Summer Series: Eps 197, Walking the Tightrope of Raising Teens with Kim Muench

Joyful Courage: Calming the drama and taking control of your parenting journey AUDIOBOOK will be available just in time for the Back to school season – it’s summer now, but soon we will all be looking at the transitions that come with fall. I am confident that the Joyful Courage audiobook will be a supportive companion as you ride it out with your kids – full of stories and tools that will connect you with self and others, the audiobook will be something you can listen to over and over and over again.  Keep staying tuned in for details as we get closer to launch day!! Follow Joyful Courage on FB and IG, and sign up for my weekly newsletter at www.https://besproutable.us13.list-manage.com/subscribe?u=5e11377e68a482c341b78ff6d&id=d25c237449

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Hey friends! Welcome back to Joyful Courage – a conscious parenting podcast, where we get real and raw about the parenting journey. You have tuned in to another SUMMER SERIES EPISODE!!  This week I am bringing back my conversation with Kim Minch. Kim has been on the show a couple of times, but this episode we dig into how the parenting teens experience can really feel like a tight rope walk. Consider the content of LAST WEEK’s show, I thought it would be helpful to share this conversation.

 

Kim is a JAI Institute for Parenting certified parenting coach who works with moms of preteens and teenagers. She is the mother of 5 kids ages 13-31. She writes about conscious parenting, provides one on one coaching and workshops to help support moms towards intentional parenting. We are discussing detaching from the outcome. Join us!

What you’ll hear in this episode:

– When children arrive at adolescence
– The balance of boundaries and relationship building with our teens
– Choosing your battles
– Defining your family values
– Setting an example for your kids
– Defining non-negotiables
– Ways to offer choices to your teenager
– Detaching from the outcome
– Prioritizing personal care and personal development
– The illusion of control
– Individuation and what that can look like
– Supporting our kids in making better choices with alcohol
– Being okay with kids failing or things taking longer
– Trusting vs hovering – learning to detach
– Taking a long view to your relationship with your kids

What does Joyful Courage mean to you?

Joyful Courage means to me enthusiastically embracing and supporting the journey of our sons and daughters that have come into the world to live out their journey. Supporting and encouraging them with enthusiasm. And I love the two words together, I think it’s fantastic.

Resources:

Episode 82: Tweens and Smart Phones

Where to find:

Website | Facebook | Twitter | Facebook Group Real Life Parenting Community

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Joyful Courage: Calming the drama and taking control of your parenting journey

 

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Thank you to everyone that has been so encouraging on this journey!!!  I appreciate you!!!!

 

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Transcription

Casey O'Roarty 0:00
Joy, joyful courage, calming the drama and taking control of your parenting journey. Audiobook will be available just in time for the back to school season. It's summer now, but soon we will all be looking at the transitions that come with fall. I am confident that the joyful courage audiobook will be a supportive companion as you ride it out with your kids, full of stories and tools that will connect you with self and others, the audiobook will be something you can listen to over and over and over again. Keep staying tuned in for details as we get closer to launch day, follow joyful courage on Facebook and Instagram and sign up for my weekly newsletter at www dot joyful courage.com/join,

Hey friends, welcome back to joyful courage, a conscious parenting podcast where we get real and raw about the Parenting journey you have tuned in to another summer series episode this week, I am bringing back my conversation with Kim Minch. Kim has been on the show a couple of times, but this episode, we dig into how the parenting teens experience can feel like a walk on the tightrope considering the content of last week's show. I thought it would be helpful to share this conversation. You know that I love the mantra fiercely committed, lovingly detached. This conversation is all about that, and man, is it hard to do with our teens. Check it out. Welcome back, listeners. My guest today is Kim Minch. Kim is a Jie Institute for parenting, certified parenting coach whose favorite population are moms of pre teens and teenagers. She is also the mother of five kids, ages 13 to 31 four boys and her youngest is her only daughter with three decades of personal experience, Kim is passionate about educating, supporting and encouraging moms to raise their adolescents through intentional parenting practices, by facilitating one on one coaching as well as local support groups and workshops just for moms, Kim guides With compassion and without judgment, to help moms create happier, healthier relationships at home. In addition, Kim writes locally and nationally about conscious parenting practices, and her blog can be found at WWW dot reallife parentguide.com you if you are a hardcore, joyful courage listener, you will remember Kim from Episode 82 when we talked about tweens and smartphones. Oh my gosh, that conversation was well over a year ago, and I feel like so much has shown up on the journey since then, including deep diving into the teen years. I'm so happy to have you back on Welcome back to the podcast. Kim,

Kim Minch 2:57
thank you, Casey. I'm so happy to be here again and to have the opportunity to chat with you and your listeners, yay.

