Guest Episode
September 13, 2024
Episode 66:
Ally Parenting
Listen or watch on your favorite platforms
Cynthia Klein is a Family Happiness Expert and Parenting Coach. Cynthia's passion is to create world peace by first creating peace within each family.
As the author of Ally Parenting, she has created a unique formula for parents to transform conflict into cooperation. For more than 29 years, she has spoken in person at hundreds of schools and organizations, successfully coached parents of 5 to 25-year-olds, and taught numerous online courses based on her highly effective Ally Parenting approach.
She earned a Child Psychology Degree at U.C. Berkeley, taught elementary school, and is certified in adult education.
Today we will discuss the common challenges parents face, and how cultivating relationships in the family is essential.
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so there's two kind of basic ways of parenting when there's a lot of
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parenting experts and there's actually punishment is one way and discipline is the second way punishment is based on
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how do I control my child to make them turn out the way I want them to how do I
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control so do I use um shaming fear intimidation what do I do to control
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them so it's really about the parent having control so discipline is based on
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on teaching and guiding Your Child So how do I teach them what disciple
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discipline comes from disciple so how do I teach and guide how do I influence my
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children and they're going to actually turn out the way what's best for them so
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we give much more freedom to kids in terms of making choices for their lives
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greetings hello good day wherever you are in the world thank you so much for joining trueu hope Cy official podcast
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information about us you can easily visit trueu hope canada.com if you're listening on iTunes
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please leave us a review it's very very helpful today I welcome family happiness
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expert and parenting coach coach Cynthia Klein to the show today I welcome family happiness
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expert and parenting coach Cynthia Klein to the show Cynthia Klein's passion is to create well Peace by creating peace
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within each family as the author of Ally parenting she has created a unique
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formula for parents to transform conflict into cooperation for more than 29 years she has spoken in person at
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hundreds of schools and organizations successfully coached parents of 5 to 25-year-olds and taught numerous online
2:02
courses based on her highly effective Ally parenting approach she earned her child psychology degree at UC Berkeley
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taught Elementary School and is certified in adult education today we're going to discuss some of the common
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challenges that parents have and how cultivating relationships in the family is absolutely essential enjoy the show
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all right hello Cynthia welcome to True H Hope cast really appreciate you coming on today and giving us your time um how
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are you it's great great to be here and lovely to meet you and get to know you
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better Simon wonderful why not as an intro just let us know who you are and what is it
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that you do so I'm Cynthia kleene and for the
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last 28 years I have worked with parents of five to 25 year-olds who are they're
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not happy with the relationship that they're having right now with their kids like maybe they're not communicating
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well maybe they're the kids they feel like the kids aren't cooperating or they don't like how they're interacting they
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don't like what's coming out of their mouth and what they're thinking saying and doing and so I am an educator I got
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my degree in child psychology I went on to be a school teacher so I am not a
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therapist I am somebody who teach specific skills on language and thought
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that will actually Shi shift their relationship so they can achieve what they're hoping to achieve and which is
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always a a more connected relationship to their kids wonderful why the why that age
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group why five to 25 well I work a lot on language so
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young kids they aren't as capable to do the problem solving that I like to
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teach um and then up to 25 it's because it's there's still they might be they
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might be in college they might be at home they might be away there's still a real opportunity to make some shifts in
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relationships I mean it's more challenging when you've got someone who's 2122 if you have negative patterns
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have gone on but it's still possible and I wanted I want parents to know that
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they don't have to like okay I you know they're gone they're out of the house there's nothing I can do but I want them
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to know that there is some changes that they can still make they can still learn better Communications
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skills yeah I think that's very important because you know as a as a
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child you will have multiple different relationships with your with your parents whether that's your mom or your
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dad or both of them as a unit um obviously as you grow up and you're a young child and then you start you know
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you're a teenager and then you're an adult and then you start having your own kids like obviously you change as an individual and you know you go through
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multiple identities and things change so therefore your relationship with yourself your relationship with your
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friends your family your partner like everything's going to evolve and change so yeah I don't see why we can't always
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be looking to do some work and be aware of like how we are communicating with each other so yeah it makes sense that
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you would work with those older um the parents of older children as well I
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think that's obviously very important what um yes what do you what
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do you think has led us into a position where we actually need professional psychological support for parenting
