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Hey everyone, welcome to Bite Your Tongue the Podcast.
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Join me, your host, Denise Gorant, as we explore the ins and outs of building healthy relationships with our adult children.
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Together, we'll speak with experts, share heartfelt stories, and get timely advice, addressing topics that matter most to you.
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Get ready to dive deep and learn to build and nurture deep connections with our adult children.
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And of course, when to bite our tongues.
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So let's get started.
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Hello everyone, I'm Denise.
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Welcome to another episode of Bite Your Tongue the Podcast.
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I want to apologize in advance.
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I've got a bit of a cold today, so my voice is a bit off.
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So thanks for bearing with me.
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Anyway, I want to start right off by thanking our listeners.
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If it were not for the thousands of downloads from over 150 countries, that's true, guys.
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We are getting downloads from all over the world and numerous letters.
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There's no question I could not keep this up.
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But we're continuing, and we're continuing to bring you the best guests and fresh ideas to help you build healthy relationships with your adult kids.
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I don't know about you guys, but I listen to episodes more than once, sometimes more than twice.
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And I take notes.
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I hope you do too.
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Because sometimes it can get so messed up in your head.
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And some of the advice we bring to you is quite impactful, and we hope you'll use it.
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Now, before we start with our guest, I want to cover a tiny bit of business and a small favor.
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Please, please follow us on social media.
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I know, I know.
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I am not a big fan of these platforms either.
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But more followers really helps us build our platform, visibility, monetization, and our brand.
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And that will keep us going strong.
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So if you can just take a minute and find us on Facebook at Bite Your Tongue the Podcast and on Instagram at BiteYourTonguePod, follow us.
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It will help so much.
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And I'm really going to look at the numbers and see if this goes up after this episode.
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And also, I want to take a minute and wish all of you a very happy, healthy holiday season.
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This will be our last episode this year, but we'll be back in January with brand new conversations and some exciting new guests.
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All right, enough business, guys.
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Let's get on to today's episode.
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If you've been listening for a while, you know we've spent a lot of time.
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We've talked about boundaries, communication, respect, and all these basics about staying connected to our adult children.
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And I always think we've got to find new things.
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Well, today we're taking the conversation to the next level, to what my guest, Dr.
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Francine Toder, calls Parenting 2.0.
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Francine is a clinical psychologist, university faculty emeritus, writer, and the author of Your Kids Are Grown, Parenting 2.0.
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A book that's equal part mirror, guidebook, and a general wake-up call for all of us parents trying to redefine our role in our children's lives.
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She writes beautifully about the ache many of us feel when our grown kids are distant, busy, and defensive.
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When those quick calls feel more like obligation than real connection.
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She offers us some real practical wisdom to let go, not out of defeat, but out of growth.
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Today we're talking about what happens after the basics, how to rebuild a relationship that feels mutual, not parental, how to find peace when your expectations may collide with the reality.
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How to create a life that's full and satisfying beyond your role as mom and dad.
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So let's dive in to parenting 2.0 with Francine Toder.
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And right out of the gate, I'll let you know that she has a wonderful parenting 2.0 tip sheet for parents and adult children.
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She'd be happy to share it with you if you email her at Francine at D-O-C.
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That's doc D-O-C Toter.com.
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Hey so, Francine, welcome.
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I've really been looking forward to this.
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We've been doing this podcast for nearly four years, and I feel like we've talked about it all boundaries, communication, biting our tongue.
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But what struck me about your book, first of all, it was filled with just everything.
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I mean, I want these listeners to know this book just has everything from A to Z.
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You can almost use it as a Bible where you refer to things when you have issues going on.
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What struck me was it asked parents to evolve.
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And in the introduction, you write something like, Your kids are grown.
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What's the problem?
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So let's start there.
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Why do you think the tension doesn't end or even get stronger as our kids become young adults?
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When the kids are grown, they're adults, at least those that are over 25, because 18-year-olds don't really have very good judgment in general.
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You're dealing with adults who have different ideas, values, different hopes, different dreams than you.
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And it can be disappointing and even unacceptable.
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You never dreamed that it would be this way.
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How could you know?
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Okay, time to adapt.
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Yeah, that's exactly right.
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Time to adapt, but how could we know?
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You talk about it, and I've talked about it with my friends, this knot in our stomach or tension when something's going on with our adult kids.
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We all know we love our kids, they're like part of ourselves, and yet they're not.
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So they lose their job, they're getting a divorce, they're raising their kids in a crazy fashion.
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We think it's a crazy fashion.
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I don't mean to say it that it is a crazy fashion.
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But anytime they're going through painful things or things that go completely against everything you think you've raised them with, you do get this tension in your stomach.
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What's happening there emotionally between our adult children and us?
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I think when you experience that kind of tension in your body, it signals something.
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Sometimes it's defensiveness, sometimes it's disbelief, sometimes it's readiness for a fight or an argument.
