Transcript
WEBVTT
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I think it's alarmingly cruel what we do to women.
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When we basically tell them that what you need to raise a healthy child is full investment, attention, attunement, focus, attachment, self-sacrificing.
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Do all of this.
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That's what makes you a good mom.
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Then suddenly those become her greatest liabilities that are used against her once her children are adults.
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We expect this switch to just to happen organically, because she just needs to know her place.
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I view that in a way as like kind of using women.
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Have we given any credence to her experience in the attachment?
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Given any credence to her experience in the?
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attachment.
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Hello everyone, welcome to Bite your Tongue.
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The podcast.
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I'm Denise.
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And I'm Kirsten, and we hope you will join us as we explore the ins and outs of building healthy relationships with our adult children Together.
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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 and, of course, when to bite our tongues.
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So let's get started.
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Hello everyone and welcome to season four of Bite your Tongue the podcast.
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We are so glad to be back and excited that you are here with us.
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We're going to cover everything from daughter-in-law issues being a good mother-in-law grandparent and even have a poll our guest is going to share about what bugs young adults the most and what bugs us.
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Let's see if we all agree with this.
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Denise, would you like to introduce our guest today?
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Yes, kirsten, can you believe we're heading into season four?
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This is sort of amazing, but welcome everyone.
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As Kirsten said, we're glad you're with us.
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Today.
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We're going to have Rachel Hack and I've been following Rachel on social media for a long time.
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I love all her posts.
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I love what she has to say.
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Then I looked further into her and she's a mental health clinician and she has so many degrees I can't even list them all.
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But what I like most about her is she's walked the walk.
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Not only is she a parent to five children her oldest, I think, is 18 or 20.
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She's also a daughter-in-law.
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Both of her kids have grandparents and she talks personally about all these experiences on her social media posts and that sort of thing.
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We're going to learn a lot from her today.
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I hope all of you like her as much as we do.
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Welcome, rachel, we're so glad you're with us today.
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Hi, thank you so much for having me Should we get right to the meat of this interview.
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Yeah, let's do it, let's talk.
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Okay, I love so much of what you talk about on Instagram, so I want to start with.
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You're a daughter-in-law.
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You've been a daughter-in-law for 20 years.
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You have an 18-year-old daughter.
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How do you start on the right foot with your daughter-in-law?
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Your son or daughter brings their significant other over, welcoming not welcoming too much.
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Let's start on the right foot.
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What's your advice?
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Okay, so my advice here?
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First, I want to say I actually have no personal experience in this.
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Okay, I guess I'll start by saying that I did not start off on the right foot, so I'm not an expert in that department.
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I'm actually more of an expert on how to get things back in alignment when things have gone so terribly wrong foot.
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So my mother-in-law and I did not get along initially in our relationship.
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My husband and I had been high school sweethearts.
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We had dated since we were like 16 years old.
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I'd known his family and his mom for a few years by the time we decided to get married and in high school it was a very just, sweet, standard high school relationship between her and I.
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She was very kind to me, would give Christmas gifts.
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I accompanied them on a trip to go visit him.
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In college we went away to separate schools so I went with them.
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It was a very cordial, kind relationship and it was really when my husband and I were dating at the time, through a real curveball at her.
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So I can see that right.
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Here is where you begin to have, like these, two very separate perspectives and, depending on which perspective you're looking at, you can really figure out and see the legitimacy of why one person feels one way and the other person feels another way.
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So my husband announced quite unexpectedly to his mom that he was going to be converting to a new faith.
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He also.
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Within six to nine months we were engaged, we were getting married, we were 20 years old, we were in the middle of college.
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We really just threw this right on her lap and really with the expectation of huh, we're adults, we know what we're doing and this is totally fine, she understandably, from her perspective, protested.
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Let's say she absolutely was blindsided by it because my husband, he's a peacemaker by nature, somewhat conflict avoidant in that way, so he didn't really bringing her in on what his decisions were until they were made.
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They had a historically very close loving relationship.
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So she was completely blindsided by this.
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She reacted strongly.
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I reacted strongly right back because from my perspective it was like here I am living my life, I'm an adult, we can make our decisions.
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This is an overbearing, enmeshed mother.
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She's behaving like a narcissist.
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I don't know about language at the time, but if I had a TikTok account and Insta therapy, I would have been armed with all the psychobabble and I would have used it To my perspective.
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She's lacking boundaries here.
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She's toxic.
