Bite Your Tongue: The Podcast
May 3, 2024

Season 3 Episode 74 Mother's Day Special: Tell 'Em What you Want!

Season 3 Episode 74 Mother's Day Special: Tell 'Em What you Want!

When we think of Mother's Day, we often envision breakfast in bed or a sweet card, but the truth is, the gifts that mothers cherish most are the bonds they share with their children, no matter their age. 

That is what we hear today from our guests. Mary Dell Harrington and Lisa Heffernan. They are the founders of Grown & Flown, the very popular website and social media stops. Together, we unpack the transition from managing a bustling household to adapting to an 'empty nest', and how this shift doesn't mean the end of parenting, but the beginning of a new chapter.

We get a behind the scenes look at how they started, what is the most valuable advice they've learned and what they see on the horizon.

We talk about so much including:

  • Adapting different strategies for each child's unique needs
  • Significance of Mother's Day to many and how to set clear expectations
  • Multi-generation living and why taking the failure out of "failure to launch" is so important
  • How the pandemic has re-shaped our understanding of family living situations.
  • Complexities of financial support and how to handle it
  • Spirituality, mental health and so much more.

Grown and Flown Links

Link here for College Admissions: Grown and Flown membership helps parents through the college admissions process. Sign up for theirnewsletter here.  Link here to join their community o parents of teens, college students, young adults. 

A big thank you to Connie Gorant Fisher, our audio engineer.  Send your thoughts to biteyourtongue@gmail.com and follow us on Facebook and Instagram.

Support us with a donation as little as $5 (purchasing a “virtual” cup of coffee).  Or joining our squad with a year's membership as low as $5 per month.  Link here now:  SUPPORT US.



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Chapters

00:03 - Grown & Flown

10:55 - Navigating Parenting Young Adults

17:31 - Navigating Modern Intergenerational Living

30:54 - Parenting, Relationships, Spirituality, and Wisdom

40:03 - Parental Guidance for College Mental Health

Transcript
WEBVTT

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I love you so much, mom.

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Happy Mother's Day.

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You've been such an amazing support system for me over the last few years especially, and the only thing I would say is I hope I can also be a support system for you and help you view life a little bit more positively over the next year.

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I love you so much, thank you, thank you and happy Mother's Day.

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I love you so much.

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Thank you, thank you and happy.

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Mother's Day.

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Hello everyone.

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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.

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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 and of course, when to bite our tongues.

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So let's get started.

00:01:03.313 --> 00:01:03.914
Hello everyone.

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Happy Mother's Day to the moms out there that are celebrating and welcome to another episode of Bite your Tongue, the podcast.

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I'm Denise and I'm here with my co-host, Kirsten Heckendorf.

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Before we get started, we're going to do a tiny bit of housekeeping.

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We want to let listeners know that our very last episode of Season 3 will be strictly your questions and expert answers.

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So please send us your questions.

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You can send them directly to us by email, by emailing biteyourtonguepodcast at gmailcom, or you can record your questions by going to our website at biteyourtonguepodcastcom and look for the small microphone icon in the corner.

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You just press and talk Easy peasy.

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We'd love to hear from you.

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Now on to today's episode.

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Today we're honoring Mother's Day and you may have noticed, in the beginning of the episode we had some messages from young and older adults about their mothers.

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We love these messages, so, as the episode goes along, we're going to share a few more.

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Stay tuned and listen to them.

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They'll come in and out throughout the episode, but today we're celebrating two moms who we believe have changed the landscape for understanding and parenting teens and young adults.

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We're talking about Mary Dale Harrington and Lisa Heffernan, co-founders of Grown and Flown, the amazingly popular website and social media stop for all parents with young adults and, of course, teens.

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They're also the author of a bestselling book called Grown and Flown how to Support your Teen, Stay Close as a Family and Raise Independent Adults.

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I personally follow them on social media and have noticed that they're moving a little bit more towards the young adult arena.

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I think you follow them too, Kirsten.

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I do.

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Someone had sent me years ago a newsletter or a blog or something and I signed up for whatever it was, but it was perfect for whatever was going on in my life with one of my kids who was leaving for college Preparing for this interview today.

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I also noticed that they were named in People Magazine's one of the 25 women who are changing the world.

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I know they're alongside Jane Goodall, american Ferrera, a bunch of others.

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They're in great company.

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It just makes it even a bigger honor to have them here with us today.

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Welcome, mary Dell and Lisa, and happy Mother's Day to you both.

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Can you tell us a little bit more about yourselves and how you got started on the Grown and Flown journey?

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This is Mary Dell.

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I'll go first, Since Lisa and I are both here together.

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I have a son and daughter, and they're both living and working in Metro New York City, not far from where they grew up in the suburban area north of the city.

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My professional background is in media.

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I worked for NBC and Lifetime in New York before stepping down to spend more time with them, but in a way that has some connective tissue to how Lisa and I started, Grown and Flown my background in the media and, of course, being a mom.

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And we started Grown and Flown because there really wasn't much on the internet about that period of teens, late teen years, early adulthood years, having college students.

00:04:04.872 --> 00:04:06.842
At the time we started Grown and Flown.

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Maridel and I had both kids in high school and our oldest sons had just gone to college.

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We had a foot in both of those worlds.

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We felt very much out of our depth.

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We commiserated every time we got together about this stage of parenting, but we just couldn't find much on the internet about it and so we decided to start ourselves.

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So I'm happy that you did.

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I happen to love the personal essays that people write.

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It's really amazing, all of you that are listening, if you've not gone on and read some of these personal essays.

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We have some amazing writers in the world, don't we?

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From young people to the very oldest.

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You have some teens write in and some young adults that have crafted articles that are pretty amazing.

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We've had Tracy Hargan on.

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I just love her.

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I don't even know how well you know the people that write, but they've been pretty amazing.

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I've had 900 writers.

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It started with Lisa doing most of the writing.

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She's a New York Times bestselling author, so it was a natural occurrence for her to take that side of things.

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But now we publish content daily and we're always looking for new voices, and I've loved the people who've written for us, both the experts and sometimes the parent who just has, you know, one really great story to tell.

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And we happen to know Tracy in real life.

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Oh, you do.

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Oh, that's so funny.

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So where do you two know each other?

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Tell us the connection with you two, and then we'll get into the interview.

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Third grade with our youngest kids.

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Like many adults, we met through our children and some of those are the most wonderful friendships, and in this case, both a friendship and a business partnership.

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We're lucky enough so our younger children were in the same third grade together.

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Isn't that something?

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Well, congratulations to both of you.

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So we're using this episode to celebrate Mother's Day because we think you're two terrific moms and you've also helped a lot of moms.

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Tell us what you think about Mother's Day.

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Do you celebrate Mother's Day in your families?

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Some people are like, okay, we're done with this, so where are you guys?

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in this whole idea of Mother's Day.

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Lisa, do you want to take that one?

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No, I'm going to let you jump in there First of all.

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I think Mother's Day is a great holiday and I encourage all of your listeners to celebrate it in whatever way works for their family, not only for their children, but also if they have their own mothers or mother-in-laws or important older generation of women in their lives.

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I think that's one thing that I love about it.

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I'm lucky enough to have my mother still living.

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She will be 97, may 57.

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And she is sharp as a tack and physically a little, maybe slightly, diminished.

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But it's wonderful to see the connections that our two children have, who are only grandchildren, and that I have with her.

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That's the piece that I love the most is the multi-generational component of Mother's Day.

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Go ahead.

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I want to go ahead.

