Eps 404: Joyful Courage Book Club – Chapter Two

Episode 404

Join me in Chapter Two of 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

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  • The typical challenges list that comes up for parents
  • The overwhelm that can show up in the day to day of life
  • The trap of judging ourselves for our children’s developmentally appropriate behavior
  • Getting familiar with our internal struggle
  • Getting hooked into our teen’s angst
  • Using our body to navigate our fight or flight response
  • Being aware of our self talk taking us off track
  • The learning and healing that happened because my 14 year old told me she didn’t want to live with our family anymore

Joyful Courage is trusting the process even when what you are going through seems as though its pulling you under… Know that everything is temporary and an opportunity to grow and expand as a human – for yourself and others.

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Transcription

SUMMARY KEYWORDS
parenting, experience, kids, feel, triggered, response, children, book, body, respond, freight train, happening, behaviour, emotional, teenagers, shows, emotions, moment, perceived threat, share
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.

Casey O'Roarty 02:06
Hi, hi. Hi. Welcome back. Welcome back. I am going to be sharing Chapter Two today of joy, courage, calming the drama and taking control of your parenting journey by me, published in 2019. And can I just say that on the cover of this book is a quote that says Casey over already is the authentic friend who tells the truth about the struggles of parenting, and is the wise guide who provides powerful tools to help us be our best selves as parents, you know, gave me that quote. Dr. Tina Bryson. Yeah, it feels like a pretty big deal. super grateful that I've had her on the podcast a couple of times, we grew up in the same area in southern California. And in my mind, we're really good friends. So there you go, if you needed an endorsement, that's the one. That's the one. Okay, we are on chapter two. Like I mentioned in the introduction to the podcast, if you're just showing up here, you might want to go back a couple shows to Episode 400. And start with the intro. Because these solo shows are going to be moving through my book, and we're on chapter two. So I want you to have, you know, the foundation. Alright, chapter two, what exactly is happening on your emotional freight train? At the beginning of parenting classes? I start by asking what are the challenges you're experiencing in your home? People tend to generate the same list no matter if I'm talking to parents in the city, or in the country or to parents of toddlers elementary schools. Teenagers even travelled to the UAE last fall asked this question got pretty much the same list, right? It's always the same whining, tantrums, back talk, not listening, disrespect, picky, eating, fighting, negotiating, swearing, screentime bedtime morning routine, lying, biting, hitting, kicking sibling conflict, the list goes on. And of course, the older the kids, you know, some of the topics start to veer more towards those scary behaviours of adolescents. Positive Discipline educators and trainers all over the world asked this question and the answers are consistent. Then the energy in the room shifts. As parents look around and smile at each other they realise they're not alone. For me, at the time of writing this book, the things that are currently triggers are quote, the I know everything there is to know about everything and you know nothing attitude of my teenager, as well as her insatiable desire to Be on her phone. Also, the eye rolling the angsty response to simple requests and the power struggles that crop up, forcing me to confront the fact that I can't actually control everything that my children do. This was brutal to realise it's so annoying. I asked the joyful courage community what triggers them most? And here's what I heard from some moms. And yes, I asked moms I didn't hear a lot from dads defiance, especially when partnered with rudeness and outright no I'm not going to do that can leave me feeling desperate, out of control and immediately drawn into a power struggle. Unkind behaviour is huge for me. If I see my kids behaving unkindly towards a friend or a sibling, I'm filled with worry, shame and disappointment when my husband and kids are talking to me at the same time, and both need my attention without being aware of the other eye become overwhelmed, and feel the heat rising from my chest all the way to my head. Big negative emotions such as anger and frustration, interrupting disrespectful behaviours, such as name calling, kidding, and overwhelmed, due to a lot of noise and distraction during busy times of day, such as when making dinner, or trying to get out the door in the morning. When others children and adults are inconsiderate of people's needs or feelings when children or adults behave in selfish ways when I'm feeling overwhelmed with tasks to dues and chores, when I'm feeling alone and the act of never ending parental decision making and fearful that this one decision about something mundane, could come back to haunt me when I hear whining and complaining when they're not willing to try something new or keep an open mind. So I'm just gonna pause here a lot from the community as I was writing this book, and are you relating? I mean, yes, I'm

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