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She was angry, she was irate.
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She absolutely let us know what she thought about these decisions.
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She was begging us to think and take more time and consider this and he had been raised in a different faith.
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She wanted time, she wanted to consult as a family and all of this, and we were kind of like, no, it's our life, it's our decision, we're doing it, you can get on board, or too bad was how we approached it.
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So thank thank God that this woman decided to fight for her relationship with her son.
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She decided to get a therapist.
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So she said, can we do therapy?
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I don't know what voodoo magic this man worked back in the day I wasn't in school for counseling.
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None of this was in my even awareness, but I agreed to go to these group, family sessions and individual.
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This therapist really did a great job.
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I don't know how he did it, but somehow I came out feeling understood.
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She came out feeling more understood.
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We had a family reconciliation conversation that went very well and it really changed the trajectory of us being able to plan the wedding and go through things with civility and some respect.
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I won't say that everything just gets buttoned up perfectly.
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The next few years it was a lot of little ruptures, mini ruptures, repairs, as we really got to figure each other out throughout the years.
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I worry that if this had been today versus 20 years ago, I really think I probably would have, without any guilt, pursued the path of like no contact.
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This has been too much.
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We need to just live our life and I would have really missed out on the opportunity to build something.
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That's been that I'm very proud of now.
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Now as a therapist and you have people coming to you, many of them, you say, are over 50 and they're mother-in-laws.
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What advice do you give to these women, or even father-in-laws, on someone's going to marry too young, someone's going to marry out of their race, religion, whatever it might be?
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How do you advise people?
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I'm in the age where our kids are getting married and this and that and how do we become part of their life, but not, like you said, overbearing, narcissistic, you know that sort of thing.
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I think it's really important to examine your expectations and the sort of unenforceable rules that come with your expectations.
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Like what is it you're really dreaming of or expecting when your son or daughter partners and ends up with another person?
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Are you expecting that this person is going to absolutely want to be a part of your family system because you're warm and you're loving and you invite, and that they're just going to want to join in and it's going to be great?
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Is that the expectation right now?
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Is the expectation that in-laws are a nightmare?
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Is that the expectation right now?
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Is the expectation that in-laws are a nightmare?
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It's like an invasion to your family system.
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It's probably going to go poorly.
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The best you can hope for is kind of a distant civil relationship with each other.
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I think we come to the table with a lot of unconscious expectations based on our history, our experiences, what we've observed, cultural messages, all of that.
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So I recommend that you examine your expectations and start to erase them.
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Like, the more you can create space for the unexpected, more you're going to be able to adapt to create a truly unique story, because that's what it really is going to be.
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It's going to be a unique story of your family and how you all relate to each other.
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So that's a complicating factor because they throw stuff back at us and I don't know that we have the tools to address whatever's going on there.
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Like we don't understand it, we're not going there, we probably won't be going there.
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So how does that play into us healing those relationships?
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Assuming that we set aside the expectations, because one of the things I see is a lot of kids are like oh well, on TikTok, tiktok, they're saying I should do blah, blah, blah, blah, and that's the direction they go.
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And here we are saying, well, let's do therapy, let's all do family therapy, and they're like uh-uh, I got it, I'm doing it my way.
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Yeah, yeah.
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Well, the first thing I counsel parents on with this one, because I even come with kind of a heavy critiquing lens on the whole TikTok insta-therapy world and the sort of oversimplified messages, so I come hard at that.
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But I don't recommend you actually do that in your relationship with your child.
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So say they're bringing up the words and you're hearing.
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You're like that's that weird TikTok stuff you guys are listening to.
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This is garbage.
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I don't recommend you say that.
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I don't recommend you just say oh, this is all that nonsense.
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You guys and your boundaries and whatever.
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I don't have to listen to any of this.
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The more defensive of a posture you assume, it's more evidence of your guilt, according to the TikTok Insta therapy world.
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So defensiveness is never going to be the posture you want to approach with this.
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So, as hard as that is because it is very hard when you're actually in interaction with your children in that way, if you need to go disarm your defensiveness with somebody else and really just pop off, go on about oh I'm so sick of this, I don't want to deal with this, I'm feeling so defensive, go ahead and go do that with somebody else.
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But when you're with your child and you're trying to like interact, really adopt a posture of curiosity, like, so okay, what do you?
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What do you mean by that?
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Let me, okay.
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I heard you say boundaries.
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What boundaries do you feel are being violated right now?