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280,000 parents in it and there's a lot of conversation about Mother's Day.

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I think two things really rise to the surface in that conversation.

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First of all, the number of moms who feel disappointed about Mother's Day.

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So come the Monday after Mother's Day, we will have a flood of parents coming in, moms coming in saying that Mother's Day wasn't what they hoped to do, and every year other mothers remind them.

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Tell your kids what you want it to be, make it happen.

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Sitting and waiting for our kids to wake up and realize how important this is to us isn't a winning strategy.

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If you want that brunch, tell the kids we're having brunch.

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It's Mother's Day.

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You can give me this, give me your morning, and we're going to do that.

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So that's one thing that really rises to the surface about Mother's Day.

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And the second thing that really rises to the surface we just asked parents, I think in the last week, what they want for Mother's Day and it's overwhelming.

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People want.

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They want quiet, they want some time, they want a little break, they want to see their kids.

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The whole thing that gets pushed at us about flowers and gifts and cards.

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I got nothing against flowers.

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I have nothing against gifts I love gifts as much as the next person but what we really want is quiet time and family time.

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The evidence is overwhelming.

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I agree with you.

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I could care less if I ever get flowers or a box of chocolate, but a phone call from my kid, that's really all I want.

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So true.

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We see that in our group, as Lisa said, the Grown and Flown Parents Facebook group.

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for people who may be curious what Lisa was referring to, Facebook group for people who may be curious what Lisa was referring to.

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So I'm super grateful for my mom.

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She has taught me so much and she is such a special lady.

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She taught me the difference between being a lady and a woman, so I do love that.

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One thing that I would say is great advice for any mom is to always remember that your children will remember the things that you say.

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They are very impactful.

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So, especially when it comes to appearance as women, we sometimes are very difficult on ourselves about that and I know my mom tended to be a little bit difficult with me about my appearance or what I should do or shouldn't do.

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So those words were impactful and lasting.

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But she's a wonderful lady and I thank her.

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Mom, I know you're up there looking down at me saying look at you, you're 88 and a half years old and you're still wasting time.

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No, I'm not wasting time.

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I'm sending a little love note to you to remind the world what a terrific mother you were and are and you've meant so much to me.

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And I still remember your words.

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I still remember your good advice, your good thinking.

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I love you.

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Happy Mother's Day, mom.

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Okay.

00:09:43.280 --> 00:09:47.571
So I have noticed a little bit that you're moving a little bit more towards young adults.

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For a while, you guys were completely teens and college students, but I see more now in the young adult arena.

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There's a huge difference, don't you find, now that your kids are getting to be young adults, between teens and college and then young adults, You're stepping back even further.

00:10:03.659 --> 00:10:09.188
Some of the reason why you might be seeing more of it is that our audience has just come along with us on this journey.

00:10:09.188 --> 00:10:12.287
So many of them started when they started reading us.

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They had 13 year olds or 14 year olds, and now those children are much older than they are.

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One of the things that makes this so difficult is that we struggle to look back on our own experience as being young adults with our parents.

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So, because of the technology and just because of changing generational norms, we can't really look back at our experience of calling our parents, maybe once a week, maybe sending a letter, if that was in your family's behavior patterns.

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So we're very much lost and looking for our own ways to connect and to continue conversation with our young adults, and I think that's probably why people feel a little bit.

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So we're very much lost and looking for our own ways to connect and to continue conversation with our young adults, and I think that's probably why people feel a little bit disoriented and why they look to Grown and Flown for guidance.

00:10:52.640 --> 00:10:54.788
And there's very little written about it until this year.

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Well, I guess, jane, I say walking on eggshells, but very, very little in comparison to what you read now about teens and particularly.

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I wish I could just tell parents those early years you're reading, reading what's my kid doing at nine months?

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What's my kid you know?

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There's thousands and thousands of books we find overwhelmingly from our listeners.

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They say the hardest part is this young adult time when you are no longer in the picture and yet you have to learn to connect in a less obtrusive way.

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Does that make any sense?

00:11:24.090 --> 00:11:25.111
It does.

00:11:25.860 --> 00:11:29.451
And many of us may have mentored younger people in the workplace.

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I think there's a lot of analogy there with our young adults trying to slip into that role of being advisor, sounding board there when they need us.

00:11:39.270 --> 00:11:43.148
As you say, treading lightly, I feel like it's a little less eggshell.

00:11:43.148 --> 00:11:48.352
I feel like the eggshell years were very much the teen years where you just didn't know what reaction you were going to get.

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A lot less of that with our young adults, but they still very much need us.

00:11:52.750 --> 00:11:53.961
There's a lot of research into this.

00:11:53.961 --> 00:11:56.649
I know you guys have had a lot of researchers on with you.

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There's a lot of research in this about how much closer we are with our kids than our parents ever were with us at the same age and how much they still need that guidance, that support, that love, that sort of underpinning in their life that parents can provide.

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Sometimes parents of our generation, lisa, have feared that they were doing too much because they feared the branding of oh, I'm harming my children because I'm a helicopter.

00:12:21.192 --> 00:12:31.135
When we did the research into the book that we wrote that came out in 2019, it showed just the opposite that closeness really was nurturing our kids.

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It wasn't intrusive.

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It was something that was supportive to them as they grew up to be independent adults.

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But I think we do fear this Are we doing too much?

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Are we doing too little?

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It really is hard to find the balance all along, all along the ages that you're trying to raise these little kids to be independent.

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You just are always looking for that line and not cross over it.

00:12:51.860 --> 00:12:59.013
Is there anything that stands out to you guys as far as mistakes that parents make as their kids are transitioning into this?

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young adult phase.

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I think maybe not doing what Lisa said, not recognizing that your role really does change as your kids get older.

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You know that, transitioning into a mentorship role, a sounding board being there not with a quick suggestion but like just a good ear.

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I think the other thing is thinking that their world is our world, the number of times where I have said something to my kids and they've had to say, mom, it's not 1993.

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We're going to need to move on here About.

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The social norms have changed the way they behave with each other.

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The romantic norms has changed.

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When we're not cognizant of that, we're not as helpful to them as we can be.

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There's a lot of ways we think the world is and some of those are outdated and we need to be really careful that we're looking at the world they're in around careers as well.

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It's very easy for us to think stay at that job, Don't switch jobs, you don't want to be job hopping.

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Tons of evidence to show that people move jobs more often, they get better pay.

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You know, some of the old norms that we knew professionally or personally are out of date and we need to recognize that with our kids.

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I find that the very most difficult.

00:14:04.722 --> 00:14:09.126
Sometimes I don't even know what our young kids are doing today, what their jobs really entail.

00:14:09.126 --> 00:14:12.169
You have a section on your website now on young adults.

00:14:12.169 --> 00:14:18.335
We went through it and I'm just going to go quickly down some of the things that you talk about on that website.

00:14:18.335 --> 00:14:20.437
Kirsten touched on a few of the mistakes.

00:14:20.437 --> 00:14:24.163
You also have the feathering, the empty nest, I think.

00:14:24.163 --> 00:14:30.903
Several years ago I read an article in the New York Times that featured Mary Dell working as an architect to reformat her kitchen to accommodate a crowd.

00:14:30.903 --> 00:14:40.739
Most empty nesters are downsizing, whereas I think in the article you said I'm making it so everyone can come home, and I find that's a really interesting thing.

00:14:40.739 --> 00:14:47.331
Right now People are saying I'm going to move out of my big house and I'm in this conflicted situation because neither of my kids are here.

00:14:47.331 --> 00:14:48.754
They may come back.

