Hosted by funny moms Margaret Ables and Amy Wilson, “What Fresh Hell: Laughing in the Face of Motherhood” is a comedy podcast about the never-ending "fresh hells" of parenting.We’re both moms of three, dealing with the same hassles as any parent, but with slightly differing styles. Margaret is laid-back to the max; Amy never met an expert or a list she didn't like.In each episode, we discuss a parenting issue from multiple perspectives and the accompanying expert advice that may or may not back us up. We talk about it, laugh about it, call out each other’s nonsense, and then we come up with concrete solutions. Join us as we laugh in the face of motherhood!Winner of the 2018 Mom 2.0 Iris Award for Best Podcast and the 2017 Podcast Awards People’s Choice for Best Family and Parenting Podcast, and finalist for the 2019 Romper's Parent's Choice Award.whatfreshhellpodcast.com
DEEP DIVE: I Really Thought This Would Be a Bigger Part of My Life
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
This Deep Dive series is titled "Things We've Learned After Doing This Motherhood Thing for a While." Listen to the whole playlist on Spotify.
What did adulthood mean to you when you were growing up? Staying up late? Doing algebra every day? Stopping, dropping, and rolling at least once a week? We asked our listeners what they thought would come in handy or plague them daily when they grew up.
Amy and Margaret discuss:
"Oops! All Berries" Cap'n Crunch cereal
Chunky statement pieces
How to get the upper hand in "Jeopardy"
Here's the original thread in our Facebook group where we asked this question
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We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
https://www.whatfreshhellpodcast.com/p/promo-codes/
mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent,
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9/16/2024 • 49 minutes, 31 seconds
Fresh Take: Carla Naumburg Tells Kids How to Stop Freaking Out
Kids sometimes lose their cool, and it can be easy to lose ours while trying to help them. Carla Naumburg, author of the new book HOW TO STOP FREAKING OUT, discusses why kids freak out, how we can help them, and how we as parents can keep our cool.
Carla Naumburg is a clinical social worker, and a mother. She’s the author of four non-fiction books, including her international bestseller, How to Stop Losing Your Sh*t With Your Kids, as well as You Are Not a Sh*tty Parent.
Carla and Amy discuss:
Why the point of Carla's book is not for kids to stop freaking out all together
Why kids (and all of us) are wired to occasionally freak out
How we as parents can keep calm when our kids are freaking out
Here's where you can find Carla:
www.carlanaumburg.com
@carlanaumburg on IG
@CarlaGeorge22 on Twitter
@cnaumburg on Facebook
Buy HOW TO STOP FREAKING OUT
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
https://www.whatfreshhellpodcast.com/p/promo-codes/
mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, kid behavior, child behavior
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9/13/2024 • 37 minutes, 53 seconds
Are Our Kids Overscheduled?
So many of us spend hours chauffeuring our kids back and forth to their myriad activities. Why are kids so overloaded with activities these days, and can we get off of this ride? Here are some parenting strategies for navigating this issue.
Amy and Margaret discuss:
Why kids are so overscheduled these days
How overscheduling really affects kids, beyond the mom guilt-inducing headlines
What questions to ask when assessing if our kids are overscheduled
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Dr Shimi King: Overscheduling Your Kids Isn’t the Fast-Track to Success it Once Was
Solution Health: Overbooked Kids: The Overscheduled Crisis
Anna Nordberg for Slate: The Fine Art of Underscheduling
Jill Barshay for Mind Shift: Overscheduling Kids’ Lives Causes Depression and Anxiety, Study Finds
Carolina Caetano, et. al for Economics of Education Review: Are children spending too much time on enrichment activities?
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
https://www.whatfreshhellpodcast.com/p/promo-codes/
mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, kid behavior, child behavior, kids activities, kids sports, kids enrichment, kids extracurriculars, kids schedules
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9/11/2024 • 45 minutes, 24 seconds
DEEP DIVE: Which Parenting Rules Can We Break?
This month's Deep Dive series is about flouting parenting rules and advice that don't work for us. Listen to a Spotify playlist of all the episodes in the series here.
Who makes the parenting rules? And how bendable are they? From picky eaters to sleep routines to playing outside, we all have to navigate the line between what we supposedly should and shouldn't allow as parents. But sometimes it's okay to break the rules if it works for you and your family. Amy and Margaret dive into the details in this listener-driven episode.
In this episode, Margaret and Amy discuss:
The different types of parenting rules
Which parenting rules they have broken
"YOYO" dinners
Other episodes we mention:
Amee Severson on Intuitive Eating
Ask Amy: Helping Kids Deal with Comparison and Envy
Christina Martin on How Children Learn Through Play
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
https://www.whatfreshhellpodcast.com/p/promo-codes/
mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, bad advice, bad parenting advice, parenting rules, family rules
9/9/2024 • 47 minutes, 21 seconds
Fresh Take: Dr. Jo-Ann Finkelstein on Raising Resilient Girls
How do we raise our daughters to feel empowered, rather than helpless, in the face of gender bias? Dr. Jo-Ann Finkelstein, PhD, author of the new book SEXISM AND SENSIBILITY, offers parenting tips to prepare our girls for the modern world.
Dr. Finkelstein, Amy, and Margaret discuss:
The limits of the "girl power" line of thinking
How to teach girls what is and isn't in their control when it comes to sexism
How to recognize and combat sexism in our own parenting
Here's where you can find Dr. Finkelstein:
www.joannfinkelstein.com
@joannfinkelstein.phd on IG/TikTok
Jo-Ann Finkelstein, PhD - Author on FB
@finkeljo on Twitter
Buy SEXISM AND SENSIBILITY: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780593581162
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
https://www.whatfreshhellpodcast.com/p/promo-codes/
mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, sexism and sensibility, raising girls, feminist parenting, everyday sexism, end sexism, gender equality matters, smash the patriarchy, double standards, girl power, body positive, parenting teens, teen health, equal partnership, respect women, teen mental health matters
9/6/2024 • 33 minutes, 39 seconds
What Happened to My Sweet Child?
Why do formerly-sunny kids turn overnight into little tornadoes of defiance and aggression? A listener posted this question in our Facebook group:
My four-year-old daughter has recently developed a special, defiant, boundary-testing, aggressive version of herself that she saves only for me. I can’t make sense of it at all. WFH, send help!
In this episode, we explain why
these sudden onsets of periods of dysregulation are completely normal
almost every kid will go through this—and a lot of four-year-olds, although not they do not have exclusive ownership of this sort of behavior
and why most kids alternate between periods of regulation and dysregulation repeatedly as they grow and mature.
These difficult stretches don't mean you're doing anything wrong as a parent. They don't mean you need to lock everything down because your kid will be a tornado forever. But they also don't mean mean you need to become the 24/7 punching bag for your dysregulated kid. Here's what to do instead.
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Rebecca Onion for Slate: Why These Child Psych Books From the 1980s Are All Over Parenting Facebook Groups Today
Allana Robinson for Mom Halo: Here's why your 4 year old's behaviour is out of control
Uncommon Sense Parenting with Allana Robinson: What Exactly Is Stress?
Louise Bates Ames: Your Four-Year-Old: Wild and Wonderful
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
https://www.whatfreshhellpodcast.com/p/promo-codes/
mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, kid behavior, child behavior
9/4/2024 • 45 minutes, 58 seconds
BEST OF: Back to School Back-to-Ones
Sign up for What Fresh Hell Plus on Supporting Cast to get all episodes ad-free, plus monthly bonus episodes. Supporting Cast works right where you already listen! Go to whatfreshhell.supportingcast.fm to subscribe in two taps for just $4.99 a month, or $39.99 a year.
Getting-ready playlists? Choosing outfits the night before? Bringing snacks to the pickup line? We asked our audience about their favorite back-to-school tips... and we also allowed some venting about back-to-school craziness.
Amy and Margaret discuss:
To make lunch or not to make lunch
How to keep outfits clean at breakfast
The best time to grocery shop
Here are links to resources mentioned in the episode:
Read the full Facebook thread here and if you're not already part of our amazing group, you can join at www.facebook.com/groups/whatfreshhellcast!
Watch the short film Amy mentions: "How Was Your Day?" directed by Allison Hadar and Maddie Corman
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
https://www.whatfreshhellpodcast.com/p/promo-codes/
mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, back to school, school, school day, school-age kids,
9/2/2024 • 47 minutes, 51 seconds
You Might Also Like: In It: Raising Kids who Learn Differently, from Understood.org
Today we’re sharing an episode from another parenting podcast we think our listeners will really appreciate. It’s called “In It: Raising Kids who Learn Differently.” This podcast offers perspective, stories, and useful takeaways for parents of kids with challenges in reading, math, focus, and other learning differences, like ADHD and dyslexia.
This is an episode called "After the Diagnosis: How Kids Feel About Their Learning and Thinking Differences." To listen to more episodes, search for “In It: Raising Kids who Learn Differently” in your podcast app.
Listen to "In It" here: https://lnk.to/initunderstoodFD!whatfreshhell
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
https://www.whatfreshhellpodcast.com/p/promo-codes/
mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, learning differences, ADHD, dyslexia, IEP, learning challenges
9/1/2024 • 30 minutes, 29 seconds
BEST OF: Esau McCaulley, "How Far To The Promised Land"
How can we talk about America’s ongoing legacy of racism without sliding into despair? In his new memoir HOW FAR TO THE PROMISED LAND, Esau McCaulley tells his own story—and questions why Black failure is judged collectively, while Black success is perceived as the merit of an individual.
Rev. Esau McCaulley, PhD, is an author and associate professor of New Testament at Wheaton College. His work has been published in The New York Times, The Atlantic, the Washington Post, and Christianity Today.
Esau and Amy discuss:
Why "escaping poverty" is a misleading term
How experiences that set the context for heroic bravery also create the possibility for failure
What caused Esau to change his definition of justice
Here's where you can find Esau:
www.esaumccaulley.com
@OfficialEsauMcCaulley on Facebook
@esaumccaulley on Twitter on Instagram
Buy HOW FAR TO THE PROMISED LAND: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780593241080
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
https://www.whatfreshhellpodcast.com/p/promo-codes/
mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent,
8/30/2024 • 37 minutes, 15 seconds
When Kids Ask Tough Questions
We've all been there: our kid asks us what heaven is like, and whether dogs can go there too. Or why some people are homeless. Or why that person over there doesn't look like other people.
Sometimes we rush to smooth things over, or chastise them for what is probably honest curiosity.
Other times we overexplain, answering with a confusing lecture when what they really wanted was reassurance.
In this episode, we talk about how to find the best balance.
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Cory Turner and Anya Kamenetz for NPR's Life Kit: When Kids Ask (Really) Tough Questions: A Quick Guide
Our Fresh Take with Britt Hawthorne discussing kids' "curious questions"
Danielle S. McLaughlin for the Huffington Post: Having Difficult Conversations With Kids
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
https://www.whatfreshhellpodcast.com/p/promo-codes/
mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent,
8/28/2024 • 46 minutes, 34 seconds
DEEP DIVE: Might Seem Crazy. Works for Me.
This month's Deep Dive series is about flouting parenting rules and advice that don't work for us. Listen to a Spotify playlist of all the episodes in the series here.
We asked our listeners to tell us all the things that others might call crazy but which totally work for them.
From packing the laundry to eating the same lunch every day for five years to toothbrushes in the kitchen, these are the ideas that don't sound so crazy, come to think of it.
Following us on Instagram? Join the fun! http://instagram.com/whatfreshhellcast
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
https://www.whatfreshhellpodcast.com/p/promo-codes/
mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, bad advice, bad parenting advice, parenting rules, family rules
8/26/2024 • 51 minutes, 25 seconds
Fresh Take: Jill Castle, "Kids Thrive at Every Size"
The task of feeding kids "the right foods" can give parents a lot of anxiety. Jill Castle, author of the new book KIDS THRIVE AT EVERY SIZE, explains how we can set our kids up with healthy eating habits they'll maintain for life.
Jill Castle is a pediatric dietitian and childhood nutritionist, founder of The Nourished Child®, and the host of the Nourished Child podcast. In this interview, Jill and Margaret discuss:
The 8 Pillars of Wellness: Family Culture, Sleep, Movement, Feeding, Eating, Food, Screens, and Self-Love
Useful tips for fostering your child's healthy relationship with food
What we often get wrong about the relationship between a child's size and their health
Here's where you can find Jill:
jillcastle.com
@pediRD on X
@i.am.pedird on IG
@thenourishedchild on FB
@JillCastle on YouTube
Buy THE NOURISHED CHILD: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9781523521838
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
https://www.whatfreshhellpodcast.com/p/promo-codes/
mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, feeding kids, kids eating, kids nutrition, kids diet,
8/23/2024 • 44 minutes, 50 seconds
Randomest Claims to Fame
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
We asked our listeners for their randomest, most tenuous claims to fame, and as usual, they delivered. Whether it's first place in a two-person pie-eating contest, or dating someone just four degrees removed from the Real Housewives of New Jersey, here are their stories.
Join our Facebook group to see the thread with all of our listeners' randomest claims to fame!
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
https://www.whatfreshhellpodcast.com/p/promo-codes/
mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, bad advice, bad parenting advice, claim to fame, celebrity
8/21/2024 • 48 minutes, 36 seconds
DEEP DIVE: Rule Breaker Or Rule Follower: Which Are You?
This month's Deep Dive series is about flouting parenting rules and advice that don't work for us. Listen to a Spotify playlist of all the episodes in the series here.
Are you a rule breaker or a rule follower? Are you married to your opposite? We're both rule followers, and when one builds a life with someone who sees the "NO DOGS IN THE LAKE" sign as an invitation to let the golden retriever go for a swim, one is caught between two bad choices: swallow the horrible anxiety that others might think *you* are the sort of person who has zero consideration for clearly posted signage, or be the stick in the mud who can never loosen up a little.
In this episode we discuss why both kinds of people exist, and bump up against each other– and
why the "no rules pool" isn't as fun as it sounds
how rules limit possibilities, good and bad
why humans tend to create more rules during and after times of struggle
whether kids are born to be rule followers
It's worth the struggle to find the balance for our families. In order for our kids to have the secret thrill of breaking a rule, there need to be a few rules there in the first place.
Here are links to some of the writing on the topic that we discuss in this episode:
Michele Gelfand: Rule Makers, Rule Breakers: How Tight and Loose Cultures Wire Our World
Diane Spear: Play By the Relationship Rules!
Michele Gelfand for The Guardian: Why countries with 'loose', rule-breaking cultures have been hit harder by Covid
Wikipedia: Rumspringa
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
https://www.whatfreshhellpodcast.com/p/promo-codes/
mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, bad advice, bad parenting advice, parenting rules, family rules
8/19/2024 • 47 minutes, 6 seconds
BEST OF: Judith Warner on What Grownups Get Wrong About Middle School
Judith Warner’s book AND THEN THEY STOPPED TALKING TO ME: MAKING SENSE OF MIDDLE SCHOOL investigates what can be a truly painful period in any adolescent's life. Warner explains that our "personal fable" is deeply affected by our own experiences during that developmental period, even if our memories may rely on flawed or incomplete information.
That matters because it can affect how we parent our tweens as they enter the middle school stage themselves. Are parents sometimes inadvertently reinforcing the narrative that middle school is a Thunderdome of social aggression?
In this interview, Judith tells Amy the history of middle school, the brain science behind its intensity, and what parents can do to make their children's path through these years an easier one.
Buy AND THEN THEY STOPPED TALKING TO ME: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9781101905890
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
https://www.whatfreshhellpodcast.com/p/promo-codes/
mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, middle school kids
8/16/2024 • 37 minutes, 51 seconds
Helping Kids Face Their Fears
Every kid is afraid of something. Sometimes their fears make sense; sometimes their extreme anxiety over every ant that crosses their path can seem a little excessive. But our job isn't to make sure our kids never see ants; our job is to help them learn to navigate those feelings on their own.
In this episode, Amy and Margaret discuss:
Why kids facing their fears is an appropriate part of their emotional development
Why just our presence, when they're feeling fear, can be a great support
How more anxious parents tend to create more fearful children—and what to do about it
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Lior Abramson et. al for Developmental Science: "The effects of parental presence on amygdala and mPFC activation during fear conditioning: An exploratory study"
Dr. Cara Goodwin for Parenting Translator: "New Study Alert: Your Presence Matters More Than You Think"
NYU Langone Health: "Proven Strategies for Anxious Parents Who May Pass Their Anxiety on to Their Children"
Naître et Grandir: "Fear in Children"
Canadian Paediatric Society: “Helping children deal with their fears”
Butterfield, Moira: Everybody Feels...Scared!
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
https://www.whatfreshhellpodcast.com/p/promo-codes/
mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, kids fears, kids scared
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8/14/2024 • 46 minutes, 53 seconds
DEEP DIVE: Advice We Totally Hate
This month's Deep Dive series is about setting aside the parenting rules and advice that just don't work for us. Listen to a Spotify playlist of all the episodes in the series here.
As soon as you become a mother, unsolicited advice-givers are everywhere, telling you to “sleep when the baby sleeps.” Or “it gets easier.” Or “enjoy every moment.”
Out of all the advice (parenting and otherwise) that we and our listeners have ever received, here is a selection of the very worst.
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
https://www.whatfreshhellpodcast.com/p/promo-codes/
mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, bad advice, bad parenting advice, parenting rules, family rules
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
8/12/2024 • 50 minutes, 15 seconds
Fresh Take: Amy Betters-Midtvedt on What No One Tells You About Parenting Teens
You hear that parenting teens is a wild ride. But as Amy Betters-Midtvedt, author of the new book YOU'LL MAKE IT (AND THEY WILL TOO), says, it can also be baffling:
“So much weirdness comes when they go back-and-forth between staying their old selves and becoming their new ones. Conflict will suddenly flow out of nowhere over nothing.”
But you'll make it. And they will too.
Amy Betters-Midtvedt is a Today Parenting contributing author with more than a million readers and twenty-five years of experience working with adolescents and families. In this episode, she and Amy Wilson discuss
Why teens are constantly flipping from cuddly to crabby
Why we owe it to our kids to be the best versions of ourselves
When texting—or GIFs—is the best way to communicate
Here's where you can find Amy Betters-Midtvedt:
amybettersmidtvedt.com
FB: @Amy Betters-Midtvedt
TikTok: @hidingwithcoffee
IG: @Amy.Betters-Midtvedt
X:@amymidtvedt
Buy YOU'LL MAKE IT (AND THEY WILL TOO): https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780593601129
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
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mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, parenting teens
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8/9/2024 • 34 minutes, 55 seconds
Comparing Without Despairing
It's easy to compare our parenting—often as measured by our kids' achievements—with their peers' achievements. As in, how other parents might be doing it better.
This week, we're talking parenting tips for resisting “mompetition”— and how we can use comparison to create healthy perspectives instead of "compare and despair."
Amy and Margaret discuss:
Why competition is a biological imperative
The effects of social media and other societal forces on parenting
How to know if we're putting too much pressure on our kids
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Matthew Hutson for The Atlantic: "Why We Compete"
Aruna Raghuram for ParentCircle: "Are you a competitive mom? Here are the many ways in which mompetition can harm your child"
Urban Dictionary definition of "mompetition"
Eileen Kennedy-Moore for Psychology Today: "How to Resist Competitive Parenting"
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
https://www.whatfreshhellpodcast.com/p/promo-codes/
mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, mompetition, parenting competition
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8/7/2024 • 48 minutes, 35 seconds
DEEP DIVE: Admitting Things Aren't Perfect
This month, we're doing a deep dive series into letting things go—arguments, unattainable standards, you name it! You can find the playlist with all of the episodes in the series here.
It's hard to admit things aren't perfect. It's especially hard for moms. Psychologists Paul Hewitt and Gordon Flett described three types of perfectionism in the 1990s: self-directed (I must be a size 2), others-directed (do that piano exercise again until you get it right), and "socially mediated" perfectionism, which comes from society making unrealistic demands of a person or a group and punishing that person when she falls short. Sound familiar?
Turns out the amount of socially mediated perfectionism a parent feels is directly related to her level of "parental burnout," defined as exhaustion in one’s role as a parent, feelings of being fed up as a parent, and even emotional distancing from one’s children. Not the place any of us want to get to. So why is it so hard to admit things aren't perfect? And how can we start?
Here are links to some of the research on the topic that we discuss in this episode:
Fatemeh Ghanbari Jahromia et al: The relationship between socially prescribed perfectionism and depression: The mediating role of maladaptive cognitive schemas
Paul Hewitt and Gordon Flett: Perfectionism in the Self and Social Contexts
Matilda Sorkkila and Kaisa Aunola: Risk Factors for Parental Burnout among Finnish Parents: The Role of Socially Prescribed Perfectionism
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
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mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, self-conscious, mindfulness
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8/5/2024 • 45 minutes, 6 seconds
Fresh Take: Debra Hendrickson on What We Can Do About Climate Change
We know climate change affects not only our children's health but their future. So what can we as individuals do?
Debra Hendrickson is a board-certified pediatrician practicing in Reno, Nevada, and a Clinical Professor of Pediatrics at the University of Nevada School of Medicine. She is also the author of the author of the new book THE AIR THEY BREATHE: A PEDIATRICIAN ON THE FRONT LINES OF CLIMATE CHANGE.
