
(00:25:13)
nonsense onto them and suddenly it's
(00:25:14)
their responsibility to process all of
(00:25:16)
that that's an act of violence on your
(00:25:18)
kid versus like hey you know I have a
(00:25:21)
history of with alcoholism and I've been
(00:25:23)
sober for a long time and like let me
(00:25:26)
tell you about like how all of this
(00:25:28)
happened and like kind of how I manage
(00:25:30)
it now like that can be helpful
(00:25:32)
especially you know with a you know a
(00:25:34)
genetic predisposition or what what have
(00:25:36)
you to do it like you know from just a
(00:25:39)
place of calm Detachment you know as as
(00:25:42)
a means of like helping them make sense
(00:25:45)
of how they're going to navigate those
(00:25:46)
opportunities when they arise about
(00:25:48)
whether they're going to pick up or
(00:25:49)
indulge or not yeah yeah I mean we have
(00:25:52)
hard earned wisdom we want to spare our
(00:25:55)
kids pain there are lessons we've
(00:25:57)
learned we'd rather they don't have to
(00:25:59)
learn them the hard
(00:26:00)
way and teenagers don't like to be told
(00:26:05)
right so we have to sort of sit in that
(00:26:06)
tension of how do we give good guidance
(00:26:08)
give good advice share what we need to
(00:26:11)
in a way that makes them receptive and
(00:26:13)
not allow our emotions to be regulated
(00:26:16)
by theirs like this idea like it's our
(00:26:19)
job to love them it's not their job to
(00:26:20)
love us it's true it's
(00:26:23)
true and there's so much gratification
(00:26:26)
in parenting and so much pleasure but
(00:26:29)
it's really um we're here to care for
(00:26:33)
them and and caring for ourselves well
(00:26:36)
is part of how we do that but it's
(00:26:38)
really about creating an environment for
(00:26:41)
kids where they feel safe where there is
(00:26:43)
warmth where there is structure where
(00:26:45)
there's a grownup in the
(00:26:46)
room and um and just you know seeing
(00:26:50)
what unfolds from there well I think
(00:26:52)
that's a good place to kind of end it
(00:26:54)
for today and set up the podcast which I
(00:26:57)
believe is episode 190
(00:26:59)
three of the show uh should I share my
(00:27:03)
mental health struggles with my teen um
(00:27:06)
it is the ask Lisa podcast you can find
(00:27:09)
it on all the podcast platforms our
(00:27:12)
newest uh and most exciting new addition
(00:27:15)
to the voicing change uh Network and
(00:27:17)
we're just we're delighted to have you
(00:27:18)
Lisa so thank you for coming and sharing
(00:27:21)
with me today and everybody should go
(00:27:22)
and listen And subscribe and do all the
(00:27:25)
stuff yeah Rich thrilled to be
(00:27:27)
partnering with you and we're very
(00:27:29)
honored and touched so exciting times
(00:27:32)
ahead indeed and you'll come back and
(00:27:34)
we'll do a full blond one at some point
(00:27:36)
cool cheers
(00:27:38)
peace
(00:27:40)
enjoy do you think a lot of families are
(00:27:42)
dealing with this I think more families
(00:27:44)
are dealing with this than not having
(00:27:46)
things that families are trying to
(00:27:47)
figure out how and when to bring up with
(00:27:49)
their teenager is more the rule than the
(00:27:55)
exception episode 193 should I talk with
(00:27:59)
my teens about my own mental health
(00:28:01)
challenges so how you doing
(00:28:05)
uh how about
(00:28:07)
you you know I feel like I'm on this
(00:28:09)
hamster wheel I never get off but I keep
(00:28:11)
telling myself oh it's just five more
(00:28:13)
minutes and you're going to get a nice
(00:28:14)
long break and that break never comes no
(00:28:17)
it really the to-do list never ends
(00:28:19)
Reena and and I I don't know how I have
(00:28:23)
not figured this out yet I keep thinking
(00:28:26)
that somewhere somewhere there is an end
(00:28:28)
to the to-do list and I really am trying
(00:28:30)
to be like I step in and out of it I'm
(00:28:32)
just not in it all the time but I kind
(00:28:34)
of feel like I'm in it all the time
(00:28:35)
anyway I wonder what studies say about
(00:28:38)
this like we always think that we're g
(00:28:39)
to be done and we're not done well
(00:28:42)
actually it's funny you should mention
(00:28:43)
that because there actually is one of my
(00:28:45)
favorite research studies shows of
(00:28:46)
course you have a study on this I have a
(00:28:48)
favorite of course a favorite like I
(00:28:49)
like a live for these we have a study
(00:28:51)
that shows that like if you ask people
(00:28:53)
about how busy they are now and how busy
(00:28:55)
they'll be in the future they reliably
(00:28:57)
say oh I'm very very busy now but I