00:14:48.754 --> 00:14:51.205
I want to have the space, I don't want the space.

00:14:51.205 --> 00:14:53.270
What was your thought process when you did that?

00:14:53.960 --> 00:15:02.586
Well, first of all, our house is almost 100 years old, so you know, we had done the kitchen 30 years ago and it really looked old.

00:15:02.586 --> 00:15:22.313
Anyway, we took out one wall and enlarged our island and did some other things, but it's a beautiful space and I have now my daughter, my son, my son's wife, my daughter's fiance, our young adult nephew and, when we're all there, in the old kitchen there were collision courses which meant we were the ones who ended up doing most of the food prep and most of the cleanup.

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Now there's space for everybody to participate.

00:15:25.169 --> 00:15:27.063
It's really been a great thing.

00:15:27.063 --> 00:15:36.682
It was well worth it, but it's also they live in Metro, new York City, where we are, so we do have an opportunity for them to see us much more frequently than we might otherwise.

00:15:37.243 --> 00:15:47.389
I was intrigued by your sense of what most empty nesters are doing, so we asked I put a little question in our Facebook group to see if people were really thinking of downsizing.

00:15:47.389 --> 00:15:48.912
We have almost, I think, lisa.

00:15:48.912 --> 00:15:49.253
What is it?

00:15:49.253 --> 00:15:55.991
280,000 members and 66 of the respondents said that they have not made one change.

00:15:55.991 --> 00:15:59.586
So, denise, you're in good company if you've not made one change.

00:15:59.586 --> 00:16:01.980
And then all the other answers were raised.

00:16:01.980 --> 00:16:12.326
The gamut from selling the house, moving to the beach, you know, expanding the house, moving to a smaller house, moving to where my kids are, but really most people haven't.

00:16:12.326 --> 00:16:14.394
And our who answered that?

00:16:14.394 --> 00:16:15.820
Hundreds of people who answered that question?

00:16:15.820 --> 00:16:16.922
Yeah, every time.

00:16:17.062 --> 00:16:19.548
I get concerned about it or think about it.

00:16:19.548 --> 00:16:22.614
I say my prayers or something and say first world problems.

00:16:22.614 --> 00:16:28.138
I get a little bit like slap myself in the face kind of thing, because we're fortunate we can make some of those decisions.

00:16:28.138 --> 00:16:30.325
Some people don't even have those choices.

00:16:30.325 --> 00:16:35.159
So failure to launch you make your house maybe too comfortable.

00:16:35.159 --> 00:16:37.947
Sometimes it sounds like your kids are out on their own and everything.

00:16:37.947 --> 00:16:43.827
But you have a lot about failure to launch on your website, in the Facebook groups.

00:16:43.827 --> 00:16:47.403
What advice do you give to parents and when they come back home?

00:16:47.403 --> 00:16:50.692
A lot came back home during COVID how long do you let them stay?

00:16:50.692 --> 00:16:55.672
Is multi-generational living maybe something that's coming to be healthy and accepted?

00:16:55.672 --> 00:16:56.982
What are your thoughts on that?

00:16:57.825 --> 00:17:01.966
One of the things I wish we could take away the word failure, because a couple of things.

00:17:01.966 --> 00:17:03.451
First of all, kids.

00:17:03.451 --> 00:17:04.476
The data shows them.

00:17:04.476 --> 00:17:05.539
I know you've gone over this.

00:17:05.539 --> 00:17:06.784
Kids are doing everything later.

00:17:06.784 --> 00:17:09.599
So getting the apartment is later, getting the marriage is later.

00:17:09.740 --> 00:17:18.348
Having children all the milestones of adulthood that we saw 30 years ago, 40 years ago, certainly 50 years ago, have all been pushed out later.

00:17:18.348 --> 00:17:26.949
So when a kid at 25 doesn't have the final job, doesn't have the partner, doesn't have the family or the apartment, they haven't failed at anything.

00:17:26.949 --> 00:17:28.511
That's just not the norm anymore.

00:17:28.511 --> 00:17:30.744
So I think we need to get rid of that construct.

00:17:30.744 --> 00:17:44.647
The other thing I think it's important to think about this whole notion that we would have the wherewithal to buy a place to live, to start a family, to move out, is very much a artifice of the late 20th century.

00:17:44.647 --> 00:17:52.362
Until that point, in the United States that is not how families constructed themselves, and the rest of the world still doesn't construct themselves that way.

00:17:52.362 --> 00:17:59.386
So until that point, young married people moved in with one of the parents, they moved in with the parents or they moved in with the in-laws.

00:17:59.386 --> 00:18:12.747
Nobody had the kind of money or the kind of jobs where they could expect that Our economy did so well and we had such prosperity for some periods during the 20th century, that became available to people at a younger age, but that is certainly not the norm.

00:18:12.787 --> 00:18:19.790
So I think if your kids are living with you and they're trying to find their footing with jobs and they don't have a partner yet, you should not look at this.

00:18:19.790 --> 00:18:22.084
The word failure should not be attached to this.

00:18:22.084 --> 00:18:24.949
It means that they're still looking for those things Now.

00:18:24.949 --> 00:18:34.531
If your kid, of course, is sitting playing video games all day and not doing anything to join the adult world, that's perhaps not the best thing.

00:18:34.531 --> 00:18:49.387
But if they're looking for a job, doing a part-time job, the way kids earn income looks like a lot of different things than it looked like when we were their age Consulting and gig work and different opportunities that they can jump in on that, quite frankly, weren't available to us.

00:18:49.387 --> 00:18:53.228
Their relationships are different and constructed differently, as we talked about earlier.

00:18:53.228 --> 00:18:57.584
We need not to take the construct of our world and bring it and impose it on their world.

00:18:57.584 --> 00:19:04.538
We very much don't look at it as failure and we think it's pretty much okay, and things that keep families close are good things.

00:19:05.131 --> 00:19:15.779
Speaking of close, we do have a number of listeners that have written in or called in and their kids live far away and they're feeling very disengaged and lonely.

00:19:15.779 --> 00:19:18.939
Do you have any advice for those parents?

00:19:19.990 --> 00:19:21.375
I think that what's helped me.

00:19:21.375 --> 00:19:29.304
We aren't always in the same place where our kids are, but we have a very lively family text thread and we have a very lively.

00:19:29.304 --> 00:19:34.999
My husband doesn't participate in this, he's not really on Instagram but Instagram sharing thread.

00:19:34.999 --> 00:19:40.271
Probably half of it has to do with Labradors, which are the dogs that our kids grew up with and we still have.

00:19:40.271 --> 00:19:43.991
We're the only ones with a dog and they miss the dog very much when we're not in town.

00:19:43.991 --> 00:19:52.074
But it's a way that I feel very close to our kids, without ever having an actual conversation with them or being in the same place.

00:19:52.074 --> 00:20:10.271
Not to diminish that feeling of being ignored or lonely, using technology to its full advantage is something that I think people should embrace and if you're not on social media or you're not participating in Instagram and that's where your kids are on TikTok, jump in.

00:20:10.271 --> 00:20:13.717
There's no harm in it and there's potential upside with closeness.

00:20:14.218 --> 00:20:14.980
Get with the program.

00:20:14.980 --> 00:20:26.935
I wanna go back to the failure to launch a minute, because when you said all of this sort of started changing when the economy, I wonder, was there more tolerance If kids moved in with their parents or their in-laws?

00:20:26.935 --> 00:20:29.728
We'd hear more of it because the angst is on social media.