In this interview, Margaret and Debra discuss:
How climate change is affecting the health of children
Why we should not feel completely defeated when it comes to reversing climate change
Small steps we as individuals can take to reduce carbon emissions and keep our kids safe
Here's where you can find Debra:
https://debrahendrickson.com/
#TheAirTheyBreathe
Buy THE AIR THEY BREATHE
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
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mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, climate change, climate change effects, global warming, global warming effects
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8/2/2024 • 27 minutes, 23 seconds
Sibling Spacing: Close Together or Far Apart?
What are the best things about having closely spaced siblings? What about farther apart? Siblings' closeness, amount of conflict, and relationships as adults are all affected by the age differences between them.
In this episode, the listeners with closely spaced children tell us why that has worked for them (constant playmates) and not (constant bickering), while those with kids with larger age differences point to the unexpected connections that can still result.
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Michael Waters for The Atlantic: A Subtle Shift Shaking Up Sibling Relationships
ANALYZING CONTEMPORARY FERTILITY by Christine R. Schwartz et. al: Chapter 10: Trends in Years Spent as Mothers of Young Children: The Role of Completed Fertility, Birth Spacing, and Multiple Partner Fertility
Bart H. H. Golsteyn and Cécile A. J. Magnée for the IZA Institute of Labor Economics: Does Birth Spacing Affect Personality?
World Bank Group, "World Population Prospects: 2022 Revision:" Fertility rate, total (births per woman) - United States
Cicirelli, V. G. for Developmental Psychology. Effects of sibling structure and interaction on children's categorization style.
Sahar Borairi, et. al for the Society for Research in Child Development: "Do siblings influence one another? Unpacking processes that occur during sibling conflict"
Erping Xiao et. al for Early Child Development and Care: "The influence of birth order and sibling age gap on children’s sharing decision"
Read all of our listeners' great advice on the original thread in our Facebook group
Listen to our episode "Birth Order: Can We Fight It?"
Join our Facebook group for advice and laughs from other moms just like you!
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
https://www.whatfreshhellpodcast.com/p/promo-codes/
mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, siblings, brothers, sisters, sibling relationship, kids age gap, sibling age gap
7/31/2024 • 48 minutes, 2 seconds
DEEP DIVE: How To Stop Having The Same Fight
This month, we're doing a deep dive series into letting things go—arguments, unattainable standards, you name it! You can find the playlist with all of the episodes in the series here.
Having the same fight doesn’t mean your relationship is broken. But it is totally annoying. In this episode we discuss the modes of negativity at play when we repeat the same conflicts- and what we can do to break the cycle, whether it’s our partners or kids.
Conflict may be unavoidable- but it can be at least a little more productive.
Here are links to some of the takes on this topic that we discuss in this episode:
We The Norths on YouTube: How We Avoid Stupid Fights: The Number System
Esther Perel for Cosmopolitan: How to Stop Having the Same Fight With Your Boyfriend All the Time
Kristine Fellizar for Bustle: 7 Hacks To Avoid Having The Same Fight Over & Over In Your Relationship
Charlotte Latvala for Good Housekeeping: More Fun, Less Fighting
Ted Lasso on Apple TV
Eckhart Tolle on Oprah Super Sunday: How To Identify And Stop Your Pain Body
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
https://www.whatfreshhellpodcast.com/p/promo-codes/
mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, fighting, couples fighting, partners fighting, arguing, spouses fighting, marital discord, marital strain, marriage
7/29/2024 • 49 minutes, 58 seconds
Fresh Take: Erin and Stephen Mitchell, "Too Tired To Fight"
Do you and your partner find yourselves talking past each other when arguing? Erin and Stephen Mitchell, authors of the new book TOO TIRED TO FIGHT, discuss how parenting can impact relationships (including their own!) and strategies to manage conflict and stay connected.
Erin and Stephen Mitchell are the cofounders of Couples Counseling for Parents, a company focused on providing access to research-informed, psychologically sound online education for couples.
Amy, Erin, and Stephen discuss:
Why fighting between couples often increases once kids come into the picture
What conflict in a relationship really signifies—and why it's not a bad thing
Why conflict resolution doesn't have to be dead serious all the time
Here's where you can find Erin and Stephen:
www.couplescounselingforparents.com
Buy TOO TIRED TO FIGHT: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780593714270
Listen to the "Couples Counselling for Parents" podcast
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
https://www.whatfreshhellpodcast.com/p/promo-codes/
mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, relationships, fighting, couples, marriage, couple arguing, couple fighting, conflict in relationships
7/26/2024 • 46 minutes, 37 seconds
Are We Helping or Are We Helicoptering?
Is "helicopter parenting" actually a definable thing? Or is it just what we call parents who are being annoying? Overparenting is something that it's easy to be judgey about in other people, and a lot harder to identify in ourselves. Parents have to help. It's what we're there for. So how do we manage without micromanaging?
In this episode, we discuss:
The conditions that trigger parental anxiety (probably the true cause of overattentive parenting)
Allowing struggles and disappointments to be part of our kids' journeys
How to discern for yourself if you're maybe helicoptering more than helping
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Kate Bayless for Parents Magazine: "What Is Helicopter Parenting, And How Does It Impact Kids?"
Julia Schønning Vigdal and Kolbjørn Kallesten Brønnick for Frontiers in Psychology: "A Systematic Review of “Helicopter Parenting” and Its Relationship With Anxiety and Depression"
Our Fresh Take with Camilo Ortiz
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
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mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, helicopter parent, snowplow parent
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7/24/2024 • 44 minutes, 12 seconds
DEEP DIVE: Let's Stop Caring What People Think
This month, we're doing a deep dive series into letting things go—arguments, unattainable standards, you name it! You can find the playlist with all of the episodes in the series here.
What if we didn't let other people's judgments change our game plans—as women, as mothers, and as humans? We're wired to pay attention to what other people think. There's a reason those judgments can be painful. Are there ways we can break free and care less?
In this episode Amy and Margaret discuss...
Why our innate need to be included (and not ostracized) is hard-wired
The "behavioral inhibition system" and how it gets triggered
Whose feelings and judgments we should take into account
Why parenting is an especially problematic zone for others' judgments of us
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Our episode "Parenting With An Audience"
Governor J.B. Pritzker's speech to the 2023 graduates of Northwestern University: "The kindest person in the room is often the smartest."
Rachel Moss for HuffPost UK: How To Actually Stop Caring What Other People Think Of You
hotter.com: At What Age Do You Feel Most Comfortable In Yourself?
Arthur C. Brooks for The Atlantic: No One Cares!
Naomi I. Eisenberger: Why Rejection Hurts: What Social Neuroscience Has Revealed About the Brain’s Response to Social Rejection
Sarah Coyne for The Joplin Globe: Parenting with an audience changes the rules
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
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mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, self-conscious, mindfulness
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7/22/2024 • 43 minutes, 51 seconds
Fresh Take: Emily Cherkin on Tech-Intentional Parenting
Is screen use a daily battle of wills in your house? Emily Cherkin, author of the new book "THE SCREENTIME SOLUTION: A Judgment-Free Guide to Becoming a Tech-Intentional Family," explains how to model a healthy relationship with tech for our kids.
Emily Cherkin, MEd., consults with parents, offers school presentations and professional development training, and brings her tech-intentional approach to as many people as possible.
Emily and Margaret discuss:
What "tech-intentional" really means and how it's different from being screen-free
How to align screen use with family values
How to model tech intentionality with your kids
Here's where you can find Emily:
http://www.thescreentimeconsultant.com
Instagram: @thescreentimeconsultant
Facebook: @thescreentimeconsultant
X: @ScreentimeLlc
Buy THE SCREENTIME SOLUTION: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9798886451122
Listen to our Fresh Take with Julie Lythcott-Haims
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
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mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, tech, technology, screens, screentime
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7/19/2024 • 49 minutes, 37 seconds
When Mom Leaves Town
Does it seem like just as much work to leave your kids behind for a couple of days as not to go in the first place? Do your instructions for family operational procedures during your absence run more than five pages?
Getting away from our kids—for work, for the weekend, for a friend’s 40th—isn’t just good for us. It’s also an opportunity for our kids to realize that “only Mommy” stuff they pull when we’re around is not as necessary as they might have thought.
Margaret and Amy discuss:
Why our kids may behave better when we aren’t around (and why it's not a bad thing)
Why the best time to call your kids when you travel is in the morning
How the instructions you leave behind can change as your kids grow
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Kari Bodnarchuk for The Boston Globe: Preparing Kids for When a Parent Travels
Smart Women Travelers: Keeping Mom’s Business Trip from Being Mom’s Guilt Trip
Our episode "We Forgot What Little Kids Were Like"
Kara Williams has great advice for vacationing with kids of all ages
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
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mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, travel
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7/17/2024 • 47 minutes, 2 seconds
DEEP DIVE: Dropping the Rope
This month, we're doing a deep dive series into letting things go—arguments, unattainable standards, you name it! You can find the playlist with all of the episodes in the series here.
When you're locked in a battle of tug-o-war it can be extremely exhausting to keep up the fight. But there is a solution: dropping the rope. It may seem counterintuitive, but when you're in the middle of a conflict you've had many times before—when you're fighting for something that seems very important, or at least obvious—and then suddenly drop the rope, you're allowing the space for something different to occur.
Here are the links to the resources we mentioned in the episode:
Jen Lumanlan for Your Parenting Mojo: "Want to stop playing Tug of War with your child?"
Our Fresh Take with Dr. Jill Stoddard on How to Manage Our Anxiety
Our bookshop!
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
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mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, parents fighting, arguments, husbands, wives, partners arguing, kids arguing, spouse disagreements
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7/15/2024 • 42 minutes, 36 seconds
Fresh Take: Jo Piazza
Jo Piazza wears a lot of hats: author, podcast host, award-winning journalist, mom. In this episode we talk about them all!
We're big fans of her sexy thriller THE SICILIAN INHERITANCE and her podcast Under the Influence (now part of Adalyst Media!) Jo's interests are wide-ranging and so is this conversation. We cover:
How Jo's experience solving a century-old murder in her family inspired her book
Why Jo and Amy are apparently cousins
Jo's advice for parents who are just entering the world of social media with their kids
Here's where you can find Jo:
www.jopiazza.com
@jopiazzaauthor on IG
@jopiazza on X
Listen to "Under the Influence," an Adalyst Media podcast!
Listen to "The Sicilian Inheritance" podcast
Buy THE SICILIAN INHERITANCE: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780593474167
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
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mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent
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7/12/2024 • 36 minutes, 11 seconds
BEST OF: Super-Awesome Mom Hacks
Time for some easy wins! Here of some of our (and our listeners') favorite hacks for
naptime
diapers
laundry
kitchen
sibling squabbles
and General Sanity Preservation. This stuff really works!
The Lazy Genius (Kendra Adachi's) principle: Decide Once
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
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mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent,
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7/10/2024 • 45 minutes, 32 seconds
Keeping Our Families' Traditions
Danielle Friedman's recent New York Times article says it all: "The Constant Work to Keep a Family Connected Has a Name." That work is kinkeeping.
Sociologist Carolyn Rosenthal defined kinkeeping as "someone who works at keeping family members in touch with one another." Every lucky extended family has a kinkeeper, and yes, it's usually a woman. Perhaps that's why the work of kinkeeping can be dismissed as silly and unimportant, even by the same people who reap its benefits.
Margaret and Amy discuss:
How kinkeepers help their families live longer
How to get support if you're the kinkeeper
How to offer support if you're not
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Our interview with Eve Rodsky: "Changing the Invisible Workload"
Molly West's TikTok video on kinkeeping
Frank Bruni for the NYT: "Tolstoy and Miss Daisy"
Danielle Friedman for the NYT: "The Constant Work to Keep a Family Connected Has a Name"
Carolyn J. Rosenthal for The Journal of Marriage and Family: "Kinkeeping in the Familial Division of Labor"
Caitlin G Allen, et. al, for the Journal of Community Genetics: "Developing and assessing a kin keeping scale with application to identifying central influencers in African American family networks"
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
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mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, mom guilt, invisible labor, emotional labor, cognitive load
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7/8/2024 • 45 minutes, 44 seconds
BEST OF: Bethany Johnson and Margaret Quinlan
Margaret "Maggie" Quinlan and Bethany Johnson are the co-authors of the book You’re Doing it Wrong! Mothering, Media and Medical Expertise. This book investigates the history of mothering advice in the media, from the 19th century to today, and the processes by which mothering has been defined, from getting pregnant to being pregnant to giving birth to whether "that baby" needs a hat on.
Like most moms, Maggie and Bethany questioned their own parenting decisions because they understood their choices would be met with scrutiny exercised in few other arenas. They suggest that the first step to freeing ourselves from the socially prescribed perfectionism of motherhood is to realize that no matter what you decide, there will always be someone telling you "you're doing it wrong."
Margaret "Maggie" Quinlan is a Professor of Communication at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. She explores how communication creates, resists and transforms knowledges about bodies, and critiques power structures that marginalize certain people both inside and outside of healthcare systems.
Bethany Johnson is a PHD candidate at the University of South Carolina. She studies how science, medical technology, and public health discourses are framed and reproduced by those with structural power.
Get YOU'RE DOING IT WRONG! in our Bookshop store: https://bookshop.org/books/you-re-doing-it-wrong-mothering-media-and-medical-expertise/9780813593784.
To find out more about their work: http://johnsonquinlanresearch.com.
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
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mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent,
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7/5/2024 • 33 minutes, 12 seconds
Why Was This a Thing? Rules We Once Lived By
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
Rooms where no one was allowed to go? Saving up phone minutes? Opening one kind of cereal at a time? What odd rules did we once live by that we can't imagine following now?
Amy and Margaret discuss:
The Good Room
Snuggies
Peek Freans
Links to references in this episode:
The Onion: Bloodthirsty, Undead Ghoul Advocates Chocolate-Cereal Consumption
"Certain things are for company" - comedian Sebastian Maniscalco
"Company is Coming" - comedian Chris Fleming
Peek Freans
Follow us on Threads @whatfreshhellcast
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
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mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent,
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7/3/2024 • 45 minutes, 56 seconds
BEST OF: Ask Amy: I've Already Got the End-of-Summer Scaries
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
Why is it that summer never seems to be the picture-perfect, sun-washed experience we want for our kids? Amy helps a listener ditch her mom guilt over not providing her kids with the "perfect" summer.
"I have the end of summer scaries. Or end of summer mom guilt. I feel so bummed that I have spent most of the summer in survival mode instead of really enjoying it with my children. I probably have seen way too many of those "you only get 18 summers" posts. My oldest starts first grade in two weeks and I feel like I completely failed. I wish we had spent more time swimming, riding bikes, all of that quintessential summer stuff. Instead, I feel like I've spent most of it breaking up fights with his 4 year old brother, keeping the 18 month old from injuring himself, and saying "no" to every request.
I'm notoriously hard on myself so I probably just need a reality check. Does anyone else feel this way?"
It's totally normal to feel like the summer is a more difficult time of year, especially with three little kids to entertain, Amy explains. There are more hours of daylight and more unstructured time.
And, by the way, your kids don't vaporize once they turn 18, and if they're away at college, summer is when you WILL see them, at least somewhat more than you did during the school year. Try to decouple yourself from the overwhelming "you only get 18 summers with your kids" messaging. It robs you of the ability to remain present THIS summer with your kids.
So how do you try and be present with your kids without worrying about how many summers you have left in the bank? Start super small. Declare that it's "ice cream dinner" tonight or let the kids cover the driveway in chalk drawings. The "summer memories" we're supposed to be making are by definition lazy and unstructured. And those little things we may think are nothing special are probably what our kids will look back on most fondly.
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mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, summer, vacation, summer vacation, summer activities, staycation, summer break
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7/1/2024 • 6 minutes, 1 second
Fresh Take: Mr. Chazz on Breaking Generational Patterns
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
How can we be responsive, rather than reactive, when our child misbehaves? Chazz Lewis, host of the podcast Learning Curve with Mr. Chazz, explains practical steps for navigating our children's behavior issues with empathy and compassion, rather than judgement.
Mr. Chazz is an educator, speaker, and activist. With over 1.5 million followers across social media, Mr. Chazz has helped countless parents and teachers navigate the challenges and triumphs of raising and teaching children.
Margaret and Mr. Chazz discuss:
The one thing that can really help a child who comes from a troubled home
The five steps for a conscious-based parenting approach
Simple mantras to keep in mind for a healthy perspective on parenting
Here's where you can find Mr. Chazz:
mrchazz.com
@mrchazz on IG
@mrchazzmrchazz on TikTok, FB, and YT
Listen to Learning Curve with Mr. Chazz, an Adalyst Media podcast!
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
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mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, educator, kids' education, generational trauma, breaking patterns,
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6/28/2024 • 39 minutes, 54 seconds
Sibling Rivalry
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
Most of us have either experienced—or refereed—sibling rivalry. So what do we do when our kids are constantly at each other's throats? Why do they fight constantly, and how do we get them to stop?
In this episode, Margaret and Amy discuss:
How parents consciously and unconsciously contribute to sibling rivalry
How to know what's normal sibling rivalry and what's harmful bullying
When to step in and when to let your kids work it out themselves
Why treating your kids fairly is not the same as treating them equally
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Rob Quinn for Newser: This Bird Takes Sibling Rivalry to Extremes
Claire McCarthy for Harvard Health Publishing: Sibling rivalry is normal — but is it helpful or harmful?
Anahad O'Connor for the New York Times: When the Bully Is a Sibling
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6/26/2024 • 47 minutes, 10 seconds
BEST OF: Would You Rather...? (Mom Edition)
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
Parenting is a constant process of choosing the lesser evil. When it's stomach flu or Coxsackie, they're both bad, but when you're playing Would You Rather?, you've still got to pick one.
In this episode, Amy and Margaret discuss:
What their kids' names REALLY are
Rat backpacks
The horror of perma-noisemakers
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6/24/2024 • 43 minutes, 29 seconds
Fresh Take: Lucas Mann on Fatherhood
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
What does it mean to perform the role of "dad" in today's world? How do the ways the world perceives our children affect the ways we perceive ourselves?
Lucas Mann is the author of ATTACHMENTS: ESSAYS ON FATHERHOOD AND OTHER PERFORMANCES, a collection of essays about parenting that The New Yorker just called "intense, poetic, and almost uncomfortably honest." In this interview, Lucas tells us about his experiences, how and why he writes, and what he's learned along the way.
Here's where you can find Lucas Mann:
www.lucasmann.com
@lucaswmann on IG
@LucasWMann on X
Buy ATTACHMENTS: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9781609389536
https://www.newyorker.com/books/under-review/should-we-expect-more-from-dads
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6/21/2024 • 30 minutes, 9 seconds
Dumb Things We Thought When We Were Kids
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
Amy thought The Love Boat was filmed in real time, at sea. Margaret's grandfather had all the kids convinced his dining room light switch controlled the Tappan Zee Bridge. We asked our listeners for all the silliest things they fully believed as children, and in this episode, we highlight all of the absolute dumbest.
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6/19/2024 • 42 minutes, 9 seconds
BEST OF: Toxic Positivity
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
“God never gives you more than you can handle.” “Look on the bright side.” “It could be worse.” These are examples of toxic positivity. They're platitudes we’ve all heard and we all know are (to say the least) less than helpful.
So why do people feel the need to put a good spin on things when disaster strikes, and how do we break out of that habit? We talk about our own experiences with toxic positivity, what we’ve learned from them, and what we’re still working on.
In this episode, we discuss:
How overvaluing positives functions as a survival mechanism
Why toxic positivity actually makes us less happy
How to counter toxic positivity and how to stay graceful towards people who offer us outlooks we may not want or need
Here are links to some of the articles we discuss in this episode:
Brock Bastian and Ashley Humphrey for The Conversation: “How to avoid ‘toxic positivity’ and take the less direct route to happiness”
Allyson Chiu for The Washington Post : Time to ditch ‘toxic positivity,’ experts say: ‘It’s okay not to be okay’
Elizabeth Bernstein for The Wall Street Journal : Toxic Positivity Is Very Real, and Very Annoying
Links to other episodes that mention toxic positivity:
Fresh Take: Kate Bowler on the Truths We Need To Hear
Fresh Take: Taylor Harris on Motherhood, Genetics, and Facing the Unknown
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6/17/2024 • 44 minutes, 34 seconds
Fresh Take: Ruth Whippman on What We Get Wrong About Raising Boys
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
How do the stereotypes we harbor about raising boys harm them in the long term? Ruth Whipmann, author of BOYMOM: REIMAGINING BOYHOOD IN THE AGE OF IMPOSSIBLE MASCULINITY, discusses what most modern parenting advice misses when it comes to raising boys.
Ruth, Margaret, and Amy discuss:
why so much parenting advice for boys has historically sidelined the role of mothers
the ways in which the emotional lives of boys are suppressed
how to be "annoying in service of the project" of changing the conversation in your own family
Here's where you can find Ruth:
https://www.ruthwhippman.com
@ruthwhippman on X and IG
Follow Ruth on Substack: https://substack.com/@ruthwhippman
Buy BOYMOM: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780593577639
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6/14/2024 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
When Your Kid is Being Bullied
What Fresh Hell Podcast is going on tour across the Northeast US this fall! Join us for a live version of the podcast and bring all your mom friends. We can’t wait to go back on the road! https://bit.ly/whatfreshhelltour
Most of us hear “bullying” and picture a sand-kicking, lunch-money-stealing menace. But today’s bullying can take other forms. Research by Dr. Charisse Nixon shows that about 7% of kids report experiencing physical aggression once a week— but that HALF of kids report experiencing relational aggression at least once a month.