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obviously that wasn't always available um so what do you think I mean it's great that it is it's a wonderful that we've got so many different therapies
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available for so many different things but what do you think has led us into the position that we require something like
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that um so first of all I when I work with parents I make sure that they
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understand that I'm I'm a teacher so I'm an educator so there's no um there's
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nothing wrong with them psychologically so if there is if they feel like they
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have their own issues deep issues from when they were younger they need to deal with I pass those on to somebody else um
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or I work a lot with couples it I don't have to but primarily I work with couples so two people together coming
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together and they come in from different backgrounds um and if they need marriage
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counseling then I pass them on with somebody else so I think since the beginning of time I think parents have
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been trying to basically keep their children alive like that's been the fundamental concern what do I do to keep
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them alive um it wasn't at all based on what is the relationship like between me
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and my kids that's a very New Concept like thinking of how are they feeling
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how are they thinking how do I connect with them that is is you know that's maybe 50 60 years so very new so if you
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have a new goal you're trying to reach then you need to new do new strategies
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to reach that goal so what comes up all the time is parents a lot of parents I
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work with they're really wanting to change the relationship with their kids and they um old stuff comes up for them
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that they how they were parented that they didn't like maybe shaming blaming shaming
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blaming humiliation um making kids feel bad to do better punishment has been a role
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model since the beginning of time okay and that does not build a relationship
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it might build one based on fear and intimidation and obedience but when parents are saying I I want something
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more right I want my kids to talk to me when they have problems
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how do I create a an environment where they can do that so then you can't take the old strategies the old strategies
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got a certain result but if you want a new result you have to learn new skills
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so that's why it's like nothing's wrong with parents it's they're saying I want
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a different outcome so I need to learn new skills to get that outcome it's very
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it's very basic and I I really implore parents to not feel like they're a bad
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parent or they're supposed to know you only know what you've learned right there's there's no
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innately you you don't innately know how to listen you don't in you know you only
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know how you were raised and so parents I feel really need to let go of this
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guilt or like if I love my child uh that's enough or I should know how to
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listen or and I really want parents to get rid of that it's all skill-based
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because that's always what it was right it was always the you know the mother
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father teaching the kids how to parent and all a sudden you're saying you know what I want a different outcome so I
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have to go I go to an expert which is what I am on really I can really hear
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from what they tell me what they're saying and doing I can pick up on where they're um creating um a relationship
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that isn't going to turn out the way they want to so an expert like myself can really hear that hear the language
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and then say okay let's shift your thinking you're actually very adversarial let's shift your thinking
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towards your kids and let's change away from you feeling like a victim and let's
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have new language and then you're going to get a different response from your kids so it's education that's
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all interesting so I mean it's it sounds like when you when you're discussing
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obviously you've got the experience with parents coming in and speaking with you that they do want something new they do
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want something different rather than their past experiences because I think maybe what we've gotten now is we've got
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we've had generation after generation after generation of parenting in a very particular way quite discipline based um
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and as you say parents now want more because we can take care of the
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survival stuff of keeping those children alive a bit easier these days it's obviously not for not for everybody but
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most people can provide food can provide shelter can provide warmth and protection so yeah that that urging for
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something new and for something deeper and I like to think that we we as a society are getting slightly better at
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being open to being vulnerable and being open to our emotions a little bit better and being able to communicate how that's
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actually working I feel that there's there's obviously a whole genre of books and individuals out there who are doing
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a lot of that work and when those individuals get to a certain age where they become aware of maybe their past
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patterns aren't serving them in the best possible way and they want to do some self-work to develop themselves I think
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that's wonderful and to have those Outlets available for people is great so going back in like going back in
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those generations and those histories what do you think the um what's the source of this like really like
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discipline-based punishment type of parenting where does