00:20:29.728 --> 00:20:32.038
Sometimes it could be the smartest thing they could do.

00:20:32.038 --> 00:20:33.786
The housing market is crazy.

00:20:33.786 --> 00:20:35.932
You got four empty bedrooms in your house.

00:20:35.932 --> 00:20:37.276
What's the big deal?

00:20:37.276 --> 00:20:39.882
But why is there so much intolerance out there?

00:20:40.650 --> 00:20:44.393
I think that the reason is since the housing crisis of 2008,.

00:20:44.393 --> 00:20:50.616
There's been a steady progression of young people living with their parents more and more, so it's actually now incredibly common.

00:20:50.616 --> 00:20:58.883
The parents of these young people are the only generation for which that was uncommon, for our parents and their time in a generation that wasn't used to it.

00:20:58.883 --> 00:21:09.220
If this had happened to our parents or our grandparents, they wouldn't have had it.

00:21:09.220 --> 00:21:14.271
So I think it's because it happened quickly and it happened in very large numbers, and much of it is what you're saying.

00:21:14.271 --> 00:21:18.982
Housing costs, compared to what our kids can and do earn, are astronomical.

00:21:18.982 --> 00:21:31.244
You know, to look at your kid and somehow feel that they're a failure when the economy over the last eight, 12 years hasn't allowed them to do what you could do at the same age, has nothing to do with your child.

00:21:31.244 --> 00:21:32.546
Your child's doing great.

00:21:32.546 --> 00:21:34.369
They're doing everything they should be doing.

00:21:34.871 --> 00:21:38.280
And let's layer on the housing costs, on college debt.

00:21:38.280 --> 00:21:44.722
You know, really people are financially in not great shape to be able to buy their own first home.

00:21:44.722 --> 00:21:48.109
People are financially in not great shape to be able to buy their own first home.

00:21:48.109 --> 00:21:53.142
I think one benefit of COVID is that it did kind of break these norms of where people live and how they spend their time.

00:21:53.142 --> 00:22:06.352
And certainly I don't know about you two, but we had our young adults living with us off and on in various places and their friends and partners and nephew, and it was actually really kind of amazing that we had this opportunity.

00:22:06.352 --> 00:22:17.663
I think, in a way, I would hope that people would be more tolerant and more open minded about different, again multi-generational living options than they might have before COVID.

00:22:20.730 --> 00:22:21.891
Happy Mother's Day, mom.

00:22:21.891 --> 00:23:00.583
I just want to say that I love sharingital stuff and problems with home, because that's my dad and you're my therapist, but I don't want to be your therapist.

00:23:00.583 --> 00:23:02.553
Anyway, happy Mother's Day.

00:23:04.498 --> 00:23:11.300
One of the things that I was just thinking about is, you know, it brings up this idea of having to reestablish all these rules again.

00:23:11.300 --> 00:23:17.753
You've had this period of time where you've been empty nesters whatever you want to call it and you've got this quiet and this peace.

00:23:17.753 --> 00:23:24.134
And then they all come back and you really do have to reestablish what are those rules, what are the boundaries?

00:23:24.134 --> 00:23:25.679
We're all living together.

00:23:25.679 --> 00:23:27.804
How do we make this work collectively?

00:23:28.170 --> 00:23:31.317
Those rules might include your kids paying you something.

00:23:31.317 --> 00:23:33.262
This may not be a free option to them.

00:23:33.262 --> 00:23:35.174
It may just be a less expensive option to them.

00:23:35.174 --> 00:23:47.576
For families who are struggling with their own mortgages, having a young adult who's able to earn some money should probably be helping out in some way food costs, utilities, rent in some small way.

00:23:47.576 --> 00:23:55.979
So every family is going to have to find that place that works for them, both financially and in terms of the rules of people's lives and how they can continue to live together.

00:23:56.279 --> 00:24:01.361
Right, I love this and I hope we've opened the door to being more tolerant and accepting of this.

00:24:01.361 --> 00:24:08.462
You know, if your child's still living with you, people look at you and say, hmm, you know that it's not by choice, it's that they've failed.

00:24:08.462 --> 00:24:15.691
When you look around the world Italy, greece, japan, china everybody lives together as an intergenerational family.

00:24:15.691 --> 00:24:19.460
There's something to be said for multiple generations living together.

00:24:19.460 --> 00:24:21.932
It's a pretty rich experience, I think.

00:24:21.932 --> 00:24:24.777
All right, let's move to money.

00:24:24.777 --> 00:24:26.680
We were sort of talking about it a little bit.

00:24:26.819 --> 00:24:29.023
This is really a source of conflict.

00:24:29.023 --> 00:24:32.670
Some parents do have a lot of money and can give their kids a down payment for their house.

00:24:32.670 --> 00:24:34.276
Many cannot.

00:24:34.276 --> 00:24:35.674
The kids are stuck or whatever.

00:24:35.674 --> 00:24:36.397
Everyone's stuck.

00:24:36.397 --> 00:24:40.635
But a lot of situations where parents are paying for lawyers when the kids get in trouble.

00:24:40.635 --> 00:24:46.090
Down payments on houses first, and last month's rent cell phone.

00:24:46.090 --> 00:24:54.638
The Pew Research study said that most of the kids, even into their 30s, are still on the cell phone and streaming because they think the parents are lazy and don't want to change.

00:24:54.638 --> 00:25:01.792
I'll be honest both of my kids are on my cell phone plan and they're both doing well, but it's such a good plan I just don't even want to mess it up.

00:25:01.792 --> 00:25:03.355
So when do you stop?

00:25:03.355 --> 00:25:04.317
How do you stop?

00:25:04.317 --> 00:25:05.959
Are there phases in stopping?

00:25:05.959 --> 00:25:08.002
We're always trying to save them.

00:25:08.502 --> 00:25:14.142
Of course it's different for every family because every family is in different financial situations To what we were just talking about.

00:25:14.142 --> 00:25:17.002
You may need your kid to help you with rent, and they certainly should.

00:25:17.002 --> 00:25:21.817
I think the rule of thumb here, if there is one, is having them have some skin in the game.

00:25:21.817 --> 00:25:33.554
So, whatever it is, like you, my children are on my cell phone plan and they're on my cell phone plan because they can't get the plan that we have and I should probably and I'm going to admit this right here, I should probably have them paying some part of that.

00:25:33.554 --> 00:25:35.700
They should not be freeloading on my cell phone plan.

00:25:35.700 --> 00:25:50.182
So, whatever it is, if your kid let's use the example you just gave if your kid got a DUI and paying for a lawyer is beyond their means, you really don't want them to not have a good lawyer and whatever help they need in the situation they've got into.

00:25:50.182 --> 00:25:53.653
But they certainly should have some responsibility for what they did.

00:25:53.653 --> 00:25:56.801
They brought this on themselves and the cost of what they did.

00:25:56.801 --> 00:26:04.776
So while you may not want them to just pay for whatever they can afford, because it may put them in a very bad situation, but it doesn't mean they pay nothing.

00:26:04.776 --> 00:26:07.560
So the answer is never all or nothing is the point I'm making.

00:26:08.102 --> 00:26:13.020
Whatever it is that you're helping with them, try and make sure that they have some responsibility as well.

00:26:13.020 --> 00:26:13.872
This is how you know.

00:26:13.872 --> 00:26:16.180
The whole thing's a transition, everything's a transition.

00:26:16.180 --> 00:26:19.375
We're trying to get them more and more and more to have adult responsibility.

00:26:19.375 --> 00:26:23.201
So if you're helping them with their rent, you're not paying their whole rent.

