Eps 436: Creating a safe space for our teens to individuate

Episode 436


Join me this week as we dive deeper into what “individuation” really means, and how parents can provide an optimal environment for their teens to move through this very developmentally appropriate process.

Today Joyful Courage is all about being fiercely committed and lovingly detached. Fiercely committed to my child, and lovingly detached to the way things unfold or the results of that commitment. My kids are on their own journeys and their learning through experience is so much richer than taking my word for it.

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Takeaways from the show

https://www.besproutable.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/Casey-9.27.23-scaled-e1695854154767.jpg
  • We are on a collective experience raising teens and our struggles aren’t unique
    (even though you might think they are)
  • Three common beliefs that emerge in the parent-child dynamic: need for belonging,
    lack of autonomy, and perceived rejection.
  • The importance of internal reflection and personal responsibility in teen development,
    rather than external reactions to parents’ opinions or actions.
  • Despite efforts to shield children from pain, life will unfold in unexpected ways,
    and addiction can still occur.
  • The importance of recognizing and addressing one’s own fears and worries when parenting,
    as they can unconsciously influence how we hold and interact with our children.
  • The importance of prioritizing a child’s well-being over external expectations,
    such as what teachers or parents think.
  • Create a safe space for teens to come to with trust and respect.
  • Parents must respect children’s boundaries and be authentic in their interactions
    to build trust and have meaningful conversations.
  • Focus on nurturing relationships with teens, even when they misbehave.

Today Joyful Courage is all about being fiercely committed and lovingly detached. Fiercely committed to my child, and lovingly detached to the way things unfold or the results of that commitment. My kids are on their own journeys and their learning through experience is so much richer than taking my word for it…

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Transcription

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 browseable. 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. Hey, friends, welcome back to the podcast. How are you? How's your week going? If you're listening when the show came out, it's Thursday, Thursday, Thursday, end of the week, moving towards the weekend. I love that. Did you have a chance to listen to Monday's interview? It might be one of my top five favourite conversations of this year. I had the best time loved getting to know Kyra fan Lowe and hearing her story. I'm so grateful that she is so generous and telling her story and how she's using it to fuel her work. And I'm just in awe. It was so awesome. She is the proof that even when things are the worst are super tough. humans find a way through. I love that she is so candid about her journey. We talked a lot about her treatment story and her pain during adolescence, how it felt to integrate what she learned through her wilderness therapy programme into the quote real world, what it was like to feel like she was making up for last time we talked about the power of maturity. We talked about self harm. And then she finds her passion of working with teens who are in the struggle, right? I loved every minute of this conversation. If you haven't listened to that yet, check it out. You won't be sorry, you won't be sorry, something that came up with her in the conversation that comes up with a lot of the clients that I work with, especially lately. It's so funny. I live in this ecosystem of joyful courage, right? So I'm doing my interviews, I'm doing my client calls. I'm doing my membership. I'm Fielding, the JC for teens Facebook group, I'm answering questions in my DMs. And there's always like themes that come up. And I love it. It's this ecosystem of patterns and themes. And I know when I come in here to talk on the solo shows, like I'm speaking to things that are really alive, because I hear about them, right. And I love putting out shows and getting feedback. And all the places from all of you listeners going oh my god, this is exactly what I needed. How did you know? Right? I know because we are in a collective experience you guys. I know sometimes it feels like you're having this really unique, you know dynamic with your kiddo unique experience unique challenges, but it is very collective. What we're all going through as we raise teens and you know, something I really appreciate about this podcast offering is I get to highlight that I get to highlight this collective journey and hopefully, you listening in makes you realise like you are not alone. Right? You are not the only one. With a kid who's struggling. You're not the only one who's unsure about what to do or what to say. Right. And that feels good. Feels good to know. You're not the only one. So something that came up in my conversation with Kyra, that's been coming up with all of you is this idea, right? This idea the parents have this question of how do I get my teens to see that their behaviour isn't hurting me it's own li hurting them. Right? When they're making less than optimal choices. Do you ever feel like that? Have you ever had that moment of like, oh my God, listen, dude, this is like, it's your problem, this sucks for you. This isn't hurting me. And then the frustration when they keep making the same less than optimal choices, right? So we're going to talk about this, we're going to talk about individuation, being reactive versus responsive, I want to kind of create a context for this and remind you of something that gets brought up a lot on the podcast, which is behaviour makes sense that there's belief behind behaviour, that oftentimes the behaviour we see is a solution to a problem we don't know about. Right? behaviour is purposeful. Oftentimes, there's also this extra

