Eps 392: SOLO – The importance of holding our teens as capable

Episode 392

Join me this week as I dig into the ways that our human-ness can get the better of us, even when we are the parenting coach!! I share about a recent interaction that I didn’t love with. my own son, why it is hard to hold our teens in their light, and how to do better.

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Takeaways from the show

https://www.besproutable.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/Solo-380-scaled.jpg
  • A personal share about NOT walking my talk with my son
  • When”what’s your plan?” becomes a trap
  • Holding our teens in their light
  • What gets in the way/makes it hard
  • How to do better in the heat of the moment
  • The power of expanding our observer
  • Back pocket questions to filter your response

Joyful Courage…. today, like a lot of days, Joyful Courage is trust. Trusting that there is time, and that learning is happening even when I can’t see it.

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Transcription

SUMMARY KEYWORDS
kids, dysregulation, work, grades, hard, parent, teens, support, question, assignments, ego, hold, podcast, feel, portal, behaviour, noticing, centre, moment, relationship
SPEAKERS
Casey O'Roarty

Casey O'Roarty 00:04
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.

Casey O'Roarty 01:33
Well, hi, hello, my friend. I'm so glad that you are tuning back in here. It's so good to be with you. It's glorious. Over here in this little corner of the United States in the Pacific Northwest. It's just beautiful. And summer is really here. Almost here. I kind of feel like it's here. And it is so amazing. This is my favourite season. I don't know about you, but I just love it. I love all the excitement. We had prom a couple of weeks ago, my son went to prom had a great time. A lot of people posting about their kids graduating from high school, you can just feel the excitement right now. It's here. And I'm tripping out to think that my son is going to be a senior in high school. Whoa, anybody else feeling like that? He was sharing with us last night we had dinner together, which only happens a couple times a week. And we did a family meeting. And en shared about last week's I don't know what they called it. But they had a little assembly where they said goodbye to all the seniors and acknowledged you know the school acknowledge some of the seniors for some of their accomplishments. And then they had the juniors stand up and go sit where the seniors typically sit, and then all the other classes kind of moved up as well. And Ian was telling us about how that felt for him. It was really cool to hear and it reminded me just have, you know, how long ago was it 1990 Oh, my God, a short 33 years ago, when I was finishing up my junior year, and thinking about the fact that I was going to be a senior and it's just exciting. It's exciting times and trippy times and I definitely feel the sleeping empty nester waking up. Yeah, I may have mentioned this already. And I'm probably going to talk about it a lot. But yeah, I'm feeling it. I'm feeling it. I know it hasn't arrived yet. And yeah, but the transition has begun. The internal transition, I think has definitely begun. The oldest has moved out the youngest. Yeah, one foot out the door, one foot out the door. But before he can become a senior, he's got to wrap up this junior year. So yeah, I share a lot with you all. I keep it real. On the podcast and in the community. That is something that's really important to me. I couldn't do this work without being authentic around my experience, because I'm not perfect. And I don't ever want to send any kind of message that I have this parenting thing mastered. Because I don't write I don't I mean, it's easy to be behind the mic. It's easier to be on the outside of my clients struggles looking in and being able to offer support. But you know, when you're in it, you're in it. And when you're in it, that's when you're really doing the work and I am in it with all of you. And when I'm immersed in my own challenging moments, you know, the human part of me with conditioning and patterns, bubbles up and sometimes gets the better of me. Right? This just happened yesterday. So like I said, this week is my son's last week of his junior year of high school, which, again, exciting. And I've mentioned here on the podcast, we visited some colleges and had lots of conversations. He's a kid who wants to go to college, like, that's what he wants to do. And he's not a Freezie academically driven kid, he's not a kid who strives for 100%, or A's or top of the class, right? It's just not who he is. And he always seems to do better. And he's always done better when he's interested in the subjects when he has a good relationship with the teacher. You know, those are the places where he really thrives. Right? And, you know, there are classes and teachers where he hasn't thrived. And he's okay with that. And, you know, I know that he won't have a problem getting into college, right? He's not applying for, like the top 10 universities in the country. He's not an Ivy League kid. And like I've mentioned before, it turns out, there are plenty of colleges that take the majority of the applicants, right, and that's what he's going for. It's great. He's going to do just fine and have a great time. So I'm not worried about that. And, you know, in, it always seems like he has a few missing assignments, right? Not a tonne. But a few. I don't look in the portal too much. Right, I learned that it doesn't serve me or my child, or our relationship for me to be overly concerned with the portal and all the information that we get there. Okay, so I don't look at it too much. And I typically ask him, before I look, you know, what am I going to see? I'm going to peek in the portal, what am I going to see? And we have conversations about that. I work really hard, as you know, to stay neutral most of the time. And I ask the question, so what's your plan? Because positive discipline? That's one of the back pocket questions, right. And when I asked that question, you know, he usually tells me something and typically follows through in his own way, on his own timeline, right. And when I say he tells me something, I'm gonna be fully honest and transparent. Typically, what he's telling me is what he thinks I want to hear, right. And then again, like I said, he follows through in his own way, on his own timeline. So you know, I do work really hard to practice what I preach. I do work really hard on that. And sometimes man, I give in to that pestering inner dialogue, that shows up that tells me he can't possibly do all the things without me laying out all the ways he should be doing all the things. Right, like in case he needs you, you know, like, that's what I'm saying in my head. Not always, but sometimes. Sometimes it's this little voice that's like, Oh, no. Is he really going to do it? Is he really going to pull it off? Can you really let go? Right? Anybody with me on that? So yeah, like I said, it's the last week of school. I know, he's had a few missing assignments that he hasn't completed that have been sitting in the portal for what feels like a really long time. And I can feel the urgency, right, I can feel the time going by yesterday. He worked in the morning, and then he had the whole day free. Right. And that hasn't been the case lately. He's been really busy. So I brought up the assignments yet again. And he got really bugged. He got really irritated at me. He said things like, you always bring up school. Like every time we talk, you want to bring up school and my assignments. I've got it. You don't need to be on my case. The hardest part in this, you know, quote, unquote, conversation was that the energetic pull away that I could feel from him. When I brought up school. I'm trying to be helpful. I'm trying to ride the line of useful parent versus naggy parent. And the feedback I got from E and yesterday that was that I was not getting it right. I was not getting it right. And he even brought up me asking him well, what's your plan and how that felt to him and like I said, What's your plan? It's a question that I love. And I encourage you all to use it. And what I'm starting to see is when I'm asking that question in this context to en, I'm really asking it for my own benefit, like, tell me what you're going to do to get this done so that I don't have to worry about it anymore. Why am I worrying about it? It's not my problem. His missing assignments are not my problem, but I'm making them my problem, and I'm letting them get in the way of the relationship and the dynamic that I have with my son. The question, what's your plan? is really a question for him. Like, it's an opportunity to prompt some thinking ahead, consider your schedule, decide when it's important to you to complete this thing, and, you know, make a plan. So I'm noticing that I am holding whatever he says to the question, what's your plan? In stone? I'm like, Okay, you said it, you're gonna get it done. By the end of the week, you said that you are going to do that. I hold it in stone, and then I weaponize it when the follow through isn't there? So what's your plan? That question has sort of morphed into what feels like a trap, and my son, and even my husband, they're sniffing it out. They're sniffing it out. And they're responding to it from a defensive place. It's not useful, right? It's not useful.

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