On the other hand, as bullying expert Signe Whitson explains, some things get termed “bullying” that are more correctly described as mean or rude. Knowing the difference as parents will help our children navigate these waters more effectively.
In this episode we discuss how to help our children understand what bullying is, plus how to know if our kids are being bullied themselves— since it’s the kids who are truly frightened and struggling who are often the most likely not to tell us.
We also discuss whether, how much, and in what ways parents should intervene— somewhere in the middle ground between “so find new friends!” and beating the bully up yourself. (Spoiler alert: don’t do either of those things.)
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in this episode:
Katie Hurley for Washington Post On Parenting: "What does childhood anxiety look like? Probably not what you think."
Katie Hurley for PBS Kids: What to Do If Your Child Is Being Bullied
Sherri Gordon for Very Well Family: 7 Tips for Helping Kids Deal With Being Ostracized
Sumathi Reddy for WSJ: Little Children and Already Acting Mean
Signe Whitson for Huffington Post: Rude Vs. Mean Vs. Bullying: Defining The Differences
Louis Sachar: There's a Boy in the Girls' Bathroom
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6/12/2024 • 46 minutes, 18 seconds
BEST OF: Uh Oh, It's Summer!
Hooray, summer is finally here! No more French quizzes or spirit days to dress for last minute! So now what? Million-dollar summer camps? Kicking our kids outside from sunup to sundown so they don't drive us crazy?
Here's how to give everyone, including yourself, a sane summer that won't send you into bankruptcy.
Margaret and Amy discuss:
Why summer light affects our mood
Summer camp inflation
Farmer's almanac predictions - here are the 2024 predictions
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Johns Hopkins School of Public Health: 7 Things To Know About Daylight Savings Time
Michele Marchetti & Mia Taylor for Parents: How To Handle the Rising Costs of Summer Camp
American Camp Association: How To Afford Camp
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mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, mom guilt
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6/10/2024 • 45 minutes, 17 seconds
Fresh Take: Jessica Calarco on Women as America's Social Safety Net
During the pandemic, most moms hit a breaking point. All of the increased labor of childcare, at-home teaching, and caregiving seemed to land mostly, or only, on their plates. It was a clarifying moment for many of us that things simply could not continue as they were going—and that perhaps they had been going that way for a long time.
Jessica Calarco is a Professor of Sociology at the University of Wisconsin and the author of the new book HOLDING IT TOGETHER: How Women Became America's Safety Net. In this interview, discusses the forces that place the burden of childcare and domestic labor on women.
Jessica, Amy, and Margaret discuss:
how societal expectations around motherhood have always pointed toward a lack of choices
how "mom guilt" is weaponized to ensure women keep doing more than their share
what Jessica calls "DIY society," and why it's a myth
Here's where you can find Jessica:
https://www.jessicacalarco.com
@JessicaCalarco on X
Buy HOLDING IT TOGETHER: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780593538128
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6/7/2024 • 34 minutes, 22 seconds
Tips for Vacationing with Extended Family
We've both traveled with our extended families over and over again, and have loved the memories we've made together. But different bedtimes, sightseeing styles, and mealtime expectations can lead to unexpected conflict.
Laura in our Facebook group wrote in to say:
"Might be a fun episode before summer: large family vacation traditions. I'm wondering if there are favorite games/foods/tips/funny stories on going away with lots of members of your non-immediate family."
As usual, our listeners responded with great tips for maintaining both organization and sanity when vacationing with extended family, and in this episode we discuss them all, including:
Which conversations to have ahead of time—and which conversations never to have at all
Systems for family vacations that don't fall on one person (or one gender) to execute
Limiting your non-negotiables as a nuclear family ahead of time
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6/5/2024 • 40 minutes, 20 seconds
DEEP DIVE: When You Feel Like a Failure as a Parent
This month, we're doing a deep dive series into mom guilt—why it's so pervasive and what we can do about it. You can find the playlist with all of the episodes in the series here.
In this episode we discuss all the reasons we’ve felt like failures as mothers, why we’re never as hard on others as we are on ourselves, and what we have done to mitigate these feelings of failure in our own lives.
“I feel like I’m failing at parenting fairly often,” our listener Becky wrote when she suggested this topic. If it makes you feel any better, Becky, you’ve got plenty of company. These self-inflicted guilt trips are nearly universal among mothers.
But why? Is it the 24/7 nature of the job? Is it the admittedly high stakes that come from nurturing small humans towards successful adulthoods? Is it our parenting culture, which tells us no matter how much we do, how hard we try, there’s another mother doing it just a little bit better?
We think it’s all of the above. We also think talking to other mothers is the best solution. Thanks for being part of our mothering community.
Here’s links to research and other writing on this topic discussed in this episode:
Regan Long for Motherly: To the Mom Who Feels Like She's Failing: You're Not. Promise.
Heather Marcoux for Motherly: 66% of working parents feel like they're failing—but the system is actually failing them
Doug Parker for Babble: I Feel Like I'm Failing This Parenting Thing Every Damn Day
Denise Rowden for Empowering Parents: “I Feel Like a Failure as a Parent.” How to Turn That Hopeless Feeling Around
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mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, mom guilt
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6/3/2024 • 49 minutes, 18 seconds
Fresh Take: Sarah Gristwood on What We Can Learn From Women's Diaries
What do women's diaries tell us that's not in the history books? What has changed about women's experiences in the last 400 years, and what remains frustratingly familiar? Historian Sarah Gristwood, author of SECRET VOICES: A YEAR OF WOMEN'S DIARIES, explains the common threads she found among the stories women felt they could tell only to themselves.
Sarah and Amy discuss:
The most common emotion expressed in all the diaries contained in this book
The meaning of a diary as a secret-keeper, as a historical record, and sometimes both
Whether our social media posts and Substacks today can serve the same purpose—and where they fall short
Here's where you can find Sarah:
http://sarahgristwood.com/
Buy SECRET VOICES: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9781849948159
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mom friends, diary, journal, history, herstory, feminism, women's voices
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5/31/2024 • 28 minutes, 50 seconds
When Our Kids Are Bad at Making Friends
When we have a kid who just doesn't seem to fit in—or who is a loner, if a fairly content one—it can be hard for parents. But putting our own anxiety about it aside, and getting clear on the lagging skills and social cues that may not quite be in place, is the best way to help kids get on a better path. This episode is full of specific and useful advice!
Amy and Margaret discuss:
all the reasons kids can have trouble making (and keeping) friends
five "unwritten social rules" that some kids take longer to comprehend
how figuring out the specific issues at play can lead to the most useful solutions
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Jamie Howard, et. al for Child Mind Institute: Kids Who Need a Little Help to Make Friends
The Sue Larkey podcast: Promoting Social Understanding – Social Scripts
Gwen Dewar for Parenting Science: How to help kids make friends: 12 evidence-based tips
Christine Comizio for U.S. News Health: Understanding Kids' Friendship Struggles: Common Causes and Solutions
Lexi Walters Wright for Understood.org: 5 “unwritten” social rules that some kids miss
Andrew M.I. Lee for Understood.org: Why some kids have trouble making friends
ADHD Dude: "How to Help Your ADHD Child Keep Friends"
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5/29/2024 • 45 minutes, 37 seconds
DEEP DIVE: Bad Mom Moments (with guest Arianna Bradford)
This month, we're doing a deep dive series into mom guilt—why it's so pervasive and what we can do about it. You can find the playlist with all of the episodes in the series here.
Fess up: everyone's got a Bad Mom Moment. Or twelve.
We tend to hold these things really close, our shame rooted in deep certainty that no other mother has ever temporarily forgotten their baby in the toy aisle at Target.
Guess what? You're not alone. Here are some of our listeners' Bad Mom Moments– and more than a few of our own.
Our guest this week is Arianna Bradford, the brains behind The NYAM (Not Your Average Mom) Project, a website dedicated to helping parents -- moms especially -- celebrate the person they are outside of their role as a parent. Her book, SHAME ON YOU: BIG TRUTHS FROM A BAD MOM, is a hilarious collection of parenting essays that focus as much on a mother's mental health as they do on kids, and how very, very strange they are.
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mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent,
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5/27/2024 • 49 minutes, 18 seconds
Fresh Take: Naomi Cahn and June Carbone on Building a Just Economy
Contrary to popular belief, the gender wage gap is widening, not narrowing. Naomi Cahn and June Carbone, authors of FAIR SHAKE: WOMEN AND THE FIGHT TO BUILD A JUST ECONOMY, discuss why working women still lag behind men both in wage equity and in positions of power.
Naomi Cahn is the Justice Anthony M. Kennedy distinguished professor of law at the University of Virginia School of Law. June Carbone is the Robina chair of law, science, and technology at the University of Minnesota Law School.
Naomi, June, and Amy discuss:
How the "winner takes all" economy rewards men and not women
The "triple bind" that sidelines women in the workplace
How things get even more complicated for working parents
What solutions for this problem look like at a societal, organizational, and personal level
Here's where you can find more of June and Naomi:
June Carbone: https://law.umn.edu/profiles/june-carbone
Naomi Cahn: https://www.law.virginia.edu/faculty/profile/nrc8g/2915359
@carbonej and @NaomiCahn on X
Buy FAIR SHAKE: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9781982115128
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
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mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent, feminism, feminist economy, feminist economics
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5/24/2024 • 32 minutes, 21 seconds
How Old Is Old Enough?
How do we know when our kids are old enough to walk home alone? Wear makeup? Get a phone? It definitely depends on the kid, your family situation, and the community where you live, but we think there are few ground rules—and some scaffolding it's a good idea to have in place.
Amy and Margaret discuss:
why social media may be the thing to delay, more than the phone
why it can be tricky to leave older siblings in charge of younger siblings even when they actually are old enough
when kids are old enough to "date" (which depends on what the meaning of the word "date" is)
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Our Fresh Take with Camilo Ortiz
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mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent,
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5/22/2024 • 44 minutes, 27 seconds
DEEP DIVE: JoAnn Crohn of "No Guilt Mom"
This month, we're doing a deep dive series into mom guilt—why it's so pervasive and what we can do about it. You can find the playlist with all of the episodes in the series here.
JoAnn Crohn of No Guilt Mom is a parenting educator who helps moms feel confident in everything from raising empowered, self-sufficient kids to dropping the anxiety and guilt out of modern parenthood.
No Guilt Mom offers self-paced digital courses in handling big emotions, getting kids to help out more, creating a morning routine, and conquering the homework drama.
JoAnn is the co-host of the No Guilt Mom podcast, a former board-certified middle-school teacher, and a mom to 2 kids, ages 13 and 8.
In this episode, Amy and JoAnn discuss:
Why rewards charts taught as classroom strategies can often become counterproductive
Why kids do well if they can
When rewards charts actually DO work
No Guilt Mom's HAPPY approach to parenting more effectively– while raising happier, more self-sufficient kids at the same time...
Here's where you can find JoAnn:
@noguiltmom on FB/IG
noguiltmom.com
Here are the links to the podcast episodes Amy references:
Fresh Take: Stacy Haynes on the Best Method to Help Kids Who Struggle
Amy and Margaret's interview on the No Guilt Mom podcast
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5/20/2024 • 34 minutes, 26 seconds
Fresh Take: Cameron Normand of "Stepfamily Solutions"
How can a step-parent gain the trust of her kids as she becomes part of their family? Cameron Normand, founder of Stepfamily Solutions, discusses her own experience as a stepmom and offers some helpful takeaways for navigating stepfamily dynamics.
Cameron and Margaret discuss:
The biggest misconception about stepfamily life
Cameron's top piece of advice for new stepmoms
How to deal with a stepchild or ex-spouse who is less than accepting
Here's where you can find Cameron:
stepfamilysolutions.com
@stepfamilysolutions on FB, IG, and TikTok
Listen to Cameron's podcast "The Stepmom Diaries"
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manifest reality, positive thinking, toxic positivity, magical thinking, mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, stepmom, stepparent, blended families, step kids
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5/17/2024 • 34 minutes, 37 seconds
Do We Need to Lower Our Standards?
When we explain to our partners and families that we need them to pitch in around the house, we sometimes hear back that the real problem is our too-high standards. That if we actually think "doing the laundry" means FOLDING the laundry, instead of leaving it in the dryer, that that is just too high a bar.
Eve Rodsky, author of FAIR PLAY, suggests that partners establish a "minimum standard of care" for household duties. But how does that get set? And is that really all it takes?
In this episode Amy and Margaret discuss:
How to use "community standards" to determine minimum standards of care
The tired old idea that women have impossible standards
Why it might be your system that's the problem, and not your partner
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Sheila Wray Gregoire for Bare Marriage: EMOTIONAL LABOR SERIES: HOW DO WE DECIDE WHAT NEEDS TO BE DONE?
Listen to our Fresh Take with Eve Rodsky
Eve Rodsky's FAIR PLAY: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780525541943
Leslie Goldman for The Cut: The Marriages Hanging On by a $19 Deck of Cards
Buy Lyz Lenz's book THIS AMERICAN EX-WIFE: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780593241127
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5/15/2024 • 44 minutes, 20 seconds
DEEP DIVE: Dr. Pooja Lakshmin on Burnout and Mom Guilt
This month, we're doing a deep dive series into mom guilt—why it's so pervasive and what we can do about it. You can find the playlist with all of the episodes in the series here.
Dr. Pooja Lakshmin, MD is a psychiatrist and author specializing in women's mental health. She is a frequent contributor to The New York Times and the founder of Gemma, the first digital education platform dedicated exclusively to women’s mental health. Dr. Lakshmin is most passionate about empowering women and sees her clinical work as a perinatal psychiatrist as an extension of this mission.
In this episode we discuss mom guilt, stress, self-care, the anxiety of this ongoing pandemic moment, and how we can reclaim ourselves amidst it all.
You can find Pooja on Instagram @poojalakshmin and at her website: poojalakshmin.com
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5/13/2024 • 33 minutes, 7 seconds
Fresh Take: Danielle Bayard Jackson on "Fighting for our Friendships"
Are female friendships really more complicated than male friendships? Does that make our friendships more valuable?
Danielle Bayard Jackson is a female friendship coach and educator on the science of women’s platonic connections. In her new book FIGHTING FOR OUR FRIENDSHIPS, Danielle explains what makes female friendship strong as well as tips for making and keeping great friends.
In this interview, Danielle and Amy discuss:
The three central affinities that bring women together: secrecy, symmetry, and support
How to compassionately approach friends who are flaky
Scripts for navigating common issues in friendships
Here's where you can find Danielle:
www.betterfemalefriendships.com
@daniellebayardjackson on IG
@thefriendshipexpert on TikTok
Listen to the "Friend Forward" podcast
Buy FIGHTING FOR OUR FRIENDSHIPS: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780306830617
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5/10/2024 • 36 minutes, 30 seconds
MAY BONUS TEASER: Our Myers-Briggs Personality Tests!
This month, we take the Myers-Briggs personality test live on air—Margaret answers with her first instinct and Amy parses every question within an inch of its life. The results will and will not surprise you...
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5/9/2024 • 13 minutes, 53 seconds
What Fresh Hell Is Mother's Day?
Is one morning of runny eggs and burnt toast really fair payback for 364 days of work? Does "Mother's Day" have to mean packing the kids for a two-hour drive to see your mom and/or mother-in-law? Why does Mother's Day often feel like it's more trouble than it's worth?
Margaret and Amy discuss:
Anna Jarvis and the rather tragic origins of Mother's Day
"minor Mother's Day" vs "major Mother's Day," and how to deliver that message
How to ask for—and get—the Mother's Day that feels right for you
Margaret mentions "The Lanyard" by Billy Collins in this episode.
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Mother's Day, making mom feel special mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, toddler, baby, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, mothers day, mother's day gift ideas
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5/8/2024 • 42 minutes, 36 seconds
DEEP DIVE: Ditching Mom Guilt
This month, we're doing a deep dive series into mom guilt—why it's so pervasive and what we can do about it. You can find the playlist with all of the episodes in the series here.
"Mom guilt" is shorthand for what we think are two pretty different things:
the universal, low-grade feelings of inadequacy that our soccer snacks aren't as good as Monica's
the intense, deeply personal shame that we are definitely the only horrible parent who has ever allowed their baby to roll off the changing table
Yes, we take on these feelings of guilt and shame—but society is pretty quick to hand them to us. In this episode we discuss
why there isn't such a thing as "dad guilt"
why mom guilt might serve as a sort of magical thinking
if we can at least skip the feeling guilty about HAVING mom guilt part
Here are links to some studies and other writing on this topic that we discuss in this episode:
Lara Bazelon for The Atlantic: The End of Mom Guilt
Amy Paturel for The Washington Post: Why we feel 'mom guilt'—and how to stop
Fresh Take: Dana Dorfman on When Worry Works
Fresh Take: Carla Naumburg on Why You Are Not a Sh*tty Parent
Fresh Take: Sara Petersen on "Momfluencers"
Fresh Take: Susan Linn on How 'Big Tech' Targets Our Kids
Batram-Zantvoort, Stephanie et al, Frontiers in Global Women's Health: "Maternal self-conception and mental wellbeing..."
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5/6/2024 • 42 minutes, 6 seconds
Fresh Take: Dr. Alok Kanojia on Parenting a Healthy Gamer
How can we tear our kids away from the increasingly addictive video games they can't get enough of? Dr. Alok Kanojia, author of the book HOW TO RAISE A HEALTHY GAMER, explains how to talk to kids about their video game addiction.
Dr. Kanojia is a former gaming addict and a Harvard-trained psychiatrist who has developed evidence-based programs that helped tens of thousands of gamers overcome their addiction.
Margaret and Dr. Kanojia discuss:
Signs that someone is addicted to something and why gaming can fill a void
How to talk to your gamer about healthy habits
Enforcing boundaries around gaming and dealing with resistance to those boundaries
Here's where you can find Dr. Kanojia:
Follow Dr.K's podcast HealthyGamerGG https://open.spotify.com/show/6VaJwyS2KXxiXqR77jqzmP
Check out Dr.K's Book, How to Raise a Healthy Gamer https://bit.ly/4c8BNkr
Healthy Gamer Website https://www.healthygamer.gg/
Instagram: @healthygamergg
X: @dralokkanjia
YouTube: @healthy gamer GG
TikTok: @healthygamer.gg
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5/3/2024 • 34 minutes, 39 seconds
How To Deal With Picky Eaters
Follow us on YouTube!
Are you worried your picky eater will never eat a vegetable as long as they live? Here are some parenting tips for picky eaters—and some updates on Amy and Margaret's own picky eaters since recording our very first episode 8 years ago! (It's good news.)
Amy and Margaret discuss:
Why it's helpful to make food the least interesting thing at the dinner table
How to maintain your own sanity around mealtimes by meeting kids where they are
Why dinnertime is actually the worst time of day to get kids to try new foods
How pairing and "food chaining" can help expand your picky eaters' palates
Here is a link to one of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Benioff Childrens Hospitals: Picky Eaters
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5/1/2024 • 42 minutes, 3 seconds
DEEP DIVE: Parenting as a Team
Parenting as a team is an ongoing challenge– even when your relationship with your co-parent is usually harmonious. But matching headspaces with your co-parent about a problem your family, or one of your children, is dealing with doesn't have to be the goal.
Parenting as a team can often mean taking turns, whether it's with the pancake-flipping, the hard talks with teenagers, or the 3 am worried Googling of ICD-10 diagnoses. In this episode we talk about what’s worked for us in moments of disagreement or struggle with our spouses, and how we found common ground.
If getting through the pandemic meant zooming in, just getting to the next lamppost, parenting as a team means zooming way out. If you know you're on the same page about the adults you want your children to become, it's a little easier to chill out about how they’ll get there.
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Amy and Margaret discuss their "Pre-Cana" experiences in the Catholic Church, and the usefulness of the Engaged Encounter program in particular. To find out more: engagedencounter.com
Buy WHAT CHILDREN LEARN FROM THEIR PARENTS' MARRIAGES: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780060929305
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4/29/2024 • 44 minutes, 29 seconds
Fresh Take: Chelsey Goodan on How Parents Underestimate Their Teenage Girls
Why are stereotypes of teenage girls rarely flattering? And what important traits are we not acknowledging in these young women? Chelsey Goodan, author of the new book UNDERESTIMATED: The Wisdom and Power of Teenage Girls, explains what teenage girls really want and need from us.
Chelsey and Amy discuss:
The generational shift towards a culture of support and empowerment among young girls today
The significance of offering agency to young girls in shaping their identities and futures
What teenage girls want from their parents more than anything else
Here's where you can find Chelsey:
https://www.chelseygoodan.com
@chelseygoodan on IG and X
Buy UNDERSTIMATED: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9781668032688
https://www.democrashe.org/
https://www.acalltomen.org/about/
Amy also mentions our Fresh Take with Judith Warner in this episode: https://www.whatfreshhellpodcast.com/fresh-take-judith-warner-on-what-grownups-get-wrong-about-middle-school/
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4/26/2024 • 32 minutes, 18 seconds
What Can We Add? What Can We Take Away?