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Okay, what would you like me to do differently, and how can and how would you like to move forward together?
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What do you need from me?
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What changes are you seeking?
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I think you'll get off to a much better start if you adopt that posture versus the defensive one that understandably comes up naturally, but you've got to get that one in check.
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I think that's really important and I think we're going to cover some of that when we get to this poll, and also the pros and cons, or the things that you learn from your 50 plus patients.
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Anyway, let's move to grandparent real quick.
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We're just going over these three periods of life real quickly and then we're going to get into the real meat.
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Give us what listeners should know that make a loving grandparent and what are the pitfalls they should avoid.
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Okay, here.
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I'll actually give some personal examples because my children have grandparents on both sides and they're very different and they grandparent differently.
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But I see them very much as these beautifully unique puzzle pieces to my girls, like mosaic, that they really fill in very unique spaces for my girls' hearts in their relational world.
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I have a question Are all five of your children girls?
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They are yeah, oh, for some reason that didn't click with me.
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Okay, go ahead.
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Five daughters, yeah, and what's weird is my brother just above me has five boys, so we can't figure it out really what's happening.
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So yeah, it's pretty funny.
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Oh, my gosh, okay, go ahead.
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The family is very large so my kids get a lot in the grandparent realm of like cousins and chaos and loudness and activity.
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And then on my husband's side of the family it's smaller and they get a lot of that really focused attention, quiet, special trips, things that his family provided in a unique way.
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So I love that.
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First of all, they have that blend.
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But the feature that both sets of grandparents have in common that I think is really the thing that makes them amazing is they are unabashed cheerleaders of their grandchildren cheerleader to enjoy them, to notice everything that's good about them, to take the photos, to show up at the celebration you know the award ceremonies to be really well-versed in your grandchildren's strengths.
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Let your grandchildren see that you're well-versed in those strengths.
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The pitfalls that I see I think it's in three categories kind of criticism, I see.
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I think it's in three categories kind of criticism, discipline and favoritism.
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I think those are pitfalls in grandparenting.
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So a grandparent might see things that they think are deficits in their grandchild, things that need to be corrected behaviorally.
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You know, you really need to teach them this.
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Have you noticed that they do that Again, I just don't think, from a strategic place, it's wise to go with that route.
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You might think you're helping, but often your child is just feeling judged.
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They don't want to feel judged, so they'll remove themselves from areas that they feel judged.
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Your grandchild doesn't want to feel judged either, so they're less likely also to solicit your opinion or your advice.
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And when you're already offering up judgment in the form of criticism, so that's a pitfall.
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Okay, so you're their greatest cheerleader.
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You see the positive.
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Now your son or daughter comes to you for advice.
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Okay, I'm struggling with Sally's X, y or Z.
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Are you allowed then to say yeah, I've seen that too.
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Or here are some ideas.
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Yeah, okay, cause I worry.
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Then I'm suddenly not a cheerleader, I'm saying that's something, yeah, you know, whatever.
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I just wonder if I can then give a little bit of suggestion.
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Absolutely.
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I think when you're asked for advice like that's such an important role you serve as an elder, a mentor, a parent, a guide that they will need that sort of advice from time to time.
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They'll feel more safe to come to you with it when you haven't already been offering it here and there.
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I also think that you are in a unique position, too, to help your child keep their child in perspective.
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So if you're really well-versed in your grandchild's strengths, you can help remind your child keep their child in perspective.
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So if you're really well-versed in your grandchild's strengths, you can help remind your child of that, to help them buffer their own anxieties and concerns as a parent and keep it in context.
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So, yeah, absolutely.
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I love that too, because if the parent's really concerned, you can say you know what, I see all of her strengths and it doesn't seem anything to worry about.
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But if you're what, I see all of her strengths and it doesn't seem anything to worry about.
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But if you're worried you can talk to the doctor.
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You don't want to play down everything On Instagram.
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You took a poll.
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I was so shocked at the huge replies you got.
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You asked young adults what bugs them the most about their parents and then you asked parents what bugs them most about their young adults.
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I think the listeners will be surprised.
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Let's start with the number one thing was bad-mouthing your siblings.
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So this is your adult parent bad-mouthing a sibling to another sibling, meaning I would say to my daughter your brother's driving me crazy.
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I wish he would do this, because I do this sometimes.
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I'll say could you call your sister?
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And that's really the wrong thing to do.