Casey O'Roarty 3:05
Well, please remind us all about how you found yourself doing what you do. Well,

Kim Minch 3:09
I found myself in my greatest parenting challenge and slash nightmare, in May of 2008 when, as you mentioned, I have five children. My oldest son at the time, was 20, and I received a phone call from him. He was living out of state, 1500 miles away, and he called and he said, Mom, I need help. I've been in a blackout the last three days, and I've been recovering all day today, and I this isn't the first time, though, it was the first time for me to understand that he had a very serious problem with alcohol. It was the wake up call of that phone call that really sent me on a journey to look at not only the way I was parenting, but the way I had been parented, and what I was bringing from my own my own childhood, into the way that I was raising my kids, so he we had very tumultuous couple of years, and he is at this point more than eight years sober. Much in credit to the fact that, of course, you know, as with addiction, it really had to come from him. However, I think it was supporting and encouraging him without doing too much for him during those times, that really elicited his long term sobriety. So that prompted me to really, like I said, investigate parenting on so many levels. I went back to school for a degree in psychology, and I was determined to become a licensed Chemical Dependency Counselor, and along that road, I decided what I really want to focus on is proactively helping parents, specifically parents of teenagers, just because of where I was at in the game with my own children. So at this point, I, as you mentioned, I write about conscious parenting. I lead local workshops and. Support groups for parents of moms, specifically of preteens and teens, and Coach women one on one through a course that I developed because I want to help shift the consciousness of the way that we're parenting, especially our teenagers.

Casey O'Roarty 5:16
Yeah, well, and I want to say to all the dads that are listening. Don't worry, this show is for you too. Yeah,

Kim Minch 5:25
I love dads. I have one. My kids have one. Yes, absolutely, this will apply to either one, yeah,

Casey O'Roarty 5:31
well, and I really appreciate that. So as everyone knows, I have my own teenager, and one that's coming up in October, will be a teenager, a baby teenager. He Well, both of them are teaching me so much and really sending me back to my parenting books, specifically positive discipline for teenagers, as you know and my listeners know, that's the philosophy that I facilitate and kind of have my foundation in and it's interesting because and we were talking before I hit record, it feels like there's this gap of information. There's so much written and offered for parents with kids under five and for school aged kids, and then it comes to adolescents and teenagers, and it just feels like there's not much there. And so I'm so grateful to have you come on and have this conversation with me, because for one you are, you know your your youngest is your daughter. So she is, she 1314, she's heading into eighth grade. So she's heading into eighth grade, but you have people that made it to the other side, I

Kim Minch 6:45
do, and have been through some challenges on the way to the other side. So yes, I have a son that is going to be a sophomore, so I believe you have a daughter the same age I do. I do, yes, okay. And then I have one in college, and I have one that is in his mid 20s, and he is returning to from a European a year in Europe, and going to be going into the seminary. So I have bear a wide variety of kids and experiences, and they're all, you know, I don't know why I thought they would be kind of the same, but they couldn't be more different. And the and the beautiful thing about it is, when we're all together, they appreciate each other and their uniqueness, and that is fantastic as a parent to see, yeah,

Casey O'Roarty 7:29
well, and I'm guessing, too, none of them have walked a path that you assumed that they would be walking.

Kim Minch 7:38
No, and that's why we're talking about detaching from the outcome today. Yes, that is, they had, they haven't, and it's been, you know, it's a practice for me and to Yeah, just realize sometimes you don't even know that you have expectations. Do you notice? Oh, like, I

Casey O'Roarty 7:56
think you have no expectation? Yes, you think you're so easygoing, that's what I think. I'm so laid back and, you know, free spirited, and I just want my children to walk their own creative path. And then I'm like, why are you on that path? That's not the right path? Oh my gosh, it's so mind melting. Yes, well, when I re listened to the show that we did in March of 2017, all I could think of as I listened to myself was, oh, you sweet mom. You had no idea what was coming. It was actually right at the cusp, right before some really big shifts with my daughter. And I thought that I had a teenager. She was 14, and I thought we had arrived, but she was really, and I just said this about Ian, she was really just like a baby teenager, right? So tell me about what you think of when, like, when do we know, because they turned 13, but then there's that period where you're like, Oh, now they're they've arrived. What when do you when do you think that time is? What is it? What is the distinctions that show up when our children have arrived? If you know what I mean, yeah,