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this kind of like come from because we're clearly breaking through it right now right so um let me uh clarify
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language and definition of words so that people know you know people who are listening know how I'm talking about it
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so there's um two kind of basic ways of parenting when there's a lot of
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parenting experts and there's actually punishment is one way and discipline is the second way okay so it's two
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different Avenues two ways of thinking so punishment is based on how do I
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control my child to make them turn out the way I want them
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to how do I control so do I use um shaming fear intimidation what do I do
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to control them so it's really about the parent having control so discipline is based on teach
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teaching and guiding Your Child So how do I teach them what disciple discipline
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comes from disciple so how do I teach and guide how do I influence my children
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and they're going to actually turn out the way what's best for them so we give
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much more freedom to kids in terms of making choices for their lives then we do with punishment
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punishment is parents are the boss they know what's best and they're going to
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use whatever means they they want to to try to get the outcome they want for
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their child but it's discipline it's a different mindset so when you were talking about this whole thing like from
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the 50s 60s the psychology the introspection like that's think of how
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long human beings have been here and how new that is like that's really new to be
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self-reflecting I mean you see all these movies and plays of the olden times they weren't sitting around and
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self-reflecting you know so now parents are thinking okay um what can I do
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differently to get a different result from my child but what's happening there's this huge conflict because the
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old punishment style keeps coming up because that's what's been around for so
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long and that's where parents go when they're upset and angry they resort to
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all right if you don't do this right now then you know that's that's a punishment right if you don't that's like a threat
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um they resort to that because that's because kind of like a lower life
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Condition it's coming out from anger and and control and they are like I don't
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want to do that you know however what's happening is to learn how to set
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guidelines and rules which you have to do in a way that isn't shaming is very
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difficult for parents to learn like uh uh for example an after then approach
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which is the work before play it's a one of my favorites like my daughter who's now um a young woman married is the only
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way I'd get her to do the like let's say clean the bathroom let's say she wanted
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to go to a friend's house she's a teenager and I would think okay what hasn't she done yet okay so at the
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moment she's wanting to to to go I'd say oh oh she hasn't cleaned the bathroom
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after you clean the bathroom then you can go of course you'd complain wait wait a minute all my friends are getting
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together now why you know why didn't you tell me sooner so as a disciplinarian I
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ignore all of that stuff because she's trying to engage me into an argument a
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parent in a punishment mindset would defend themselves and they would stay engaged instead I just say um after the
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bathroom then you can go but you should have told me sooner you know another argument bathroom
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first and it always worked like so you see how I'm I'm not getting engage with
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making her feel bad you know I what could I have said right what would have been a great thing to say to make her
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feel bad if you want you ex
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yeah yeah yeah if you yeah if you yeah if you don't do the bathroom you're not going to
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go yeah and then also if you had done it sooner like don't blame me it's not my
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fault you didn't do it if you had done it earlier then you can go off with your friends see so parents get into all this
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garbage that hurts the relationship it really hurts it and
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there's no need for it so that's one of the big things I teach parents how to be when you're having to set a guideline
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you you get rid of all that shaming stuff you just stick to the point and you know what it is amazing how it works
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so I wrote this up this story this particular one yeah it's and so has that's the thing
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you don't it's the Judgment there's so much judgment goes on you're not good
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enough you should have oh I really work with parents on getting rid of the you should you should you need to I want you
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to why didn't you all of that hurts relationships so when parents learn
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about that like oh my gosh I mean I can work on not saying these few words to
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start out and and and I'm going to get a different response like isn't that
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Simple Simon I mean isn't like oh okay okay I'm not going to say if you don't
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I'm not GNA say why didn't you I'm not gonna say how many times do
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I have to tell you and instead I'm G to replace it with a few simple things so that's what I love doing it's like
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parents are like oh my gosh it's not it's not like I'm an awful parent it's just that I don't have the skills that's
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all excited yeah no I I I understand the use of language is is is beautiful and it