(00:28:58)
won't be busy in six months they think
(00:29:01)
somehow out there is is is Leisure um we
(00:29:05)
have to believe that or else we're going
(00:29:06)
to self-combust well it's true but this
(00:29:09)
is also How We Do ourselves in because
(00:29:10)
we agree to things in the future because
(00:29:13)
we think well I'm busy now but I won't
(00:29:15)
be busy then so yes let's put it on the
(00:29:16)
calendar and that's how we end up with
(00:29:18)
these over full calendars is this um
(00:29:20)
distorted belief that the future is
(00:29:22)
somehow full of leisure and extra time
(00:29:24)
oh we've got to learn to say no that's a
(00:29:26)
hard thing it's a very hard thing
(00:29:29)
I love this letter that came into our
(00:29:30)
inbox uh about a parent who's dealing
(00:29:33)
with their own history of mental health
(00:29:35)
challenges I want to get right to it
(00:29:36)
dear Dr Lisa I'm a mom of three
(00:29:38)
teenagers as most parents with children
(00:29:40)
of this age my husband and I are having
(00:29:43)
lots of conversations about mental
(00:29:44)
health I come from a family with mental
(00:29:46)
health issues including alcoholism
(00:29:48)
depression anxiety and eating disorders
(00:29:51)
I myself had anorexia during college
(00:29:53)
I've not shared this part of my story
(00:29:55)
with my children and I think it is
(00:29:57)
important that I do so so they
(00:29:59)
understand their family history and how
(00:30:01)
important it is for them to build
(00:30:02)
healthy coping skills I'm not sure how
(00:30:05)
to start this conversation and how much
(00:30:07)
to share with them at this point in
(00:30:08)
their adolescence what do you think is
(00:30:10)
the best way to talk to my children
(00:30:12)
about my past thank you do you think a
(00:30:16)
lot of families are dealing with
(00:30:17)
this I think more families are dealing
(00:30:20)
with this than not I would say that it's
(00:30:22)
probably the rule not the exception that
(00:30:24)
families have things in their past
(00:30:26)
either the parents of their own past or
(00:30:28)
even family history that they are trying
(00:30:31)
to figure out how and when to bring up
(00:30:33)
with their kids I think about in my
(00:30:35)
clinical practice how not rare it has
(00:30:39)
been that I will sit with families who
(00:30:42)
maybe I'm caring for their teenager and
(00:30:44)
they will say oh by the way also her
(00:30:47)
grandfather who died you know before she
(00:30:49)
was born actually died by Suicide we've
(00:30:51)
never mentioned it our kid is kind of
(00:30:53)
depressed should we tell her do we bring
(00:30:56)
this up do we not having things that
(00:30:58)
amilies are trying to figure out how and
(00:30:59)
when to bring up with their teenager is
(00:31:01)
more the rule than the exception but I
(00:31:04)
worry if I bring it up then they're
(00:31:06)
going to think okay I'm going to have
(00:31:08)
Suicidal Thoughts I'm going to be this
(00:31:10)
person I'm GNA so as a parent I don't
(00:31:12)
want to mention it or bring it up I
(00:31:15)
think that's exactly right I mean we all
(00:31:17)
feel so um loving and worried about our
(00:31:21)
kids that you don't want to do anything
(00:31:23)
that's going to rock the boat and so
(00:31:25)
this letter writer and I think lots of
(00:31:27)
parents sit in this tension of it feels
(00:31:29)
like this is important information for
(00:31:31)
my kid to have but what's going to be
(00:31:33)
the impact of sharing this information
(00:31:35)
and is it going to have unintended
(00:31:37)
consequences I want to pick up where she
(00:31:39)
talks about I think what really stood
(00:31:40)
out of the issue she talked about was
(00:31:42)
the eating disorder right you you this
(00:31:44)
is your expertise I mean what do you
(00:31:46)
think the mom should do in regard to
(00:31:48)
knowing that she had a history of an
(00:31:50)
eating disorder so I think this helps us
(00:31:52)
kind of start to tease apart some
(00:31:54)
principles that can be useful as
(00:31:57)
families are thinking about if when
(00:31:58)
they're going to say something to their
(00:32:01)
teenager and I would say as a generic
(00:32:03)
rule you should have this whatever the
(00:32:06)
issue is it's probably best if it's
(00:32:09)
pretty well metabolized on your end one
(00:32:11)
thing that would be really really
(00:32:13)
helpful in these conversations is if any
(00:32:15)
parent who is suffering with something
(00:32:17)
or has suffered with something so this
(00:32:19)
parent with a needing disorder really
(00:32:21)
feels like it's behind them you know
(00:32:23)