The human tendency to solve problems by adding something is called "additive solution bias." However, sometimes a problem is more quickly and effectively solved by taking something away.
In this episode we talk about how "additive solution bias" can play out in our parenting strategies, and how we can become more aware of the times when what we actually need to do is take something away.
Amy and Margaret discuss:
Why our brains are wired to solve problems by adding things
How additive solution bias increases along with the size of the problem we're attempting to solve
Why removing something, or doing less, isn't automatically easier
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Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Diana Kwon for Scientific American: "Our Brain Typically Overlooks This Brilliant Problem-Solving Strategy"
Gabrielle S. Adams, et. al for Nature: "People systematically overlook subtractive changes"
Less is more: Why our brains struggle to subtract
Anthony Sanni: Additive Bias—and how it could be affecting your productivity
Braess's paradox
Rachel Fairbank for Lifehacker: "Why You Should 'Subtract' From Your Parenting"
SUBTRACT by Leidy Klotz
Our Fresh Take with Amanda Montell
Our Fresh Take with Yael Schonbrun
THE SENSORY CHILD GETS ORGANIZED by Carolyn Dalgliesh
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4/24/2024 • 42 minutes, 46 seconds
DEEP DIVE: Kate Mangino on Increasing Gender Equity
This month, we're doing a deep dive series into the division of household labor—why it's often unbalanced, and what we can do about it. You can find the playlist with all of the episodes in the series here.
Kate Mangino, PhD, is a gender expert and professional facilitator who has been working internationally for nearly 20 years. She is the author of the new book Equal Partners: Improving Gender Equity at Home, an informed guide about how readers can rewrite harmful gender norms and create greater household equity.
Here's where you can find Kate:
https://www.katemangino.com
@ManginoKate on X
Buy EQUAL PARTNERS: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9781250276117
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4/22/2024 • 33 minutes, 42 seconds
Fresh Take: Amanda Montell and the Age of Magical Overthinking
Cognitive biases are self-deceptive thought patterns we all use to make sense of the world. In a world that makes less and less sense, Amanda Montell argues, humans have become more irrational than ever. In her new book THE AGE OF MAGICAL OVERTHINKING, Montell explains how our brains' coping mechanisms have become overloaded—and how to slow down our panic responses when the world becomes too overwhelming.
Amanda, Amy, and Margaret discuss:
How magical overthinking has manifested from the modern age of mass information overload and an epidemic of loneliness
The types of cognitive biases that comprise magical overthinking, such as the sunk cost fallacy, the halo effect, and proportionality bias
Strategies to combat the negative effects of magical overthinking
Here's where you can find Amanda:
https://amandamontell.com/
@amanda_montell on IG
Buy THE AGE OF MAGICAL OVERTHINKING: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9781668007976
Listen to the "Sounds Like a Cult" podcast
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manifest reality, positive thinking, toxic positivity, magical thinking, mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities,
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4/19/2024 • 39 minutes, 29 seconds
Do We Share Too Much About Our Kids Online?
We all know what extreme "oversharenting" is when we see it. It's the gray areas that get harder. When we post about our kid's adventures in potty training, are we supposed to think twice?
What will happen when our kids are old enough to want to curate their own internet presence?
How concerned should we be about the privacy we may have given away without thinking?
Amy and Margaret discuss:
the digital footprint and the "right to be forgotten"
what to check in your privacy settings
when to start asking kids for permission before you post
the benefits we gain from sharing about our families online
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Zoya Garg, Elmer Gomez and Luciana Yael Petrzela for the NY Times: "If You Didn't 'Sharent,' Did You Even Parent?"
Sean Coughlan for the BBC: "'Sharenting' puts young at risk of online fraud"
Fortesa Latifi for Cosmopolitan: "What’s the Price of a Childhood Turned Into Content?"
Fortesa Latifi for Cosmopolitan: "'We’re Never Doing This Again': What It Took for These Parenting Influencers to Pull Their Kids Offline"
Paula Cocozza for The Guardian: "‘I was so embarrassed I cried’: do parents share too much online?"
Amy Webb for Slate: "We Post Nothing About Our Daughter Online"
Jennifer Valentino-DeVries and Michael H. Keller for the NY Times: "A Marketplace of Girl Influencers Managed by Moms and Stalked by Men"
Megan Francis: When Your “Worst-Mom Moment” Becomes A Viral Meme (And How The “Surfboard Kid” Became A Man)
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4/17/2024 • 44 minutes, 3 seconds
DEEP DIVE: It's Not "Nagging"
This month, we're doing a deep dive series into the division of household labor—why it's often unbalanced, and what we can do about it. You can find the playlist with all of the episodes in the series here.
Want to see a mother get mad? Tell her she's "nagging" you after she's been obligated to repeat an entirely reasonable request several times over. And just why is "nagging" a word that's almost exclusively applied to women?
We need the other members of our households to show up and do their share. As the default parents, we own the lists. So do we stop caring whether others like how we ask and remind? Do we enforce a back-to-one where we're not forced to ask repeatedly in the first place?
In this episode Amy and Margaret discuss:
The sexism and etymology of the word "nag"
What Amy says are the three types of "nagging," and why we should separate them out
What to say when our repeated asking is framed as annoying to other people (guess to whom it's also annoying, too?)
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Jessica Zhang on LinkedIn: "What's In a Nag?"
Episode from If Books Could Kill podcast: "Men Are From Mars, Women Are From Venus"
McClelland, T., & Sliwa, P: "Gendered affordance perception and unequal domestic labour."
Our episode with Lynyetta Willis on "Stable Misery"
Our episode with Eve Rodsky on "Changing the Invisible Workload"
Anne Helen Petersen's newsletter Culture Study
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mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent,
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4/15/2024 • 41 minutes, 43 seconds
Fresh Take: Diane Boden, "Minimalist Moms"
Is it even possible to declutter your home for more than one minute at a time when you've got kids? Diane Boden, host of the Minimalist Moms podcast, offers parenting tips for cutting down on possessions in a manageable way.
Diane Boden is the host of the Minimalist Moms Podcast and author of Minimalist Moms: Living and Parenting with Simplicity. She lives in Ohio with her husband and three kids.
Diane, Margaret, and Amy discuss:
What minimalism can mean for different people
Simple steps for starting the decluttering process—and some more radical strategies too
How to reconcile different set points for clutter between parenting partners
How to deal with family members who love giving gifts
Here's where you can find Diane:
minimalistmomspodcast.com
@minimalistmomspodcast on all socials
Buy MINIMALIST MOMS: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9781642505092
Listen to the Minimalist Moms podcast
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4/12/2024 • 35 minutes, 41 seconds
How Involved Should We Be with Our Kids' Schools?
How do we help our kids succeed in school without becoming the dreaded "snowplow" parents? Here are some parenting tips for advocating for your child at school when necessary, while also empowering our kids to navigate their own learning.
Amy and Margaret discuss:
How school environments have changed in the last few decades
Best practices for helping kids of different ages manage homework
How to start a productive conversation with your child's educators about concerns you may have
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Jenny Anderson for TIME Magazine: "Many American Parents Have No Idea How Their Kids Are Doing in School"
Carrie Bauer, et. al, for Slate: Help Me Help My Kid
Libby Stanford for Education Week: "Does Parent Involvement Really Help Students? Here’s What the Research Says"
U.S. Department of Education: "Raise the Bar: Resources for Parents and Families"
Cara Goodwin for KQED's Mind/Shift: "How important is homework, and how much should parents help?"
See our interview with Jennifer Breheny Wallace - author of Never Enough: When Achievement Culture Becomes Toxic — and What We Can Do About It
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4/10/2024 • 47 minutes, 12 seconds
DEEP DIVE: Matthew Fray on Strengthening Our Relationships
This month, we're doing a deep dive series into the division of household labor—why it's often unbalanced, and what we can do about it. You can find the playlist with all of the episodes in the series here.
Matthew Fray is a relationship coach who leans on the lessons of his failed marriage to help others avoid making the same mistakes that he did. He's a 43-year-old single father who is best known for his viral blog post "She Divorced Me Because I Left Dishes by the Sink." Fray is the author of the new book "This is How Your Marriage Ends: A Hopeful Approach to Saving Relationships." Matthew gives us wonderful, poignant insights into how to validate our partners, find out their true needs, and re-establish trust when we've lost it.
In this episode, Matthew, Margaret, and Amy discuss:
Why we may not realize we're betraying our partner's trust
Matthew's hierarchy of needs in relationships
Why couples always have the same fight
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Maslow's hierarchy of needs
Matthew's recent article in The Atlantic
Our episode with Eve Rodsky on changing the invisible workload
Here's where you can find Matthew:
matthewfray.com
Buy Matthew's book: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780063072251
FB: @matthewfrayMBTTTR
IG: @frayrelationships
Twitter: @MBTTTR
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4/8/2024 • 40 minutes, 51 seconds
Fresh Take: Amy Shoenthal on "The Setback Cycle"
If setbacks are so common, especially in the trenches of motherhood, how can we learn useful lessons from them? Amy Shoenthal, author of the new book THE SETBACK CYCLE, offers a framework for navigating setbacks and becoming stronger because of them.
Amy Shoenthal is a journalist, marketing consultant and a contributor to Forbes Women and Harvard Business Review.
Shoenthal and Margaret discuss:
Why our brains learn more from setbacks than successes and why people who have setbacks are better at problem solving
Shoenthal's four-phase framework for navigating setbacks
The "motherhood penalty" that women in the workforce experience
Here's where you can find Amy Shoenthal:
www.thesetbackcycle.com
@amysho on Instagram and Twitter
https://www.linkedin.com/in/amyshoenthal/
Buy THE SETBACK CYCLE: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9798888451687
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4/5/2024 • 36 minutes
Our Lowest-Stake Conspiracy Theories
We asked our listeners to tell us their lowest-stakes conspiracy theories, and as usual, you all really came through! Whether it's gum with flavor that goes extinct in thirty seconds or less, or printers that indicate the need for new ink well ahead of schedule, here are all the extremely minor daily occurrences that just may have sinister planning behind them. We're just asking questions here.
Amy mentions this I THINK YOU SHOULD LEAVE sketch in this episode: "That's a Chunky" sketch
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4/3/2024 • 40 minutes, 53 seconds
DEEP DIVE: When Our Partners Just Don't Get It
This month, we're doing a deep dive series into the division of household labor—why it's often unbalanced, and what we can do about it. You can find the playlist with all of the episodes in the series here.
Why does it feel like I do all the work around here? Why can't my partner take on a little more? Why does a dad get to go on Good Morning America for DOING HIS DAUGHTER'S HAIR TWICE A WEEK??
There is evidence that having kids reduces marital harmony. And for a woman, the birth of a child often means taking on a second shift while her partner's routine may barely be interrupted. So how can we find labor divisions that work for everyone?
In this episode, Margaret and Amy discuss:
What the science says about relationships post-children
Signs that a partnership is operating unsustainably
Tips for how to start the conversation about dividing up parenting responsibilities
Here are links to some of the resources we mention:
The Infamous "Husband Crimes" episode
What Happens to a Marriage After Having Children?
Fighting Constantly After Baby? Read This.
9 Signs That a Relationship Just Can't Be Saved
And a bonus from the Husband Crimes archives: Kurt Vonnegut's attempt at gender equity
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4/1/2024 • 43 minutes, 38 seconds
Fresh Take: Dr. Gabor Maté and Dr. Gordon Neufeld on Maintaining Healthy Connection with Our Kids
How can we maintain a strong attachment to our kids as they begin to look to their peers for approval instead of their parents? Dr. Gabor Maté and Dr. Gordon Neufeld explain the crucial importance of remaining attached to our children as they grow in their new and revised edition of their book HOLD ONTO YOUR KIDS.
Dr. Gordon Neufeld is an internationally renowned psychologist and foremost authority on child development, and founder of the Neufeld Institute. Dr. Gabor Maté is a renowned speaker and bestselling author, highly sought after for his expertise on a range of topics including addiction, stress and childhood development.
Amy, Dr. Maté, and Dr. Neufeld discuss:
Why "peer orientation" doesn't actually have to be the way things go
How cultural shifts in society have accelerated the rise of peer orientation
How we can reattach to our children and remain their most important role model
Here's where else you can find Dr. Maté and Dr. Neufeld:
gabormatemd (IG); @DrGaborMate (X); Gabor Maté (FB)
@NeufeldInst (X); Neufeld Institute (FB)
Buy HOLD ONTO YOUR KIDS: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780375760280
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3/29/2024 • 30 minutes, 34 seconds
Making the "Invisible Workload" Visible
What should we do when all the work we do to run our family's lives is done so successfully that they not only don't acknowledge it—they don't even understand it? How do we help our partners understand that saying "I left the doctor a message, but they didn't call back" does not really count as a completed task?
It's all about what's called the "invisible workload." In this episode Amy and Margaret discuss:
whether "cognitive labor" (Allison Daminger) or "emotional labor" (Rose Hackman) might be even better terms for what we're talking about
pushing back on "weaponized incompetence"
the difference between taking on tasks and taking on outcomes
The importance of giving voice to invisible labor in front of kids
Here are links to some interviews/books we mentioned in the episode:
Our interview with Eve Rodsky
Mac Daniel for Harvard Radcliffe Institute: "The Unseen Inequity of Cognitive Labor"
FAIR PLAY by Eve Rodsky: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780525541943
EMOTIONAL LABOR by Rose Hackman: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9781250777355
THIS AMERICAN EX-WIFE by Lyz Lenz: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780593241127
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3/27/2024 • 39 minutes, 35 seconds
DEEP DIVE: Teaching Kids Patience
We're doing a "Deep Dive" into our past episodes about "getting our kids to...," from listening to what we say the first time, to talking to us about what matters most to them. Find the rest of the episodes in this deep dive series in this Spotify playlist.
If a three-year-old can't wait thirty seconds more for dinner, will she grow up to be an impatient adult? Is there anything we can do to teach our kids patience– and should we?
Impatience is completely normal in kids (not to mention grownups), but there are ways to help our children develop this skill. It's worth the effort– not to make our kids more compliant and quiet in church, but because patience and overall happiness, as it turns out, are highly correlated.
In this episode, Amy and Margaret discuss:
Why impatience is developmentally appropriate- and when kids are ready to become more patient
The infamous "marshmallow experiment"
How to model patience for our kids (and find a little more happiness ourselves)
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Steve Calechman for Greater Good Magazine: "How to Help Your Kids Be a Little More Patient"
Angel E Navidad for SimplyPsychology: "Marshmallow Test Experiment and Delayed Gratification"
Scholastic Parents: "Teaching Patience"
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3/25/2024 • 42 minutes, 32 seconds
Fresh Take: Kelley Coleman on Parenting a Disabled Child
How can we get our disabled children the support to which they are entitled? How do we find the confidence that we're adequate enough to provide what they need? Kelley Coleman, parent of a disabled child and author of the new book EVERYTHING NO ONE TELLS YOU ABOUT PARENTING A DISABLED CHILD, provides practical advice and templates for navigating systems and accessing services.
Kelley and Amy discuss:
Kelley's personal story of parenting her disabled son and the challenges she's faced
the frustrating experience of "reinventing the wheel" for each parent of a disabled child
why the language of disability matters—and why it was the first thing Kelley had to learn
why the best place to get real, practical information is often from other parents—until we become the informed parents
Here's where you can find Kelley:
https://www.kelleycoleman.com
@hellokelleycoleman on IG
Buy EVERYTHING NO ONE TELLS YOU ABOUT PARENTING A DISABLED CHILD: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780306831706
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3/22/2024 • 38 minutes, 41 seconds
When One Family Member's Moods Are Running the House
What do we do when one of our kid's moods is affecting everyone else in the house? Whether it's anxiety, frustration, rigidity, or plain old temper tantrums, understanding where it's coming from is the first step. But even when we don't allow emotions to be an excuse poor behavior, that misbehavior can happen anyhow—and walking on eggshells is no way to teach the dysregulated person better emotional skills.
In this episode, we discuss:
the sometimes hidden needs of the other kids in the house
why "fair" is not the same thing as "equal"
the single most important factor for positive family well-being
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Our episode "When One of Our Kids Is Taking All Our Bandwidth"
Nicole Schwarz for imperfectfamilies.com: When The Siblings of a Difficult Child Feel Ignored
Leigh Anderson for Lifehacker: What to Do If Your Child's Behavior Is Ruining Your Relationship With Your Partner
Pamela Li for Parenting for Bain: Emotional Regulation in Children | A Complete Guide
Jane Indergaard for ADHD Newsstand: It's Never About Me: The Hidden Needs of Siblings
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3/20/2024 • 44 minutes, 55 seconds
Introducing: Pop Culture Moms Podcast, from ABC Studios
Today we're sharing an episode of another podcast we’re loving: Pop Culture Moms.
Andie and Sabrina are toddler moms and best friends of 20 years. They’re taking their obsession with TV and movies to the next level by talking to celebrities, writers and fellow “scholars” of pop culture about what they can learn from the fictional moms they love most. In this episode: Some of the best moms on TV right now are cartoons. We hear from Deena Margolin and Kristin Gallant, the moms behind parenting resource Big Little Feelings and co-hosts of the podcast, After Bedtime, about what the mothers in Bluey and Daniel Tiger are doing right.
Listen to “Pop Culture Moms” here!
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3/19/2024 • 4 minutes, 36 seconds
DEEP DIVE: Getting Your Kids To Talk To You
We're doing a "Deep Dive" into our past episodes about "getting our kids to...," from listening to what we say the first time, to talking to us about what matters most to them. Find the rest of the episodes in this deep dive series in this Spotify playlist.
Getting your kid to talk to you is never easy (unless you’re standing with car keys in hand, front door ajar, 15 minutes late for an appointment). Here are some parenting strategies that work to get kids talking at every age.
Based upon empirical evidence, “How was school today?” is the most annoying question a mom could ever ask. So why bother trying?
Because Jennifer Kolari, author of Connected Parenting: How to Raise a Great Kid, says getting our kids to open up is part of our job description:
It’s our job as parents to help our kids sort through and process the things that happen to them during the day. “They don’t have the higher-order thinking to do it on their own yet.
In this episode we lay out what gets our kids to talk– at every age and stage.
Margaret says you have to “talk the talk that arrives.”
But Amy comes at it armed with research; if her ninth-grader wants to talk NBA draft, she’s ready to lean in.
Both of us plan to work on what Marie Roker Jones calls “listening with the intent to understand.”
Here’s links to some research and hilarious takes on this topic that we mention in this episode:
Alice Bradley for Lifehacker Offspring: Stop Asking Your Kid About Their Day
Marie Roker-Jones for Good Men Project: 10 Ways to Get Your Son to Open Up and Talk to You
Clare Gagne for Today’s Parent: Age-By-Age Guide To Getting Your Kid To Talk
Liz Evans for Huffington Post: 25 Ways to Ask Your Kids ‘So How Was School Today?’ Without Asking Them ‘So How Was School Today?’
The Ungame
…and some perfect viewing for you and your teenager: Maddie Corman’s wonderful short film How Was Your Day?
How do you get your kids to open up? Let us know!
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3/18/2024 • 50 minutes, 30 seconds
Fresh Take: Simone Davies and Junnifa Uzodike on the Montessori Child
How can we make the parent-child relationship peaceful and enjoyable? Simone Davies and Junnifa Uzodike, authors of THE MONTESSORI CHILD, explain Montessori parenting strategies and why they're useful for raising independent children.
Simone Davies hosts the blog The Montessori Notebook, and Junnifa Uzodike sits on the executive board of the International Montessori Association and runs a school in Abuja, Nigeria.
Simone, Junnifa, and Margaret discuss:
The core tenets of the Montessori parenting philosophy
What it means to be a parental guide to our children
How Montessori parenting differs from other parenting styles
Here's where you can find Simone and Junnifa:
@themontessorinotebook
@montessori_nduoma
Buy THE MONTESSORI CHILD: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9781523512416
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3/15/2024 • 32 minutes, 37 seconds
Getting Unstuck (with Blaire and Molly from "Unsticking It")
Is creativity the domain of artists and artists alone? How do we get unstuck when we haven't picked up a paintbrush in decades? Blaire Brooks and Molly Lloyd, former hosts of "Toddler Purgatory" and now co-hosts of "Unsticking It," discuss why creativity is accessible to and crucial for everyone, no matter who they are.
Blaire, Molly, Amy, and Margaret discuss:
How to disentangle yourself from the "hamster wheel" of everyday life
How famous artists have found inspiration for their great works
The overlap between creativity and motherhood
Here's where you can find Blaire and Molly:
Listen to Unsticking It with Blaire and Molly
@unsticking_it_podcast on IG
Watch Molly in her State Farm commercial with Ludacris!
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3/13/2024 • 41 minutes, 44 seconds
DEEP DIVE: Getting Kids to Cooperate
We're doing a "Deep Dive" into our past episodes about "getting our kids to...," from listening to what we say the first time, to talking to us about what matters most to them. Find the rest of the episodes in this deep dive series in this Spotify playlist.
How do we get our kids to listen to us and do as we ask, without too many tears on either side? Here are some parenting tips for encouraging cooperation in kids (and modeling it ourselves.)