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can be implemented in such a powerful way to build Bridges and yeah I have a
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lot of sympathy especially for parents who have got like the young kids you know the one two three fours and they've basically been tired
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and sleep deprived for you know a few years and being able to have the um
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ability to communicate without that emotional aspect and immediately go into
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those should have and you must do and stuff like that I I I totally understand
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you know I've got my own personal experience with that it's very difficult to do but it's amazing that um parents
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who come and see you finally have the um awareness and the ability and and the
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time to start thinking in a different way and they've obviously always had those the they've always had the
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potential to understand your practice and your theory right but being able to
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to put it into practice is not so easy but being able to work with you and learn and and have those skill sets is
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is just wonderful I've got a question on what do your the majority of the
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people who the majority of the parents who come and see you what's their main
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goal I'm sure they've got a lot of like you know they come in and you have this initial conversation and they tell you
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the whole story but like I suppose it comes down there there's one big reason why they've made this appointment with
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you and what are the more common
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reasons um they're arguing with their kids too much is a big reason and they
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feel really bad about it my kid argues about everything you know I I say could
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you please help me unload the dishwasher and they just argue it or I'm I say it's
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time to get off the the tablet and they argue with me um so that that that sense
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of wanting to set limits um that are followed seems to be
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the most the most urgent they come in for and then the secondary thing is they
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really want to have a better relationship they really want to feel
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better with their kids they want their kids to tell them more about their life
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and their problems they want to have a teenager when they leave the house or
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young adult that's going to actually want to still see them and will call them and
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share and and ask for support that's that's like that and that
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there you know that wasn't there isn't that beautiful it's like okay and and so
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the thing is the two work hand in hand it's like learning the language so
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you're not hurting the relationship ship so you're not using shaming blaming humiliation so learning how to set
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directives where you're not hurting it then I teach how to listen and respond
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when you're either doing collaborative problem solving or it's the child's problem to solve how you do that and
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when they're teenagers how you manage the frustration you feel inside when
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they're doing stuff that you're going you oh my god what are they doing so
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learning how to have unconditional love is a tough thing I try to teach as
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well does how how much does happiness come into it you know like I think
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obviously a lot of parents they just want to be they want to be happy with themselves they want their kids to be
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happy and they also want the communication and relationship to be happy as well there's a lot of layers
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there there's a lot of individuals that need to do need to do some do some work so it's
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like yeah like how how does happiness come into all of this I think one of the things that's
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important to realize is that problems lead to happiness that having
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challenges and knowing how to overcome them and getting the support to get through hard
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feelings and difficulties that that is really happiness that ability to do that
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that's what builds this solid foundation of okay I come on life because life is
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full of problems I can handle it I've got my parents to support me I mean you
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think I think about those um people who were well-known professional athletes or whatever almost always they always say
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my parent I had a parent and adult who really supported me don't they like when you think think about it they're they
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don't say oh I did it on their my own and so I think that's to me for my
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life is like it happiness isn't like oh having fun so if parents think that I
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need to please my child to make them happy I want to help them shift that
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that's not I mean that's um very um transitory happiness right it just comes
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and goes if you get something but the fundamentally build the relationship ship where you feel um at home I'm loved
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and I'm respected like you know I this a safe
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place for me to me that you know that's happiness and then you because when you
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have that Foundation then you can go out and enjoy you know things fleeting things that make a person happy so I
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really want to help parents know how to build that Bond I worked very hard at it and I have that with my daughter uh
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because that was my big mission was like you know I want to know how to be a
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parent and she had some major challenges happen to her how can I be a parent that
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she feels can come to her and so I've had many cards she wrote me as she was growing up saying thank you for being
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there during the mountains and valleys during the hard times in the easy times that's that's what I treasure those are
