Eps 370: SOLO SHOW Deep diving into encouragement

Episode 370

It’s you and me, babe! You. And. Me. Another solo show for diving into work of parenting teens and rolling around in it together. Today I am talking about how encouragement can be a tool for relationship, skill building and showing up as our best. I share language and thoughts about how to uplevel the encouragement in YOUR home so that your teens are more likely to step into cooperation and collaboration.

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Takeaways from the show

https://www.besproutable.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/IMG_8690-scaled-e1678320832140.jpeg
  • encouragement vs praise
  • what encouragement looks like, sounds like
  • personal responsibility and encouragement
  • being in the tension of what we want most vs what we want now
  • when encouragement isn’t enough
  • taking care of ourselves when our teens are deeply discouraged

Today Joyful Courage means trusting myself and paying attention to the indicators that I am moving into my teen’s lane. Joyful Courage means trusting my teen, and trusting the power of encouragement.

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Transcription

SUMMARY KEYWORDS
encouragement, teens, kids, feel, support, notice, parents, hear, strengths, sound, relationship, discipline, alfred adler, positive, stay, encouraging, physical sensation, statements, offer, happening
SPEAKERS
Casey O'Roarty

Casey O'Roarty 00:05
Hello, Welcome back. Welcome to the joyful courage podcast, a place for inspiration and transformation as we work to keep it together. While parenting our tweens and teens. This is real work people. And when we can focus on our own growth and nurturing the connection with our kids, we can move through the turbulence in a way that allows for relationships to remain intact. My name is Casey already, I am your fearless host. I'm a positive discipline trainer, space holder coach and the adolescent lead. It's routable. Also mama to a 20 year old daughter and a 17 year old son, I am walking right beside you on the path of raising our kids with positive discipline and conscious parenting. This show is meant to be a resource to you and I work really hard to keep it really real, transparent and authentic so that you feel seen and supported. Today is a solo show and I'm confident that what I share will be useful to you. Please don't forget sharing truly is caring. If you love today's show, please please pass the link around snap a screenshot posted on your socials or texted to your friends. Together we can make an even bigger impact on families around the globe. If you're feeling extra special, you can rate and review us over in Apple podcasts. I'm so glad that you're here. Welcome. Welcome, welcome. Enjoy the show. Hi, welcome back to the podcast. Welcome back to the joyful courage Podcast. I'm so glad that you're here another solo show special time. This is our weekly special time member when they were little. And all the people said make sure you're doing special time with your little people. Well, now you and me. We get to do special time. Every week here on the pod. Yay. Okay, yes, hi, welcome. I'm a little scattered Not gonna lie. I have a lot going on over here in a sorority land. And my sweet husband had shoulder surgery yesterday, which is pretty major and poor guy. He's had a lot of physical things come up over the last few years. And he's, I'm sure tired of it. Lots of pain in his bod. So yeah, Ben had shoulder surgery yesterday, and the daughter, my oldest sweet Rowan got an apartment is signing her lease tomorrow and is moving out. So she's packing up. And you know, just life life life, and Alon feels like lots happening. But I'm really glad that I get to sit down and hang out with all of you and create this special content for you. So this week, something I wanted to talk about that's been on my mind is thinking about teasing apart understanding encouragement and strength based parenting with our teenagers. I think that you know, as our kids become teens, you've heard me say before, they have pretty special bullshit radars. And they know when there's an agenda. And they know, when we've got some opinions and some judgment, and when we're trying to manipulate the situation. And it's not useful. They really push back against that as they should, as I would if my friend came in, with all of that written all over their face, right. And so this week, I just want to deep dive into encouragement. Encouragement is a positive discipline tool that we love. And really, all the positive discipline tools are encouraging to our kids. And I like to think about encouragement. There's a quote by Jay Nelson, maybe you've seen it before. It floats around here and there, many iterations, but I love this quote, it's straight out of her book, positive discipline. And Jane says, Where did we ever get the crazy idea that in order for children to do better, first they need to feel worse, children do better when they feel better. And feeling better isn't about ice cream and lollipops. Feeling better is really about encouragement. And Rudolph strikers who was a student of Alfred Adler, and if you've been around or in the study of positive discipline, you'll remember that the foundation of positive discipline is Adlerian theory comes from the work of Alfred Adler, who is one of the first social psychologists and Rudolph drinkers was his student, and Rikers has a quote that I also love which is Children need encouragement like a plant needs water. Children need encouragement like a plant needs water. Encouragement is what keeps us going. When we feel encouraged, we show up better, we lean in more, we try new things. Right? When we feel encouraged, we can lean into resilience, we can remember that tomorrow's going to be a better day, we can keep in mind that just because it was hard at first doesn't mean it's always going to be hard. When our environment is encouraging, when the people in our life are encouraging, we are able to harness that inner strength that we need to carry on and to move through. And sometimes, sometimes encouragement gets mis labeled as praise, or misunderstood as praise, right? Or encouragement can often or sometimes be thought of as like catching them while they're good. And we're going to play with that we're gonna expand on that, because those things are not the same. Right? That's not what we're talking about when we're talking about encouragement. Praise sounds like the job well done. You're so smart. You got straight A's, I'm so proud of you. You're the best, the best on the team. You're so pretty. Right? These statements are Ray's statements. Right? Not horrible. Not horrible. But over and over and over again, when that's all you hear as a kid, you start to form some beliefs. And we'll get to that in a moment. Encouragement sounds like, wow, you worked really hard. You earned that. You earned that? What are you proud of? How do you feel like you showed up as a student? How do you feel like you show up as a friend? What supported you in that outcome? I see you pushing yourself you really persevered through this semester? I know it was tough. How do you feel about how you did those statements would fall under the category of encouragement. Right? Now going back to that first set, well done, good job, you're so smart, straight A's like all of that you're the best. All of that is about me judging my child me judging you. It develops an extra extrinsic motivation, right, wanting to please others. There's a lack of reflection in praise. It generates a people pleasing belief. And it really disconnects. There's a disconnection between the process and the personal desires and the goals. Right? When we lean into encouragement, you worked really hard. You earned that. I saw you pushing yourself all semester, you really persevered through some tough stuff. Right? How did you feel about how you did? These kinds of statements and questions really grow an internal compass, right? You heard me name some strengths, perseverance, right pride, work ethic. When we encourage our kids, we help them connect the dots between their choices, their action, and the results. We help them through those reflective questions. That's encouraging to them. Oh,

Casey O'Roarty 08:53
I did work hard. What did help me earn that grade? Or get that accolade? What am I proud of?

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