Kim Minch 9:08
in the teen years, yeah, yeah. And then there's no magic. It's like 18 is not some magical number that all now for kids and adult I mean, they're renowned as an adult, but that doesn't a magic number that just all of a sudden, hey, they're mature, and they need to, they be. They can make all the decisions on their own. I will say this. I'm going to tell you two answers, one of which is what I think parents would say. My in my experience in working with parents, is when I see the eye rolls, when all of a sudden I'm getting the attitude. This is what I know that I'm a parent of a teenager. And what I will tell you from my own personal parenting experience is this, when my kids start to come to me and tell me things about their friends and then the things their friends are experiencing and doing and experimenting with, that's that's what I know. And for my daughter at 13, that. It's very realistic in terms of friends and boys and dating and things that are going on, but yeah, for me, it's when my kids start talking to me about things that I might wish that they weren't yet experiencing through their friends, but they are, and they're coming and talking to me about it, yeah, yeah, there's the plus, right? You said the same thing, right? Yeah, that is a plus. And

Casey O'Roarty 10:23
it's also like, oh my gosh, where's the sand? I would like to stick my head in it, right now, yeah, not really, but that is, it's, it's challenge. It's, you know, I think that there's this continuum, right, of that extreme, authoritarian, lots of control on the parents part, or perceived control through punishment and rewards. And then on the other end of the spectrum is this, like, hands off, they're going to do what they want anyway. I have no control. Kids are in control continuum and so and I was raised, or I've raised my kids with positive discipline, which is this kind and firm, both and style, and it's all well and good until things got super real, and my child is coming to me saying, hey, guess what? I need to tell you something that I did.

And I'm like, oh, all I have to respond is tell me more about that, because I don't know what else to say. And so it feels really challenging to stand in the middle between this like, you know, super control of the parent versus super control of the child, to be inside of this authoritative style. It's I'm noticing, and not all the time, but and it's typically when fear is creeping in and the Oh my gosh. What if future tripping to find my feet in that kind and firm you know, in my opinion, relationship trumps everything. So whatever I do or say, I want it to strengthen relationship while also holding boundaries. I mean, it's like,

Kim Minch 12:09
yeah, it's a tightrope. I mean, that's what I call it. But, and here's how I work with moms, in terms of as our kids are progressing through their middle school and certainly, certainly through their high school years, we want to give them opportunities and choices as much as possible, but you absolutely have to have some boundaries and structure in place. So just like when there are two two things apply, choosing your battles, choosing what is most important to you. And I think one of the things that we do is we get so busy as parents in our day to day life, we've never really defined what our values are and what we want to what our family stands for, and what we want to instill in our children. We might say things, but really, I think it's beneficial to parents to really think through, write down and have a conversation if they're, you know, in a co partnership parenting as to, you know, what did it what do we stand for? What do we value, and what are we trying to instill in our kids and work towards that end in every decision that's made? And are you an example of this? I think that clearly helps to define what the non negotiables are going to be in your house, and then whenever possible, to give choices. Would you like some examples of what I mean? Yeah,

Casey O'Roarty 13:27
I would love that. That

Kim Minch 13:28
would be great. Okay, okay, so my young I'm going to focus on my youngest two that are 13 and 15, girl and boy, because that just makes the most sense, and that's kind of where you're at as well. So in terms of their academics, they're choosing their schooling and whatnot. Of course, there's all these outside messages parents are getting about what their kids should take and how they need to, you know, check this box and, you know, blah, blah, blah. I very much give my kids the opportunity to choose whatever level course they want to take I figure they know. I really just trust that they know better than me what what their ability is. And okay, so that's one area where they always have choice. Second area is what, for example, this is a little thing, but when they're going to do their homework, they know what they have to get done. They know if they want to come home and have a snack and get to it, or if they want to do it after dinner, if they want to do it, if they want to get up early the next morning and do it. I mean, they're the ones that are going to have the ramifications in terms of their grades or not being prepared. So that to me, like I've released that. Okay,