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the cards I keep from my daughter that I was there for her so I don't know to me that's great happiness like somebody you
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know I'm helping somebody else and I know I have the skills to know how to do that especially with my daughter and my
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husband who've been married for long time and that's not just an incredible achievement for you but you're obviously
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passing on wisdom and a skill set to another human being who is going to um
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be a certain way in the world and and pass pass that on that's great
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yeah yeah and we talk she knows about like I communication blocks is one of the things I teach and she knows all
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about those and so she's she you know wants us they moved recently and she wants us to move down there to be near
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her so that's a that's a high achievement right wow that's the plan I'm you know
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come on Mom yeah she should the opposite of that so you've done something right that's
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for sure yeah yeah I've work I've worked and so here's the thing is my mother didn't
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know how to listen or support I mean she was born in the 20s so she didn't know
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and I remember as a teenager um I was on bed crying because I had another fight
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with her and I can remember hearing her out in the kitchen talking to my dad as
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though nothing had happened like I was devastated and she acted as though it
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didn't matter because that was her whole upbringing and I was like determined
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like I don't want that you know if I have a teenage daughter I want something different and so everything I teach
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parents I had to learn it wasn't like oh I had this great mother who knew how to
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do this and I learned it it's like everything I teach I teach parents what
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I had to change myself like I really had to do a lot of deep change of my
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thoughts um learn new language learn a whole new skill set so that's why I feel
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very confident that when people are determined I want to change I'm going to take responsibility for changing the
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relationship with my child I'm not going to say they need to change first because when you change they change that I can
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teach them because I learned it and you know there's no reason anybody else count it's not easy you know you have to
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change patterns you have to keep your mouth shut at times when you want to say things however I've worked with some
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many parents hundreds of parents who just are like feel so much happier when they change and they feel know better
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about what's coming out of their mouth right rather than this negativity certainly let's talk about
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those communication blocks because they they're probably excuse me they're probably some of the key
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setbacks um that you know hold families back and they probably creep up without
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a lot of parents really knowing that they're they putting up these massive barricades between themselves and their
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kids so can you talk a little bit more about um about that please yeah and um my daughter
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encouraged me to watch this movie called ladybird because it's about a teenage
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girl and her mother and so if anyone wants to see in play communication
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blocks you watch the movie ladybird um because as I was I was just watching it
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yesterday I was watching it I was like cringing because what what when a person
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is or kids or anyone is expressing some thoughts like you know I I let's say you have a teenager and they're saying you
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know I'm not sure where I you know where I should go to school or I don't know
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what I should study so especially when a person's brought out something or a
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friend saying you know I'm having this problem with um this person I work with
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or a child saying I can't can't do this homework it's too hard if it's so if
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it's something that somebody's expressing that's uh usually it's done when they're a
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challenged and so how we respond determines whether they keep talking or
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whether they shut down and the gift that we can give a
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person I think is when we support a person with a sense of confidence in
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their brain that they they they can kind of figure things out when we listen in a
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way that makes them feel that safe and secure then what happens is they can
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they're pre prefrontal cortex the reasoning part of their brain can gradually engage more let's say they're
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upset and they get upset oh I can't do this this is too hard or my boss is awful or you know I just don't know what
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to do is when you listen in a way that allows them to keep expressing those
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emotions from the lyic system then gradually they'll be able to
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engage their thinking part of their brain the prefrontal cortex so that's the important uh part of the block is we
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have to let the emotions out first the emotional part of the brain has to be expressed because as long as we're
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emotional state we can't think right I mean and everybody knows
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that right when you're upset you you you know and you make decisions it's not the best decision so the idea of a
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communication block is or not blocking is to is to think how do I
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respond to my child's so they will keep talking versus how am I responding now
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that would make them stop talking so um child says okay I don't know I don't