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But it's it's really called somatization.
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And this is when the body is acting out the emotions that you're experiencing.
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It's another clue.
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Sometimes we don't really know what we're feeling until our body signals us.
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It isn't a time for good outcomes, but that can be accomplished.
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It's a time when you feel that way, but you don't want to get into a yes but situation with your kids.
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Because it signals you this is not a good time for a conversation because I'm feeling either overwhelmed or I'm feeling unable to process things very well.
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And many times that's the time that we do want to reach out.
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We want to say, what are you doing?
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or how can I help you?
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Or are you sure you want to get divorced?
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Right.
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So, what advice do you give to parents?
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What are the steps they need to take to not maybe get them to this point where they have this knot in their stomach?
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For starters, we have dreams and then we have expectations, but it isn't theirs.
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So we may have imagined and maybe even played out our hopes in our imagination, but they're in a life stage where there are more pressing needs and worries than having a relationship with mom or dad, and they may take that for granted.
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Whereas it might be a priority in your life, and you want to fix things and help them and care about their decision making, they may not want to hear that from you.
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And sometimes it's perceived as intrusion or demand, and that's the worst thing that can happen at that time.
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Just basically, when you hear their pain, listen to it.
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Try to understand it, try not to argue with it, try not to say yes, but uh try not to fix it, just be with them.
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It's called empathy, understanding that that's where they are.
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That's an easy thing to say and a very hard thing to do.
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Oh, absolutely.
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You know, listen, all of this is hard to do.
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It goes against our very grain to take this kind of a stance, which is not the stance that we took while we were raising them.
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Do you think my parents, parents of the generation before us, also dealt with this, or we were different kinds of adult children?
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What do you think's changed that this is such a talked-about topic right now?
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I think things are much different than they were.
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Parents of the generation of the 50s, they let their kids roam free.
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Life sort of played itself out.
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We weren't as parents weren't as responsible for the kids' behaviors.
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Kids are growing up more slowly now.
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And part of it is the economy, and a part of it is the length of time it takes to mature, get an education, find a career, going to college or trade school or whatever it is.
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It all takes longer, and everything is more difficult today than it was for, you know, the generations that came before.
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And they were more resourceful, they were left on their own to solve problems, where today's kids have parents who are much more involved.
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It interferes with one's ability to develop on your own.
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So it's really a detriment that we're so involved at so many stages in their life that they don't get a chance to sort of fumble and get up again and fumble and get up again.
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Everyone expects when their kids leave college they should have a six-figure job, be able to rent a good apartment or buy a house or whatever.
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And we don't have the patience.
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Why is it the footing taking so long?
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You say it's harder.
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I felt, I remember when I first started out, I thought the houses were so expensive and it was hard to get a footing.
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Is every generation harder?
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Is the next generation going to be even harder?
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I can't predict the future.
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Oh, you can't.
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What's the problem here?
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I mean, I tried to tackle a lot of stuff in the book, but predicting the future isn't one of those things.
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I I it's hard to say.
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It does feel like increasingly the world is becoming more complex.
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And I think with the advancements in in AI, we're also going to see things get much more difficult for recent college graduates to find their footing, make a living.
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And the cost of living is extraordinarily high.
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It wasn't always this way.
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I could get into the economics of things, but I don't think that's relevant.
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Yeah, no, no, I get it.
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I think we understand it.
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I just can't figure out how different it is now than then.
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I know it's a higher cost of living and all of that, but I remember feeling some of that as a young adult too.
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So I just wonder how different it is.
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But let's move on.
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Well, what one thing, one thing I could say is that in an earlier generation, we let kids find out things on their own.
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And sometimes those kids who are now adults having kids, having adult kids, feel like they had to do too many things on their own.
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They had to stumble too many times.
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They had not enough support from their parents.
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And then what you know, in the next generation, I talk about this in the book, tends to go overboard in the other direction.
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And I think there's some movement back now toward moving away from being as involved with our kids as this generation has been.
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No, that makes perfect sense.
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So they felt like they weren't attended to so much, so they really wanted to attend to their kids.
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Because I remember when I bought my first house, my parents weren't involved at all.
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Yeah.
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Yeah.
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So one of the takeaways is from one of your interviews with adult children was their desire to be treated as equals.
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What are some of the subtle ways that we're not showing them we feel like they're equals?
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And how can we improve on this?
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Even though we mean well, we might be doing things not purposefully.
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Yes, and I don't think we do things to harm our kids.
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We just play out these familiar, overlearned patterns.
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So I I include some of these on my tip card, which by the way, I'm happy to send listeners.
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But here are a few.
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One, in conversation, if you're talking more than 50% of the time, then you're lecturing, not listening.
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We have this overlearned history of raising kids and giving them information, providing them with knowledge and giving them the best of what we understand about life.