really feels like it's something that
(00:32:25)
they um have worked their way through
(00:32:27)
they understand in retrospect what
(00:32:30)
occurred they can offer insight into it
(00:32:34)
I I would want that would be the ideal
(00:32:36)
condition and if they're not Lisa well
(00:32:38)
exactly I mean of course we have parents
(00:32:40)
you know who of course suffer while
(00:32:41)
parenting so let's come back to that
(00:32:43)
because I think that's a really
(00:32:44)
important question like what if a parent
(00:32:46)
is actually working their way through
(00:32:47)
depression like how do we talk with kids
(00:32:49)
about it but for something that's in the
(00:32:51)
past minimally I would want it to be um
(00:32:54)
something that the parent feels like
(00:32:55)
they've got their hands around and and
(00:32:57)
it doesn't feel uncontrolled to them
(00:32:59)
when it comes up I think another
(00:33:01)
principle that we really want to bring
(00:33:04)
to bear
(00:33:05)
here is how we bring up delicate
(00:33:08)
conversations about anything with
(00:33:10)
teenagers even if you have no drug
(00:33:12)
history in your family you're going to
(00:33:14)
need to have a conversation with your
(00:33:15)
teenager about feny right I mean so like
(00:33:17)
this is a constant challenge in
(00:33:19)
Parenting teenagers is that we have
(00:33:21)
important and delicate things we need to
(00:33:23)
say and it's not always easy to get
(00:33:26)
those across to teenagers one way way to
(00:33:28)
think about this is to remember
(00:33:30)
teenagers have a lot going on their
(00:33:32)
minds are very busy they're thinking
(00:33:34)
about 40 different things um we may be
(00:33:37)
aware of two of them but there's 38 more
(00:33:40)
happening and so when we just suddenly
(00:33:43)
bring up something big and important out
(00:33:46)
of the blue it tends not to go that well
(00:33:50)
because they didn't see it coming they
(00:33:51)
weren't really ready they don't know why
(00:33:53)
we're talking about this so I think that
(00:33:56)
part of what we want to look for here
(00:33:57)
are
(00:33:59)
openings so I think you know especially
(00:34:02)
with teenagers you're going to get these
(00:34:04)
openings they're going to talk about the
(00:34:05)
classmate who is losing weight rapidly
(00:34:08)
they're going to talk about the
(00:34:10)
classmate who's getting into way too
(00:34:12)
much booze right so your chances of
(00:34:15)
having a successful conversation go way
(00:34:17)
up if you're actually stepping into a
(00:34:20)
conversational line the teenager has
(00:34:22)
already started as opposed to being like
(00:34:25)
hey I've got a big thing sit down let's
(00:34:27)
have this conference ation so I would
(00:34:29)
wait I I think I would wait until and
(00:34:32)
it's very high guarantee at some point
(00:34:35)
the teenager is going to bring up
(00:34:37)
something in the vein of what the parent
(00:34:38)
wants to talk about and then I think the
(00:34:41)
parent can say something like
(00:34:44)
actually I I have more experience with
(00:34:46)
eating disorders than I wish I did I
(00:34:48)
actually had one in college do you want
(00:34:49)
to hear a little bit more I think giving
(00:34:52)
teenagers um a little control about how
(00:34:54)
much they hear or how much they hear all
(00:34:57)
at once is probably a third thing I
(00:34:59)
would strongly recommend but do you
(00:35:01)
think it could be a little bit jarring
(00:35:02)
if the the this comes up casually in
(00:35:05)
conversation like whoa whoa whoa what
(00:35:07)
you had an eating disorder and there
(00:35:09)
were maybe no signs or maybe suffering
(00:35:12)
from alcoholism maybe there are no
(00:35:14)
signs I think it can be very jarring I
(00:35:17)
think I mean there are parents who are
(00:35:19)
sober and their kids you know are you
(00:35:22)
know may be very aware of it because the
(00:35:23)
parent doesn't drink so it may have come
(00:35:25)
up more naturally than something like an
(00:35:27)
eating disorder
(00:35:29)
but I do think Reena there's value when
(00:35:31)
you have to share some pretty heavy
(00:35:33)
stuff about your own
(00:35:35)
history I think that part of how we
(00:35:37)
signal to teenagers that we have it in
(00:35:39)
hand is to say I have more experience
(00:35:42)
with this than I wish I did how much do
(00:35:44)
you want to hear it there are things I
(00:35:46)
want to tell you but you let me know how
(00:35:48)
much you want to hear right now I think
(00:35:50)
that that makes it far more
(00:35:54)
bearable but I'll tell you Reena like
(00:35:56)
you are right teenagers want to us to be
(00:35:58)