Casey O'Roarty 14:37
can you talk about that for a second? Sure? Because I think it's valuable to be transparent, and I am being transparent right now. So this is one of those places where I thought I was so hands off, and it was easy to be hands off because I had a child who was highly motivated around school and grades, and that has left. The building, and it's become like, Nah, passing still probably getting better grades than the majority of the kids, pulling off, actually pretty decent grades, considering the amount of effort that's being put into. And this is where I'm like, Oh my gosh, I am not hands off like I am. I want to. And I was raised in a family where, like, values education, not only education, but high GPA. I mean grades. I was paid for grades, whether or not I could drive my car, dependent on my grades. And I did exactly the bare minimum of whatever was. You know, I had to have a 3.0 to drive my car. So guess what? I got a 3.0 and and now I'm FA and SO coming out of that, thinking I am going to be totally hands off, you know? And I thought that I was so mean. Listeners, don't you love it when you're like, oh my gosh, I am so good at being hands off. I am so good pat myself, yeah, totally patting myself on the back. And lo and behold, here we are in high school, and she's like, You know what? I don't really care, and I'm probably not gonna go to college and and I'm like, inside my body, like, What are you talking about? So yes, and I'm the same way with homework, although the inside of me is slowly dying again. I think being the Pioneer versus, you know, on child four and five is probably what's showing up here as well. Because I could be all over her case, and it that could be the theme of our time together, is me letting her know that she's not doing enough, translated to not good enough, translated to whatever meaning she makes, which is not what I want either. So

Kim Minch 16:46
it okay. And I think a second part to this, I just have to jump in and say this is detaching to the outcome thing, right?

Casey O'Roarty 16:52
That's what I'm talking about. Why? Why? I

Kim Minch 16:55
mean, we could talk about whole range of things, but why I've gotten to a place where I'm able to do this is because I have done a lot of personal work and and by that I don't mean like, oh my god, years of study. And you know that? You know that. Okay, but what I'm saying is I regularly work on myself and take good care of myself so that I am present when I'm with them, and I don't, I spend a lot less time worrying about what the future is going to bring for them. I know that's easier said than done, but I don't know if you meditate. I mean, I've meditated for years. That is incredibly helpful to me, taking the time every morning I run, so I taking the time every morning to do that, and quite frankly, one thing that helps my mental health at the end of the day is to have a glass of wine. And that's just me. I mean, every parent will have a personal care routine, but making that a priority, we it's so hard. Like as moms, we have this nature to give, give, give, give, give, give, give, and you cannot give what you do not have, right? Yeah, you know, you cannot give your patience to your children if you don't have patience to give. But I think that one of the contributing factors is that I have watched my kids go through through some very challenging things, and I can't say I've never been anxious about the outcome, but I am able to realize that these bumps is where we grow character. I was a teen mom, and of course, I worry about that, you know, with my kids and their girlfriends, or my daughter, you know now that she's hitting the teen years, but the reality is that she's not me. My kids aren't me, and being super anxious about a particular outcome can sometimes bring that about. I've seen it over and over, you know, yeah, there's good reason to be anxious as parents of teens, especially when there's so many different things available to them and new experiences and whatnot. But if you can build a relationship with your child that they understand that you are not going to judge them and that you love them for just who they are in that moment, I think that that is a key player. Not easy,