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know where to go to school I don't know what to study and the parent says well you know you're really good at math I
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think you should do that so that is all of a sudden the parent giving advice
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which is one of the communication blocks unwanted advice so the the teenagers is like like like okay well you you know
29:59
what's best you're you know how can how can they talk anymore because they feel shut down and they feel hurt because
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you're acting as though you know more about their life than they know and the parent thinks they're
30:13
helping right like that's the intent often is we
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think we're helping but in that case it shut them down from Talking even let's
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say and I love talking about it with adults because it deals with adults as well so your friend says you know I I
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just can't stand my boss you know there this they're just so difficult to work
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with and let's say you say yeah you know you've said that before and and maybe you don't want to
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work there anymore you know maybe you really need to be in a better job than
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that so this again is kind of it's like I know more what you should do than you
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know and how would that make you feel if I said that to you Simon if I just started telling you what you should
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do yeah it's quite an invasive proposition because obviously there's so
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much that goes into that whole situation that I'm experiencing there's a psychological element there's an
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emotional element you know it's it's it's very very deep and I've experiencing it all with my senses all
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of the time and then to have a very quick callous response like that would
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be you know not are you really listening to me it's like what's going on here yeah yeah and I'm not being helpful
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so what would be helpful if I respond in ways to allow you to keep talking so
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that you can get those big feelings out and then you can come up with your
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decisions so this is very clearly I need to be a supporter and so it'd be better
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response if I was like oh wow wow that's
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hard that's it simple yeah yeah and so it's it's there's other
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things like asking questions that feel like interrogation is another way of shutting kids down like even kids coming
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home from school and the parent says how was
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school that can feel like an interrogation even the kid says hi hi
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Dad hi Mom oh how was school fine and I get parents who say this my
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kid won't talk to me about school the reason probably is the underlying
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message of a question can feel like you've done something wrong or whatever you're going
32:46
to say I'm going to tell you it needs to be different or I'm going to start asking more questions so fundamentally a
32:52
question becomes an interrogation and so interes kid doesn't
32:57
want want to talk to because that's a big thing that I get from parents my kid won't talk to me well it's like okay
33:02
let's look at how do you what do you say when they do tell you right um so when I
33:09
started learning about this I first learned about this my very first parenting education training program I
33:14
had from a man named Michael Popkin and I used several of his his viewpoints in
33:20
my book and he said fine you can do that and it was so exciting to think of oh so
33:27
so um another thing not to say when somebody's expressing their own
33:33
challenges is to talk about myself a Meo ism is a very common thing for parents
33:39
to do it's like the child says you know this this uh I'm just not very good at
33:44
English this is awful and the parent says you know I really struggled when I was your age with English
33:52
now that may or may not be a block so if the child if the parent says
33:59
I really struggle too and the child says you did what
34:05
happened then it's not a block you see how the child is still kind of trying to
34:10
express If the child says it's different now you don't know what you're talking about leave me
34:16
alone then that has become a
34:21
block yeah so let me tell one more yeah okay no sorry please carry let me just
34:29
yeah plating is a big one so sometimes there's parents who like to be tell kids
34:34
what to do I know best and I'm going to give you advice and that shuts them down and then you have a other parents who
34:41
like want to make their child feel better which is called plating so if the
34:47
child says you know I I'm not getting along with Nikki you know she's not
34:53
calling me at all she's not texting me and I don't know what to do and then the
34:59
let's say it's to the mom mom says Oh goodie you know you know um you know honey it'll be okay don't worry about it
35:07
you you're just such a wonderful girl you've got other friends so mom's intention was to make
35:15
her feel better CU I don't want to see see my baby you know struggling but the
35:21
girl is left there going right like what what what my Fe
35:27
not listened to you're not listening to me what about my friend Nikki you know they feel really deflated and that's
35:34
another way of doing of a communication block W yeah some really strong examples
35:41
there that's for sure yeah how just how we uh how we speak and how we hold our
35:46
body language when we're speaking with anyone to be honest it's very very can
35:52
be very very powerful it can also be very very damning to to the relationship as well I know I've become a better husband because I I listen a lot better
35:59
and you know I if if say one of my buddies who I grew up with is having a conversation with me and asking my
36:06
advice or venting or whatever my Approach would be very very different with with my wife you know we we when
36:12
we're aware and we learn and we you know we can know how different people communicate and we know we're um
36:18
sensitive to that but there's certainly skills along the way that we should be
36:23
should be developing especially as we know you you got a partner of a certain amount of years and you have kids and
36:30
just so many different things come into it um how how do parents how when is it
36:37
like when do we know when to listen when to tell when to collaborate and when to
36:42
give like freedom of choice I mean this that's a that's an interesting question in regards to yeah when do we use which
36:51
skill right and and I think that it's a fluid thing and I mean I certainly kept
36:58
learning and sometimes I made mistakes and so and just so parents to know that there's no cut and drop but so I think
37:06
of it as there's three different roles that parents do one is going to be like you mentioned that giving directions
37:13
when do you do what I call a director role and then the other is when do you collaborate when do you come up with
37:19
decisions together and the third role is when do you support when do you let your
37:24
child make the final decision and it's very important to understand director