boring kids need us to be boring like I
(00:36:02)
think that you know in many ways it's
(00:36:05)
it's ideal for them if we can give them
(00:36:07)
a pretty like you know not a lot going
(00:36:10)
on over here just available to support
(00:36:12)
you as needed and so when we bring up
(00:36:15)
truths about the fact that we're whole
(00:36:17)
and real people with long complicated
(00:36:19)
history sometimes we have to account for
(00:36:21)
the fact that that that's not exactly
(00:36:23)
what they are always um counting on or
(00:36:26)
wanting Lisa you were saying a little
(00:36:27)
bit about this will come up organically
(00:36:30)
in a way that you can enter the
(00:36:33)
conversation and discuss it but what
(00:36:35)
about I want to go back to eating
(00:36:37)
disorders I don't know if that just
(00:36:38)
stood out to me in the letter we talk
(00:36:39)
about it a lot you have flagged so many
(00:36:42)
times that this is not just a white girl
(00:36:44)
problem that it affects men um it
(00:36:46)
affects boys and girls from all
(00:36:47)
different races so talk to me about what
(00:36:50)
about that it does it affects people of
(00:36:53)
all Races ethnicities sizes right I mean
(00:36:56)
Eating Disorders are very equal
(00:36:58)
opportunity and they're very dangerous
(00:37:00)
and and so you know we want to be really
(00:37:02)
thoughtful about how we talk about them
(00:37:04)
so for sure if a teenager brings it up
(00:37:08)
right I think that that creates an
(00:37:10)
opening to start to have a
(00:37:12)
conversation it also may be that a
(00:37:14)
teenager brings it up right using finger
(00:37:16)
quotes by going on a diet right that you
(00:37:19)
know you can imagine can you imagine
(00:37:21)
right as a parent of who has suffered
(00:37:23)
with an eating disorder knows how
(00:37:24)
harrowing they are how scary it would be
(00:37:28)
to see your kid suddenly get weirdly
(00:37:31)
serious about Fitness or weirdly
(00:37:33)
restrictive in what they eat and I think
(00:37:36)
here again is an opening an opportunity
(00:37:39)
and I think if the parent themselves
(00:37:41)
suffered from an eating disorder there
(00:37:44)
also may be a genetic loading that the
(00:37:46)
kid needs to know about well talk to you
(00:37:48)
about that because I was wondering if
(00:37:50)
you have gone through these mental
(00:37:52)
health issues are your children higher
(00:37:55)
probability that they will be
(00:37:56)
susceptible or will definitely have
(00:37:58)
these there's no definite will you will
(00:38:01)
have like I we know that for sure
(00:38:02)
there's never a one toone correspondence
(00:38:05)
but is there a vulnerability and the
(00:38:07)
answer is like yeah we do know that
(00:38:09)
there's a genetic component to eating
(00:38:11)
disorders this doesn't mean your kid's
(00:38:13)
going to have an eating disorder but it
(00:38:14)
does mean that you probably need to flag
(00:38:16)
to them that they need to be careful
(00:38:18)
that they may be be more vulnerable and
(00:38:20)
then this is the same as true for
(00:38:22)
alcoholism we know that this can run in
(00:38:25)
families not just from what we would
(00:38:26)
call environmental effect of kids seeing
(00:38:28)
adults drinking more that there can be a
(00:38:30)
biological
(00:38:32)
vulnerability and so if there's a family
(00:38:34)
history of alcoholism we need to let I
(00:38:37)
think we need to let kids know and I
(00:38:40)
think that it can be very helpful to
(00:38:42)
actually drill down on exactly what it
(00:38:44)
is maybe transm you know getting
(00:38:46)
transmitted genetically and this is
(00:38:48)
stuff we pretty much know but like you
(00:38:50)
know we're always learning so for eating
(00:38:53)
disorders some of what we know can get
(00:38:55)
shared or can be a biological
(00:38:57)
vulnerability is a very high tolerance
(00:38:59)
for Hunger not everybody can tolerate
(00:39:02)
hunger I cannot tolerate hunger as soon
(00:39:03)
as I'm hungry I've got to eat yeah there
(00:39:06)
are people though who can just ignore
(00:39:09)
their hunger and we think this may have
(00:39:11)
a genetic loading and we know that it
(00:39:14)
can make it easier to have an eating
(00:39:17)
disorder if you can just not mind being
(00:39:20)
hungry for
(00:39:22)
alcoholism the way we think about where
(00:39:24)
the genetic loading comes through
(00:39:26)
there's a few different features so
(00:39:28)
fundamentally you know alcohol is a
(00:39:29)
biological agent that acts on our
(00:39:31)
biologies and everybody's biology
(00:39:34)
interacts differently with biological
(00:39:35)
