Eps 269: Solo Show Dissecting Beliefs Behind Behavior Part 4- Assumed Inadequacy

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This week is a solo show!

Takeaways from the show:


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  • Mistaken goals

  • Belonging and significance feelings live under the surface

  • Learn to pay attention to your inner experience

  • Review of undue attention, misguided power, and revenge

  • Assumed inadequacy

  • Belief behind inadequacy

  • Teens long for connection

  • Ways to restore your child’s adequacy

  • Being vulnerable pays off

  • Take time to own your behavior with your child


Mistaken Goal Chart.png

Previous shows about mistaken goals:

Eps 261 | Eps 263 | Eps 265 | Eps 267 | Mistaken Goal Chart

See you next week!! 🙂

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Transcription

Casey O'Roarty 0:00
This episode of The joyful courage podcast is dedicated to all the parent educators out there doing the important work of supporting parents and families. Stay tuned to learn more about how you can become a certified positive discipline parent educator during the show. Hello, friends. Welcome to the joyful courage podcast, a place where we tease apart what it means to be a conscious parent and a conscious human on the wild ride of parenting. I am your host. Casey o'brdy, positive discipline trainer, parent, coach and Mama walk in the path right next to you as I am perfectly raised my own two teenagers, joyful courage is all about grit, growth on the parenting journey, relationships that provide a sense of connection and meaning and influential tools that support everyone in being their best selves. Today's show is a solo show, and I encourage you to listen for how grit shows up as I tease apart this week's topic. Thank you so much for listening. I am deeply honored to lead you. I am grateful that what I put out to the world matters to you, and I am so so stoked to keep it coming. Thank you for who you are and for being in the community. Enjoy the show.

Okay, welcome back, my friends. We have made it to part four of the belief behind behavior series of solo shows I'm going to start us off today, sharing directly from the positive discipline for teenagers, book written by Dr Jane Nelson and Lynn Lott. And the title of this section, hold on. I thought I was ready, but I wasn't. The title of this section, the section that I'm going to read is mistaken goals of behavior are based on underlying beliefs. So let me read Rudolf dreichers identified what he called for mistaken goals or purposes of behavior, to get attention or special service, to have power over others, to seek justice through revenge, or to be left alone without anyone expecting anything. Of them, this is called assumed inadequacy. Some recent Adlerian psychologists have added a fifth goal for teens, which is to seek excitement. We'll talk more about that on another episode. These are called mistaken goals, because children mistakenly believe that the only way to find belonging and significance is through behaviors that often achieve the opposite of what they really want. Instead of achieving their goal of belonging, they find alienation from those closest to them, as well as deeper discouragement, their mistaken goals become a vicious cycle. The more discouraged they become, the more they escalate their efforts through the mistaken goal. Behavior has a purpose, even though a teen may not be aware of the purpose of his or her behavior. When you deal with your teen's behavior without understanding and addressing those underlying beliefs, you will be frustrated in your efforts to affect change. Becoming aware of mistaken goals can help you understand your teens, improve your relationship with them, and help them see options for their behavior. All right, so this is what we've been talking about. If you're just tuning into this conversation, please know that I've already covered the first three mistaken goals, or as we also call them, beliefs behind the behavior in episode 263, 265, and 267, and I did a general summary in episode 261 so if you're just chiming, if you're just jumping in. Now, I encourage you to go back and listen to those episodes, because it'll just build the context and will help make this show make that much more sense to you.