Our listener Alison asked:
I would love some insight into engaging the cooperation of my two boys, 5 and almost 3 years old. At what age is it reasonable to expect them to put away their toys, stay seated for meals, get in the bath without mind games, and get ready for bed in less than 60 minutes? They are capable, but rarely willing, and 8 out of 10 times it's an ordeal. We have routines, we announce transitions in advance, we give them choices and even try to make it fun, but I feel like I am either haranguing them constantly or seething with resentment or both. Do I just accept this is the season of my life? Is cooperation 2 out of 10 times a victory?
Getting kids who are younger than three to "do their share" without a lot of coaxing and singing and clapping is pretty tough. Then when they're about six, kids' "fairness radar" kicks in, and they're much less focused on loading the dishwasher than on complaining about who is not currently helping.
So there are roadblocks to kids' cooperation, to be sure, and in this episode we discuss:
whether "whistling while they work" might be too much to ask
how "connecting before directing" works for older kids
how we can model cooperation and hope our kids get the hint. (It's worth a shot.)
Here are links to some other writing and books that we discuss in this episode:
Our Fresh Take with Michaeleen Doucleff
Cameron Kleimo for Motherly: How to get your kids to listen—without yelling
Shelley Phillips for Lifehack: 6 Secrets to Getting Kids to Cooperate
Terry Orlick: Cooperative Games and Sports
Frank McCourt: Angela's Ashes
Lemony Snicket: A Series of Unfortunate Events
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3/11/2024 • 42 minutes, 11 seconds
Fresh Take: Gwenna Laithland, "Momma Cusses"
What is the happy parenting medium between raising our kids with zero boundaries, and yelling until we're blue in the face? Gwenna Laithland is creator of the wildly popular @mommacusses on TikTok and Instagram, and author of the new book Momma Cusses: A Field Guide to Responsive Parenting & Trying Not to Be the Reason Your Kid Needs Therapy.
Gwenna explains in this interview how she eventually found her way to what she calls "responsive parenting." We also discuss:
why there's no such thing as a "parenting expert"
how responsive parenting helps parents become more intentional, empathetic, and emotionally available
how helping kids regulate their emotions has to start with our modeling how to regulate our own .
Here's where you can find Momma Cusses:
@mommacusses on TikTok and Instagram
@thismommacusses on Facebook
Pleasant Peasant Media on YouTube
buy the MOMMA CUSSES book! https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9781250882660
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3/8/2024 • 40 minutes, 36 seconds
Two Things Can Be True
In a disagreement two things can feel like opposites—but it can still be a fact that both things are true.
You wish they'd listen; they wish you'd not get so angry.
Your kid isn't going to that unsupervised sleepover; your kid is going to be furious about that for weeks.
When we start allowing for coexisting differences of opinion—when we stop feeling like the other person can only be super-wrong before we get what we want—something like change can start to occur. The idea that two things can be true dates back to the ancient Greeks, and in this episode, we discuss
the history of dialectical thinking
why our lizard brains love to overcategorize
how we can use the "two things can be true" script in our parenting
We're still figuring out how this works for ourselves, but the effort seems well worth it.
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Dr. Becky on Instagram: How to Respond to Pushback With Firmness and Connection
Raising Good Humans with Dr. Aliza Pressman: Two Things Can Be True
Paul Sonderegger for Quartz: Forget the Turing Test—give AI the F. Scott Fitzgerald Test instead
Steven Reidbrd M.D. for Psychology Today: "Dialectics in Psychotherapy"
Oakwise Counseling: "Two Opposing Things Can Be True"
The poem "Good Bones" by Maggie Smith
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3/6/2024 • 42 minutes, 59 seconds
DEEP DIVE: Is Comparing Our Kids Ever Useful?
We're doing a "Deep Dive" into our past episodes on birth order and how it can shape both kids' personalities and their relationships with their siblings. Find the rest of the episodes in this deep dive series in this Spotify playlist.
Why is it siblings so often seem to be total opposites?
If we notice that and lean into comparisons, are we bad parents?
And if our kids really are completely different, are they choosing those divergent paths on purpose? Yes and no. Here's why kids in the same family can turn out so differently, and what it means for us as we parent them.
In this episode we discuss:
The definition of "adaptive divergence"
The difference between knowing our kids and comparing them
Why each of our children, even in the same household, grow up in their own "micro environments"
At the end of the day, we're wired to compare our kids as naturally as breathing. And instead of punishing ourselves for doing so, noticing when we do it and why is a good start. Even if you think you already know everything about your kids, keep your data intake sheets open!
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Lynn Berger for Mother Mag: "How (Not To) Compare Your Children"
Dr. Frank Sulloway: "Why Siblings Are Like Darwin’s Finches: Birth Order, Sibling Competition, and Adaptive Divergence within the Family"
Jensen, Alexander C et al. in the Journal of Youth and Adolescence: “Parents' Social Comparisons of Siblings and Youth Problem Behavior: A Moderated Mediation Model.”
Sheryl Ziegler for The Tot: "Why raising your kids differently is actually a good thing"
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3/4/2024 • 42 minutes, 39 seconds
Fresh Take: Ginny Yurich of "1000 Hours Outside"
How do kids play differently when they're outside? What are the benefits of unstructured play and giving kids more agency over their leisure time? Ginny Yurich, host of The 1000 Hours Outside Podcast and founder of the 1000 Hours Outside movement, explains why getting our kids outside every day that we can reaps real benefits for kids' physical, cognitive, and social well-being.
In this interview Ginny, Amy, and Margaret discuss:
the ways time outside benefits kids that you might not have heard of
why a few bumps and bruises are worth what kids can learn from taking risks
the essential role of friends and community in outdoor play... if you're going to spend a thousand hours outside this year, get a friend with kids who's willing to try it with you!
Here's where you can find Ginny:
Listen to The 1000 Hours Outside Podcast
www.1000hoursoutside.com
@1000hoursoutside on all socials
Ginny's book UNTIL THE STREETLIGHTS COME ON: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9781540903402
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3/1/2024 • 42 minutes, 25 seconds
The Parents Had a Point
Were the concerns of Nemo's father actually pretty reasonable? Was Mrs. Doubtfire the bad guy? Were Baby's parents in Dirty Dancing... actually kind of right?
We asked our listeners which movies and TV shows they perceive differently as parents, plus a few of our own. We also discuss:
which child actor Margaret scarily resembles
the weirdest Disney movie of all time, in terms of it ostensibly being aimed at children
the one thing that could save every Disney princess problem in five minutes
Read the original thread in our Facebook group!
mom friends, funny moms, Disney movies, family movies, family programming
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2/28/2024 • 44 minutes, 59 seconds
DEEP DIVE: Why Are Our Kids Such Total Opposites?
We're doing a "Deep Dive" into our past episodes on birth order and how it can shape both kids' personalities and their relationships with their siblings. Find the rest of the episodes in this deep dive series in this Spotify playlist.
It’s not your imagination: kids raised in the same family really do push in opposite directions– and we mean POLAR opposites, especially for closely-spaced or same-sex siblings. But why the de-identification? And how is it even possible for kids reared in the same environment to be so completely different?
In this episode we discuss:
the three theories social scientists have about this phenomenon
why siblings may “evolve” like Darwin’s finches
how “the shy one” in a given family may not be that shy at all- except compared to that outgoing sibling
what parents need to watch out for in terms of leaning in to these (sometimes oversimplified) categories
Here’s links to the fascinating research, and stuff that it reminded us of, discussed in this episode:
Alix Spiegel for NPR: Siblings Share Genes, But Rarely Personalities
NYT: Each Sibling Experiences a Different Family
Dr. Robert Plomin and Dr Denise Daniels: Why are Children in the Same Family So Different From One Another?
Dr. Frank Sullaway: Why Siblings Are Like Darwin’s Finches: Birth Order, Sibling Competition, and Adaptive Divergence within the Family
Dr. Robert Plomin and Dr. Judy Dunn: Why Are Siblings So Different? The Significance of Differences in Sibling Experiences Within the Family
Science Daily: Parents’ Comparisons Make Siblings Different
Dr. Alexander Jensen and Dr. Susan McHale: What makes siblings different? The development of sibling differences in academic achievement and interests.
Amy’s yin-and-yang sons, born on the Chinese days of Greatest Heat (Dashu) and Deepest Snow (Daxue)
the hilarious book Hyperbole and a Half, with its “Hot Sauce” reminder of what happens when we lean too hard into what we maybe only *think* are our children’s defining characteristics
and our own episode discussing birth order and how it shapes our kids’ personalities.
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2/26/2024 • 45 minutes, 8 seconds
Fresh Take: Charles Duhigg on Supercommunicators
How can we make our kids - and ourselves - feel truly listened to in our day-to-day conversations? Charles Duhigg, author of the new book SUPERCOMMUNICATORS, explains how to create meaningful connection in the parent/child relationship.
Charles Duhigg is the author of the New York Times bestsellers The Power of Habit and Smarter Faster Better. He is a staff writer at The New Yorker and was previously a reporter at the New York Times.
Charles and Margaret discuss:
The three types of conversations and why the distinction among them is important
How we can connect with others when we have deep personal disagreements
How our communication skills are connected to our happiness
Here's where you can find Charles:
https://www.charlesduhigg.com/
Instagram: @charlesduhigg
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/charlesduhigg
FB: @CharlesDuhigg
Buy SUPERCOMMUNICATORS: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780593243916
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2/23/2024 • 32 minutes, 42 seconds
The Power of "Not Yet"
When we worry about our kids being behind on reaching milestones, that's natural. When we fear it's proof of our own terrible parenting, that's our anxiety taking over. Here's how to reframe kids' development in a way that lessens our mom guilt and feelings of failure: the power of "not yet"
Amy and Margaret discuss:
Why we feel so anxious when our kids aren't developing the way we think they should
How we can show our kids that we believe in them—and why that helps us too
Why humans learn more from mistakes than from things we get right
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Sarina Natkin: The Power of Not Right Now
Leo The Late Bloomer by Robert Kraus
TED Talk Tuesday: The Power of Yet
Our episode "Growth Mindset"
Carol Dweck at TEDxNorrkoping: The power of believing that you can improve
Neuroscience News: Mindful Mistakes: How Brains Learn from Errors
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2/21/2024 • 40 minutes, 10 seconds
DEEP DIVE: Middle Kids
This is one of our deep dives on how kids are shaped by their siblings. Find the rest of the episodes in this deep dive series in this Spotify playlist.
Most people believe middle children are prone to feeling insecure and left out because they get less attention. Their primary emotional state? Jealousy of siblings. Studies show that we think these problems are real and inescapable. A City College of New York study found participants were most likely to use words like “overlooked” to describe middle children— while completely unlikely to use the word “spoiled.”
Psychologist Dr. Alfred Adler first proposed a “middle child syndrome” in the 1920s, and ever since, most of us have assumed the Jan-Brady worst. But Dr. Adler also believed that middle children’s place in the birth order made them “uniquely poised to succeed.” Are we getting it wrong? Are there lifelong benefits for kids who grow up neither the pressured oldest nor the coddled youngest?
In this episode we discuss:
“middleborns” vs “classic middles"
the negativity of the “middle child syndrome,” and whether or not it bears out
why middle children are more independent and open-minded
why middle children have a greater appetite for risk
how the “ambient neglect” a middle child sometimes receives can be an incredible gift
Writer Adam Sternbergh, himself a middle, says that "being a middle child is not something you aspire to; it’s something that happens to you.” While that may be true, it also turns out that we should perhaps all be jealous of them. Being a middle kid can be secretly great.
Here's links to research and other writing on the topic discussed in this episode:
Adam Sternbergh for The Cut: The Extinction of the Middle Child
Dr. Catherine Salmon: The Secret Power of Middle Children: How Middleborns Can Harness Their Unexpected and Remarkable Abilities
Lindsay Dodgson for Business Insider: 'Middle child syndrome' doesn't actually exist — but it still might come with some surprising psychological advantages
Risk-taking middle-borns: A study on birth-order and risk preferences
Abi Berwager Schreier for Romper: Do Middle Children Really Have More Issues? Jan Brady Wasn't The Only One
Alphaparent: Optimum Family Size Facts
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2/19/2024 • 42 minutes, 53 seconds
Fresh Take: Dr. Kevin Simon on What Parents Need to Know About Kids and Substance Use
How can we prevent our kids from developing substance use disorders? Dr. Kevin Simon is an Attending Child and Adolescent Psychiatrist and Addiction Medicine Specialist at Boston Children's Hospital and an instructor of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School. In this interview, Dr. Simon explains
The different ways that kids use substances, and why they use
What puts kids at higher use for developing addiction
Why the "just a sip at home" strategy isn't a good idea
What to watch for in order to intervene sooner
Here's where you can find Dr. Simon:
https://www.kevinsimonmd.com/publications
@DrKMSimon on IG, X, and LinkedIn
Here links to a few resources mentioned in the episode:
Felice J Freyer for the Boston Globe: "Boston's New Mental Health Czar Lays Out His Goals"
"This Is Your Brain on Drugs" PSA
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2/16/2024 • 46 minutes, 47 seconds
I Love My Family But...
What words, phrases, or annoying habits do you wish your family would just quit once and for all? Here's what our funny mom friends had to say.
Amy and Margaret discuss:
What rules work in Margaret's house
What behaviors cause them to "catch a bit of an attitude"
Which tropical islands they would run away to if given the chance
Read the original thread on Facebook here
Listen to Molly and Blaire's new podcast Unsticking It!
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2/14/2024 • 45 minutes, 43 seconds
DEEP DIVE: Birth Order: Can We Fight It?
We're doing a "Deep Dive" into our past episodes on birth order and how it can shape both kids' personalities and their relationships with their siblings. Find the rest of the episodes in this deep dive series in this Spotify playlist.
Is birth order a thing to fight back against? Is there a way to make the older child less stressed, and the baby maybe a little *more* motivated? And is it a problem if our own birth order has shaped who we are as adults and how we parent?
We think the answer is: not really. These stereotypes are so ingrained because the effects of birth order are real. But that's not to say the things that result are all negative, or completely determinative, or that your middle kid is doomed to a life of unhappiness just because she was unlucky enough to get a younger sibling.
Still, awareness of the effects of birth order seems important, if only to catch ourselves when we're inadvertently reinforcing those roles. That's when we can give the youngest a little more responsibility, the oldest a little less– and let the middle kid pick what’s for dinner once in a while.
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2/12/2024 • 43 minutes, 14 seconds
Fresh Take: Kelly Corrigan on Letting Big Kids Go
What does it mean to parent grown children? How can we embrace those changing relationships? Kelly Corrigan, host of "Kelly Corrigan Wonders", four-time New York Times bestselling author, and the host of PBS’ long-form interview show Tell Me More, talks with Amy about the process of letting our big kids go.
Kelly and Amy discuss:
why the thing our older kids might most want to hear from us is, simply, "I know"
why mothers and fathers might get different versions of the same stories from their kids
Kelly's top advice for younger parents
Here's where you can find Kelly:
https://www.kellycorrigan.com/
@kellycorrigan on IG
Listen to Kelly's podcast "Kelly Corrigan Wonders"
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2/9/2024 • 43 minutes, 4 seconds
How Is It Still Winter? Stuff for Kids to Do When They're Stuck Inside
Need some new indoor activities for kids? Are you completely out of ways to keep your little ones busy while winter's cold and icky weather continues to drag on? Bundling up and going outside is worth the trouble, when you can make it happen—but when you can't, here's how to make those long and boring days inside more fun.
Amy and Margaret discuss:
The "third quarter phenomenon"
How to change things up to create new experiences out of old toys for kids
Listener tips for keeping kids occupied on cold, rainy, or snowy days
Here are links to some of the things mentioned in the episode:
Elmo checks in on all of us this week: Elmo on Twitter / X
Watch this interview with Elmo and his dad Louie on TODAY
Nathan Smith and Gro Mjeldheim Sandal for Astronautics: "The third-quarter phenomenon: the psychology of time in space"
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2/7/2024 • 47 minutes, 54 seconds
Ask Margaret: How Do I Help My Kids Through a Big Move?
What can we do to help our kids feel welcome and make friends in a new town? Margaret shares her own parenting tips for helping kids adjust after a big move.
A listener asks:
"We're about to move across the country and I'm wondering what are the steps we need to take to "make friends" and help the kids do the same. What are some ways you can suggest for them to "break into" the already formed groups that I'm sure their new schools will still have? Also, it will be a very strange dynamic because in the fall, I will have one in high school, one in middle, and one in elementary. Send help!"
Margaret suggests reaching out to the community you're moving to ahead of time and trying to make connections before you get there. Even just one person to talk to in your new hometown can be really helpful.
When it comes to your kids, find groups that they might want to be a part of, whether it's theater, soccer, or Scouts, and contact the leaders of those groups to tell them your kid will be coming. See if you can get one kid from that group over for a playdate in advance so your child has one familiar face to latch onto when they walk into their new school.
If you arrive during the summer before school starts, sign your kid up for the town camp or other camps with kids from the school district.
Lastly, check in with your kid (and yourself) at 3, 6, and 9 months out from the move. Assess how it's going for everyone and, if it's not going well, where you can redouble your efforts to make connections. It can take up to a year to feel fully rooted in a new place.
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2/5/2024 • 8 minutes, 40 seconds
Fresh Take: Adam Flaherty and Marc Checket of "Modern Dadhood"
What's the difference between being a father and being a dad? What does it mean for a man to become intentional about fatherhood as an integral part of his identity? Adam Flaherty and Marc Checket, co-hosts of the "Modern Dadhood" podcast, discuss how fatherhood has and hasn't changed in the last few decades.
Amy, Margaret, Adam, and Marc discuss;
Why women identify (and are identified) as moms more readily than men do as dads
The difference between "dadhood" and "fatherhood"
How to make parenting partnerships more equitable
Here's where you can find Adam and Marc:
http://moderndadhood.com
Instagram: @moderndadhood
YouTube: @moderndadhood
TikTok: @moderndadhoodpodcast
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2/2/2024 • 37 minutes, 55 seconds
Why Is It Easier to Solve Other People's Problems?
Why are the solutions to other people's problems so easy, while our own problems seem so much harder? Turns out this phenomenon is real, and even has a name: "Solomon's Paradox."
In this episode we discuss how distance from a situation gives us clearer perspective, and how we might transfer that clarity to the problems in our own lives.
Amy and Margaret discuss:
Why it's easier to see other people's situations more clearly than our own
Why it's easier for us to see what our kids need to do in sticky situations than for them to see it
Why we sometimes may not be solving other people's problems as well as we thought
How to apply the wisdom we bring friends' issues to our own situations
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Kean Poon: "Hot and Cool Executive Functions in Adolescence: Development and Contributions to Important Developmental Outcomes" from Frontiers in Psychology Journal
Maggy Elsousou for Medium: "Why It’s So Much Easier To Solve Other People’s Problems Than Your Own"
Jeannie Ngoc Boulware for University of Chicago: "Conversations on Wisdom: Igor Grossmann"
Anne Lamott TED Talk: "12 Truths I Learned from Life and Writing"
Caeleigh MacNeil for Asana: "How the sunk cost fallacy influences our decisions"
Grossman and Kross: "Exploring Solomon's Paradox: Self-Distancing Eliminates the Self-Other Asymmetry in Wise Reasoning About Close Relationships in Younger and Older Adults" in Psychological Science
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1/31/2024 • 42 minutes, 22 seconds
Ask Amy: How Do I Get My 8-Year-Old to Read a Real Book?
How can we get our reluctant readers to read a wider range of books? Here are some parenting strategies for getting kids excited about reading.
Jennifer asks:
"Any thoughts on how to get my eight-year-old son to listen or read anything outside his go-to genre?"
Although Jennifer doesn't specify, it sounds like the go-to genre for an 8-year-old boy is probably some books about gross bodily humor. But remember: kids have to learn to read before they can read to learn. At that young age, many kids are still working really hard to ingest information as they read, so they need something really engaging to make it worth the effort for them.
You can also view the problem as: at least they're reading, and that's good! Even if it's not as educational as you wish it were. Some parenting strategies for encouraging your child to read include modeling reading at home, creating a visual representation of how many books your child has read for them to see, and taking them to the library to get the full book-borrowing experience that many of us loved as children.
Amy suggests the "You Wouldn't Want To Be" series as particularly appealing AND educational for grade-schoolers... you can find those books here: https://www.youwouldntwantto.be/
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1/29/2024 • 6 minutes, 51 seconds
Fresh Take: Dr. Linnea Passaler on Healing Your Nervous System
How can busy moms reduce their stress levels in a way that DOESN'T involve the word self-care? Dr. Linnea Passaler, author of the new book HEAL YOUR NERVOUS SYSTEM, explains the biology behind the stress response and how to address it.
Dr. Linnea Passaler is the founder of ‘Heal Your Nervous System,’ a platform that offers tools and resources to help individuals worldwide understand the root cause of anxiety, burnout, overwhelm, and physical and emotional symptoms.
Dr. Passaler and Amy discuss:
When and why our nervous systems become dysregulated
Where most people run into trouble when trying to become more regulated
Solutions for shifting to a more regulated state
Here's where you can find Dr. Passaler:
https://healyournervoussystem.com
@healyournervoussystem on IG
Buy HEAL YOUR NERVOUS SYSTEM: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780760385654
Listen to our interview with Carla Naumberg
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1/26/2024 • 35 minutes, 2 seconds
We Just Don't Get It: Stuff That Everyone Likes But Us
We each have those things that we don't hate, exactly; we just don't get them, don't get why everyone but us is so obsessed.