00:26:23.201 --> 00:26:25.085
They need to pay something.

00:26:25.085 --> 00:26:28.098
If they can afford 20% of their rent, have them pay that.

00:26:28.098 --> 00:26:30.195
If you're helping them with 20%, that's even better.

00:26:30.195 --> 00:26:38.635
If they can pay 80%, try and find those places where they are taking adult responsibility, adult financial responsibility, even if they can't pay for everything.

00:26:39.911 --> 00:26:50.352
I think, a time to do this, and I don't know how many of your listeners still have kids in college, but that college price tag is massive.

00:26:50.352 --> 00:26:52.576
It will be the single biggest thing that most families pay for outside of their homes.

00:26:52.576 --> 00:27:02.094
If you have not already begun to have these conversations with how much we're all contributing, how much we can contribute, to college, this is absolutely the time to start doing it.

00:27:02.094 --> 00:27:04.945
So many parents neglect that piece.

00:27:04.945 --> 00:27:09.028
They send their kid to the best school that they got into because they don't want to hurt their feeling.

00:27:09.028 --> 00:27:24.612
You know they want them to have that dream school experience at the detriment of their own financial well-being Robbing their retirement accounts, for instance, to pay for their kid's college education, or going further into debt with a parent plus loan Backing that up even into high school.

00:27:24.833 --> 00:27:33.816
And beginning to have those frank conversations about what we, as your parents, can afford to help you with in life and what you really need to be able to work for.

00:27:33.816 --> 00:27:36.563
Take out your own government loan for.

00:27:36.563 --> 00:27:39.756
Think about a less expensive college.

00:27:39.756 --> 00:27:43.872
That's definitely the time to begin to have those frank conversations.

00:27:43.872 --> 00:27:51.152
And then what Lisa's talking about with God forbid a DUI or a down payment or things that may come later in life.

00:27:51.152 --> 00:27:59.380
It may not be as shocking to your kid to hear that you really need them to participate in this discussion on what to pay for.

00:28:00.710 --> 00:28:01.634
Yeah, that's really good.

00:28:01.971 --> 00:28:06.722
Do you think we should be sharing our financial situation with our kids?

00:28:07.589 --> 00:28:08.794
How much should they know about us?

00:28:08.794 --> 00:28:10.779
I guess financially, at what age?

00:28:11.710 --> 00:28:15.417
I know Lisa and I have both said this it really varies depending on the family.

00:28:15.417 --> 00:28:18.097
I think there are ways to sort of approach it.

00:28:18.097 --> 00:28:23.083
Certainly there is a baton pass when your kid turns 18.

00:28:23.083 --> 00:28:28.777
And there are certain documents that they need to sign and they need to take responsibility for.

00:28:28.777 --> 00:28:38.594
Maybe that is the time when you also need to sit with them, if you haven't before, and say you know, dad and I have a will, we have made provisions for for you all.

00:28:38.594 --> 00:28:42.722
In certain ways, we're still working, contributing to our retirement plan.

00:28:42.722 --> 00:28:44.451
Kind of give them big picture.

00:28:44.451 --> 00:28:46.373
That would be my suggestion.

00:28:46.593 --> 00:28:50.997
If you don't want to give your kids minute information about your financial situation.

00:28:50.997 --> 00:28:53.538
Some of that actually depends on how mature your kids are.

00:28:53.538 --> 00:28:56.961
Young adults mature at vastly different rates and understand money at different rates.

00:28:56.961 --> 00:29:02.406
The conversation about what we can and cannot afford may be where the conversation begins.

00:29:02.406 --> 00:29:06.492
You know this is outside of our family's budget.

00:29:06.492 --> 00:29:09.078
A vacation like that is not available to us and our family can't afford it.

00:29:09.078 --> 00:29:15.201
As Marydell said, towards college, we have these funds available and beyond that it's going to be loans or different colleges.

00:29:15.201 --> 00:29:23.160
So talking to them about what is and is not in our family's budget in a more granular way is maybe a first step to beginning that conversation.

00:29:24.203 --> 00:29:31.083
Yeah, this whole college thing is really scaring me when I open the paper and see a hundred thousand dollars a year now for college.

00:29:31.083 --> 00:29:34.103
That's a year's salary for many, many, many people.

00:29:34.123 --> 00:29:42.432
Well, it's also a salary that they're not going to attain for a number of years, depending on what they go into, and that's just with.

00:29:42.432 --> 00:29:49.017
An undergraduate degree may be required, depending on what they do, for a master's right or or beyond.

00:29:49.017 --> 00:29:51.163
It's a real problem, right?

00:29:51.910 --> 00:29:54.154
Okay, let's move on to love.

00:29:54.154 --> 00:30:00.556
And we've asked this question a few times in certain episodes, but I keep hearing it over and over again.

00:30:00.556 --> 00:30:06.594
I was just with someone recently that literally sent to me okay, I finally accepted, she's going to marry him.

00:30:06.594 --> 00:30:15.861
What do you do when you know in your heart of although no one ever really knows, but you think in your heart of hearts this is not good, Is it?

00:30:15.861 --> 00:30:16.782
None of your business?

00:30:17.490 --> 00:30:31.278
I suggest we all start by being a little humbled by how little we know about what works and what doesn't work, the number of times I have thought that some friend or somebody I know well was in the perfect relationship and the next thing I hear is they're getting a divorce.

00:30:31.278 --> 00:30:44.321
So there's two things we don't understand from the outside what other people's relationships work or not, and we also don't understand what other people need from those relationships, since we all need very, very different things from our long-term relationships, slash marriages.

00:30:44.321 --> 00:30:52.434
So the first thing is just to be humble about it and admit that the longer we live, the more we realize we don't know anything and the answer is you have to be quiet.

00:30:52.434 --> 00:30:53.679
There's no choice.

00:30:53.679 --> 00:31:01.419
You are going to have a relationship with that person that you may or may not have thought was a good idea, and those words will never go away.

00:31:01.419 --> 00:31:03.054
You want them not to come out of your mouth.

00:31:03.054 --> 00:31:03.336
Never go away.

00:31:03.336 --> 00:31:04.641
You want them not to come out of your mouth.

00:31:05.202 --> 00:31:06.166
So bite your tongue.

00:31:06.227 --> 00:31:06.750
Bite your tongue.

00:31:07.430 --> 00:31:11.401
And your podcast is what everybody should just have going through their mind.

00:31:11.401 --> 00:31:22.383
When they want to say something negative Because what do you expect your adult child to do Are they going to say, oh sure, mom, you know, I'd much rather satisfy you and not marry this person I'm in love with.

00:31:22.383 --> 00:31:32.218
That's a very quick way to be estranged from your child, as well as their partner, to be and heaven forbid, you're estranged from future grandchildren too.

00:31:32.218 --> 00:31:34.939
So there's a lot of riding on this relationship.

00:31:35.631 --> 00:31:37.396
I have one little caveat to that.

00:31:37.396 --> 00:31:38.519
What if they ask?

00:31:38.519 --> 00:31:41.137
What if they ask your opinion?

00:31:41.137 --> 00:31:43.397
What do you think about blah?

00:31:43.397 --> 00:31:48.173
What I mean Do you like her Right, Do you like, do you like her?

00:31:49.699 --> 00:31:50.221
How do you answer that?

00:31:50.221 --> 00:31:51.144
Change the conversation.

00:31:51.144 --> 00:31:52.268
So no, I don't know.

00:31:52.268 --> 00:31:53.191
I don't mean the subject.