Casey O'Roarty 19:18
no, well, and I think, like you said, give, give, give. For me, it's control, control, control. And that's been my parenting lesson from childbirth with my daughter. And I thought, you know, you think, Oh, I've, I've gotten over that, or I've done, and I, too, have done a lot of personal work, and giving myself credit too, have evolved quite a bit as a human. And I know that my daughter is my teacher. I know that we came together as soul beings prior to the physical body. And said, Okay, this is it. This is where we break some cycles and the line. Of women, this is where, you know, I'm gonna teach you about letting go of fear and control. And she's doing it. She's teaching me, and I really appreciate talking to people who's, you know, like, like, with the experience of having gone through the teen years, because it is so easy to forget or to trust, really, that everybody's gonna be okay and that. And I mean, ask anyone close to me, even my brother and sister, before any of us had kids, my brother said to my younger sister, you know, Casey's pretty bossy, but if you just do what she says, you end up having a really good time. Unfortunately, my children did not get that memo. But you know, it's not like, it's something that's new, right? And I know that, I think that there's this illusion When we have control, that somehow we can keep people safe, right? And I think ultimately, it comes from this place of love and wanting our kids to be safe and forgetting, like you said that every bump in the road, every experience, offers them an opportunity to build resiliency and character and accountability. And I was just saying to a group that I lead this morning, we can model, we can teach, we can coach them, but ultimately, it's the experiences that they have in life that are ultimately going to teach them and grow them into the people that they are meant to be. And you know right now, individuation is so it's like we are hardcore in individuation right now at our house. And when I think back to my own experience of being in a pretty controlled environment, I didn't do my individuation until college, and you know, that's when I realized, like, Oh, nothing actually happens to you when you get a D Oh, nobody's, nobody's paying attention to whether or not I go to class, or what time I come home, or who I'm spending the night with, or, you know, fill in, pretty much fill in the blank with anything you can think of. And, you know, so I'm, I was individuating Two states away versus and this helps me, and that's why I'm sharing it with everybody, is it helps me to remember like our individuation process right now is happening under our roof, and how great, because we're all there, loving each other and guiding and trusting that everybody's gonna be okay at

Kim Minch 22:38
the end of the day, right? Right? I mean, and you can see, and looking back at your own upbringing, that those that individuation, those moments, you know, those are the times that you learned and built character. And the fact that your children are showing these things to you earlier is, I think, fantastic, because it means you're allowing them, yeah, you're allowing them that, to do that, to to be who they are within, you know, within the realm. Again, I really think that this age group and parenting kids tend to 25 you know, is really a tightrope walk, and it's a learning experience, and it's a practice. It is a practice in the more you can get past all of those messages and expectations that our culture tells us all the time are important, and just tune in to who your child is. To me, that's that's the key, because it's all of these messages that we need to be aware of. I'm not saying live in a world where you don't know what's going on. I'm saying keep it in perspective and continue to work on the connection with your with your child and and to do that, they have to have some buy in. They have to understand that they have to feel like you're not going to judge, criticize and hold them to a level that they're not comfortable with or that they don't want.

Casey O'Roarty 24:04
Hey, all. Just wanted to let you know that I'm cooking up some goodness over here for the fall. I've mentioned before that I'm going to do the academy again, and what I've decided is that in September, I'm going to rerun the parenting teens with positive discipline audio Summit, and then follow it with two Academy tracks in October, one for the 12 to 14 ish crowd, and another for the parents of the 15 to 18 plus kids. The summit is a 15 interview program released over the course of a week. It's completely free. You have access during the week to listen. You'll also have the option to purchase the interviews at the end, if you'd like unlimited access. The joyful courage Academy is a five week course, and is a learning opportunity for parents of teens that includes content community and a powerful one. On one call with me. I am so excited make sure that you are all signed up for my newsletter so that you can get all the information about how to sign up for both the Summit and the Academy. Www, dot joyful courage.com/join. That's where you go to sign up for the newsletter. And don't forget that there are lots of powerful conversations happening over in the live and love with joyful courage and the joyful courage parents of teens Facebook groups, all you got to do is ask to join and fill out the questions you know when I think about how many of us you know are working through our own stuff because of the messages that we received growing up. And I think that part of my college individuation, we'll just call it that okay, had to do with I couldn't I didn't have space to to try things on, because this the space was was really judgmental, and what was acceptable was very narrow. And so when I remember that, I get to celebrate that, that's while my daughter is very quick to let me know how judgmental I am, I know that at some level I'm doing okay, because she's one able to tell me you are really judgmental and you always have to be right, which I mentioned. And again, talk to the people that are close to me. Yeah, this was not just her, you know, lashing out. It's pretty accurate. And you know that she has the ability to say that to me, and, you know, and to be trying things on, and to be really, I mean, there's plenty she doesn't tell me. I know that which is appropriate, I think, and the what she does tell me I think is such a gift because I didn't, I didn't talk to my parents with the candor that my kids talk to me so that, and I'm sharing that again listeners, because it's so easy for us. I think no matter what age our kids are to judge ourselves and and we forget to look for all of these signposts that say, Hey, you're doing okay. Actually, everything is okay,