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I'm sure I'll say you know she can't make a decision on this.
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Can you call her and help her, or will you tell her she needs to do this and that's bad, huh.
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It can be.
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It's so hard because I don't think there's any real black and white rules here.
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So what you're kind of alluding to is the triangulation that can happen in families, right?
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So you're having conflict and tension with one child and so it's kind of like you rope in another child, express to them.
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They seem to be listening or they're more understanding, so you end up sharing more with them, and then sometimes they can help in the role of mediation, right?
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Like, can you talk to your brother about this?
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Sometimes that can be helpful and beneficial.
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Other times it can just really start to burden the whole system because you start avoiding more and more the direct conversation that needs to be had, because there's too much anxiety around that and there's too much volatility.
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Instead of addressing that, it's like I can go over here and unburden myself in this way and maybe this child will help take care of that.
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So I do recommend caution in doing that.
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I think that when you're having interpersonal conflict of any kind, try to keep the lines as direct as possible.
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If you need more support, pull it from an outside source.
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That's more objective than the family members that are so deeply involved in all of the relationships there.
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Well, and typically what happens to me?
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If the siblings have a good relationship, they tell each other.
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Mom told me to call you.
00:17:59.227 --> 00:18:08.153
Yeah, Well, and I think too, when there's just an explicit understanding too, that, hey, I talked to mom, you know she asked me to talk to you.
00:18:08.319 --> 00:18:09.826
She's worried about this right?
00:18:10.000 --> 00:18:20.435
Yeah, I think that that's better than pretending we're not talking behind the scenes and everyone forgets and can't keep track of the secrets of who said what to who and said not to say it.
00:18:20.435 --> 00:18:22.086
It just can get really messy like that.
00:18:22.086 --> 00:18:44.707
I think it's okay to give some leeway for the fact that we talk about each other in the family, Like that's just something we do, but if it's coming from a place of goodwill and an attempt to reconcile versus just an attempt to feel heard and justified in my position and don't you understand me that's important that we're really clear about what's my goal in saying this to the sibling.
00:18:44.707 --> 00:18:49.826
I'm actually thinking this is going to help aid in reconciliation or is this just me getting to unburden to my child?
00:18:49.826 --> 00:18:50.809
Who's a better listener?
00:18:51.413 --> 00:18:57.759
So one of the other things that came up in your poll is that, from the kid's perspective, is that parents never got to know the child as an individual.
00:18:57.759 --> 00:18:59.201
Tell us about this.
00:18:59.761 --> 00:19:08.809
I think that there are children, once they become adults, they really feel like my parent doesn't actually know me, like they don't know what I do at work.
00:19:09.430 --> 00:19:12.553
They don't know my friends, they're not very curious about that.
00:19:12.553 --> 00:19:30.419
I start to really confront the fact that I really felt like I'm a piece in my parents play in their story and in their dreams and I felt that way for a long time instead of really feeling like they know a lot about me and my dreams and that absolutely can happen.
00:19:30.419 --> 00:19:37.565
I mean, you can have parents that are just very much wrapped up in the dream of what they were building for their family and their life.
00:19:37.565 --> 00:19:43.846
The children are just supposed to integrate and follow along and obey and do it the way we do it.
00:19:43.846 --> 00:20:04.423
In those types of systems that I would call very low in differentiation, oftentimes an individual child will feel unknown because anytime if they tried to express what was different about them, it was kind of clamped down on because it didn't really match with the broader system and what the parents wanted to think of the family as.
00:20:05.064 --> 00:20:05.845
Yeah, it makes sense.
00:20:05.845 --> 00:20:09.874
But I'm wondering, as a parent of an adult child, how do we know whether we've done that?
00:20:09.874 --> 00:20:15.541
Can we ask the child?
00:20:15.541 --> 00:20:16.807
You know, I read somewhere that sometimes kids don't feel seen?
00:20:16.807 --> 00:20:19.479
What if we have been doing that all along and now we want to change our ways?
00:20:20.160 --> 00:20:25.217
Yeah, well, what you just said there I loved, which is I read something somewhere.
00:20:25.217 --> 00:20:32.582
Sometimes kids feel like they're not seen, and that really bothered me because I thought have I done that in any way?
00:20:32.582 --> 00:20:34.465
If I have, I really want to know.
00:20:34.465 --> 00:20:44.992
A question that I like to have parents ask their kids is to say I know I have blind spots, so would you help point them out to me when we go?