00:31:53.191 --> 00:31:54.153
I don't mean the subject.

00:31:54.153 --> 00:32:04.762
Turn it around and say it's not about whether I like her or not, it's about what you want and need in your life and whether this person helps you and gives you those things.

00:32:04.762 --> 00:32:07.012
So talk to me, say to your kid, talk to me about that.

00:32:07.012 --> 00:32:14.138
What is it that you want from a relationship, and does he or she help give you that and does that satisfy you and make you happy?

00:32:14.138 --> 00:32:17.952
And then you turn to your kid and say I'm not living with this person.

00:32:17.952 --> 00:32:21.459
My goal in life is to hope that you're happy.

00:32:21.459 --> 00:32:26.596
So have the conversation, but our approval in a sense, as we're all saying, doesn't matter.

00:32:26.596 --> 00:32:27.270
It's not.

00:32:27.270 --> 00:32:28.375
That's not the conversation.

00:32:28.375 --> 00:32:36.424
So when they ask it, turn the conversation around and ask them if they're getting what they need in a relationship sort of go into sounding board mode.

00:32:37.046 --> 00:32:40.853
As hard as that is, it is not easy.

00:32:41.273 --> 00:33:02.625
Yeah, if they press and press and press you and you do see that your kid is happy in this relationship, even though you feel that there are perhaps thorns and roadblocks in them, you can honestly say I am happy this person makes happy and when I think about him or her and think about how he or she makes you happy, I very much feel good towards this person.

00:33:02.625 --> 00:33:03.885
You can say positive things.

00:33:03.885 --> 00:33:05.025
It doesn't have to be.

00:33:05.025 --> 00:33:06.333
I think this is a great idea.

00:33:06.333 --> 00:33:07.559
You know full steam ahead.

00:33:07.559 --> 00:33:12.732
You can find positive things to say, couched in terms of your child finding what they need.

00:33:15.181 --> 00:33:19.932
I lost my beautiful 90-year-old mother last July to pancreatic cancer.

00:33:19.932 --> 00:33:24.230
My mom taught by example how to be loving, kind and patient.

00:33:24.230 --> 00:33:35.332
She taught me the importance of helping others and she oh-so-wisely told me when I was a discouraged 12-year-old girl that you can always wear a padded bra, but you can never wear a padded brain.

00:33:35.332 --> 00:33:43.729
I got through four years of college in two and a half and, as a young adult, asked her why she didn't tell me to slow down and enjoy those years.

00:33:43.729 --> 00:33:46.382
She said because you wouldn't have listened.

00:33:46.382 --> 00:33:50.792
She was a world-class mom, but I think she should have tried harder.

00:33:53.500 --> 00:33:55.067
With your own parenting both of you.

00:33:55.067 --> 00:33:58.079
Are there things that you wish you had done differently?

00:33:58.079 --> 00:34:00.130
Own parenting, both of you.

00:34:00.150 --> 00:34:02.319
Are there things that you wish you had done differently?

00:34:02.319 --> 00:34:08.891
Yes, of course we made I well, I'll speak just for myself, but I know Lisa and I have shared many anecdotes through the years about things that we wish we would have done differently.

00:34:08.891 --> 00:34:12.608
Some are really small and trivial and others that are more substantive.

00:34:12.608 --> 00:34:32.094
I think I, with my first child I was probably you know, he was my training wheels child, as all of our first children are and I was probably much more kind of, involved and over functioning with him, but he also had a different personality and different approach to his you know things he needed to accomplish than our younger child.

00:34:33.380 --> 00:34:51.483
I think one of the mistakes I made is I have three sons is when something worked with one child, I then did it with the next child, and my kids, like many people's children, are very, very different from each other, and when it backfired, I looked at them sort of blankly, as opposed to not assuming that anything was.

00:34:51.483 --> 00:34:52.405
There were no rules.

00:34:52.405 --> 00:34:53.389
Every child is different.

00:34:53.389 --> 00:34:54.711
I need to adapt my parenting.

00:34:54.711 --> 00:35:00.391
I think I wasn't quite as adaptable no, I wasn't quite as adaptable as I should have been with a kid who was very different.

00:35:00.391 --> 00:35:01.653
You give yourself a little pat on the back.

00:35:01.653 --> 00:35:02.161
That worked.

00:35:02.161 --> 00:35:03.023
I'm going to do it again.

00:35:03.164 --> 00:35:05.240
And you do it again, and you think what's wrong with this kid?

00:35:05.260 --> 00:35:06.447
Well, there's nothing wrong with the kid.

00:35:06.447 --> 00:35:09.101
You have a different child and you're not changing your strategy.

00:35:09.320 --> 00:35:09.581
Right.

00:35:09.581 --> 00:35:17.775
I think there's also been so much study and research about the teenage brain and brain development.

00:35:17.775 --> 00:35:30.170
Had I known then, when my oldest was just entering the teenage years, about that, I would have probably put his development into more of a context, a scientific context.

00:35:30.170 --> 00:35:36.693
That would have really helped me understand why he may have taken certain risks or what was behind all of that.

00:35:36.693 --> 00:35:39.367
Or you know, he wasn't.

00:35:39.367 --> 00:35:41.561
It wasn't like you're a super risky kid.

00:35:41.561 --> 00:35:44.068
That is something that especially teenage boys are like.

00:35:44.068 --> 00:35:51.684
He's seeking missiles for risk and I didn't really fully appreciate why that was and I would just say how could you possibly thought that was a good idea?

00:35:51.704 --> 00:36:05.231
I also think one of the big mistakes we make and I certainly made this one is trying to undo my mistakes with them, so things that I wished I had done, choices I wished I had made, I tried, a life I wished I had lived.

00:36:05.231 --> 00:36:13.081
I tried to push them towards that You're not to live out your mistakes and your misgivings and your regrets in their lives.

00:36:13.081 --> 00:36:18.344
These are their lives, they're not your lives, and I struggled with understanding that as they were going through.

00:36:24.420 --> 00:36:24.882
And that's huge overall.

00:36:24.882 --> 00:36:26.608
Even now, they're their lives and not your life, whether they're two or 32.

00:36:26.608 --> 00:36:31.045
I want to move to something that's very close to my heart and again we've asked about it before, but I love to get different opinions.

00:36:31.045 --> 00:36:33.311
Spirituality this is a big thing.

00:36:33.311 --> 00:36:36.525
Right now, many, many young people are moving away from the church.

00:36:37.086 --> 00:36:39.492
I wonder how do parents deal with this?

00:36:39.492 --> 00:36:40.581
Back to the pandemic.

00:36:40.581 --> 00:36:44.271
You know churchgoing has really not recovered from the pandemic.

00:36:44.271 --> 00:36:54.605
I think, for better or for worse, church attendance across the board has really just continued to fall Again.

00:36:54.605 --> 00:37:05.931
It's a landmine your values, the way you were brought up and what may be important to you spiritually, on a couple, on your adult child, or if they're in a marriage or relationship or if they're grandchildren.

00:37:05.931 --> 00:37:08.565
It's something they really have to sort through.

00:37:08.565 --> 00:37:20.929
You can offer your advice, you can invite them to Christmas Eve services if they're visiting, but it's really up to them to make that plan for themselves, which of course you know.

00:37:20.929 --> 00:37:24.791
But what you're talking about, denise, is sort of the heartache that goes involved with that.

00:37:25.940 --> 00:37:43.509
I really want to hear what you have to say, lisa, but some parents this spirituality is really really important to them and to see your child not go in that direction, I think it causes some estrangement and I think if we can do anything, we have to encourage parents to let their kids take their own journey.