Kim Minch 27:26
and there is value. I love the fact that you kind of thought about and worked through your own childhood and understanding what didn't work. That's one of the things that I was grounded literally, from junior high through high school. Yeah, I mean from one report card to the next. I mean, it was just and all that did was

especially as I got older and started dating and things, I just got sneakier, oh yeah, and I work with parents who are in the middle of this cat and mouse game where it's like, they do this. I'm going to read their texts. They do this. I'm going to take their phone, they do this. It's back and forth that gets nobody anywhere. And then then what you want me to ask yourself is, what kind of relationship do I want to have with this child when they're grown up? Because I have a fantastic relationship with my oldest kids because they were able, I truly believe that they felt able to come to me and talk with me and get support without my doing too much for them and also encouraging them right where they were at and not judging them, you know. And I really, I think it's because there were so many times in my own growing up that I felt judged by either parents or other adults in my life that I just didn't want that for my kids.

Casey O'Roarty 28:51
Yeah, yeah. Attachment to outcome. So not helpful, right? And then, but so uncomfortable to try and let things go. I mean, for some of us,

Kim Minch 29:07
well, and, you know, I think that one of the things that parents can do again is to really think about, what are the values, what are my own, you know, values that I want to instill and am I living those out, or am I just preaching them? Yeah, am I walking the walk? Am I because our kids will, through their behavior and their words totally throw the BS flag in our face. Mean they just will do that. So you have to, you know, be an example of what you're and that doesn't mean, hey, let's hold ourselves to a perfect level. And I've got to, you know, have all everything together and whatever it's about being human and vulnerable with our kids as well. I think there's real value in just saying, You know what, thank you for coming and telling me this, like, horrific story or something. You know, I'm not really sure how to respond at the moment, but, man, I really. Appreciate that you told me, yeah, you know, I need time to think this through, or, you know, whatever it is, but apologizing when necessary, being vulnerable at times is really humanizing. And our kids, they know we make mistakes. You know they know that. And when you can be relatable to them, and they see that you're willing to share some hard stuff at times. That's, you know, that's, that's where connections are made as well. You're not coming from this, like I know it all, and you know, you need to do this, this and this and kind of thing.

Casey O'Roarty 30:36
So I interrupted you when you were talking about the choices. You were talking about homework, kind of, and, but I What, where you didn't go, what I would love to talk about, like, are those non negotiables? And how I'm guessing those are kind of where the boundaries lie. And what does that look like in your home?

Kim Minch 30:54
Okay, so are you asking me to define like, what are in our home? What are non negotiables? Yeah. And what are the things? Okay, so the choices come in when homework right? And that you know that their grades, their academics, are completely on them. They know that I am available to take them for tutoring if they want to go. That you know I am not the person to come to for math help, because I am not strong in math. But bottom line, I will help facilitate whatever they need when they need it. But their choices, you know, they have a lot of choice in their academics. They have a lot of choice in their extracurriculars. They can shoot, they they need to be involved in something. But I don't care what that looks like. Okay, whatever, you know, whatever that looks like. I have a son in band, and we live in Texas, and band is incredibly I don't know, probably country, but, oh my god, okay, so are you

Casey O'Roarty 31:45
Texas? You always have to just do things a little bit bigger. Don't chat. Well, no,

Kim Minch 31:49
and I'm not native Texan. Been here for 10 years. I call it home, but it is really intense, really intense in terms of working and whatnot. And that is a choice for him. I would never I will support him during the season, which is just real intense in terms of two and three a day kind of practices in the heat, which is insane. I will support him in terms of making sure he's got food and making sure he gets good, you know, rest when he can, and whatnot, but his being in it is completely up to him. And there's a lot of parents who don't give that latitude. You know, it looks really important for their kid to be in football or band or, you know, play this particular instrument or be in theater or whatever. My kids need to be in something, because I think that they should do something more than just their academics, but what that looks like that's completely up to them, non negotiable, is alcohol and drugs. Of course, with the experience I had with my oldest son and I don't, I don't come from a place of fear. I come from a place of wanting to discuss it with them, educate them. They my youngest two never really saw they were two and four in the worst part of what was going on with my oldest. So they really don't have that experience like to but they know that it's been in my heart, and it's been very clear to me, because my feeling is this, once we once our kids have that knowledge of what alcohol or marijuana or, you know, whatever it feels like, the longer we can hold, the longer we can keep them, yeah, away from that, especially, especially like, I know we're both fans of Dan Siegel and in terms of what's going on in This, in this time period in their lives, the longer that we can have them, hold them from that, the better off they're going to be. And I do have my one son is going to be 21 in January, and went to study abroad, where it was legal to drink alcohol. And drank a little bit while he was there and came back and just chooses that's just not who he is. And I think that, I think that when kids feel comfortable and heard and acknowledged at home, they're especially in terms of what their how their parents feel about drug and alcohol use, I think they have an easier time going out into the world with their peers and choosing not to do that.