agents some people don't like Advil some
(00:39:38)
people you know like it's just different
(00:39:39)
for different bodies so for alcoholism
(00:39:41)
we think there's a few mechanisms in
(00:39:43)
play one is how pleasurable you find
(00:39:47)
alcohol to be right some people don't
(00:39:50)
really like the feeling of being buzzed
(00:39:53)
other people love the feeling of being
(00:39:56)
buzzed and this is can be true for other
(00:39:57)
substances as well we think that is
(00:40:00)
genetically conferred in part another
(00:40:02)
thing is how much it takes you to feel
(00:40:05)
an effect some people are born with just
(00:40:08)
a very high to like they can drink a lot
(00:40:10)
and it just
(00:40:12)
doesn't
(00:40:13)
really you know do have much impact they
(00:40:16)
are at higher risk for alcoholism and
(00:40:19)
substance concerns and then the last is
(00:40:23)
how bad the after effects are some
(00:40:26)
people most people right if they get
(00:40:28)
really drunk they're going to feel
(00:40:29)
really terrible the next day there are
(00:40:33)
people who have a biology where they
(00:40:35)
actually shake it off real fast and it
(00:40:38)
doesn't have that much of a negative
(00:40:40)
consequence for them that is also
(00:40:42)
biologically based and that makes us
(00:40:43)
worried so telling kids like it's not
(00:40:47)
just like random genetic like just like
(00:40:49)
having them know what the risk really
(00:40:52)
looks like is important I still have to
(00:40:55)
tell you if I have met mental health
(00:40:58)
issues as a parent I don't feel
(00:41:00)
comfortable discussing them it makes me
(00:41:03)
anxious and I I just don't want to have
(00:41:05)
and I know we've got to have these
(00:41:06)
uncomfortable conversations but what's
(00:41:08)
your advice when you have that talk even
(00:41:10)
if you're entering it in a natural
(00:41:12)
organic way what should I keep in mind
(00:41:14)
if I have mental health issues and I'm
(00:41:16)
talking to my kids about this well it's
(00:41:18)
funny Rea I'm actually gonna think about
(00:41:20)
something that Tova said last week in
(00:41:22)
our conversation about like what's this
(00:41:24)
about for me to have a client who was
(00:41:26)
talking to us about building resilience
(00:41:28)
yeah you know that question of like I
(00:41:31)
feel like I need to talk with my kid
(00:41:32)
about my history of and then fill in the
(00:41:34)
blank and yet I am coming up against a
(00:41:37)
lot of internal resistance I think that
(00:41:39)
is such a good signal to actually unpack
(00:41:42)
that resistance a little bit what's my
(00:41:44)
worry what's my worry in telling my kid
(00:41:47)
because say you smoked a ton of weed in
(00:41:50)
high school say you smoked a ton of weed
(00:41:51)
to high school that you totally regret
(00:41:53)
it you know you wish you hadn't and you
(00:41:56)
feel like okay I've got this life lesson
(00:41:58)
I want to keep my kid from making the
(00:41:59)
same mistakes I want to say something to
(00:42:01)
them but also I don't want to say
(00:42:03)
anything to them yeah so interrogating
(00:42:05)
the like what's the worry and I'll I've
(00:42:08)
got shame I've got Shame about it I
(00:42:10)
don't want them to know so maybe they'll
(00:42:12)
think it's okay because I did it um
(00:42:14)
maybe they have an impression of me that
(00:42:16)
I think will
(00:42:17)
change those are wonderful reasons I
(00:42:20)
think you just rattled off a lot of the
(00:42:22)
top concerns right which is I don't want
(00:42:25)
them to think less of me I don't want to
(00:42:26)
take it as perion I don't want them to
(00:42:29)
take it as permission you know I don't
(00:42:30)
what was the last one you said it was so
(00:42:32)
right on um I don't want them
(00:42:36)
to um the shame I think the shame of it
(00:42:39)
right okay I feel ashamed about about
(00:42:41)
this yeah I think that one of the
(00:42:44)
beautiful things about
(00:42:46)
teenagers is that you can have meta
(00:42:49)
conversations you can have conversations
(00:42:51)
about the conversation you're about to
(00:42:53)
have so say a parent comes to the place
(00:42:56)
where they are ready to talk with their
(00:42:58)
teenager about having smoked a lot of
(00:42:59)
pot in high school and yet they are
(00:43:02)
anxious that their kid is going to take
(00:43:04)
this as permission for the kid to do as
(00:43:07)
they please around cannabis past age 14
(00:43:11)
you can say to most teenagers listen I
(00:43:14)
want to talk with you about my own pot
(00:43:17)
smoking in high school and what I
(00:43:18)
learned and I want to try to spare you
(00:43:20)
