Eps 500: Finding common ground during the summertime with your teen

Episode 500

Join me this week as we get into how to tighten things up and find the same page with our teens during the long days of summer. I talk about being explicit with our communication, agreements, and the power of collaboration. Check it out!

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Takeaways from the show

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  • Parenting styles and seeking a balance between freedom and structure
  • The importance of setting boundaries that are not based on expectations or rules.
  • Distinguishing between personal boundaries and expectations, highlighting the need to create agreements with children rather than imposing rules or limits.
  • The importance of collaboration and problem-solving with kids
  • Addressing concerns about their child’s mental health and lack of engagement in summer activities, rather than simply accepting their behavior.
  • the power of validation and connection
  • Give your adolescents more responsibility, such as doing laundry or making food, to help them develop critical thinking and independence skills
  • Take stock of how much you’re doing for your adolescents and pull back, allowing them to practice taking care of themselves and their belongings
  • Influence your own experience and generate joy, love, and connection for themselves

Today Joyful courage means being yourself and being willing to create what you want in any given moment. Joyful courage is about recognizing that I get to generate love and joy for. myself, and don’t need to rely on the outer world to do that for me.

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Transcription

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. Hi, everybody, how are you? I am so excited to be coming at you from Ojai, California. Ojai is just a little bit east of Santa Barbara. It's gorgeous here. I'm with my family and my extended family celebrating my dad's 80th birthday is super, super special to all be together in celebration of the patriarch of the family, here with my siblings, my niece and nephew, my kids, and it just feels really special. To all be together. We were all together five years ago, we do this every five years. And man oh man five years ago was 2019. And things were about to get super real in my life. But yeah, now it's five years later and going pretty well. This episode that you're listening to is episode 500. What episode 500 I do have more than 500 episodes because there were some that didn't get numbers. They were like bonus episodes back at the beginning. But now we've been keeping track. And so this is the official Episode 500, which feels incredible. I remember way back 2014 10 years ago, I found myself in this Facebook group with all of these amazing authors like Amy McCready, and Rachel Macy, Stafford and all these other people who were writing about parenting, and I realised like, wow, I have crazy access. And I always had wanted to have like some kind of radio show or talk show place where I got to communicate my thoughts and ideas and talk with other people about things. And I finally, I did a programme to help me jumpstart the pod. And yeah, the first episode is with Andy Smithson from true parenting. I don't even know if he's still has that brand. But that was a long time ago. That was a long time ago. And I remember thinking, I'm going to do monthly shows, I'm just going to do this once a month, I'll put together a show I did all of my own editing. So if you're like, Oh, I'm gonna go listen to the first episode, just know that the sound is not that great, because I did all the editing and I did not have good gear. But it was still great conversations. I mean, I feel like the conversations really hold up. And I loved it. And I put up that first show. And I thought, well, maybe I'll do it every other week. And I mean, within a couple months, I realised Okay, I'm gonna do this every week. And now as you know, you get me twice a week. So I love love, love this podcast. I love podcasting. I love creating content for you. I love kind of mining the community and finding out what you want to hear about and how I can support you. I love who I get to talk to so many amazing guests over the year. Dan Siegel, Tina Bryson Tracy Baxley. So many incredible people have been on this podcast, it really blows my mind. Dr. Ross Green was an early guest who else was incredible. Well, Michelle, I heard you know, she's been on a couple of times. Debbie Rieber. From toe parenting. So many people, so many people. And it's going it's going well, right. I mean, now like I have ads which probably is not that exciting for you. The listener, but it's very exciting for me because it contributes to the cost of putting on the podcast because the podcast costs me money to create everyone. I pay for the editing so that it sounds good, I pay to have it on a platform that distributes it all across the land. My time that I spend on it costs money. So having the ads I know you might not love them, although I try to pick good like, find good matches, that's for sure. But just know it's contributing to the content that you love. Right? It's contributing to the content that you love. And yeah, so 2019 2020, I'm just thinking back to, we were about halfway through, you know, we were five years into the podcast, I had teenagers, it was not going well, it was very hard. And this show and all of you this community was really an outlet for me to kind of process when I was moving through, especially knowing and hearing from so many people that I was not alone, and how much it was valued, that I was talking about how hard it is because we have teenagers and something happens to us parents, especially if things start to get hard, we kind of insulate ourselves, we isolate ourselves, we don't talk about the hard stuff, right. And I can't not talk about what's going on in my life. So you know, this pod was really a place for that for me in 2019 2020. When Ben got sick, my husband got sick, again, a really powerful, supportive, encouraging space for me to move through that period of time. And know that I have this safe space and safe community to process again, knowing that we all move through the unfolding of life we all get surprised by diagnosis is or you know, shifts in relationship divorce, things happen, shit happens, right. And so it's amazing to consider the last 10 years of the pod and the last 500 Plus episodes and everything we've been through together. Yeah, it was about 2017 2018. When my content here definitely niched into the teen years and just Heads up, heads up, we're going to kind of make that like an official relaunch this fall, to kind of jumpstart the pod and hopefully grow the audience even more. So be on the lookout for that, or listen out for that. And there are ways that you can really help relaunch the pod and grow the audience. Because that's really important for the sustainability of this space. And I'm just so grateful. I'm so grateful for all of you. I know many of you have been with me since the beginning, holy cow, we've grown up as parents together. And it's such an honour to putting stuff out there for all of you. And so grateful, no matter when you came into the joyful courage community, even if this may be as your first pie the Hi, just really, really glad that you're giving it a go and finding value. And especially when you reach out and let me know that you find value. It's just really validating for me gives me the energy to keep going. And it lets me know that my content matters to you. So I'm just so grateful. And speaking of letting me know things I want to read a recent review on Apple podcast, a five star review. I love this review. The title is just listen, trust me, this podcast resonates with me so much Casey is real and down to earth. She makes me feel like it's all normal, the teenage roller coaster of things and that I can step off the roller coaster myself, put my feet on the ground and try words and strategies to shift the dynamic when it needs shifting in my house. This is so useful. I find myself quoting her all the time. And I've purchased and read several books based on recommendations and authors interviewed that I've heard here. Sometimes I listen. As episodes come out. Sometimes I scroll and listen for a topic I'm struggling with currently. And I almost always find an episode that fits when I do. It's always useful. And sometimes when I'm casually listening to an episode, I don't think will relate to me. I'm wrong. And it does in a way I didn't expect this is such a great review. Thank you so much. I know that came from my friend and client Robin. So thank you, Robin for putting that out there. Again. Just always, always, always so grateful to hear from you. Have you written a review? Listener? You? Have you written a review on Apple podcasts?

