Eps 400: Joyful Courage Book Club – The Intro

Episode 400

Join me in reading Joyful Courage: Calming the drama and taking control of your parenting journey, the book I published back in 2019. I will be discussing what holds up and things I’ve learned during the wild years since it came out.

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Takeaways from the show

https://www.besproutable.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Book-photo-for-podcast-series-1.png
  • An introduction to the series
  • My story of coming into my role as a mom and how transitioning to two kids was my invitation to growth
  • My definition of Joyful Courage
  • The context of when I was writing this book, and advice I would give myself now
  • Paying attention to the indicators that we are off course

 

What does Joyful Courage mean to you?

Today Joyful Courage is being vulnerable, allowing the raw places to exist, and fighting for what I want most.

 

Resources

Get your own copy and companion guide for the book/series at www.besproutable.com/jcbook

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Classes & coaching

I know that you love listening every week AND I want to encourage you to dig deeper into the learning with me, INVEST in your parenting journey. Casey O'Roarty, the Joyful Courage podcast host, offers classes and private coaching. See our current offerings.

Transcription

SUMMARY KEYWORDS
parenting, joyful, courage, book, work, children, kids, learning, love, mom, hope, relationship, intro, positive, reflecting, journey, years, practice, series, discipline

SPEAKERS
Casey O'Roarty

Casey O'Roarty 00:05
Hello, listeners. 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. 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, and life skills to be developed. My name is Casey Oh Bertie, I am your fearless host, positive discipline trainer, space holder coach and the adolescent lead at Sproutsocial. Also mama to a 20 year old daughter and a 17 year old son, walking right beside you on this path of raising our kids with positive discipline and conscious parenting you are in for a treat. This episode is part of a 10 part series where I'm reading from my book, joyful courage, calming the drama and taking control of your parenting journey that was published in 2019. I'm sharing the book with you and reflecting on where it holds up, and how the work has been expanded in the four plus years after writing it. If you're finding the series in the middle, I encourage you to start at the first episode, joyful courage book club the intro so that you can follow along from start to finish. The series is meant to be a resource to you and I work hard with everything I put out in the world to keep it real transparent and authentic so that you feel seen and supported. Along with this series is a free companion guide designed to prompt you in reflecting on what you're hearing and taking steps to integrate it into your life. You can find the guide and buy your own copy of the book by going to www dot fece browsable.com/jc book. And please don't forget, sharing really is caring. If you love today's show, please pass the link around, snap a screenshot and post it on your socials or texted to your friends. Together we can make an even bigger impact on families around the globe. Enjoy. All right, here we go. Here we go. My friends, I've got my book in hand. I've got my book in hand joyful per edge, calming the drama, and taking control of your parenting journey. I'm excited for this little adventure that we're gonna go on. And I hope that you are too. I haven't read my book in a long time. And I have a feeling that it might be kind of emotional for me. Yeah, so let's dig right in. This episode is just going to be the intro. I'm gonna read the intro to you and then reflect on some things at the end. So yeah, this is going to kind of just set the tone for the rest of the series. And I hope you're excited because I'm excited. I'm excited. So yeah, let's get started. Hey, there, I start. Hey there, my name is Casey. I am a mom just like you. I came into this parenting gig thinking that it would be so great. So easy. I figured I was at the perfect age in a solid relationship with my husband. We were both ready to jump into the next part of our life. We went for it. I have always been a kid person. I was a camp counsellor, a babysitter. I went into teaching when I was 25. Kids were my jam. I just got them. It was easy, right? And then I had my own. From the start, I was surrounded by moms that I looked up to moms that introduced me to natural childbirth, attachment, parenting, extended breastfeeding, everything I learned in those early years, felt really instinctive. It felt right. My first baby was like another limb. She spent a tonne of time in the sling, riding along snug against me, no matter what event or experiences were at hand. She nursed on demand, we co slept. And this worked for both my husband and me. We like to have an A right there. We found our rhythm and I learned to navigate the world with a baby quickly forgetting what it was like before. Then I had my son Hey, one is good. Two is better. Right? I read a bit about the transition from one child to two about the mama bear instinct to push your older child away. And in no way did I think this would be something that would happen to me. I was more concerned with how I could possibly love another child as deeply as I loved my first then he arrived while I was there so much love and that Mama Bear instinct kicked in hard. Those of you with more than one child no How this is you have another baby, and the older child becomes a giant overnight. And while I knew in my mind that she still needed me, this other tiny brand new human and seemed to pull me right in, it turns out that I did indeed push my older child away. And it wasn't pretty. And it really hurts to share that. I think about how confusing that time must have been for her all those years ago, when her mom changed so dramatically. My heartbreaks, as I wonder if some of the struggles she is dealing with today come from that early messaging and the experience of feeling like she didn't fit in the family. I mean, I wasn't terrible all the time. But my threshold for what I could handle was low during those early years, I would snap and get mean, mean to the girl I loved most, the one that made me a mother. It was a dark time. But what could I do like so many others, I was home all day with two babies. It was both completely chaotic and monotonous. Like there was no time and so much time, I felt guilty about not being grateful. So I'd put on that brave face. Man, I loved those babies fiercely, of course. And the pendulum would swing hard between the nurturing, connecting loving moments that we would share and the angry dysregulated less than loving moments that we would live through. Wow, this is emotional for me. During the same period of time, I was working on growing my parent education business. Ha. I'm sure you can imagine the conversations I had with myself around that. How could I stand up and speak to advise and support other parents when so much of my own parenting felt out of control. In 2007, I decided that what I was doing clearly wasn't working for me or my family. My daughter was picking on her little brother, I was picking on her for picking on him, which led her to pick on him more. It was a disaster. This is when I took the advice of a mom that I still love deeply and admire so much. And I looked up positive discipline. A month later, I went through the training and became a certified positive discipline parent educator. Learning the philosophy and practice of positive discipline and facilitating others and learning about it was a game changer for me. Not only did it shift the dynamics in my own family, and specifically my relationship with my daughter, but it was also a philosophy I was so proud to share. In the years that followed the climate of our home shifted, my daughter and I were able to mend our relationship and move forward in a connected and loving way. I learned to recognise how I was contributing to the dynamics that were happening in our home. And I learned strategies for creating a home environment that celebrated contribution, cooperation, and more important than anything, learning from mistakes. Teaching parenting classes kept me in the practice of walking my talk most of the time, it offered me a beautiful practice of accountability and personal responsibility for my actions. I was not, and I am not a perfect parents. I'm a shitshow a lot of the time, but I'm aware of what is happening. And I'm willing to be honest and vulnerable with my kids and with other parents. I'm willing to get up and try again. In 2011, I began to write about my parenting experiences and a blog, I found that it was helpful for me to tell my real and Ross stories, and that it also helps others to read them and not feel so alone. That blog evolved into a website. And in April of 2014, I published my first podcast, I am now over 150 shows in actually I'm closer to 400 Now that the time of this reading, what has always been important to me in holding space for parents, is to help them make sense of their journey to help parents recognise that there's always room to grow, evolve and expand as humans and that our children choose us to light their way. As of writing this book. My children are 12 and 15 years old. I remain in the thick of it, but I am stronger and more committed than ever in how I show up for them. The pendulum still swings but the arc is much smaller. Not only do I continue to facilitate parenting classes, I also speak at conferences, lead online workshops and coach private clients, all with the intention of supporting other parents and being and growing into the best versions of themselves.

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