Our listener Melanie posted in our Facebook group:
I have a show idea! Things that it seems everyone in the world loves, but you don’t get it! For me….Taylor Swift. I don’t get why people lose their minds over her! One of my students went into debt to pay $4000 for a ticket to her concert….and it wasn’t even a good seat!
As usual, hundreds of listeners weighed in about the things they just don't get, from Stanley cups to pretty cookies. Here are some of the widely appealing things that make them—and sometimes us—scratch our heads.
One of the top things Amy doesn't get: Tom Waits.
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1/24/2024 • 42 minutes, 57 seconds
Ask Margaret: What Should I Do When Friends Exclude My Kid?
What parenting advice works when kids are being excluded from friend groups? Margaret shares some parenting strategies for keeping calm ourselves and for modeling healthy behavior when our kids are faced with rejection.
A listener asks:
"Help! My 12-year-old son lost his only friend because his friend's other friends didn't like my son. Most kids find my son annoying. I have tried to explain to him how some of the things he does might make other people feel, but he is quite immature for his age and has ADHD. As a child, I also didn't have many friends. I'm like my mom, not super social, don't know what to do."
One of the best things you can do for your kid is model a healthy response to the situation. Acknowledge that rejection hurts but that it's a normal part of social dynamics in life and it may be a tough season socially for a little while. If you throw logs on the fire by reacting too strongly, it will cue your child to do the same.
Your kid may be in need of some social skills classes if they find friend dynamics tough on a regular basis. It's like learning math or reading - a skill that needs development and practice.
Finally, help your kid find activities outside of school with different friends, so that they have other social circles to fall back on if one goes sour.
Listen to our episode "Kid Friend Breakups" for more parenting tips on social exclusion in kid friend groups.
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1/22/2024 • 6 minutes
Fresh Take: Jessica McCabe on How to ADHD
Finding out that you, or your child, has ADHD can be a great relief: so many things finally make sense. But the diagnosis, and the self-acceptance that comes with it, is just the beginning of the work. Jessica McCabe, author of the new book HOW TO ADHD, tells her own story of learning all that ADHD can affect, and gives helpful tips for living, working, and parenting while neurodiverse.
Jessica McCabe is the creator of the YouTube channel "How to ADHD," where she shares fun, relatable and research-based educational content about ADHD and neurodiversity with her 2 million followers.
Jessica and Amy discuss:
Jessica's own journey with her ADHD diagnosis—and why it took her so long to understand it
Why people with ADHD should own and claim it as a disability
Helpful strategies for daily living for households where family members have ADHD—including the parents
Here's where you can find Jessica:
https://howtoadhdbook.com
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/howtoadhd
@howtoadhd on all social platforms (Youtube, Facebook, X, TikTok, Instagram)
Buy HOW TO ADHD: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780593578940
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1/19/2024 • 36 minutes, 42 seconds
Why Do Moms Get All The Blame?
Mothers have long been held at fault for anything that might occur in their children's lives, from autism ("refrigerator mothers") to colic, and everything in between. Why is there such a long history of blaming everything on Mom?
In this episode, we discuss how mom blame has manifested in both psychology and parenting advice over the years, and how we can start to push back on it in our own lives.
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Joseph E. Davis, PhD for Psychology Today: "For a Moratorium on Parent Blaming"
Mitzi M. Waltz, PhD for the AMA Journal of Ethics: "Mothers and Autism: The Evolution of a Discourse of Blame"
Rosjke Hasseldine for Medium: "How Mother Blaming Harms the Mother-Daughter Bond"
Bonnie Zucker for Scary Mommy: "From a Psychologist: No, It's Not All Mom's Fault"
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1/17/2024 • 43 minutes, 19 seconds
Ask Amy: My Kid Is Always Saying "That's Mine!"
It's developmentally appropriate for a toddler to shout "That's mine!" every five seconds instead of sharing. That's because toddlers and preschoolers are still learning what sharing even means. So what should a parent do when they have two little ones who are fighting over every toy?
Our listener Katie sent us a message on Instagram asking:
"I have two boys, the older almost two and a half, the younger a one-year-old (they're 18 months apart). My 2 1/2 year-old just says nonstop, "Nooo, this is mine!" and takes everything away from his little brother all day long. I'm constantly having to keep the younger one away from the older one, otherwise he will try to kick or hit him. It's frustrating and exhausting, and I know it's a normal stage, but I also feel like there must be something I can do to help."
First, a parent should focus on the kicking or hitting, which is the immediate danger. Give that behavior a firm no, and then separate the children as necessary. Don't feel like you have to enforce playing together among kids who are just too young to share. Sharing is a behavior children can only really learn when they're three or four, as they develop what psychologists call "theory of mind."
Sarah MacLaughlin, a social worker and parent educator, recommends that parents "sportscast" what's happening when a child shouts "That's mine!" to give more complete voice to what they're feeling, since they don't have the language to do so yet. For example: "Oh no! Your brother wants to play with the dump truck, but you also want to play with the dump truck. And now you feel so mad!"
Here are some other resources for advice and tips on getting through the "that's mine!" and the no-sharing stages. Rest assured, your children will eventually learn what sharing is, even if they're terrible at it right now.
-Sarah S. MacLaughlin for Zero to Three: "Helping Young Children with Sharing"
-Nurtured First: "3 Tips for the Toddler 'MINE' Stage"
-Harvey Karp, Happiest Toddler on the Block
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1/15/2024 • 7 minutes
Fresh Take: Andrea Owen of "Make Some Noise"
Self-help culture rewards women and mothers who "stay strong." But that can lead to us people-pleasing even as we struggle, making sure no one sees that we're actually drowning. Andrea Owen, host of the Make Some Noise podcast, explains how some conventional self-help advice needs to be kicked to the curb.
Andrea Owen is also a professionally-certified life coach and the author of three books, including How to Stop Feeling Like Sh*t: 14 Habits that are Holding You Back from Happiness.
In this episode Andrea, Amy, and Margaret discuss:
Being a "compassionate witness"
Quieting our inner critic
Why it's okay to fall apart sometimes
Here's where you can find Andrea:
-https://andreaowen.com/
-@heyandreaowen on IG, FB, and TikTok
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1/12/2024 • 35 minutes, 55 seconds
Why Kids Need More Time To Play
Kids have a less time for unsupervised, unstructured play than they did 40-50 years ago. Kids are also a lot less happy then they were back then. But has one actually caused the other? A new study says it has.
Psychologist Dr. Peter Gray and his associates at Boston College recently published the paper Decline in independent activity as a cause of decline in children's mental well-being, which suggests that the decline in play and the decline in children's well-being are directly correlated:
“Our thesis is that a primary cause of the rise in mental disorders (among children and teens) is a decline over decades in opportunities for children and teens to play, roam and engage in other activities, independent of direct oversight and control by adults.”
In this episode we discuss the fascinating research explored in this study, the difference in our freewheeling neighborhood childhoods and our own kids' more curated daily existences, and how letting our children take independent risks—and even get a few bumps and bruises— is setting them up for a sense of well-being that is all their own.
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
The 1000 Hours Outside Podcast is new to Adalyst Media! 200 episodes of inspiration on how to reclaim the finite moments of childhood through prioritizing outdoor play.
our recent Fresh Take with Dr. Camilo Ortiz
Peter Gray, et. al: "Decline in Independent Activity as a Cause of Decline in Children’s Mental Wellbeing," Journal of Pediatrics
Mia Venkat, Kathryn Fox, Juana Summers for NPR: "How lack of independent play is impacting children's mental health"
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1/10/2024 • 43 minutes, 39 seconds
Ask Margaret: How Do I Get My Baby Sleeping Through the Night?
How do we start to get our babies sleeping through the night, and how do we know whether they're old enough to do so? Margaret shares what worked for her when she had little ones.
For at least the first eight weeks of a baby's life, ignore the people telling you that your baby needs to be on a schedule. Their schedule is feeding upon demand, and that's going to involve some nighttime wakings.
Once the baby is at least eight weeks old, and with your pediatrician's go-ahead, you can start to shape the baby's day versus their night. Day should be bright, exciting, and lively. Night should be dark, calm, and quiet. When the baby wakes up during the night, they should be put back to sleep with minimal activity and sound—feedings and changing of diapers should be quiet and quick.
It can help to send in the non-breastfeeding partner for the first waking of the night to get the baby back to sleep without feeding, and to start building longer stretches of time where the baby will sleep.
Always consult your pediatrician for the best advice about how/when your baby should sleep!
Margaret recommends Happiest Baby on the Block by Harvey Karp as a good resource.
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1/8/2024 • 9 minutes, 4 seconds
Fresh Take: Dr. Camilo Ortiz on How to Help Kids With Anxiety
Can we make kids more anxious by being too protective? If kids are statistically safer than ever, why does it feel so hard to keep our kids safe?
Psychologist Dr. Camilo Ortiz explains how such overparenting can be counterproductive for kids, and how to take a step back. Dr. Ortiz is the developer of "Independence Therapy," a new treatment for child anxiety.
Margaret and Dr. Ortiz discuss:
-why kids today have less freedom
-how less freedom contributes to anxiety in kids
-how the definition of "good parenting" has changed over the years
Here's where you can find Dr. Ortiz:
-X: @DrCamiloOrtiz
-https://drcamiloortiz.squarespace.com/
-Dr. Camilo Ortiz and Lenore Skenazy for the NYT: "This Simple Fix Could Help Anxious Kids"
-Listen to our Fresh Take with Lenore Skenazy
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mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, toddler, baby, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent
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1/5/2024 • 35 minutes, 55 seconds
What We're Taking Into The New Year (with Life Coach Ann Imig)
How can positive psychology help us create more of what we want for ourselves in this new year? Life coach Ann Imig takes Margaret and Amy through some of her coursework and tells us how to connect our already-existing personality strengths to more joy and well-being.
Ann Imig is an award-winning writer, speaker, and performer, currently working as a certified positive psychology life coach. In 2010 she created the nationwide storytelling series and book titled Listen to Your Mother.
Ann, Amy, and Margaret discuss:
-taking stock of the previous year and using that knowledge to create what's next
-how the character strengths quiz can help you create more well-being
-how to get more of what we want in 2024
Here's where you can find Ann Imig:
-ListenLifeCoaching.com
-Get a free 30-minute consultation with Ann!
-Preview the "Year BEGIN" Workshop
-Listen to Ann's podcast "It's Pronounced Memwah" with Wendy Aarons and Mariana Olenko
-Take the character strengths quiz: https://viacharacter.org/
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
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new year, resolutions, positive psychology
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1/3/2024 • 43 minutes, 54 seconds
Ask Amy: All My Kids Do Is Fight!
Do your kids fight as much as they breathe? It's as normal as it is infuriating. This week Amy answers a question from our Instagram page:
Man, am I struggling. My kids are four and two and all they do is fight. It’s constant. (The four year old is a girl and the two year old is a boy.) They hit, scream, fight, all morning and night. I try not to react too much, but... you get the idea.
This kind of fighting is definitely in the #itgetsbetter category, but it's an extremely intense season while you're in it. The first thing to let go of is that siblings should get along, love each other, live in perfect harmony. For the next six months or a year, keep them separate! One in the yard, one in the playroom. One coloring in the kitchen, one playing trucks on the windowsill. Lower any expectations you have around what they should be doing together, and the fighting will go down.
Blank-facing is the other arrow in your quiver. Fighting is not interesting to you. If someone is actually hurt, tend to the injured party and give as little attention as possible– even negative attention– to the instigator.
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1/1/2024 • 5 minutes, 49 seconds
BEST OF: Ryan Wexelblatt on How To Help Kids With ADHD Succeed
If you're parent of a child with ADHD, you are familiar with the battles of will that can result. What are the best ways to help kids with ADHD succeed without either coddling them or coming down too hard on them? Are you the parent of a child with ADHD who feels like nothing you try is working?
Ryan Wexelblatt, also known as the "ADHD Dude," is here to help. Ryan, a licensed clinical social worker and father to a son with ADHD, creates content for the ADHDude YouTube channel and ADDitude Magazine. Ryan also provides parent training, in-person school-year programs, and a summer camp for boys.
Ryan, Amy, and Margaret discuss:
-How to talk to kids with siblings who have ADHD
-Why behavior prompts actually don't help long-term
-How to use scaffolding to build important skills for kids
Firm boundaries and consistency, rather than permissive parenting or special treatment, are going to help kids with ADHD more in the long-run, Ryan explains. Helping kids visualize the consequences of their actions– whether those kids have ADHD or not– is a good first step.
Here's where you can find Ryan:
-@adhddude on YouTube
-@theadhddude on Instagram
[email protected] on Facebook
-www.adhddude.com
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12/29/2023 • 38 minutes, 51 seconds
BEST OF: Things Change, and That's OK! How Parenting Changes as Kids Get Older
Sometimes all the "treasure every moment, Mama" content can make us feel like it's all downhill from here, that as our kids get older, each year of parenting becomes a little less special.
This suspicion is confirmed when we're with our little ones at the grocery store and an older woman takes us in, nods knowingly, then says with a raised eyebrow, "Just you wait."
But wait for what? Does only peril and sass-mouth lie ahead?
In this episode we discuss how parenting changes, and why that change is not to be feared or resisted. Some things honestly change for the better. Some things for sure you miss. But all change is absolutely, totally okay.
For more on this topic, and in particular the answers to "yes but when does it change for the EASIER?", check out our episode Your Life Begins Again When... (The Second Half of Parenting)
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mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, toddler,baby, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent
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12/27/2023 • 48 minutes, 41 seconds
BEST OF: Lisa Damour Tells Us How To Deal With Teenagers' Big Emotions
Right now there's a mental health crisis among teenagers. But teens are also highly emotional creatures by design. Adolescent psychologist Dr. Lisa Damour thinks the two are starting to get conflated– and that means parents and educators can sometimes overcorrect in their responses to teens' emotional outbursts.
Dr. Lisa Damour co-hosts the Ask Lisa podcast and writes about adolescents for the The New York Times, in addition to her clinical practice. She is the author of two New York Times bestsellers: Untangled: Guiding Teenage Girls Through the Seven Transitions into Adulthood and Under Pressure: Confronting the Epidemic of Stress and Anxiety in Girls.
Dr. Lisa's latest book is called The Emotional Lives of Teenagers: Raising Connected, Capable, and Compassionate Adolescents. In this interview Amy and Lisa discuss:
-Why good sleep is the first thing we need to help dysregulated teens solve
-What the pandemic actually revealed about teens' mental health
-Key myths and misconceptions about adolescent emotions
Dr. Lisa says that we– and our teenagers– can gain much by asking if the strong emotion a teen may be feeling is uncomfortable or unmanageable. If it's uncomfortable, learning to sit with that is part of the process of healthy emotional maturation.
Here's where you can find Dr. Lisa Damour:
-our previous interview with Dr. Lisa
-https://drlisadamour.com/
[email protected] on IG
-https://www.facebook.com/lisadamourphd
-Buy Lisa's book: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780593500019
mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, toddler,
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12/22/2023 • 35 minutes, 46 seconds
BEST OF: The Smallest Hills We'd Die On
From how to eat a Reese's peanut butter cup, to *not* saving the pandas, to the forever-ban of helium balloons, our listeners are funny moms who are willing to die on some pretty tiny hills. Here's what mountains you all are making out of mole hills– plus a few of our own tiny battles.
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12/20/2023 • 44 minutes, 41 seconds
BEST OF: Family Holiday Traditions: The Good, The Bad, The Elf on the Shelf
’Tis the season for traditions— most of that holiday work shopped for, planned, and generally upheld by moms.
And for some of us, sending 300 holiday cards or creating a new tableau for a six-inch elf every night before bed really gets us in the holiday spirit.
But most of us, at this time of year, have more to do than hours to do it. Many of us think we’re done shopping and only then remember Aunt Doris who is impossible to buy for (and has expressed specific disappointment in giftcards). Many of us have kids at whom we may have raised our voices after the fifth or sixth question about when we were going to make all the Christmas cookies this year.
So we asked our listeners:
What are the holiday traditions that you love and work great for your family? What are the things you’d rather never do again but feel like you can’t stop now?
In this episode, we discuss your responses, plus:
-how to get out from under the traditions you wished you never started
-what to consider before letting a new tradition take root (keeping in mind that anything that happens at this time of year will immediately be deemed “something we do every year”)
-why the Elf on the Shelf might be a slippery slope to the full-on surveillance state
-why the joy of anticipation is at least as good as the moment anticipated
-how the Danish concept of hygge factors in to all of this
-easy holiday traditions like “Christmas Adam,” which as far as we can tell mostly involves holiday pajamas and Rankin-Bass specials
Lean into the hygge this holiday season. Push back against the incremental spend, the just running out for one more thing.
Lean into the anticipation, because that’s the sweet spot.
Oh, and Christmas lights. Lots of them. (They do wonders for Seasonal Affective Disorder.)
Special thanks to our guest comedy bit reader for this week: Sean Conroy of The Long Shot Podcast!
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Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, Santa, Elf on the Shelf, gift exchange, mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, toddler,
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12/18/2023 • 43 minutes, 53 seconds
Fresh Take: Amy Palanjian of Yummy Toddler Food
Are picky eaters a reflection of their parenting? How in control are moms and das when it comes to kids' willingness to eat a variety of foods?
Amy Palanjian, creator of yummytoddlerfood.com and author of the NYT bestselling book DINNERTIME SOS, is here to reframe our parental anxieties around feeding our kids every single day.
Amy and Margaret discuss:
-where to start when it comes to feeding your picky eater
-why we shouldn't expect kids to "make healthy choices"
-how to make dinnertime less stressful for everyone
Here's where you can find Amy:
-@yummytoddlerfood
-yummytoddlerfood.com
-Buy DINNERTIME SOS: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780593578506
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baby, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent
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12/15/2023 • 36 minutes, 54 seconds
The Most Useful Parenting Tips We Learned in 2023
We look back on our favorite parenting tips and takeaways we learned this year. Here's the Spotify playlist with all of our favorite episodes from 2023!
Here are the parenting experts who changed our thinking the most, the listeners who made us laugh the most, and what we're going to carry with us into the new year.
We also shout out the fantastic small team that makes What Fresh Hell and our podcast network, Adalyst Media, run so smoothly. All women, all amazing.
Our listeners are amazing, too. Thank you for being part of our funny, fun, supportive community. If you haven't yet, join our Facebook group, the last good place on the internet: https://www.facebook.com/groups/whatfreshhellcast
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12/13/2023 • 45 minutes, 5 seconds
HOLIDAY BEST OF: Handling the Holiday Craziness as a Mom
We’re in Christmas/Hanukkah/Kwanzaa Countdown! To keep you company while you slowly lose your mind, we’re re-running some of our favorite holiday episodes. This week we're revisiting "Handling the Holiday Craziness" — need we say more?
Each December 25th, most moms look at a living room full of scattered wrapping paper and vow to do less next year. Then Black Friday rolls around. But can you really downshift on how much Santa brings once a baseline has been established?
This week Amy and Margaret talk about managing the holiday craziness. (Disclaimer: for both of us, that does mean Christmas, although we feel the pain of the Hanukkah Harriets out there, we really do).
Here’s some of what’s discussed in this episode:
-how to get your kids more involved in holiday preparations— at any age
- the very appealing “three kings, three gifts” rule
-how to carefully consider any new holiday “traditions” before instating them (we’re looking at you, Elf on the Shelf)
-how the Laws of Holiday Attrition can work in your favor
-how Amy uses this cookie recipe every December and it’s easy and amazing
-what to do when your spouse gives you a Pajamagram
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mom friends, funny moms, parenting advice, parenting experts, parenting tips, mothers, families, parenting skills, parenting strategies, parenting styles, busy moms, self-help for moms, manage kid’s behavior, teenager, toddler, baby, tween, child development, family activities, family fun, parent child relationship, decluttering, kid-friendly, invisible workload, default parent
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12/11/2023 • 41 minutes, 51 seconds
Fresh Take: Ed Center of Village Well Parenting
How does our cultural upbringing influence the way we parent? Ed Center, founder of Village Well Parenting, discusses how culturally grounded positive parenting can bring connection, joy, and healing to both kid-raisers and educators.
Ed has spent his career supporting low-income, underrepresented youth and adults by helping them gain access to the resources necessary to thrive. He started The Village Well to bring more connection, joy, and healing to families of color.
In this interview, Amy and Ed discuss:
-The lack of attention to diverse cultures and traditions in traditional parenting courses and literature
-How generational wisdom can sometimes come from the same source as generational trauma
-How to stay calm when your children are not
Here's where you can find Ed:
-https://www.villagewellparenting.com
-IG: @villagewellparenting
-FB: @thevillagewell
-TikTok: @queerbrowndad
-Sign up for First Fridays with Ed on this page
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
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12/8/2023 • 35 minutes, 13 seconds
Decision Fatigue- And Why It's Especially Bad For Moms
The average adult makes 35,000 decisions a day. The average "default parent" makes a lot more than that. No wonder we suffer from decision fatigue. The more decisions we have to make, the more fatigue we develop, and the more difficult it can become to function.