Casey O'Roarty 09:37
It's really easy to do. It's really helpful for the show. It makes it so that Apple puts the show out to even more people and if you're not an Apple iOS person, feel free to pass the pod around. Right? If you listen to a show and you love it and it lands for you and you're finding yourself like oh my god, yes, I love it. Send it to your friends send it to your neighbours, send it to your families send it to whoever you know, that might be in a place where they need a little parental support. Thank you so much. Thank you so much. This week's solo show is going to focus on summertime. So last week, I did a big public workshop around summer solutions, systems routines, to keep our kids safe and to keep ourselves sane as we move through the long days of summer. And, you know, as of this week, in my family, we're officially in summer in graduated, we are in summer, we're even on a trip. So there you go. I did the workshop, I got to connect with lots of parents, who were really in that space of how can we influence the summer experience in a way that provides opportunity, relationship connection, all the things and safety, right.

Casey O'Roarty 11:06
When I asked the group of parents, you know, what are the biggest challenges they foresee? With the summer, the brainstorm sounded like, you know, worry about their kids not doing anything, worry about their kids wanting too much freedom and inappropriate amount of freedom, wanting their kids to get a job, they want too much screen time, kids that won't leave their rooms, not being willing to contribute to the household. These were some of the pain points that parents showed up having. And I know, I hear from my community, as well, I know that, you know, that's happening all across the land, right? We've got kids who are of age to learn to drive, and they don't want to learn to drive or maybe they've, you know, tried to take the driving test and have it and have failed, right? And how discouraged are they? We've got kids that, you know, maybe are launching into college in the fall. And so what does the summer before college look like? What are the expectations that we have, we might have, you know, tweens and middle schoolers that are moving towards high school, but all of a sudden, they're ready to roll, you know, and don't want to keep us updated on all the things they're doing and aren't great about checking in. And how do we navigate that? So yeah, I think there's a lot in the summer that can feel sticky for parents of adolescents, right? And that need for autonomy and novelty seeking, in their wiring is really kicking into gear. So we just want to know that they're gonna be safe, right? It's all the things, it's all the things and what can we do. And I've talked before on the pod just about the parenting style continuum, right? We sit kind of in the either or like, oh, well, we can let them do whatever they want. Or we've got to have all of these rules, so we can make sure they follow, right? We kind of swing between those two extremes, like, oh, I guess I can't control them. So just do whatever you want, I can't have any influence, or Gosh, darn it, you will be home at this time, you will not hang out with this person. And if I find out, you're breaking the rules, you're grounded for the summer. Right? So we kind of swing between those two places. And when we talk about parenting styles, really the goal isn't to not visit those places, although it would be nice not to, but to really kind of shrink into that kind and firm place where it's like, I want you to have freedom. Absolutely. I want to collaborate with you to create freedom, while also having some structure and having some expectations that you're willing to follow, right? We want to shrink that pendulum swings. So we're spending more time in that authoritative mode of kind and firm freedom within structure, right flexibility with firmness, everybody's got a voice, we get to communicate about what's going on. There's a both and we're looking for win wins, we're willing to stretch as parents while also inviting our kids to let go of, you know, perhaps ideas and plans that are just a not yet because they're 13 or 15 or 17. Right. So that's really where we want to be right. And at the end of the day, you know, I talk a lot about this, what can we control? Ultimately, you guys, we can control ourselves. We have some control over the environment. Right? And where we have very limited control is over our kids, which might seem kind of controversial, but at the end of the day, they walk out the door. They make their choices, right? They make their choices. And so that's annoying. Right, as you've heard me say the most powerful tool we have for influencing that behaviour that they were displaying out in the world is the relationship that we nurture with them. Right. And there's some other things we can do to we talked about this in my workshop, which is personal boundaries, right? What are you willing to engage