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But when they're an adult, they don't want to hear that.
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They will stop listening as soon as you start lecturing.
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Another is don't interrupt, judge, or help without an invitation.
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And certainly don't criticize.
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You wouldn't do this with an adult friend.
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Think about it as they're your peer, they're your friend.
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I mean, obviously that's a different relationship, but you would never talk to a friend the way some of us talk to our adult kids.
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Just remember that they want that.
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Whether they need more or not is another story.
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For a quality, see them not as you want him or her to be, but as she really is.
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This is really hard.
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We have this fantasy about who these kids are going to be, and it's hard to let go of that.
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And often they aren't that, but we don't want to see who they actually are.
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That is really hard because I think every we've talked about this in other episodes where the minute you have that baby in your arms, you have dreams, grandparents have dreams, everyone has dreams, and typically the dreams don't pan out.
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They do their own thing, they're their own person.
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But as a parent, you've given 100% of yourself.
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How do you then let go of that without being sad?
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Or I mean, I guess you grieve a little bit.
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Well, first it's awareness.
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You have to be aware, that's what's going on.
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That takes a lot of work on oneself.
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You have to see that this is about you and not about them.
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And and you know, often we want to find some cause in the external world, not in ourselves.
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That's the work.
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And of course, I'm a psychologist, so you know, I understand the work, but it's really hard to do.
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Not just when they're born, we have fantasies about them before we're born.
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Yeah, I guess that's true too.
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What kind of children we'll have, right?
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That's true.
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It has a long history, and it's really hard to you know shift gears at that point.
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But they are who they are, and as much as you want to manipulate it so that they fit more your fantasy or your hope or your wish, it's not gonna happen.
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And the more you try, the worse it gets.
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Well, that's it, because trying is interference.
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And it's saying to them basically, you're not okay the way you are.
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And believe me, if you want to push your kids away, that's the way to do it.
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One more thing I wanted to add is make sure that while your words are saying one thing, your nonverbal message isn't saying something else, isn't condescending.
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Sometimes if we're talking to them and they're trying to make a point about who they are, where they're going, what they're trying to do, we're kind of biding our time, waiting for the next word to come out, got our arms crossed.
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We really show impatience, and that doesn't help anything.
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But awareness is the first step.
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Notice that you're doing this, get feedback from someone who's there as a third party, observing, so that you can do something about it.
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I guess the thing I struggle with the most is you say you wouldn't talk to a friend like this.
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I feel like I have such authentic relationships with my friends that if they were doing something that I thought was just absolutely crazy, I think I would talk to them with much more directness than I would my adult children.
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So then sometimes I feel like because I'm paying so much attention and trying to be so aware of my actions and not overstepping, I'm not building such an authentic relationship.
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With your friends, it's two ways.
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Right, that's true.
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That's true.
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You don't just tell them stuff.
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No, no, you're right, you're right.
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They don't get offended in a way that your adult child might.
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If you really had an equal relationship with your adult child where they can tell you when you're messing up, right, and where you don't get it, where you're, you know, you're you have biases and you're open to hearing that, then it you it can be more equal.
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But often it doesn't that doesn't that part doesn't really fit too well.
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And also when you're talking to a friend, usually, I mean, I like to say, is it all right if I tell you what I think?
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I don't necessarily just tell people that I disagree with them.
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For I mean, that maybe some of this is style.
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You're a lot nicer, you're a lot nicer than I am.
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My friends know I'm completely direct.
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That's the stupidest thing I've ever heard.
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Yeah, well, I mean, not everyone goes for that, but um if your friends do, then you've got good matches there.
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No, I do.
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I must have good matches.
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And I'm also fine for people to say, Are you crazy?
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You know, and I say, Well, wait a minute, what do you mean?
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I really want to hear it.
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I know that they respect me already, and I guess that's the difference.
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Our kids are not sure that we completely see them as equals.
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They think what we're saying is talking down to them as children.
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Whereas when I say to a friend, Are you crazy?
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or a friend says to me, Are you crazy?
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I already have a history that they think I'm pretty terrific.
00:16:52.799 --> 00:16:53.039
Right.
00:16:53.200 --> 00:16:54.399
Okay, so here's the thing.
00:16:54.639 --> 00:16:58.159
Would you be okay if your kid said to you, Are you crazy?
00:16:58.480 --> 00:17:00.480
Yeah, I really would be, because I would want that.
00:17:00.639 --> 00:17:00.799
Okay.
00:17:01.360 --> 00:17:02.159
I really would be.
00:17:02.320 --> 00:17:02.799
I really would.
00:17:02.879 --> 00:17:03.840
I'd say, What do you mean?
00:17:03.919 --> 00:17:04.640
What did I say?
00:17:04.799 --> 00:17:05.920
What was so crazy?
00:17:06.160 --> 00:17:07.920
Right, but you'd be open to hearing it.