00:37:43.509 --> 00:37:44.130
I don't know.

00:37:44.130 --> 00:37:45.282
How do you feel, lisa?

00:37:46.324 --> 00:37:47.327
I think you're absolutely right.

00:37:47.327 --> 00:37:56.224
We have to encourage them to take their own journey, and I think what you said at the beginning is also important to remember is really is fundamentally different in their generation.

00:37:56.224 --> 00:37:58.387
The numbers are really clear.

00:37:58.387 --> 00:38:13.827
So, again, what we've talked about a couple of times is not bringing them back to the 1990s, because they will never be there, and not taking the values of what might've been the 1970s or the 80s or 90s, or our parents' world even earlier, and bringing it into this world.

00:38:13.827 --> 00:38:22.483
If your child is walking away from, maybe, the religion that they were brought up on, they're the norm rather than the exception, actually, and we need to remember that.

00:38:22.483 --> 00:38:24.610
I think, yep, that's really true.

00:38:26.561 --> 00:38:29.030
My mom is like the true backbone of our family.

00:38:29.030 --> 00:38:33.969
She means the world to me and she's always checking in to see how I'm doing.

00:38:33.969 --> 00:38:38.710
She's someone who I can go to for anything and she'll always listen.

00:38:38.710 --> 00:38:45.840
My mom is a true giver and puts herself second to everyone else and makes sure those around her are always doing alright.

00:38:45.840 --> 00:38:51.833
I'm just very lucky to have a mom who cares so much about me and our family and my friends.

00:38:54.081 --> 00:39:02.543
What our mom means to us is someone that provides constant support and comfort and someone that is always there for us when we need her.

00:39:02.543 --> 00:39:06.793
Yeah, and our mom is a very giving and passionate person.

00:39:06.793 --> 00:39:19.940
She started a non-profit and so she really has, you know, relayed that to Sarah and I, always growing up and teaching us to be compassionate people and have empathy for others, and we're just so lucky that we have a mom like ours.

00:39:19.940 --> 00:39:21.605
We love her so much.

00:39:21.605 --> 00:39:24.833
And happy Mother's Day to everyone who celebrates.

00:39:27.161 --> 00:39:33.465
Okay, one last big question and this is really a big one and we have an episode coming up on this but want your take on this.

00:39:33.465 --> 00:39:36.699
There's a lot of more difficult situations facing young adults.

00:39:36.699 --> 00:39:39.947
I don't know if you've read Judith Smith's book Mothering Difficult Children.

00:39:39.947 --> 00:39:51.634
There was a big article in the New York Times but it's a really wonderful book about the very difficult young adults or even teenagers mental health, drug abuse, alcohol addiction, this fear of suicide.

00:39:51.634 --> 00:39:52.556
They're away from you.

00:39:52.556 --> 00:39:53.840
You sense they're depressed.

00:39:53.840 --> 00:39:55.545
I think what they say is boys.

00:39:55.545 --> 00:39:59.574
If they're going to be schizophrenic, it's usually between 19 and 20, something, 24.

00:39:59.574 --> 00:40:01.204
So they're in college.

00:40:01.204 --> 00:40:02.548
You're not around.

00:40:02.548 --> 00:40:07.309
Any advice for parents when they're struggling with this or staying on top of it.

00:40:07.309 --> 00:40:08.291
This is a tough one.

00:40:09.260 --> 00:40:10.806
We certainly are not mental health experts.

00:40:10.806 --> 00:40:14.230
I don't want to step into a place where we have no expertise.

00:40:14.230 --> 00:40:26.708
We have spoken to a lot of mental health experts and one of the things is to touch on something Mary Dell said earlier that parents are so worried about being helicopter parents and don't want to over-function when your kid goes off to college.

00:40:26.708 --> 00:40:34.041
They are in a world full of strangers who do not know them and they will not pick up on sort of quieter signals that something's wrong.

00:40:34.041 --> 00:40:36.989
If you sense that something's wrong, act.

00:40:36.989 --> 00:40:38.452
Don't ignore it.

00:40:38.452 --> 00:40:42.166
Their roommate met them six weeks ago and does not know them.

00:40:42.166 --> 00:40:46.101
Their friends are brand new and aren't going to understand if there's a problem.

00:40:46.121 --> 00:40:57.570
So I think parents very much need to trust their own instincts they know their kids better than anyone and don't let that over-parenting thing you know that sit on your shoulder and tell you they're all grown up.

00:40:57.570 --> 00:41:02.567
If you're concerned about their mental health, urge them to act and speak to them.

00:41:02.567 --> 00:41:10.701
That's the one thing that we see that parents are concerned whether they are overstepping, and there's nothing more important than their mental health.

00:41:10.701 --> 00:41:11.684
So you're not overstepping.

00:41:11.684 --> 00:41:22.849
You wouldn't think twice, if they were ill with a physical ailment, of giving them advice, urging them to see a doctor, making sure they got the care, following up and say did you make that appointment?

00:41:22.849 --> 00:41:23.791
Did you go?

00:41:23.791 --> 00:41:29.322
Since you wouldn't, if they had a sore throat or they had some other ailment, you wouldn't hesitate.

00:41:29.322 --> 00:41:30.947
Don't hesitate around their mental health as well.

00:41:31.800 --> 00:41:33.405
It's much harder when they're not.

00:41:33.405 --> 00:41:38.028
You don't see them every morning when they come down for breakfast, when they're going off to high school.

00:41:38.028 --> 00:41:44.824
But we have I hope we've developed kind of a sixth sense a little bit.

00:41:44.824 --> 00:41:49.880
Obviously, parents Weekend is a great opportunity to go and, if you can go and check, see them with your own eyes.

00:41:49.880 --> 00:41:57.487
But we see this a lot, just so that parents know that they are not alone If they both have concerns about their kids' well-being.

00:41:57.487 --> 00:42:05.891
I think the colleges are now much more attuned to helping parents and students find the help and support that they need.

00:42:05.891 --> 00:42:08.248
I think the conversation is much more open.

00:42:08.248 --> 00:42:14.981
It doesn't have to be a hidden one about making sure that your kid has the mental health support that they need, you know.

00:42:15.001 --> 00:42:16.065
Denise for our book.

00:42:16.065 --> 00:42:26.947
I interviewed the head of student health services at Columbia University, who's very much an expert on student mental health in every aspect, and I said something about parents don't want to get in the way they don't want.

00:42:26.947 --> 00:42:33.072
She said I am happy to hear from parents if they have some level of concern about something that's going on on this campus.

00:42:33.072 --> 00:42:36.394
She said I have a level of concern about what's going on and when.

00:42:36.394 --> 00:42:38.876
They can give me a piece of information that I don't have.

00:42:38.876 --> 00:42:41.925
Maybe your kid has had an episode like this before.

00:42:41.925 --> 00:42:46.172
Maybe they're following a pattern that you've seen this pattern before.

00:42:46.172 --> 00:42:48.528
Of course, your school hasn't seen this pattern before.

00:42:48.528 --> 00:42:53.467
She said those pieces of information are invaluable to me, so parents should not hesitate.

00:42:54.681 --> 00:42:57.521
That's really really good advice, and I'll give a little plug for Grown and Flown.

00:42:57.521 --> 00:42:59.125
Here there's a lot of columns.

00:42:59.125 --> 00:43:06.094
Tracy Hargan's column on her son is a wonderful, wonderful column and we'll link that in our episode notes too.