So again, remembering that all of this work is based on the Adlerian theory, the Adlerian idea that human behavior is motivated by our perception of belonging and significance. And as Rudolf dreicher said, and he was a student of Alfred Adler, he said, a misbehaving child is a discouraged child. We call this mistaken goals, because they are based on the mistaken beliefs about how to achieve a sense of belonging and significance. Yes, this week we are focusing on the final mistaken goal, which is assumed inadequacy. And that mistaken belief is that it's impossible to belong, so it's better to just give up. Hmm, makes me sad. I'm going to be using the mistaken goal chart to guide us through this content. And just like in previous episodes, you can find a downloadable PDF of the mistaken goal chart in the show notes. But before we get into that, I'm wondering, if you listener are asking yourself, what's the big deal? Like, why does this matter? Why do we care about mistaken goals? Well, if you have been listening to me for any length of time, you've probably heard me talk about the iceberg metaphor. In a nutshell, the iceberg metaphor is the idea that at the tip of the iceberg are the behaviors that we don't love, the behaviors that make us feel fear or anger, sadness, annoyance, irritation, resentment, all the things right? This is what we see from our kids. This is what's on the surface. This is what's showing up in our homes and out in the world. And well meaning, loving parents, just like you and me, often want to shut that behavior down, right? No, thank you. We get laser focused on making it stop, right? Sometimes, we might get a little desperate and use that one tool that we all have in our toolbox, whether or not we use it often, it's in there, and even though it's pretty ineffective in the long run, it makes us feel powerful as parents in the short run, and that tool is punishment, right or intimidation or lecturing or blaming or shaming. Now, what typically happens when we react to behavior this way is that we may shut it down. So it seems for a minute, but more likely than not, the behavior will return, or we damage our relationship with our teens, or they just go underground, right? What is more effective is to go under the surface. Right? Remember, we're talking about the iceberg. Go under the surface to that part that we can't see and remember that there is a lot going on under there, and we need to be curious about that. This is where our kids mistaken goals live. This is where their misguided beliefs about belonging and significance are developed. This is why these conversations matter? Because when we can support our kids in developing new beliefs about themselves and the world around them, we see the behaviors at the tip of the iceberg shift, right? I mean, it just it makes sense. When we can take care of our kids needs, then they don't need to act out. I know it's hard to believe, but it's true. So this week's focus again, we're talking about the fourth mistaken goal, the fourth belief behind the behavior. It is called assumed inadequacy. And as a reminder to discover our kids mistaken goal, or to make a guess about what our child's mistaken goal is, what their belief behind behavior is, we have to tune into how their behavior makes us feel. It isn't about looking at what they're doing and making a guess. It's about turning into our inner experience and exploring that first so side note, side note, many people aren't paying much attention to their internal experience. So if this feels hard for you, you aren't alone. Remember, one of the pillars of joyful courage is personal growth. And here is a prime example of why it's so important for us to continue to grow and expand who we are. Know that so much can be gained in the context of parenting as well as the larger context of being a human out in the world when we learn to pay attention to our inner experience and grow our emotional intelligence. Just trust me on this one peeps as a review undue attention. Remember, that was the first mistaken goal leaves us feeling kind of annoyed and irritated, like the sensation of having this pesky fly around that won't go away. The second mistake and goal, misguided power leaves us feeling challenged or threatened. The physical experience of like our hackles getting raised and we're ready to show who the actual boss is, right? Who's the adult in the room? Well, if you're throwing a fit alongside your teen, who is. Adult in the room, hmm, revenge, which is the mistaken goal we talked about a couple weeks ago, leaves us feeling hurt and defeated. And it's the physical sensation of being punched in the gut, like, Ah, how could you, how could you do this, right? It's different than big and tall and how could you do this? It's more of like an Ugh, like a like a punch to the gut. Now, finally, this week's topic, assumed inadequacy. Assumed inadequacy, when our kids are living with the mistaken goal of assumed inadequacy, we are left feeling despair and a sense of hopelessness. It's as if we're a sponge, and we've been wrung out so much that we're dry, we don't have anything left to give. And I really think of this as a down low energy experience, a low energy, right kind of like hunched over head in your hands, tears right there, just really feeling that sense of helplessness around what's going on with your child. So it's not like, God, if they just get it together, like it's not that kind of that's like a higher energy, this is a really low energy. And I see you. I know you parents out there. I know that there's many of you that are in this place right now, and I hear from a lot of you. There's people in my membership in the Facebook group, one on one clients who are feeling really worried about their kids and not feeling like they've got anything left to give. And that's a really desperate place, right? You may be experiencing this. If your child is totally withdrawn from the family, has stopped putting any effort into school, won't try new things, or just generally, seems to be checked out. Now, some of those behaviors that I just mentioned could be an indication of another mistaken goal, right? Which is why the important piece is to focus in on how these behaviors make you feel okay, how these behaviors make you feel let's use the chart to guide us through this mistaken goal. So in that first column, adults feel a sense of despair, hopelessness, helplessness and inadequacy. They might respond to their child's behavior by giving up doing things for them over helping or showing a lack of faith. Sometimes we might even compare them to another child. So it could sound like I don't know why this is so hard for you. Your brother blew through this and was fine, right? Again, we're coming from that desperate place. So we have our feelings, we respond typically in a certain way, then our child's typical response is to retreat further or to be passive. Right? Have you ever had a situation where you're trying to get your child to shift their mindset around being able to do something, and they're really committed to I can't, I can't, and then they just kind of get that passive affect. Typical response also includes no improvement, no response, or just avoiding trying. Now we can guess. We can make the guess that if this is the pattern that you're falling into, that your child's mistaking belief is I don't believe I can belong, so I'll convince others not to expect anything of me. I'm helpless and unable, and it's no use trying because I won't do it. Right?

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