lessons that I learned the hard way but
(00:43:23)
let me just say at the outset this is
(00:43:24)
not me giving you permission to do it so
(00:43:26)
just tell them tell
(00:43:28)
I'm sharing this CU I want you to know
(00:43:29)
I'm sparing you I love that language you
(00:43:31)
said I'm sparing you y yeah I want to
(00:43:34)
spare you you know I learned the hard
(00:43:35)
way I'd rather you not have to learn
(00:43:36)
this lesson you can do the same say
(00:43:38)
there's something I feel like I need to
(00:43:40)
share with you about um my own struggle
(00:43:42)
with an eating disorder in high school
(00:43:44)
or college but I got to tell you I feel
(00:43:46)
kind of ashamed like there's a part of
(00:43:48)
me that still feels Shame about it and I
(00:43:49)
just want to play my cards face up
(00:43:51)
teenagers are generous and interested
(00:43:55)
and very tender around their adults
(00:43:58)
vulnerabilities like I've learned that
(00:43:59)
like they know that well they know and
(00:44:02)
they don't know that we're whole unreal
(00:44:04)
people with histories um they don't like
(00:44:06)
to think about it all the time but if we
(00:44:08)
have it under good enough control and
(00:44:10)
can just talk about it in a pretty
(00:44:13)
straightforward way in my experience
(00:44:15)
teenagers can take that in stride and
(00:44:18)
leave with whatever message it was that
(00:44:20)
you were hoping that they would take
(00:44:21)
from it when you look at um healthy
(00:44:25)
coping Lisa I I'm just curious because I
(00:44:28)
want to also talk about what makes for
(00:44:31)
good healthy coping well it's
(00:44:33)
interesting when you were reading that
(00:44:34)
letter
(00:44:35)
Reena the writer said something about
(00:44:38)
like how do I help them move towards
(00:44:40)
healthy coping and as soon as she those
(00:44:43)
words came out I was like oh this lady
(00:44:44)
has this totally under control because
(00:44:47)
what she has fully metabolized is that
(00:44:50)
her eating disorder whatever else it was
(00:44:52)
about was about unhealthy coping right
(00:44:54)
that's what all of these behaviors that
(00:44:57)
we worry about fundamentally at bottom
(00:45:00)
having common abusing substances is
(00:45:02)
unhealthy coping Eating Disorders are
(00:45:04)
unhealthy coping like you're trying to
(00:45:05)
get your hands around something you've
(00:45:07)
landed on an unproductive
(00:45:09)
self-destructive
(00:45:10)
strategy so I think that when we need to
(00:45:15)
talk with teenagers about past events
(00:45:18)
past history Family Life the all-time
(00:45:20)
opening that's going to come is somehow
(00:45:22)
around coping right kids have to cope
(00:45:25)
they have their ups and downs they have
(00:45:26)
good days and bad days and so we're
(00:45:29)
watching their coping and we're
(00:45:30)
reflecting on their coping and so when
(00:45:32)
your kids's like oh my gosh I had the
(00:45:34)
worst day ever I'm going to go for a run
(00:45:36)
you know without being too corny about
(00:45:37)
it you can be like you know what that is
(00:45:38)
such beautiful coping that is exactly
(00:45:40)
how we handle hard things it sounds so
(00:45:42)
corny but you're you're getting them to
(00:45:44)
be aware that what they are doing is
(00:45:46)
taking the pressure off like you know
(00:45:48)
going to go play for play basketball I'm
(00:45:50)
going to go listen to really loud music
(00:45:52)
in my room exactly and and so I think
(00:45:54)
you know every relationship between
(00:45:56)
parent and child is its own Universe in
(00:45:57)
its own unique thing and you can't
(00:45:59)
really tell people how to do it but I
(00:46:02)
think that the fundamental is if a
(00:46:04)
parent knows they're in a good place
(00:46:05)
with their kid to say you know what that
(00:46:07)
is such healthy coping and it's not the
(00:46:08)
kind of coping I was using when I was in
(00:46:10)
high school and I'm so proud and happy
(00:46:13)
as your parent that you've already found
(00:46:15)
your way to such healthy strategies or
(00:46:17)
the flip say the kid is doing
(00:46:19)
destructive things say look you get to
(00:46:20)
be upset you get to have hard things
(00:46:22)
unhealthy coping is not an option the
(00:46:25)
strategy you're using is unhealthy I
(00:46:27)
have a lot of sympathy for this I chose
(00:46:29)
on healthy strategies when I was in high
(00:46:30)
school but I love you too much I'm not
(00:46:33)
letting you do it this way just tell me
(00:46:36)
like what do you see in teens that are
(00:46:37)
like you're like yes that's really great
(00:46:40)
coping skills like what like what is