00:43:06.094 --> 00:43:13.277
I think there's a lot of help in listening to other people's experience and advice you get from them.

00:43:13.277 --> 00:43:16.429
Walking the walk, kirsten, why don't you ask the last, the takeaways?

00:43:18.920 --> 00:43:24.128
So at the end of every episode, we do like to ask our guests to give us two or three takeaways that you think would be important for our listeners.

00:43:24.128 --> 00:43:26.065
Could you share a couple of those?

00:43:27.902 --> 00:43:31.980
I think the name of your podcast is at the top of the list.

00:43:31.980 --> 00:43:34.528
We've talked about some of the places where you have to bite your tongue.

00:43:34.528 --> 00:43:41.846
I think it's biting your tongue in terms of answering your kids' questions with what you want them to do and learning to be.

00:43:41.846 --> 00:43:43.731
You know, just keep your mouth shut.

00:43:43.731 --> 00:43:44.922
Learning to be the soundboard.

00:43:44.922 --> 00:43:59.052
Lisa had this idea and I think it's really brilliant, like if you're trying to think of how to help your kid in a tough situation, almost like think about okay, this is like a family friend's kid, this is a nephew, somebody who obviously care a great deal about.

00:43:59.052 --> 00:44:10.864
But maybe you can take the emotion out of it If you think that it's maybe not your flesh and blood that you're giving an answer to, but definitely you got to buy your time when you're, you know, blunder.

00:44:10.864 --> 00:44:14.753
You're about to blunder in with giving your opinion when it's not being asked.

00:44:15.260 --> 00:44:19.972
The other thing we talk about in our book is this is the longest relationship you're going to have with your child.

00:44:19.972 --> 00:44:23.762
We spent a lot of time as we talked about at the beginning of this conversation.

00:44:23.762 --> 00:44:26.389
There's a lot on the internet about the zero to 18.

00:44:26.389 --> 00:44:30.148
And there's it's a lot of focus on the zero to 18.

00:44:30.148 --> 00:44:31.351
And, of course, there's good reason for that.

00:44:31.351 --> 00:44:39.351
But the longest relationship, hopefully, is the 18 plus, hopefully, the many, many, many decades of a relationship.

00:44:39.351 --> 00:44:44.626
So work as hard on this relationship and think about it as building it.

00:44:44.626 --> 00:44:46.532
The same way you did when they were tiny.

00:44:46.532 --> 00:45:03.148
You're going to build a new relationship and that relationship is going to last for decades, we hope, and put the same sort of effort and thinking and focus and caring and researching and everything that you did when they were little, because this one is as important Boy, that's wonderful.

00:45:03.409 --> 00:45:03.728
Great.

00:45:03.728 --> 00:45:06.483
Thank you both so much for giving us this time.

00:45:06.483 --> 00:45:07.967
Thank you for inviting us.

00:45:08.809 --> 00:45:10.400
It was such a pleasure to talk to you both.

00:45:11.242 --> 00:45:13.509
Great Thank you to both of you for doing this today.

00:45:13.509 --> 00:45:15.072
It really meant a lot to us.

00:45:15.072 --> 00:45:22.103
Your resource is tremendous for so many different people and you are right that we need more of this.

00:45:22.103 --> 00:45:24.467
We need to be talking about all of this stuff.

00:45:24.467 --> 00:45:27.440
It makes it easier for all of us.

00:45:30.626 --> 00:45:43.652
I talked to my mom probably like three or four times a week, but I feel like for me, I try to talk to her a little bit more often just because my parents are getting older, and I feel like for me, I try to talk to her a little bit more often just because my parents are getting older and I feel like I really value the amount of time that I do get to have with them.

00:45:43.652 --> 00:45:51.545
Two pieces of advice you would give parents Listen, sometimes we don't want advice, we just want to feel heard.

00:45:51.545 --> 00:45:53.606
Mother's Day message to your mom.

00:45:53.606 --> 00:45:55.186
Thank you to my mom.

00:45:55.186 --> 00:45:57.648
She actually recently helped me with my job.

00:45:57.648 --> 00:46:10.349
She was in a video for me and I'm very grateful because I made her reshoot a lot of times and she was so sweet going through it all, even though this was probably not my dream job for her, but it is mine.

00:46:11.630 --> 00:46:19.382
I think once my mom and I set healthy boundaries, our conversations are much more friendly and we just talk about catching up with each other's lives.

00:46:19.382 --> 00:46:27.188
And so we we have much longer conversations, like an hour to an hour and a half, and it just feels so much easier that way.

00:46:27.188 --> 00:46:29.271
Happy Mother's Day, mom.

00:46:29.271 --> 00:46:29.873
You're the best.

00:46:33.101 --> 00:46:33.922
So that's a wrap.

00:46:33.922 --> 00:46:36.228
Thank you so much to Mary Dell and Lisa.

00:46:36.228 --> 00:46:38.813
They are really two women to be reckoned with.

00:46:38.813 --> 00:46:42.710
I know some of the questions we've asked before, but it was nice to get their viewpoint.

00:46:42.710 --> 00:46:44.266
They've been in this for so long.

00:46:44.266 --> 00:46:49.612
Sometimes, you know, Kirsten, we talk about this, but the repetition helps us remember.

00:46:49.612 --> 00:46:54.826
That's why I do those rewind episodes, because you forget and you need to put it into practice.

00:46:54.826 --> 00:46:55.827
I really thank them.

00:46:55.827 --> 00:46:56.887
I thought it was terrific.

00:46:57.288 --> 00:47:10.523
I also think sometimes you hear something one day and it didn't necessarily jive, but then you hear it again, said a little bit differently, and all of a sudden it means something to you.

00:47:10.523 --> 00:47:11.146
So I thought it was great.

00:47:11.146 --> 00:47:15.724
I love the resources, I love what they're doing, just having the conversation.

00:47:15.724 --> 00:47:29.208
We talk about that with so many different topics, but really that is something that should carry through everything, whether it's parenting or mental health or our own health, whatever we should be talking about everything.

00:47:29.208 --> 00:47:31.746
We're all having the life experience.

00:47:32.467 --> 00:47:32.849
We are.

00:47:32.849 --> 00:47:33.891
Why not share?

00:47:33.891 --> 00:47:36.766
And I love the way she said it isn't failure to launch.

00:47:37.849 --> 00:47:38.492
It's a journey.

00:47:39.440 --> 00:47:41.769
Anyway, thank you so much to our listeners.

00:47:41.769 --> 00:47:44.168
Happy Mother's Day for you mothers celebrating.

00:47:44.168 --> 00:47:48.570
Thanks to Connie Gorn-Fisher, our extraordinary audio engineer.

00:47:48.570 --> 00:47:51.809
Again, I want to thank everyone for supporting our work.

00:47:51.809 --> 00:47:56.050
Remember, you can log on to our website BiteYourTonguePodcastcom.

00:47:56.050 --> 00:48:00.563
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00:48:00.563 --> 00:48:03.108
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00:48:03.108 --> 00:48:05.963
If you do $5 a month, it ends up being $60.

00:48:05.963 --> 00:48:08.769
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00:48:08.769 --> 00:48:12.143
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00:48:12.143 --> 00:48:14.666
You can either email us or there's a little microphone.

00:48:14.666 --> 00:48:15.628
Send us your message.

00:48:15.628 --> 00:48:21.123
We are going to do a question and answer episode at our very last episode for season three.

00:48:21.583 --> 00:48:27.481
Send us your questions and remember sometimes you just have to bite your tongue.

00:48:27.501 --> 00:48:52.960
Thank you.