So how can we combat the frustration, apathy, and resentment that result from having to make all the decisions in the family?
In this episode we discuss:
-how decision fatigue manifests—and how it differs from burnout
-the best time of day to make hard decisions
-why "going with the flow" is not actually a thing
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Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
-Sara Berg for the American Medical Association: "What doctors wish patients knew about decision fatigue"
-Michelle Adelman for HowStuffWorks: "When's the Best Time of Day to Make a Decision?"
-Lauren Barth for The Bump: "Why the Decision-Fatigue Struggle Is (Still) Real for Parents"
-Frank Graff for PBS North Carolina: "How Many Decisions Do We Make In One Day?"
-Ilyse Dobrow DiMarco for The Washington Post: "For parents, everything feels like a high-stakes decision now. Here’s how to lower the anxiety."
-Ashley Stahl for Forbes: "How Burnout Affects Your Decision-Making Process—And How To Fix It"
-Eva M. Krockow for Psychology Today: "How Many Decisions Do We Make Each Day?"
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12/6/2023 • 47 minutes, 6 seconds
HOLIDAY BEST OF: Susan Katz Miller on Interfaith Families at the Holidays
We’re in Christmas/Hanukkah/Kwanzaa Countdown! To keep you company while you slowly lose your mind, we’re re-running some of our favorite holiday episodes. This week we're revisiting our interview with Susan Katz Miller, author of THE INTERFAITH FAMILY JOURNAL.
The holidays are always intense, and if your family is an intersection of multiple traditions, it can really ratchet up the pressure for perfection times two. Which is when it’s time to maintain perspective. As Susan explains:
“I try to help people to understand that if they're having conflict often, it's not about religious difference. It's not about theology. It's not about whether there was an actual physical resurrection or not. It's usually about whether to put the fried onions on the green bean casserole or not.”
In this episode we discuss
-why every family is an interfaith family
-how to reduce conflict about traditions with your spouse’s extended family
-how to help your spouse when the hard feelings are on your family’s side
-how to push back on the pressure to do “both” traditions perfectly
-how to help your kids navigate being of a different faith than most people in your community
-how to handle it when you’re observant but your spouse is not (or vice versa)
-the resentment that can occur when the mom in a family is expected to carry the weight of passing on a religious tradition that's not even hers
It’s worth it to have the conversations, do the work, and delineate a “sacred circle” that works for your immediate family. As Susan explains, when you and your spouse come from different traditions, “you’re going to be doing the work anyhow.” But challenging your own mindset and context is also an incredible opportunity for growth– even if the way your spouse’s family opens their holiday gifts is completely and totally wrong.
Here are links to some other writing on the topic we discuss in this episode:
-Pew Research Center: Why America’s ‘nones’ don’t identify with a religion
-Stina Kielsmeier-Cook: Blessed Are the Nones: Mixed-Faith Marriage and My Search for Spiritual Community: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780830848270
-Buy THE INTERFAITH FAMILY JOURNAL: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9781558968257
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12/4/2023 • 41 minutes, 32 seconds
Fresh Take: Amanda Montei on "Touched Out"
What does it mean to be "touched out" as a mom? And once we know it's a thing—as anyone who's experienced it firsthand can attest—is there anything we can actually do about it?
Amanda Montei, author of the popular Substack Mad Woman and the new book TOUCHED OUT, has studied the phenomenon of "maternal touch aversion" in both the literal and metaphorical senses. In this interview, Amanda, Margaret, and Amy discuss:
-what being "touched out" really means—and why guilt and shame often accompanies it
-the "very not normal" conditions of today's American parenting
-how can we can begin to claim the space we want for our own selves, and model that for our children
Here's where you can find Amanda:
-https://www.amandamontei.com/
-Mad Woman Substack: https://amandamontei.substack.com/
-@amontei on IG
[email protected] on Facebook
-Buy TOUCHED OUT: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780807013274
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12/1/2023 • 33 minutes, 38 seconds
What Fresh Hell Is the Holiday Season?
We all have things we dread about the holiday season, whether we celebrate Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, or a combination of the above. In this episode we are here to list all the "fresh hells" of this time of year, like:
the terrors of Santa's lap
the people who are impossible to buy for
the grandparents who take all of our best gift ideas
the approaching storm system as you check in for your flight to Nana's
We do love the holidays, though. Really, we do. Remind us of that.
This episode was inspired by this discussion on our Facebook page: What do you dread most about the holiday season?
Join the fun: https://facebook.com/groups/whatfreshhellcast
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11/29/2023 • 42 minutes, 12 seconds
HOLIDAY BEST OF: It's the Most Everything Time of the Year
We’re in Christmas/Hanukkah/Kwanzaa Countdown! To keep you company while you slowly lose your mind, we’re re-running some of our favorite holiday episodes. This week we're revisiting "The Most Everything Time of the Year" and how the intensity really ratches up as soon as Thanksgiving is behind us.
Are you juggling “dress as your favorite reindeer” day at preschool with frantic texts from your sister-in-law asking what your spouse wants for Christmas? Are you feeling like hiding under the covers instead of hitting the office holiday party?
It’s the most everything time of the year, and women report the holidays as being far more stressful than men do.
In this episode we discuss how to manage the holiday stress, how to accept the non-cozy feelings that may arise, and why it’s okay to dial back if you’re really not feeling the holiday spirit.
Here are links to some of the writing on the topic that we discuss in this episode:
Pooja Lakshmin on Instagram @womensmentalhealthdoc
Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research: Holiday Stress
Harvard Medical School: A holiday advisory for your emotions
Cedars-Sinai Hospital: Depression and Anxiety Around the Holidays
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11/27/2023 • 43 minutes, 54 seconds
Fresh Take: "The Girl Next Door Podcast" on Setting Boundaries
How can we set reasonable limits for our kids without negotiating every single time they're tested? Erica Ladd and Kelsey Wharton, co-hosts of "The Girl Next Door Podcast," discuss tips for setting boundaries—and not just at the holidays, but all year round.
Margaret, Kelsey, and Erica discuss:
Why holidays are so boundary-crushing
Everyday actions you can take to practice setting boundaries
Why boundaries are not just for handling "crazymakers"
Here's where you can find Kelsey and Erica:
https://www.girlnextdoorpodcast.com/
@higirlsnextdoor on Instagram
Listen to the GND episode "Ten Things We're NOT Doing This Christmas"
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11/24/2023 • 39 minutes, 59 seconds
Does Having Kids Ruin Your Marriage Forever?
Have you and your spouse slipped into "angry partners at the 24/7 daycare" mode since your baby was born? Here's why relationships change after kids, and some real solutions that can help us get through it.
Amy and Margaret discuss:
The number-one reason relationships change after a baby is born
Helpful perspectives for maintaining sanity during early parenthood
Small steps for building back connection with your partner
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Jessica Grose for the NYT: Fighting Constantly after Baby? Read This
Doss BD, et al. The Effect of the Transition to Parenthood on Relationship Quality: An Eight-Year Prospective Study.
Alex Vance for Verywell Family: 4 Ways To Focus On Your Relationship When the Kids Keep You Busy
Jessica Grose for the NYT: Bickering More After Kids? Learn how to avoid the four horsemen of the relationship apocalypse.
Christina Caron for the NYT: How to Reconnect with Your Partner After Kids
Judd Apatow: "Who Slept Worse?"
Check out all of the amazing shows in the Adalyst Media podcast network! If you love What Fresh Hell, you'll love our network of sister podcasts.
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11/22/2023 • 45 minutes, 25 seconds
HOLIDAY BEST OF: The Holiday Creep
We’re in Christmas/Hanukkah/Kwanzaa Countdown! To keep you company while you slowly lose your mind, we’re re-running some of our favorite holiday episodes. This one is about the "holiday creep" which, if you're reading this, has already begun...
"Holiday Creep" is well on its way to being an entry in Merriam-Webster's dictionary. And with good reason. Amy and Margaret bemoan the fact the Christmas seems to start ever earlier, and weigh in on their strategies for managing the gift giving, decorating, and scheduling craziness at this time of year.
Amy and Margaret discuss:
Why Margaret is everyone's Christmas nightmare
The 3 best rules for holiday gift giving
When Christmas should REALLY start
The solution to all the madness? Let the laws of holiday attrition work in your favor! If something falls off the list of priorities or is just no longer fun, take it off the calendar. Ask for a no-gift-exchange policy amongst family, friends, and coworkers, and find your "no" when it comes to holiday events, tasks, or experiences that are nothing but drudge for everyone!
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Anne Helen Petersen, "A Theory of Sprawling Holidays"
Mollie Wilson O'Reilly, "Waiting By the Jesse Tree"
Eleanor Lees for Newsweek: "Why Does the Christmas Countdown Get Earlier Every Year?"
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11/20/2023 • 41 minutes, 22 seconds
Fresh Take: Nicole Walters on "Nothing Is Missing"
What can we do when life seems to be falling down around our ears? Nicole Walters, author of the new book NOTHING IS MISSING: A MEMOIR OF LIVING BOLDLY, explains how to create our own fresh starts‒ and the joy that accompanies them.
Nicole Walters is the host of "The Nicole Walters Podcast", a motivational speaker, and the mother of three adopted daughters.
Nicole, Amy, and Margaret discuss:
How to pour into your community with gentleness, grace and honesty
How "fresh starts" can help you take control of your life
Why vulnerability is essential to connection
Here's where you can find Nicole:
https://nicolewalters.com
@nicolewalters (IG)
@MonetizeThyself (FB)
Listen to the Nicole Walters podcast
Buy NOTHING IS MISSING: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9781668000953
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11/17/2023 • 30 minutes, 58 seconds
DEEP DIVE: Highly Sensitive (and Under-Sensitive) Kids
We’re doing a Deep Dive into our best episodes around a single topic. Find the Spotify playlist for this “Deep Dive” here.
This group of episodes is about parenting kids who don’t fit the mold. This week, we’re revisiting this episode from 2021.
When a parent first hears about highly sensitive kids– or their opposite, sensory seekers– it can provide a profound moment of recognition, of connecting the dots for things about our kids that up until now have baffled us.
We think understanding these sensory tendencies can help us parent our kids more effectively and compassionately. Not every kid who shows hyper- or hypo-sensitivity will go on to require occupational therapy, struggle in school, or anything else. But as childmind.org explains, ""These problems can be tough on kids, and get in the way of them functioning effectively, learning, and making friends."
Every kid who displays these behaviors and preferences can benefit from a parent who understands and can therefore effectively support and address for the otherwise confusing behaviors that might ensue. We don't have to accommodate every dictate of an extremely picky eater, or messy playroom caused by a sensory seeker– but it's worth exploring, because it can really help us as parents to understand where these things might be coming from.
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
This image from Miracle Maker Mom
Michael Rosenthal, PhD for the Child Mind Institute: Sensory Processing FAQ
Amanda Morin for understood.org: Sensory seeking and sensory avoiding: What you need to know
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11/16/2023 • 49 minutes, 56 seconds
Things That Should Be Fun... But Aren't
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There are some things in life that sound more fun in the planning stage than they are in the execution, and those things are statistically proven to be done more frequently by parents.
We asked our listeners to tell us their lists of things that should be fun, but aren't. As the record will show, our listeners are sadly, completely correct. Don't say you weren't warned.
Here's the link to the episode of The Mom Hour episode a few of our listeners mentioned: We Hate Fun!
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11/15/2023 • 40 minutes, 37 seconds
Ask Margaret: How to Foster Relationships with Grandparents
What can we do to foster relationships between our kids and their grandparents? A listener in our Facebook group asked:
"A question for those of you sandwiched between kiddos and elders in your home. How do you encourage interaction between the two ends of the spectrum? Our elder is old-school and equates time with our kiddo as a time to treat them with food and gifts. How do you support this relationship?"
It's important to realize that in any interaction that you are trying to foster, that you don't have a tremendous amount of control, Margaret says.
That being said, you can lay out guidelines and be very clear that, for example, "we only eat between these hours and this hour, and this is how we approach this kind of food. And so please limit the amount of treats you give my kid to one a day." You can go over this boundary with your kid as well.
If your child has overlapping interests with any of their grandparents, that's a great place to start. You can also direct your child to talk to their grandparents if they express curiosity about a topic or time period they're familiar with. It can also go the other way, in that you can suggest a grandparent play a game or engage in an activity that your child is passionate about.
Ultimately, you are a facilitator, not a controller, and you can't dictate the relationship between your child and their grandparents, but you can keep offering up opportunities for connection.
Here's the article Margaret references in the episode:
Susan Adcox for VeryWell Family: 6 Factors of Grandparent-Grandchild Closeness
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11/13/2023 • 9 minutes
Fresh Take: Mother Gopi Gita on Leadership Parenting
What if leadership wasn't about being in charge, but about serving others? Mother Gopi Gita, is the founder of Leadership Parenting and Vice Principal at TKG Academy, an independent private school in Dallas, Texas.
She's also the author of LEADERSHIP PARENTING, in which she defines leadership as "serving others with collaborative decision-making." That goes for parents and kids both! In this interview, Mother Gopi and Amy discuss:
The three guiding principles for leadership parenting
How to know when our child's "connection needs" are being met
How to turn defiance into loving conversation
Here's where you can find Mother Gopi:
www.gopigita.com
@leadershipparenting on IG
Buy LEADERSHIP PARENTING: https://gopigita.com/new-book
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11/10/2023 • 30 minutes, 4 seconds
DEEP DIVE: When the World Moves Too Fast for Our Kids
We’re doing a Deep Dive into our best episodes around a single topic. Find the Spotify playlist for this “Deep Dive” here.
This group of episodes is about parenting kids who don’t fit the mold. This week, we’re revisiting our episode from 2022, "When the World Moves Too Fast for Our Kids."
When we look at our kids– and think of the responsibilities we had and risks we took at their ages– a lot of us think our kids are growing up more slowly. This is definitely not always a bad thing. But when our kid is playing Pokémon and their peers have moved on to Snapchat, should we be encouraging them to blossom? Or letting them stay young a little longer?
Amy and Margaret discuss:
why it's good to have "young" kids
when to rescue, and when to leave them alone
how to make our own homes safe havens for our kids to be exactly who they are
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Camille Noe Pagán for WebMD: "Is It Immaturity or ADHD?"
Alloprof Parents: "5 ways to support an immature first grader"
PsychCentral: "The Effects of Trauma from Growing up Too Fast"
Amy Norton for CBS News: "Why today's teens are growing up more slowly than they used to"
Katie Bishop for BBC: "Kids getting older younger: Are children growing up too fast?"
Steven Richfield for HealthyPlace: "Coaching The Emotionally Immature Middle Schooler"
Julie Rawe for Understood: "Why some kids seem immature compared to other kids their age"
Dr. Tori Cordiano for Your Teen Magazine: "My Daughter Is Immature and She’s Annoying Her Friends"
Jessica Lahey for Your Teen Magazine: "Understanding Changing Middle School Friendships"
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11/9/2023 • 40 minutes, 25 seconds
Growth Mindset: What Is It? Does It Matter?
Growth mindset is the belief that one's abilities and intelligence can be developed through effort, learning, and persistence. Makes sense, but is it the number-one secret to our kids' future happiness and success? Is fixed mindset a death knell for our children's potential?
Amy and Margaret discuss:
The current controversy in academia about whether "growth mindset" has been over-emphasized
Why it's important to praise our kids' efforts, more than those efforts' outcomes
How to foster growth mindset in our kids (hint: it's by example)
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Melinda Wenner Moyer: Is Growth Mindset a Sham?
Melinda Wenner Moyer: The Nitty Gritty of Growth Mindset
Carol S. Dweck: Mindset
Dweck, Carol et al: Praise for intelligence can undermine children's motivation and performance
Macnamara, B. N., & Burgoyne, A. P: Do growth mindset interventions impact students’ academic achievement? A systematic review and meta-analysis with recommendations for best practices.
Burnette, J. L., et al: A systematic review and meta-analysis of growth mindset interventions: For whom, how, and why might such interventions work?
See Eva DeVirgilis's one-woman show, "In My Chair"
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11/8/2023 • 41 minutes, 5 seconds
Ask Amy: When Did 5th Grade Get So Rough?
Is fifth grade way more complicated than it used to be? A listener wrote in to ask:
"Is it just me or is 5th grade rough? Is it just my 5th grader and his classmates, or are others experiencing this too? Weird friend drama, lots of emotions, being teased (but in a friendly way?)... It’s a lot. Please tell me I’m not alone!"
The average 5th grader is in the 10- to 11-year-old range, and as Vanessa Kroll Bennett and Dr. Cara Natterson recently explained to us, that's become a reasonable age for puberty to begin. (Listen to our Fresh Take with them here.) So it's no wonder that some of them are feeling big emotions, or having sudden drama with the same friends they've had since kindergarten.
Even though we may want to Mama Bear the situation and fix everything that's wrong, it's developmentally appropriate for kids of this age to experience discomfort of a social, mental, and yes, physical, nature.
The best thing you can do is make your home a safe space for whatever emotions your child is feeling about all of this upheaval. If it seems like they're handling it, you can take a back seat. If they're really asking for your help, that's your cue to get more involved. But if you're not hearing as much as you used to about school and friends from your kid, remember that that's also normal for this age and stage.
Here are two more of our Fresh Takes you may find helpful on this topic:
Dr. Lisa Damour on Helping Kids Manage Anxiety
Judith Warner on What Grownups Get Wrong About Middle School
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11/6/2023 • 5 minutes, 36 seconds
Fresh Take: Dr. Robyn Silverman on How to Talk to Kids About Anything
How do we talk to our kids about all the complicated topics our world presents them with? Dr. Robyn Silverman, child and teen development specialist, is the author of the bestselling book How to Talk to Kids About Anything and host of the podcast How to Talk to Kids About Anything, gives us scripts for having hard conversations with our kids.
In this interview Dr. Silverman, Amy, and Margaret discuss:
The downside to parents not talking to kids about hard things
The biggest mistakes parents make when talking to kids
Why tough conversations are worthwhile for reasons that go far beyond what might be discussed
Here's where you can find Dr. Silverman:
DrRobynSilverman.com
@DrRobynSilverman on socials
Buy HOW TO TALK TO KIDS ABOUT ANYTHING: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9781728246987
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11/3/2023 • 33 minutes, 6 seconds
DEEP DIVE: When Your Kid Doesn't Fit the Mold
We’re doing a Deep Dive into our best episodes around a single topic. Find the Spotify playlist for this “Deep Dive” here.
This group of episodes is about parenting kids who don’t fit the mold. This week, we’re revisiting our episode of that name from 2021
Sooner or later, most parents discover that their kid doesn't fit society's mold in one way or another. But there's "quirky" kids with unusual haircuts, and then there's the kids who really do their own thing, with or without peer approval. In this episode, we're talking about the latter.
Those parents will recognize what Dr. Perri Klass calls "the pivotal moment": "not just one moment of extreme behavior in your kid, but the last in a series of impossible-to-explain-away behavior that resonates with the parent's long-considered and long-avoided fears. It crystallizes in a parent's mind all the floating anxieties and worries of many months."
It’s especially challenging for us when our kids are outside the norm because we can't help but think what will become of this kid? But at those times, we're forgetting two things: not only do our children have the ability to grow and develop, we're going to become better parents along the way, as well.
When it comes to our non-mold-fitting kids, there's reason to hope that the world will someday be wide enough. Albert Einstein didn’t fit the mold either, and things worked out pretty well for him. Which isn't to say he didn't cause his mom some sleepless nights along the way.
Here are some links to writing on the topic that we discuss in this episode:
Drs. Perri Klass and Eileen Costello: Quirky Kids: Understanding and Helping Your Child Who Doesn’t Fit In
greatschools.org: How to support your unique, quirky child
childmind.org: Sensory Processing FAQs
slate.com: What About Kids Who Don't Fit The Mold?
Dana Basu: How to Cope When Your Child is Different
Andrew Solomon: Far From The Tree: Parents, Children, And The Search For Identity
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11/2/2023 • 45 minutes, 45 seconds
When Kids Fight You on Everything
We’re on YouTube Music! Watch and listen at this link: What Fresh Hell: Laughing in the Face of Motherhood
We've all had times when our kids resist every. single. thing. you tell them to do. When is it part of a larger problem, and even if it's not, how do we manage the exhausting defiance?
Amy and Margaret discuss:
How to keep track of a kid's defiance in order to figure out where it's coming from
Gut-check questions to ask yourself to ascertain where ODD might be what's happening
the "two free requests" approach
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Katherine Lee for VeryWell Family: Effective Ways to Handle Defiant Children
Royce Flippin for Additude: Why Is My Child So Angry and Defiant? An Overview of Oppositional Defiant Disorder
Dr. Douglas Riley: The Defiant Child: A Parent’s Guide to Oppositional Defiant Disorder
Mount Sinai Parenting Center: Positive Opposites
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11/1/2023 • 41 minutes, 53 seconds
Ask Margaret: Is There a Nice Way to Say "I'm All Touched Out"?
Moms of little kids are touched all day, every day. So what happens when it's supposedly our spouse's turn at the end of the day, but we're just not in the mood for cuddling?
