Eps 406: Joyful Courage Book Club – Chapter Three

Episode 406

Join me in Chapter Three 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

https://www.besproutable.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Book-photo-for-podcast-series-1-1.png
  • The many entry points of getting on the EFT (Emotional Freight Train)
  • The power of being open about our experiences
  • The pull when our kids jump on their EFTs
  • The vortex of adolescence
  • Reframing trust
  • Letting go of control
  • Paying attention to our thoughts
  • Doing our work to keep broaden our perspectives

Joyful Courage means loving your people through their hard times and trusting they are learning and growing through exactly what they are meant to learn and grow through…. And man, it can feel SO HARD!

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Transcription

SUMMARY KEYWORDS
parenting, freight train, recognise, feel, experience, control, joyful, mistakes, talk, kids, hard, learn, emotional, life, children, train, happening, trust, book, choices
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, everyone. Welcome back. It's Thursday, Thursday, another joyful courage Book Club series episode. We're going to talk about Chapter Three today. But before I get into that, I want to know, how's it going? What are you taking away? What are you putting into practice? What are you noticing? As you learn about the emotional freight train? Or maybe you're relearning? Right, maybe you got my book and read it back in the day. And now you're listening to the series. And you're like, oh, right, I get to pay attention to the experience that I'm having. So where are you at with that? How's that going? Are you noticing physical sensations that are giving you that indication that you're about to flip that you're about to get on the train? I noticed while I'm reading this, you know, the last chapter, I think it was that I talked about the physical experience. I talk a lot about my belly. But any more. I really notice when I am triggered when I'm having a hard time, which lately it's not as much with my kids as much as it is in my marriage. It's in my chest like I really feel it in my heart centre. So, you know, it's good to revisit these concepts and take stock in where you're at. I encourage that, I encourage that. Yeah, and you know what you can always let me know how this is landing. You can make a comment on the post. If you see it on Instagram or Facebook, you can shoot me an email at Casey at joyful courage.com You can leave a review on Apple podcast. There's lots of ways that you can be in touch about what you're noticing. And I love hearing from you. So be sure to do that. If you're moved to. Alright, chapter three is called who is causing your derailment? who's causing your derailment is derailment the right word to use? I don't know who's pushing you on the train. Maybe that should be the subtitle. When we ride the emotional freight train, we typically don't write it alone, we tend to bring along whoever is closest to us that means our children or our partner, our past hurt pain and trauma ride with us on the train as well as does a deep need for control. And you know what you guys as I read that, that deep need for control what I'm really thinking about is safety. Right safety is so slippery, right? It really gets us into mischief, our perception of safety right it can take on the illusion that we need control. But why do we need control? We need control to feel safe. That's what I mean when I say you're not the only one riding the train, we don't live in a vacuum. We are emotional beings having emotional experiences, and raising other emotional beings who have limited life skills. Is it any wonder that things get dicey. There are so many entry points to get on the train. Choosing to parent with joyful courage requires that we learn to recognise when we are being swept up in a way, that's the goal, right? As I read that, the goal is to recognise that the train is pulling in the station. And a lot of times, we miss it. And so then the next goal becomes being aware enough and observant enough to recognise Oh, I'm on the train. How much more damage do I want to do? How can I pivot that awareness? And then the willingness to see the choice point? That's what we're talking about here, my friends. All right. If your partner comes home in a bad mood, complaining about something that happened in their day, they might be short with you. How does that feel? Right? How does that start to feel for you, and they come home with their own stuff, and then it kind of feels like it's spilling over into how they're treating you. Or your son won't stop complaining about a sister, the weather, how he never gets to pick the TV show, when the family sits down to watch something together? How does that start to make you feel some of us are better at letting others energy roll off of us and others are super sensitive about it. I'm gonna guess most of us fall somewhere in the middle. Again, this chapter in this podcast is about learning to become ever more aware of what's happening in our experience, and perhaps discovering some places where we have been unconsciously allowing that outside energy to pull us onto the train. Our children also have emotional freight trains everybody does. For many of us, definitely, for me, the emotional freight train experience really took root and began to happen after having kids, even then perhaps it took a few years for us to really understand how deeply their behaviour could affect us. I mean, true that right? I'm sure that people who choose not to have kids, or don't have kids have plenty of things in their life that trigger us. But because you're reading this book, I'm assuming you're a parent. And if you're a parent, you know, I mean, oh my god, they get under our skin so quick. It's so it can feel violent, almost right, the level of response that we have to these little people that we love that we made, and yet they have a life of their own. And an opinion matters. The fact of the matter is children increase your stress level Never before has so much of our self worth been connected to someone else. Even when they're babies, we feel a sense of pride when we can say, oh, yeah, they sleep through the night, or yes, she took to breastfeeding right away. When we dread others asking about how our children's slept fed or took to potty training, it was typically because we were emotionally invested, and how our kids performed. It could be painful to share the truth. Maybe they were up all night, maybe they weren't able to latch or struggled with potty training. Right. And this isn't just an early years phenomenon. As I've mentioned, while working on this book, my daughter was in her first year of high school, I've never been more confronted with my control and attachment issues than I was during that time. Well, so I thought the train was always right there. It was, like idling in the station with the doors open, waiting for that moment where I just couldn't take it anymore. Why does this happen? We know in our heads that all children are individuals that they're moving at their own pace that they're in development and that they need to make mistakes and experience the world so that they can learn to navigate it. Yet we find that we tend to take their behaviour on as our own personal failure. How dare they not get it right the first time? Don't they know how that makes us? Look? I remember literally saying that to my kiddo. Rowan when she was going through her stuff. That's when I really pivoted towards working more and exploring teen years and parenting in the teen years because I needed it because I was like what is happening? And I remember her like half jokingly saying to her like, Hey, I'm a parent coach doesn't look so good for me that you're off the rails and that you're Trying the things and that we are in such a dire place in our relationship. You know, what I found was, the morethe , it's hard. And it's messy. And there's no perfect way of parenting. That avoids what's hard during the teen years. And, you know, as I read this book, especially that word freak show, I really like to use that word. I have a client who likes the word dumpster fire, which I also appreciate that visual. But I think it's so important to talk about how hard it is to navigate the mistakes our adolescents are making. You know, we want to pretend they're not making mistakes, we want to keep it quiet. We want to, we want to protect their privacy, which is important. But in doing so, our world gets really small and we isolate and we're not hearing from other people that they're in it to write. So again, that's what this book is all about. That's what this podcast is about. That's what my work is about is bringing people together to have real conversations about the messy about the shit show. Right? Okay, back to the book. When we aren't paying attention, our children can jump on their own emotional freight train, and pull us along for the ride. How fun is that? As I mentioned earlier on, fear is a big piece of what gets in the way. I think another part of it is the idea of permanence, the mistaken idea of permanence, now that we're in whatever the current challenge is, we're here to stay forever. Right? We're back in that always and never mindset. We think it's forever and we brace ourselves, we're in resistance. When we do that, we find ourselves in a fighter stance, either metaphorically or physically, when we're ready to fight, we assume there'll be a winner and a loser. And I sure as hell, I'm not going to be the loser. And it becomes a standoff on the crazy drain on the emotional brain drain. Not everyone does this. I am an author of parents who seemed to have mastered the art of surrendering. They're the parents who allow their children to make mistakes. I love the word allow in that sentence.

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