37:32
collaborator and supporter so that you have the right role now your kids might
37:37
not always agree with the role that you've chosen um so you a but for
37:45
example a director a director is when you like I shared the after then um
37:50
strategy is a director role strategy you know I wasn't letting my daughter choose
37:56
at one point we discussed that she was going to clean the bathroom that had already been discussed but at that
38:02
moment I wasn't going to let her decide whether to do the bathroom or not I
38:09
pulled up a director role strategy right now some parents if the kid says oh I'll
38:16
do it later and you get fooled and you say oh okay parents get
38:23
fooled by that all the time you just that was an incorrect then you were
38:28
letting your child decide when it was going to happen and you know what it
38:34
isn't going to happen so that's a time you need to say no you know this is my job as a parent they need to do chores
38:42
I'm a real big thing on chores you don't do tons of them but every kid needs to contribute to the household and you have
38:47
to you have to pull it up and say well this needs to be done you can
38:53
do the after that or it's time to do the bathroom um and and to know that their
38:59
angst their frustration that they can handle it like be really careful to not be
39:07
fooled and give them power so anyways uh such as emptying the dishwasher you know
39:13
getting off the internet things that they don't want that you want because
39:20
it's a rule a guideline safety things then you need to be a
39:25
director and you really you it when you can do it where you're not shaming the
39:31
kid you're not making him feel bad then they can hear it and they can handle
39:36
it so it's it's time to put the laundry away but I want to watch this show right
39:42
now it's time for the laundry but after the laundry then you can watch
39:49
the show and then you might even stick an empathy statement well you really love that show don't say I know I
39:56
usually that doesn't work I know you really no don't say that it's not about you just yeah you really love that show
40:02
period don't say but please do not say you really love that show but you have
40:08
to do the laundry because then it it it's not then it did takes away from
40:13
your empathetic statement yeah that it's a great
40:19
show after you do the laundry you can watch it so I want parents to have
40:25
confidence when they stay ha it you can even smile you know like this is it then
40:32
your kids will respect you more and they'll respond more and they'll cooperate more okay so that's the
40:37
director role and it's like Buck it up parent you got to do it it sounds it
40:43
sounds just like you're not stepping into the emotional arena in that type of situation
40:50
obviously like a 13-year-old who's like watching the show and doesn't doesn't want to do the dishwasher there's going
40:56
to be emotions that come up for that that's absolutely normal it's okay very natural but um yeah as the parent as the
41:04
Director you know you're not stepping into that emotional Arena because no one wins in that situation like if you're
41:10
just going to throw emotion at emotion it's just going to be a cluster and and you know they're trying
41:16
to get what they want in their life so okay so and you are helping guide them
41:26
on this path so that they are learning certain skills for life right kids have
41:31
to learn how to contribute to the household they're in a dorm room they have to have learned already that they
41:39
pick up their things that's a skill it's a skill as important as schoolwork I'm sorry how do
41:46
you contribute to the family um so when the kids mad at you you know you're you
41:52
just you have to be mindful that you might get trigger triggered like my kidneys listen to me why are they so
41:59
disrespectful it's important I help parents realize what are they thinking that will help will make them get
42:06
triggered so if you realize that and then you say no I'm not going there I'm just okay my kids doing their thing to
42:12
get their needs met I'm just staying the course being clear one dad had these two
42:17
teenage boys and they were he had a really hard time getting them to do what
42:22
they're supposed to do at the chores and he did the after then and he was telling
42:28
me he had to do it like five times like he had to each time he had to repeat it
42:34
fewer and fewer words and the teenage boys finally said oh all right and they
42:40
did it like like they knew dad had one because Dad stayed the course well I
42:49
don't remember what the chore was and he didn't falter and the kids gave in so
42:54
the kids need to feel your strength it's I call it soft power it's not hard it's
43:00
not harsh it's not mean it's not yelling yelling is not um a very effective means
43:07
to uh get kids to cooperate okay so collaborate um I encourage parents to
43:12
have collaborative discussions such with things that impact everybody such as
43:18
chores that impacts everybody in the household right if the dishes aren't done what do you eat off of if the
43:25
groceries aren't got gotten at the store all those things that there should be a
43:30
collaborative discussion and you start out with okay guys this impacts everybody let's get together let's talk
43:37
about what are all the things that need to be done and then let's divide them up um so once you do that this makes
43:47
sound easy I have a whole I have several chapters in my book about collaborative problem solving once you do the problem
43:55
solving then chance necess are you have to be a director to make sure they follow through so for example I gave the
44:02
example of my daughter cleaning the bathroom that was one of the chore she was doing it doesn't mean that on her own
44:09
she's going to do it so I think parents get upset they say we made this chore chart and now you're not doing
44:18
it you said you were gonna do it you get what I'm saying Simon oh yeah
44:24
I do yeah so I encourage parents once you okay you post the the chore chart and
44:31
then know they still don't want to do it but you've done the collaborative problem solving and you're still going
44:37
to probably need to do a director role strategy that's just how it is and and
44:43
don't get angry about it like that's your job I'm sorry you're the parent that's your job that's that's why you
44:51
had kids too is to help them become responsible not by
44:57
trying to make them feel responsible but by you setting up expectations and not
45:04
backing down and not getting mad by them doing it over and over again then
45:10
they'll develop that sense of that this is their responsibility might not happen
45:15
till late teenage years so I think parents get these
45:20
expectations and get mad at their kids what it um and then the third one I know
45:26
we need to wrap this probably is the supporter role like if it's their problem to solve like a friendship issue
45:34
um then you can say you know honey this like the thing my friend's not texting me or not calling me wow this sounds
45:40
like a real challenge you know you'll make the decision what to do I'm not
45:45
going to tell you what to do I can be here for you we can just kind of throw around ideas or I can just
45:53
listen and and I but it's going to be up to you to decide
45:58
because kids need to hear that because um most most the parents I work with
46:05
have taken over their kids problems like they've been jumped in as
46:10
a director like I need to fix it I can't see my kids suffering so what happens
46:15
then the kid stops talking to them because if I if they open up Dad
46:23
mom's going to tell me what to do so I don't want to talk to them so if you're trying to make a change and become more
46:29
of a supporter it's important to say to your kids you know I think I did this in the past I was always telling you what
46:35
to do is is that what I did yeah yeah I'm really working on not
46:43