in? What conversations are you willing to engage in? Are you willing to stand there, when your teens are full of emotion and their lids are flipped, and there'll be rating you or swearing at you or getting in your face? You get to decide, is this space a space that I'm willing to engage in? Or now? Am I going to step away? Walk away, go take care of myself? Right? That's a personal boundary. What are you willing to do? Then? That's a funny question, right? Because that whole idea of we can't control our kids, I think is related to what are you willing to do? I remember when Rowan dropped out of high school, and my stepmom was like, You can't let her do that. And I remember thinking to myself, like, well, what does that look like? Not letting her do that. I mean, I did all the things, you guys I did all the things that I thought of doing. I was not excited about her dropping out of school, I was not on board, Ben was on board much quicker and was much more supportive earlier on. I was like spinning. Yeah, that was a tough one for me. But like, are we willing to drag them are we willing to lock them up? Like, I mean, there's just certain things that I think those of you that are a part of the community in here listening to this podcast, like we can agree that we're just not willing to do, but we might be willing to, you know, lock the doors at a certain time of night, we might be willing to limit access to money, we might be willing to take the car keys away. That's what I mean, when I say that we have some control around the environment, right? Thinking about what we're giving access to with our kids, there's space there, we might be willing to mess with the Wi Fi. If we're working on screens and trying to limit you know, the amount of screen use that's happening and promoting sleep. So what are you willing to do? What are you willing to do? Right? What's keeping you safe? And what's keeping you sane? And what kind of routines and rituals are you making time for? Right? I think about my morning routine of journaling and meditating that I do probably five times a week, and I make time for that I protect that time because I know that it helps me show up well for myself, as well as for my family, it's interesting to something that I'm not willing to do like, I'm not willing to make my kids feel shitty to get them to do what I think they should do. Like, that's the other interesting thing too personal boundaries, like I am committed to encouragement and empowerment. And I am committed to no shame, no blame. And to me, that's a personal boundary. That's something actually that I think I do pretty well in all of the relationships in my life, but I can observe being a receiver. You know, when I think back to some of the choices that I made, or, you know, some of the ways that I was parented, there was definitely some manipulative ways of being with me to kind of get me to move in a certain direction. And that came with, like, leftover baggage, right? So I'm not willing to go there with my kids. I'm bringing curiosity. I'm bringing encouragement, I am bringing empowerment. Yeah, for sure. And I think, again, that's a personal boundary of mine. And then we've got expectations, right? I think that oftentimes, parents get these two things confused, and they hear the word boundaries. And they kind of use the word boundaries in place of rules, or limits or expectations. But I'm going to separate the two and the personal boundaries, really, what are we willing to do? Expectations are what we are hoping for, or trying to encourage others to do. Right? And you've heard me on this show, talk about expectations. And when we think about it in the summer, right, making agreements, absolutely. What does it look like to sit down with your kiddo? Especially if you're already a few weeks in and you're recognising like, Oh, we're in some patterns that aren't working that are super, and you'll know if you're in a pattern that's not working if you're completely irritated, or annoyed, or if it's something like Oh, my God, they keep doing this thing, right? They keep doing this thing, then that's a great place to create an agreement, right? Like, hey, I'm noticing this challenge keeps happening. Tell me how it feels for you what you want. I'm going to tell you how it feels for me. And I want us to work together to come up with a solution so that this feels better for the rest of the summer. Right and finding a solution is looking for that win win. It's brainstorming together. I Diaz that, you know, for each person gets to brainstorm a bunch of ideas. And then you get to land on something that works for both. But I will say making agreements really, really, really requires parents to stretch a little bit past what they actually want, so that there's a little bit more autonomy for the kiddo. But the kiddo also gets to see, okay, my parent has stretched a little bit, so I'm going to stretch a little bit.

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