(00:46:41)
healthy coping that you would love to
(00:46:44)
see in teens I get such a smile on my
(00:46:46)
face around this question because
(00:46:47)
healthy coping in teens can look so
(00:46:50)
different from healthy coping in adults
(00:46:52)
right healthy coping in adults it's like
(00:46:54)
you call a friend you go out to dinner
(00:46:56)
you you know take a shower healthy
(00:46:58)
coping and teens honest to God can be
(00:47:00)
your super hairy 17-year-old son
(00:47:03)
rereading Captain
(00:47:06)
Underpants teens sometimes go back to
(00:47:08)
little kid stuff as part of healthy
(00:47:10)
really I know that te they love video
(00:47:13)
games as part of healthy coping you know
(00:47:15)
and within limits like a distracting
(00:47:17)
video game that just you know connects
(00:47:18)
them with friends or changes their you
(00:47:20)
know what they're thinking about that's
(00:47:22)
healthy coping teens love music they
(00:47:25)
love listening to music for healthy
(00:47:26)
coping
(00:47:27)
teens will go do physical stuff um teens
(00:47:31)
love to eat Comfort foods for healthy
(00:47:33)
coping and again within limits
(00:47:35)
everything at moderation that's totally
(00:47:37)
fine Reena we've talked about this the
(00:47:39)
Skin Care overthe toop skin care stuff
(00:47:42)
we have yes we have can be healthy
(00:47:44)
coping so I think that um when we're
(00:47:47)
trying
(00:47:48)
to see that our kids are engaged in
(00:47:50)
healthy coping it's really imperative
(00:47:52)
that adults kind of widen the lens and
(00:47:54)
not just look for like a meditation
(00:47:56)
practice as evidence that their kid is
(00:47:58)
using healthy coping for some people
(00:48:00)
it's like shopping on Amazon or exactly
(00:48:03)
I want to ask you as we're wrapping it
(00:48:05)
up here what do you want parents to
(00:48:07)
really keep in mind when it comes to
(00:48:10)
dealing with this topic of telling your
(00:48:12)
children here are my mental health
(00:48:15)
issues that I've struggled with you know
(00:48:17)
re when you ask it that way it really
(00:48:19)
helps me home in on the key thing which
(00:48:21)
is it has to be about the teenager
(00:48:24)
you're sharing this information because
(00:48:26)
of something that you really care about
(00:48:28)
in your teenager whether they're
(00:48:30)
starting to exhibit behaviors that
(00:48:32)
you're worried about or um they have a
(00:48:35)
friend who they're concerned about or
(00:48:39)
you're sending them off to college and
(00:48:41)
somehow these conversations have never
(00:48:42)
come up and you know that college can
(00:48:44)
involve a lot of new stresses and so you
(00:48:46)
want to make sure that they
(00:48:48)
know your worries about biological
(00:48:51)
vulnerabilities to unhealthy coping
(00:48:53)
right that there's got to the kid has to
(00:48:54)
be at the center I would say don't it up
(00:48:57)
if it's just let me just tell you about
(00:49:00)
my life and a really upsetting and
(00:49:01)
disturbing to my child part of my life
(00:49:05)
it that's not really of um how we want
(00:49:09)
to approach this as parents like we
(00:49:10)
always want to approach this from the
(00:49:12)
standpoint of what is my kid need and
(00:49:14)
how can I use my experience to try to
(00:49:16)
help meet those needs not I have this
(00:49:19)
really painful story and the time has
(00:49:22)
come for you to hear it because that's
(00:49:23)
how I would approach it I would be so
(00:49:25)
dramatic and be like this is just I'm so
(00:49:28)
embarrassed by this and but you're also
(00:49:31)
saying pay attention to the tone in
(00:49:32)
which you're delivering this it's got to
(00:49:34)
be about the kid and what the kid needs
(00:49:36)
and Reena I think what you're describing
(00:49:38)
a lot of parents would feel and
(00:49:40)
warranted like of course these are like
(00:49:43)
our pasts can be hard people go through
(00:49:46)
Terrible Things everyone deserves
(00:49:49)
support around that that needs to be I
(00:49:51)
keep using the word metabolized it needs
(00:49:53)
to be metabolized it's not your
(00:49:55)
teenager's job to metab it for you or to
(00:49:58)
help you metabolize it and I think that
(00:50:00)
that's the distinction we want to make
(00:50:02)
So Lisa tell me what if you're currently
(00:50:04)
suffering with this issue like it's not
(00:50:06)
one and done in the sense of like you've
(00:50:07)
put it in the past it's deep in the
(00:50:09)
closet what advice do you have for
(00:50:11)
parents who are still struggling there
(00:50:12)
are parents who suffer from clinical
(00:50:16)