doing that yeah it's I mean it's all I mean if you have the perspective as a parent that you are essentially training
46:52
your children for the real world because you're not always going to be there to be their director you know you're
46:57
teaching them to become their own director I think if you have that perspective then it is a lot easier to
47:04
not step into that emotional Battleground and then stay in this this
47:09
prefrontal you know cortex of analytical thinking and kind of staying in the moment and you know keeping your role
47:16
and know by you keeping your role you're serving your child a lot better I think
47:21
yeah having that perspective as a parent would be a lot a lot easier if you're able to just hold that thought in your
47:27
mind whilst you're you know engaging with your kids and you mentioned about like you know sitting around and discussing the chores and you know
47:34
collaborating with the family that kind of comes into the benefits of like having consistent family meetings and
47:40
what what kind of age would you do that with a child um so you can have family meetings
47:48
starting around age four or five when they're pretty young and what's
47:54
important a family meeting there's a it's helpful to have a certain structure
48:00
and that you make sure that you start out with compliments of each other like start out with something really positive
48:06
it's not like okay we need have a family meeting to talk about something I'm upset with you about it it's it better
48:12
to have it like we're this is an opportunity for everyone to bring up their issues to talk about it but let's
48:19
start out with what do you want to thank somebody in the family about or what do you appreciate so you wanted to be
48:25
you're coming together as an opportunity to share and then also um I encourage
48:32
people to have a piece actual piece of paper where people can write down what they want to talk about during the week
48:38
so for kids like you know I I think I should stay up till 9:30 it isn't fair
48:44
you know that kind of an issue and you want to discuss that you can say hey put it on that might be something you want
48:50
to talk about as a whole family if there's a conflict about that it's up to you to decide where you want to or not
48:56
you can say hey why don't you put it on the chart on the the list of things to talk about maybe we can talk about that
49:02
next week so it gives them an opportunity to know okay there's an issue I have and there's a forum where I
49:07
can talk about it and then you also want to talk about something nice during the family meeting
49:14
like maybe you're know you've got the afternoon what are we going to do on vacation what are we going to do
49:20
together or something nice and then end up with something nice a treat or a game
49:25
so it it Tes it helps bring everybody together so that you're not because
49:32
otherwise I'm going to tell you know parents and everybody's so busy like nobody has time but if you let's say you
49:39
said 45 minutes every week now with little kids you might only start out
49:45
with 20 minutes that might be as long as a five-year-old could handle it by the time they're teenagers you know um 40
49:54
minutes 45 minutes to be okay and we did it for many years with my daughter so there we have one daughter and was
50:01
always hard for her was like I'm the only kid but we have all the notes we took so you keep notes about what was
50:07
planned we have notes about what like she at one point she was going to she
50:12
wanted a basketball hoop and so she called up stores this is before you had
50:18
the internet she called up stores to find out how much they cost and when
50:24
they're going to be on sale so because of this this desire she had we didn't
50:30
jump in and fix it she took responsibility to find out things and and that builds a kid's sense of um
50:38
maturity when they take over responsibility for things so doing that in a family media is really really
50:43
helpful or maybe you want to go somewhere and you say hey how about okay why don't you Bobby why don't you check
50:50
out some of the hotels if they're old enough to do that right and bring it back the next meeting what would that
50:56
cost let's look at what our budget is so that's where kids start to feel responsible and good about themselves
51:03
when they're actually contributing to the family that's really cool I think I
51:08
think um starting starting with something positive about the family that's very very interesting bringing
51:14
notes from the week that's amazing and then finishing up the the evening with
51:20
like a a game or a movie night or something that you're you know doing together and then you end up having like an hour a couple of hours of of you just
51:27
all together which is just you know an an oldfashioned idea of family time I
51:34
suppose isn't it and one one to come together and allowance I encourage that
51:39
your kids to have weekly allowance to learn how to manage money so that's another thing that we always talked
51:45
about what was the money going to be used for what was you know was she G to spend it on a movie so that way when if
51:52
she knew her money was used for movies she never asked me for money for a
51:59
movie if she wanted to go she didn't have the money she didn't go so I never was nagged for money for
52:07
things because I helped her become empowered for a certain amount of money and for her to learn how to budget it so
52:15
allowance is another important thing to be included um in the family meetings to talk about that the money what the money
52:21
is going to be used for yeah certainly very very important part of the the the
52:26
family Dynamic and learning the value of it and learning that you can even from a
52:31
young age you can create your own wealth you know I think that's an incredibly powerful thing to to teach a child from
52:37
a young age you know what what they can possibly do with that information that they know that they can use their you
52:44
know mind and their physical body to actually create money and then as they get older and their skill sets increase
52:50
and you know everything else it's yeah it's just a massive massively powerful tool to to teach children so yeah I
52:56
think that's also a very amazing thing um going to have to finish up there now Cynthia so can you let people know how
53:03
they can connect with you please yeah I think going to going to
53:11
Ally parenting.com is a great first step my book is Ally parenting you go to Ali
53:17
parenting.com it'll take you to my website that will also talk to you about
53:23
the private one-on-one coaching I do the speaking I've talked to over 600 schools
53:30
um I I just so I think that's the best place and then I do have I think my uh Instagram is Ally dasp parenting or Ally
53:38
parenting also on Instagram that's another place that I post information and my you know my book is really um
53:47
there as a guide and will give you very very specific information about what
53:53
I've been talking about and so you can find that on Amazon at actually I think it's uh bit.ly Ally Das
54:00
parting or just Cynthia Klein Ally parenting you can find me and it's an audible as well as soft cover I'd love
54:08
to share the wisdom that I have with everyone wonderful yeah we'll make sure
54:13
that all of those links are available in the show notes to your website to your social media and to the book but thank
54:21
you so much for your time today I've I've learned I mean I've got I've got two young children and I've learned I
54:27
learned quite a few things tonight so I appreciate it wonderful glad I could help great
54:34
well great to be here yeah that's great well thank you for listening everybody this has been true Hope cast the official podcast of true hope Canada
54:41
don't forget to subscribe if you haven't yet if you're listening on iTunes leave a little review takes a minute and it's
54:47
very very helpful so thank you very much for that but we will uh see you next week thanks
54:54
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