Casey O'Roarty 05:51
impulse control, right, novelty seeking, lack of self regulation, because it's in development situation that's happening in the teen years. Yes. And there's also some things that we can take a closer look at, to help us make sense of what's happening with our kids. So this belief behind behaviour dynamic, you know, one of the things that beliefs that happens, and a few weeks ago, I went through this whole process of perception how our kids perceive, interpret, form beliefs, make decisions, so go back and listen to that episode. But today, I want to remind you that one of the beliefs that can be developed over time in the parent child dynamic is, you know, the only way I feel belonging is when you notice me, when I'm keeping you busy with me, or I'm at the centre of the family, right, that's where I get my belonging hit. It's not useful, and especially if staying at the centre, or keeping our parents busy with us means that we're making risky choices or are defiant or, you know, doing the things that we wish they wouldn't do. Another belief that comes up is the teen believing I don't have autonomy, right? I don't have room to be me. I don't have control over my life. So I'm going to take it where I can get it. Right, I'm going to take it where I can get it. And once they become teenagers, they kind of realise, oh, I can say no, I can walk out the door, I can refuse. What are they going to do? Right? So we find ourselves in this power struggle. Another belief that shows up is from our child's perspective might be you care more about your values and looking good, and what other people think, then you care about me. So I'm going to push against all of that to hurt you. Because I feel hurt. Right? I don't feel like I belong. And so I'm going to push against all these things that I perceive you care about more than me? And pass that herd around? Does your kiddo fit in one of these maybe, right? And it's just information, right? If we start to understand where their beliefs are coming from, if we get under the surface under the hood, I have a new client we're talking about get under the hood, figure out what's going on. And one of the pieces of what's going on is beliefs about belonging and connection, beliefs about how my parents perceive me get curious, and tease that apart. And that's where we get to do the work with our kiddos. And I really appreciate that third one, like you care more about your values than you care about me. So I'm going to push against those values. Right? We say, Hey, listen, you're not hurting me. You're just hurting you. And is that the truth? Right, so we get tangled up in the dynamic. And that in and of itself adds this whole layer to the behaviour. Right? It's simple to say, Listen, you're not hurting me, you're only hurting yourself, as if there isn't all of this weight and baggage to how their behaviour is hurting us how their behaviour is affecting us to say that it isn't, you know, we're not going very deep. So we get tangled up in the dynamic, we add, you know, other layers to the behaviour communication is really important. How are we communicating? I found this quote from untangled by Lisa demora. I love that book. And she's talking it's a section where she's writing about supporting girls in you know, taking care of themselves. And she this just this little paragraph I really appreciated a highlighted, she said with practice, I found a tone that communicates that I'm neither critic nor judge, just interested in citing with the teenagers wise mature side to see if we have any reason to be concerned about her ability to take care of herself. So what's most interesting to me in this quote is when she says, I'm siding with the teenagers wise, mature side, right? I've been talking over the last couple of weeks, it's come up, that the work of seeing our kids beyond the troublesome behaviour, right? When our kids start getting into it, getting into the stuff that we don't want them to get into, right? When they start getting into it, our focus gets really narrow, and all we can see are the things that they're doing the scary things, or, you know, the less than optimal things, you know, and I hear it when I talk about this with parents, I'll say, you know, what are you celebrating? So what I always start with, with my clients, that's my first question. After we do a little grounding, I say, what are you celebrating? And they pause for a moment, and they might bring something up, and then they say, but all this stuff is still alive. Like, wow, yeah, you know, we did have a nice afternoon on Sunday, and went on a walk with the dog and felt connected, but they're still smoking pot, but they're still doing this and that and the other thing. So the invitation becomes recognising, what are we focusing on with our kiddos? How narrowly are we focusing on that? Right? Because if that statement, how do I get them to see they're not hurting me they're only hurting themselves is true. One of the places we get to go is how about we start seeing the more expanded version of our kids? Right? How about we start to really notice the places and it might be hard, I get it. Some of you have kids who, you know, you they come home from school, they don't have any extracurricular activities, they don't have any homework somehow. And they're in their room on their phone. Right? And I asked the question, what are you celebrating? And it's really hard, like, what are their gifts? What are their strengths? And it's hard, right? In the moment when our perspectives really narrow, and we're invited to highlight the strengths of our kids, you know, there's not a lot to look at. So we get to expand, we get to expand how we see our kids, we get to untangle ourselves, right from the problematic behaviour that might feel like is the only thing going on, and really see our kiddos for who they are? Can we do that? Right? Can we do that? If individuation and this is something I talked about with Kira, if individuation is about separating from you, the parent, then I'm going to separate from all of you to be me, which means I'm going to separate from your declared best version of me who you think I should be? Who you want me to be? Because it's the only way I can be me where I can feel sovereign, right? And adolescents are on a mission to feel autonomous, to feel sovereign, right to figure out who they are separate from you. I loved it when this came up with Kira, because it was just like, Oh, I remember when Rohan was like 1516. And things were really hard. And I said, Hey, do you want to check out some yoga? Do you want to do yoga with me? It really helps me move by body move my emotions, it's just a really full practice. She said, Mom, yoga is your thing. And I'm pretty sure I responded with something like wow, I think it's like 8 million people across the planets thing or more. Right? It's not just my thing, but I remember her like, actively dismissing yoga, because it was quote, her mom's thing, right? We see this with kids who question, you know, religion, right? And the religious values of their family that's come up in my community, you know, do I force them to go to church? How do I do this? And the kids are saying, like, I need to be me, I need to be separate from this. We see this with, you know, perhaps political leanings, right? You might be a, you know, super liberal minded person. And you might have a teenager who's exploring some more conservative ideas or the opposite. You might be really conservative minded. And you might have this kid who's pushing back with leaning more towards liberal ideas, right? sense of style, right? How they be in the world. And yeah, sometimes they're pushing against your declared values, and perhaps even some of your morals, and then we get scared, and we double down in declaring war. It is right what they should be doing. What they're doing is wrong. We judge them, we criticise them all on this quest, right? Because we're scared. We want them to have values. We want them to have morals. We want them to have our values and morals if we're being honest. And we get all tangled up again, right? And we're still in this question of, can't they see they're just hurting themselves and not me? Are they? Right? Because if I'm feeling a lot of rejection from my family, or judgement or criticism from my family, and I know what they hold as important, one way I can stick it to them is to behave in a way that is the opposite of what is important to them. Right?

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