depression there are parents who have
(00:50:18)
anxiety disorders that are not under
(00:50:20)
control it is not by any
(00:50:25)
means a basic expect
(00:50:27)
that we are somehow parenting in full
(00:50:29)
mental health right I mean that that is
(00:50:31)
just not what is realistic it's not what
(00:50:34)
a lot of people's lives are I think here
(00:50:38)
there needs to be honesty with kids I
(00:50:42)
mean kids can see it especially
(00:50:43)
teenagers and I think again and you know
(00:50:46)
this is so hard when a parent themselves
(00:50:48)
is suffering there has to be a focus on
(00:50:50)
the kid and the kids's needs and so I
(00:50:53)
think a parent needs to try to get to a
(00:50:56)
place where they can say say I am
(00:50:59)
suffering from clinical depression I am
(00:51:01)
working with my doctors on trying to get
(00:51:04)
it under control and get it to a place
(00:51:07)
where I am really feeling better and
(00:51:09)
able to do more um I know this cannot be
(00:51:12)
easy for you and I want you to know that
(00:51:15)
your needs matter tremendously to me and
(00:51:17)
I'm going to make sure they get met even
(00:51:19)
as I find my way through this I think
(00:51:21)
that anything that a parent is suffering
(00:51:24)
with that um stands to interfere with
(00:51:27)
their ability to be the parent they want
(00:51:28)
to be should be addressed from a
(00:51:31)
standpoint like that a lot to think
(00:51:34)
about here um but you giving us these
(00:51:37)
tips of what to look out for how to say
(00:51:40)
it and to keep the kid really at the
(00:51:42)
focus can help with these conversations
(00:51:45)
I think that's right and I really I'm so
(00:51:48)
grateful for this letter because I think
(00:51:51)
this parent speaks to so many parents
(00:51:54)
experiences of having
(00:51:57)
lived through something having a
(00:51:59)
knowledge base that they you know earned
(00:52:02)
the hard way loving their kid wanting to
(00:52:06)
spare their kid pain wanting to use
(00:52:08)
their own experience to spare their kid
(00:52:10)
pain and running up against the reality
(00:52:13)
that to even try to coordinate with your
(00:52:15)
teenager about pickup from soccer yeah
(00:52:20)
exactly it's like next to impossible so
(00:52:22)
how do you have conversations like this
(00:52:25)
yeah I think that that is really really
(00:52:27)
um you know that just comes across so
(00:52:29)
clearly in the letter this this parent
(00:52:31)
understanding those tensions of things I
(00:52:33)
want to share and sometimes the
(00:52:36)
extraordinary challenges of having even
(00:52:38)
everyday conversations with teenagers it
(00:52:40)
isn't always easy in fact especially at
(00:52:42)
certain age it comes really harder I
(00:52:43)
think so Lisa what do you have for us
(00:52:45)
for parenting to go on this topic of
(00:52:48)
needing to have an important
(00:52:51)
conversation with a teenager if you get
(00:52:53)
an opening take it I think that's my
(00:52:55)
number one advice you don't always what
(00:52:57)
get those
(00:52:58)
openings and I think that there are
(00:53:00)
times in parenting where you feel like
(00:53:02)
okay this conversation has to happen no
(00:53:03)
opening has arrived I think then we need
(00:53:06)
to be thoughtful about how we approach
(00:53:08)
it and my advice is get on your kids
(00:53:10)
calendar say to your teenager there's a
(00:53:12)
conversation I need to have with you
(00:53:14)
about and then fill in the blank and
(00:53:15)
make it clear that it's not because of
(00:53:17)
something the kid did you know this has
(00:53:19)
been on my mind and the opportunity is
(00:53:20)
not Arisen are you available for that
(00:53:23)
conversation now is there a time in the
(00:53:24)
next few days where we could sit down I
(00:53:26)
don't think will take us more than 10
(00:53:27)
minutes but I'm H you know but we'll see
(00:53:30)
engage them in when the conversation
(00:53:33)
happens a little bit about how the
(00:53:35)
conversation happens do not do a sneak
(00:53:37)
attack sneak attacks don't go well great
(00:53:40)
advice Lisa thank you thank you for
(00:53:43)
walking us through this and thank you to
(00:53:45)
the parent who wrote this letter because
(00:53:47)
um I it just makes you realize that you
(00:53:50)
can have these conversations and the
(00:53:52)
right way to do it I want to thank you
(00:53:53)
so much Lisa you bet and so next week
(00:53:56)
we're going to talk about what do you do
(00:53:57)
when kids at school are spreading ugly
(00:53:59)
rumors about your kid we'll have that
(00:54:01)
next week I'll see you then I'll see you
(00:54:04)
next week