Casey O'Roarty 34:31
I hear you, Kim, I hear you, and I know that there. I know that there's a lot of us that are navigating this right now. I live in Washington state where, you know, pot is now legal for adults, but it's definitely kicked it up a notch with the younger crowd, and it's really you. Know, I like you, I was grounded a lot. Mostly, I was grounded for sneaking out, which only, like the meaning that I got was I gotta get better at sneaking out. Yeah, and so that being said, navigating when we do have a teen that might be experimenting or checking some stuff out. So this is, this is one of those interesting places where I feel like in parent education, it's this, we don't really nobody's myself included. It's hard to articulate or commit to messaging around this because it feels messy and risky. And, you know, I don't think that all kids that, I mean, there's definitely kids that are using drugs and alcohol and need to go to rehab, like just, it's a problem. There's issues mental health

Kim Minch 35:58
all the time. Every kid, right, right? But, but then every kid is that going, you know, they've, if they've tried pot at 15, or if they drank it, you know, are they gonna end up in rehab? And that's true,

Casey O'Roarty 36:11
right? And so it's really, and of course, honoring your experience, right and under you know, and haven't, like, not all of us have a family story that we can anchor into that's actually really useful, you know, in in as kind of pulling back the curtain on the, you know, quote, experimenting in such a way that is so close to home, yeah,

Kim Minch 36:40
yeah. And I totally understand what you're saying. And I think then, had I not had this experience, I believe that I would feel like, okay, I need to listen to my mom gut here. And I think that's really, really key. I need to listen to my mom gut and watch the chain of events. I mean, if you can tell things are going on and your kids experimenting, you know. I mean, as long as you're, you know, you're in awareness, but then you see things escalate to a point of, you know, kid gets a driver's license and they get in a crash and alcohol was involved. Okay? These are, these are beginning warning, you know, like, especially if something like that were to happen, and the kid then continued, despite the fact that there were some pretty serious consequences in one way or another, right? That's an indication that you know that, not that they have necessarily an addiction problem. That's not where I'm going. But what I'm saying is things need there has to be stepping, maybe a shifting of, yeah, shifting of boundaries and whatnot. And that's why I would say this. There's always going to be drugs. There's also going to be new ways. I mean, kids are it's amazing. Oh my

Casey O'Roarty 37:51
god, vaping. Vaping is killing me.

Kim Minch 37:54
It's, it's

Casey O'Roarty 37:57
heard me talk about vaping already many times. I know it's God, it's like crazy in Texas, it's crazy where we live,

Kim Minch 38:04
oh, my god, middle school. Yeah, it is. It is crazy. But because there's always going to be these new things, there's going to be drugs and apps and sneakiness and whatever the I think the greatest opportunity that we have is to is to build a connection and a relationship with our kids that isn't so extreme in one way, like you and I and a lot of other you know, people were raised with, you know, so many rules and all these, you know, consequences, but then not just a free for all as well. So I think giving kids choices when we can also implementing parameters around there are certain non negotiables. I told you what my mine is. I mean, that doesn't mean everybody has to have, you know, the same ones, right? But keeping those non negotiables to a minimum and giving your kids as many choices and being okay if they fail or if it takes them longer, yeah, it's detaching. It's, it's very, you know, like, ego based, you know, I mean, like just being able to say, My child came through me, but not for me, right? I mean, you can see so many times online when parents, you know, they put their child accomplishment this or that on there. And I'm guilty, I do that from time to time, but it that's we're looking for validation at some level with, you know, I need to pat myself on the back publicly, because my kid accomplished this. And what we want is our kids to be able to listen to their own inner voice and their own guidance and support that

Casey O'Roarty 39:39
yes, yes, yes. And it's a, you know, I talk about the pendulum swing a lot. I think it's they, you know, especially with, I haven't seen it so much with my son, although I know it's coming. But with the daughter, man that the pendulum swing between like connected and loving and willing to like snuggle versus, you know, do. This connection and get away from me and I'm in a mood, and sometimes the pendulum, I mean, it's like a five minute switch, but I also notice my own pendulum swing. And something that's interesting is the way that control will kind of sneak in, like sometimes it feels really solid, like, I trust our relationship. I trust in her learning from her mistakes, and then, and then it's like, this sneaky thing where I realize, like, Ooh, I am trolling her social media right now. I need to get off her social media, you know, and I'm looking for signs or clues or comments, and I don't realize I'm doing it until I realize I'm doing it, and then I get to take a pause and say, hold on. You know, I if I'm gonna I can't be both. I can't be both trusting in our relationship and trusting in her judgment while also hovering. Yeah.

Kim Minch 40:58
So, yes, yeah, I agree, and I understand that some of the things that I may have said, you know, today sound easy, and they're not. That's why I call it a practice, as I know you would. You know, there are going to be moments, and we have to be able to give ourselves Grace at some point. You know, with some of these things, when, when, when we okay. You find yourself doing that. Then you ask yourself, Okay, who do I want to be in this relationship? How do I want to show up? Because I said I trust her, and here I am doing this, yeah. So then you answer that question and you move on, yeah.

Casey O'Roarty 41:35
I love that answer the question and move on. Move on, people for the parents that are listening and feeling as though maybe they've lost connection or relationship with their teens and are perhaps really attached and are you know are just like listening to us and thinking, oh my gosh, having a new lens to see where they're at. What do you suggest as a starting point, either in rebuilding relationship or in their work of of disconnect? It does, you know, not dis attaching, that's not a word, but letting go of outcome.

Kim Minch 42:16
I think that you have to ask yourself this, you can be right, or you can be in relationship, and I don't think the two coexist very often in these years. And you have to look at this as a long term thing. When your children are grown and gone, do you want them to visit? And you know, do you want to have a relationship with, potentially, you know, grandchildren and whatnot, or, what is it? What does it look like? And what I've seen and experienced with my own older children that are out of the house at this point is that they continue to come back and engage with me, not because they need anything other than just to share with me the joys or the challenges that are going on in their lives as an adult. And I do and they care. At this point, they're asking me. They're asking me, how, you know, how, how are you doing them? How was your day? How's work going, whatever kind of thing. So I think that's what we want, in the end, is to be able to have a fantastic open relationship with our adult children. If you are feeling that you are disconnected at this point, I say one thing, and that is, it is never too late, and that I think there is real value in sitting down and being honest with your child about how you've parented up until this point, and that you like to see some things shift, and that you're going to work on it as a parent. Love it.

Casey O'Roarty 43:48
I love that. And when you know, when you consider how much, how many more years we have to be in relationship with our adult children, then this small period of time where they live under our roof, that really puts things into perspective for me too. So in the context of raising teenagers, what does joyful courage mean to you? Kim,

Kim Minch 44:11
let's see joyful courage means to me, enthusiastically embracing and supporting the journey of our sons and daughters that have come into the world to live out their journey, supporting and encouraging them with enthusiasm. And I love the two words together, joyful and courage. I think it's fantastic.

Casey O'Roarty 44:32
I love the word enthusiasm,

Kim Minch 44:37
sometimes hard as a parent, but that's that's what I think. I need, some enthusiasm.

Casey O'Roarty 44:40
Well, remind listeners where they can find you and follow your work.

Kim Minch 44:45
My website is real life parentguide.com, and you can spell that with one other twos. You're going to get there either way. I'm on, I have a do have a Facebook page, real life Parent Guide, and then I'm also on Twitter, at mom the number four, real. A, l, z, so you can find me in those places. Yay. Well, Kim,

Casey O'Roarty 45:05
thank you so much for taking the time to come on and chat with me about teenagers. Oh my gosh, we're gonna have to do this again. Absolutely.

Kim Minch 45:13
Thank you so much for having me again. I really appreciate the opportunity.

Casey O'Roarty 45:20
Thank you for listening. I am so honored to serve you each and every week. I love hearing about what you think of the show. A great place to share is iTunes. Your review will help others find the show and take in all the goodness and you never know. I may read your review live on the podcast. Big thanks to my team, Tay Alison, and Chris Mann from pod shaper, so grateful for the ways you all support me and the work of joyful courage until next week, bring your attention to your breath. Ride it into your body, find the balcony seat and trust that everyone is going to be okay.

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