This week a listener asks:
"I’ve been really wanting my own space lately. I have two preschoolers and I’m nursing a baby. Basically, I’m touched out. I feel terribly bad because yesterday when I got everyone down for a nap, my husband (who is working from home) asked if he could snuggle with me. I said sure, but then asked him to leave so that I could rest.
He caught me red-handed scrolling on my phone a couple of minutes later, and I had to admit I just didn’t want to snuggle. I really hurt his feelings. What can I say? Feeling really guilty… but I just want my own space! Is there a nice way to handle it when you don’t want to be touched?"
The problem here isn't the snuggles, it's the communication. It's 100% reasonable to feel all touched out but also understandable for your spouse to feel hurt when he is cuddle-rejected.
Having a conversation around both of your expectations while working from your maximum point of generosity will solve this problem in no time.
The Parents.com article Margaret references in this article can be found HERE.
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10/30/2023 • 7 minutes, 39 seconds
Fresh Take: Dr. Tracy Dalgleish on Making Relationships Work
Why is it that we can find ourselves in a marriage with someone we thought we knew but with whom we can't effectively communicate? Dr. Tracy Dalgleish, author of I Didn’t Sign Up For This, talks us through breaking negative cycles in our relationships.
Dr. Tracy Dalgleish is a clinical psychologist, relationship expert, and voice behind @drtracyd.
Dr. Dalgleish and Margaret discuss:
Why dating doesn't prepare us for marriage
The most common problems couples have, and what's really underneath those issues
The best way to approach difficult conversations with our partners
Here's where you can find Dr. Dalgleish:
https://www.drtracyd.com/
@drtracyd on IG / FB
@pesipublishing on IG
Buy I DIDN'T SIGN UP FOR THIS: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9781683736622
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10/27/2023 • 33 minutes, 41 seconds
DEEP DIVE: Meeting Our Kids Where They Are
We’re doing a Deep Dive into our best episodes around a single topic. Find the Spotify playlist for this “Deep Dive” here.
This group of episodes is about parenting kids who don’t fit the mold. This week, we’re revisiting our episode on meeting our kids where they are.
It's hard not to be a little nervous when your kid is the only one still crying at preschool drop-off. Or the only one still spelling everything wrong in third grade. Sometimes it turns out to be a late bloomer situation, nothing to worry about. Sometimes it's an early indicator of something your kid might struggle with for a long time.
How do we move beyond our own stress about what our kids are and aren't doing like the rest of the bunch? How do we adjust our demands to meet what our kids are actually capable of? How do we set our parental expectations so that our kids will be motivated to try harder without feeling bad about themselves?
It's a tricky balance, best summed up by parent coach Sarah Wayland:
"If we never had expectations that were beyond our children’s current abilities, we wouldn’t teach them anything.... But I’m at my absolute worst as a parent when my expectations are far beyond my kids’ abilities."
Here are links to research and other writing on the topic that we discuss in this episode:
Joanna Faber: Manage Your Expectations, Not Your Child
Terri Mauro for Very Well Family: Backward Chaining for Special-Needs Children
Dr. Sarah C. Wayland for Guiding Exceptional Parents: Meet Your Kids Where They Are
Elaine Taylor-Klaus for Impact ADHD: Shift Your Expectations to Manage Complex Kids
Listen to "When Typical Parenting Advice Just Doesn't Fit"
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10/26/2023 • 51 minutes, 40 seconds
Wait, Didn't Everyone's Family Do This?
Did you grow up thinking everyone's family has a tooth fairy that leaves tin foil behind instead of coins? Said "padiddle" whenever a car with a single headlight drove past? We asked our listeners what they grew up thinking everyone else's families did too... only to find out that nope, it was just them.
Here's the link for "Throw Your Tooth on the Roof: Tooth Traditions from Around the World"
See the original Facebook thread here
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10/25/2023 • 45 minutes, 31 seconds
Ask Amy: Coping with Having a Sick Child
How do we handle a life-changing diagnosis for our child without falling apart? A concerned mother asked for support in our Facebook group:
"My sweet seven-year-old son just got two very life-altering diagnoses. I hate that he's going to have pain and struggle in his life. That some options for his life are off the table because of his diagnoses. He's just starting his life and already has so much stacked against him. My brain won't stop thinking; my fingers won't stop reaching for more information. How do you cope with this as a mother?"
Amy tells this parent that she's right: this is a lot to handle, and she's not wrong to think so.
Parents dealing with chronically ill children need to give themselves permission to feel all their feelings. Taking time for themselves is an important part of staying mentally healthy for the long haul.
Real-life support is also crucial—and that can also include emails, phone calls, and online chats with parents you may never have met, but who are dealing with similar struggles. You don't have to pretend things are better or easier than they are when you are talking to fellow travelers who know just what you're going through.
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10/23/2023 • 7 minutes, 11 seconds
Fresh Take: Alyssa Blask Campbell on Raising Emotionally Intelligent Kids
How can we empower kids to recognize and manage difficult feelings, especially when those skills may be new to us too? Alyssa Blask Campbell, author of the new book TINY HUMANS, BIG EMOTIONS, shows us how to foster emotional intelligence in our kids.
Alyssa is the CEO of Seed & Sew, which supports teachers and families with tools for regulation, connection, and emotional intelligence. Alyssa is also the host of the podcast “Voices of Your Village.”
Alyssa, Amy, and Margaret discuss:
The main difference between parenting today and how most of us were parented
The five components of emotional intelligence
Collaborative Emotional Processing, Alyssa's framework for building long-term emotional intelligence in kids
Here's where you can find Alyssa:
https://www.seedandsew.org
@seed.and.sew on IG
Buy TINY HUMANS, BIG EMOTIONS: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780063306264
Listen to the "Voices of Your Village" podcast - a new addition to the Adalyst Media network!
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10/20/2023 • 35 minutes, 10 seconds
Is There Just Too Much Information?
“Information overload” is defined as the tipping point when the input of information exceeds an individual’s capacity to process it all. When we begin to feel overwhelmed and stressed by the amount of information that is available, we can end up feeling more stressed and overwhelmed than knowledgeable.
For parents, the urge to find certainty through online research—only to end up feeling even less certain—is particularly common. How can we make the constant availability of information, useful and otherwise, work for us rather than against?
Amy and Margaret discuss:
How "information overload" can reduce decision-making abilities
Whether obsessive internet searching is the result, or cause, of low self-confidence in parents
How to know your limits, and then set them
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Terese Glatz and Melissa A. Lippold. “Is more information always better? Associations among parents’ online information searching, information overload, and self-efficacy.” International Journal of Behavioral Development.
Jessica Runberg for The Washington Post: Is crowdsourced parenting eroding confidence?
Cara Goodwin for Psychology Today: New Study: Information Overload for Parents
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10/18/2023 • 34 minutes, 7 seconds
Ask Margaret: My Spouse and I Disagree About Bedtime
What do we do when we disagree with our parenting partners about bedtime routines for our little ones?
Here's how to get on the same side of the net against this issue.
A listener writes:
"My husband and I disagree about how to handle bedtime for our 5-year-old. It’s been a struggle to get her to sleep before 11 pm. My husband wants to tell her "you need to be in bed now" when it’s 9 pm or 9:30. This kicks off a huge temper tantrum and sets bedtime back even further. I say, just let her play until she’s tired. Any advice on how to handle different approaches to bedtime routines?"
Kids of preschool age need about 10-13 hours of sleep (including naps), so if a 5-year-old is going to bed at 11 p.m., they may not be getting enough rest.
On the other hand, changing up a young child's bedtime routine can result in an "extinction burst," or a pushback against this new and unexpected boundary. Know ahead of time that it may take about two weeks of hard work to successfully establish a new bedtime with your child that works for everyone.
As far as discussing it with your parenting partner, remember to get on the same side of the net against the problem. The issue is a bedtime routine that has become stressful for everyone, including your 5-year-old.
Here's the link to the article Margaret mentions in the episode:
Mayo Clinic: "Child sleep: Put preschool bedtime problems to rest"
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10/16/2023 • 7 minutes, 25 seconds
Fresh Take: Vanessa Kroll Bennett and Dr. Cara Natterson on Puberty
These days, early is normal for puberty onset—and early is REALLY early. That means kids whose brains might not match the way they look, and parents who are freaking out about how to bring these delicate matters up in conversation.
Help is here! Dr. Cara Natterson and Vanessa Kroll Bennett, co-hosts of The Puberty Podcast and co-authors of the new book This Is So Awkward: Modern Puberty Explained, offer clear explanations (for parents and kids both!) and ways to start talking.
Margaret, Amy, Vanessa, and Cara discuss:
How puberty has changed in the past few decades
Why we should treat kids as the age they are, not the age they appear
Why "the talk" isn't a one-and-done conversation
Here's where you can find Vanessa and Cara:
https://orderofmagnitude.co/
IG and TikTok: @spillingthepubertea
Buy This is So Awkward: Modern Puberty Explained: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780593580950
Listen to The Puberty Podcast
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10/13/2023 • 40 minutes, 8 seconds
We're Still Cringing
Whether it's the dreaded email sent to the wrong person or greetings gone wrong, we've all got moments we can't stop playing in our heads over and over. Here are some of our cringiest moments.
Amy and Margaret discuss:
Grammar school cringe
High school cringe
Dating cringe
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10/11/2023 • 43 minutes, 29 seconds
Ask Amy: When Kids Have Negative Self-Talk
How can we support our kids' self-esteem when they take their frustrations out on themselves? Amy offers some tips for helping kids express frustration without getting down on themselves in the process.
Keara asks:
"My 4-year-old daughter is in preschool and just moved into a new classroom. Since then she’s been saying some unsettling things when she’s upset or thinks she’s in trouble. She’ll curl into a ball on the floor and say things like “I’m not good enough,” or “I ruined everything,” or “I’m not beautiful enough." I’m so afraid that’s the beginning of her inner monologue. How can I help her unlearn that kind of thinking at home?"
Asking your child's teacher if there is in fact negative messaging happening at school is a good place to start. And you'll also want to ascertain if your kid is showing low frustration tolerance at school as well as at home, because the issue may lie more with increased frustration than with decreased self-esteem.
If your child is saying these things only when they're upset or scared, that's another good sign that this is a way to express frustration that she's trying on, but which might not be the source of the frustration. It's an indication that her self-esteem isn't the issue so much as her ability to express these feelings of overwhelm.
The most effective times to support your child's self-esteem are when she's not already dysregulated and upset. At those times, reassure her with your calming presence, but don't feel like you have to get her to unsay it all in the moment. She probably won't be able to respond in the way you want when she's upset.
Take advantage of quiet moments to lean into positive self-talk. Pause those Disney movies (all of them have this moment) when the protagonist doubts themselves, and show your kid that even though people may doubt themselves, they can still get there in the end.
Here's the link to the book that Amy mentions:
A SMART GIRL'S GUIDE: LIKING HERSELF from American Girl
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10/9/2023 • 6 minutes, 6 seconds
Fresh Take: Catherine McCarthy, Heather Tedesco, and Jennifer Weaver on Raising Adaptable Kids
We may think that eliminating all anxiety from our kids' lives is the endgame. But Dr. Catherine McCarthy, Heather Tedesco, PhD, and Jennifer Weaver, authors of the new book "Raising a Kid Who Can," discuss why admitting you don't have all the answers is actually necessary to help kids thrive.
Dr. Catherine McCarthy, Heather Tedesco, PhD, and Jennifer Weaver, LCSW are mental health experts, whose work provides parents with the tools they need to navigate a complex world and help their kids move from anxious to adaptable.
Margaret, Jennifer, Catherine, and Heather discuss:
Why we're living in the age of anxiety—and how to help kids navigate it
Why letting our kids talk about their feelings too much can backfire
Why the goal isn't zero anxiety
Here's where you can find Catherine, Heather, and Jennifer:
www.raisingakidwhocan.com
@akidwhocan on IG
#raisingakidwhocan
Buy RAISING A KID WHO CAN: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9781523518593
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10/6/2023 • 31 minutes, 58 seconds
Keeping Up with Friends Without Kids
Why do we find it hard to stay connected to our friends without kids? Does the total separation of our daily experience, once we become parents, mean those friendships cannot remain the same?
Allison P. Davis's recent cover story for New York magazine, When One Friend Has a Baby and the Other Doesn't, explored this dilemma from the childfree-by-choice point of view. Here's our own take on how our friendships have morphed and changed since we became parents.
In this episode we discuss:
Why our friends without kids aren't wrong to be annoyed by us sometimes
Why we’re not conditioned to put the same amount of effort into friendships as we do other relationships
How to know if a friendship is worth the long-term effort
Here are links to some other resources mentioned in this episode:
Christine Organ for Motherly: Motherhood feels lonelier than ever
Fortesa Latifi for The Washington Post: "Spoon theory: What it is and how I use it to manage chronic illness"
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10/4/2023 • 45 minutes, 39 seconds
Ask Margaret: How Do I Handle Devices on Playdates?
Do we have the authority to keep other kids off their own devices in our home?
A listener wrote in to ask:
"How have you all handled other kids' devices in your home? My 9-year-old daughter has neighborhood friends come over most days. There is an 11-year-old with an iPhone and little to no restrictions on its use. Is it overstepping to say that if another kid's device comes in, it has to stay on our kitchen table until they leave?"
Margaret says that it's totally within your control to decide how devices are used in your own house. Have a basket where phones and tablets can be placed at the beginning of a playdate. Or allow their use only in the areas of the house where you can monitor their use.
Don't feel bad about keeping a hard line, even if you get comments or eyerolls from kids. You'll feel much better if you don't have to constantly worry about what kids might be doing on their devices in your house—because that really is your responsibility.
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10/2/2023 • 6 minutes, 37 seconds
Fresh Take: Esau McCaulley, "How Far To The Promised Land"
How can we talk about America’s ongoing legacy of racism without sliding into despair? In his new memoir HOW FAR TO THE PROMISED LAND, Esau McCaulley tells his own story—and questions why Black failure is judged collectively, while Black success is perceived as the merit of an individual.
Rev. Esau McCaulley, PhD, is an author and associate professor of New Testament at Wheaton College. His work has been published in The New York Times, The Atlantic, the Washington Post, and Christianity Today.
Esau and Amy discuss:
Why "escaping poverty" is a misleading term
How experiences that set the context for heroic bravery also create the possibility for failure
What caused Esau to change his definition of justice
Here's where you can find Esau:
www.esaumccaulley.com
@OfficialEsauMcCaulley on Facebook
@esaumccaulley on Twitter on Instagram
Buy HOW FAR TO THE PROMISED LAND: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780593241080
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9/29/2023 • 34 minutes, 15 seconds
Making It Work With Extended Family
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How do we maintain healthy relationships with our extended family, whether they live five or five hundred miles away? Amy and Margaret talk about how their own extended families operate, and what works best to keep everyone connected.
Amy and Margaret discuss:
The types of conflicts that extended families typically experience
The value of extended family—whether or not they live nearby
How to model healthy extended family relationships for your kids
Here are some links to further reading on the topic:
Michele Meleen for Love to Know: Definition of Extended Families: Meanings and Roles
Kiley Hurst for Pew Research Center: More than half of Americans live within an hour of extended family
Frank Bruni for The NYT: "Tolstoy and Miss Daisy"
Megan Carnegie for BBC Family Tree: The tensions that fan tricky in-law relationships
Karen L. Fingerman, et. al, for Purdue University: In-Law Relationships Before and After Marriage: Husbands, Wives, and Their Mothers-in-Law
Fatherly: 16 Tips For Creating Healthy Boundaries With Your Extended Family
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9/27/2023 • 39 minutes, 59 seconds
Ask Amy: I've Got a Bedtime Staller
How do we get our savvy stallers to get ready for bed in a reasonable amount of time? Amy gives a listener some tools for speeding up a bedtime slowpoke.
Nici came to our Facebook group to ask:
"Please help this mom of a very smart and savvy 11-year old who is some kind of Jedi master of STALLING. He knows it’s bedtime. He doesn’t want to go to bed. But instead of outright complaining, he subtly and consistently stalls his bedtime by doing little tiny things to stall the process. Pointing out each little thing he’s doing in order to stall is annoying and only makes him dig his heels in more. I love him so much, and I know this is all probably a ploy for attention, BUT COME ON. I feel like we give him a LOT of attention throughout the day and in general. What can I do?"
What is your kid getting out of stalling? Maybe they do want to just stay up later. It could be that his bedtime needs to be rolled back by half an hour.
You can also try doing the unpreferred activities before the preferred one. All the bedtime stuff (homework, shower, pajamas, teeth, whatever it is) comes before the preferred activity (TV, gaming, time with you).
When something with a kid becomes an ongoing struggle, the best place to start is to ask these two questions: what can I add? What can I take away?
You might add external motivation, rewards, a later weekend bedtime.
You might take away your presence while he stalls, the dog that is there to distract him, the sugary treats that might be revving him up.
Work these dials one at a time, and have patience. Once you figure out a kid's secondary gain, and/or the currency that motivates them, things will usually fall into place.
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9/25/2023 • 7 minutes, 33 seconds
Fresh Take: Minna Dubin on Mom Rage
After Minna Dubin's New York Times essay on mom rage went viral, she received hundreds of messages from other parents, thanking her for daring to explore something most of us would rather pretend doesn't exist. Dubin was therefore inspired to write the new book MOM RAGE: The Everyday Crisis of Modern Motherhood, to explore what exactly mom rage is, where it comes from, and what we can do about it.
Minna's writing has appeared in the New York Times, Salon, Parents, among others, and as a leading feminist voice on mom rage, Minna has appeared on MSNBC, Good Morning America, and NPR.
In this interview, Minna and Amy discuss:
Why mom rage is a complex multi-phase physiological and psychological cycle that starts long before we explode
The societal neglect of mothers, and how it contributes
What does—and doesn't—work to mitigate our mom rage
We discussed Minna's original essay, and our own takes on mom rage, in this additional episode.
Here's where you can find Minna:
@minnadubin on IG, Twitter, Threads
https://minnadubin.com
Buy MOM RAGE: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9781541601307
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9/22/2023 • 30 minutes, 22 seconds
Best of: Sick Day Hacks
One day out of school? Fine, here’s the remote. But by day four of a low-grade temp— just enough to keep the kid home— most parents get rather desperate for ideas. We are both unfortunate experts on the topic of kids’ sick days, and here's what we've learned.
This is a "Best Of" episode from the pre-Covid days. If your kid might have Covid, definitely ignore any "they're probably fine, just send them" advice you may hear in this episode!
Amy and Margaret discuss:
what you should already have around the house in anticipation of those “Mommy, I don’t feel well” moments
why sick days are not the time to introduce a new skill
why we must always beware secondary gain
Here’s links to some research and articles with great ideas for sick-day kids that we discuss:
Stephanie Morgan for Momtastic: 10 Activities When Sickness Has You Stuck At Home
from NPR: Should My Slightly Sick Child Stay Home? The Rules Often Conflict
and most importantly, this sobering read, from Heather Murphy for the New York Times: Fish Depression is Not a Joke
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9/20/2023 • 49 minutes, 48 seconds
Fresh Take: Devorah Heitner on Growing Up in Public
How do we help our kids navigate the possibility of going viral online for one little mistake? Devorah Heitner, author of the new book Growing Up in Public: Coming of Age in a Digital World, explains how we can protect our kids online without invading their privacy.
Devorah Heitner is a leading authority on raising resilient and kind kids in our always-connected world. Her writing on kids and technology has appeared in The New York Times and The Washington Post, among others.
Devorah, Amy, and Margaret discuss:
what accountability for mistakes should look like for kids
what drives parents to overtrack their kids online - and the consequences
mentoring versus monitoring our kids' digital activity
Here's where you can find Devorah:
Instagram: @devorahheitnerphd
Twitter: @DevorahHeitner
Website: devorahheitner.com
Buy GROWING UP IN PUBLIC: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780593420966
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9/15/2023 • 38 minutes, 7 seconds
Back-to-School Back-to-Ones
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Getting-ready playlists? Choosing outfits the night before? Bringing snacks to the pickup line? We asked our audience about their favorite back-to-school tips... and we also allowed some venting about back-to-school craziness as well.
Amy and Margaret discuss:
To make lunch or not to make lunch
How to keep outfits clean at breakfast
The best time to grocery shop
Here are links to resources mentioned in the episode:
Read the full Facebook thread here and if you're not already part of our amazing group, you can join at www.facebook.com/groups/whatfreshhellcast!
Watch the short film Amy mentions: "How Was Your Day?" directed by Allison Hadar and Maddie Corman
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9/13/2023 • 44 minutes, 51 seconds
Ask Margaret: How Do You Get Your Kids to Part with Their Toys?
How do we get rid of the giant dollhouse or racecar track that our kid insists they ALWAYS play with? (Even though they don't.) Here's how to clean house while remaining on your kid's team.
A listener on Facebook asks:
"How have you been able to get your younger children to part with toys? I’m trying to get rid of the giant four-foot dollhouse we were gifted several years ago. My daughter is 4 and I think she only ever played with it 3 or 4 times (years ago), yet she is so attached to it! Did I mention it’s huge?! Oh and I hate it! I typically get rid of things they don’t play with when the they aren’t around, but this is like a piece of furniture and she’ll definitely notice its absence."
There are two paths to getting this dollhouse out once and for all, Margaret explains. Playing the role of teammate and the role of benevolent dictator.
Playing teammate means asking for your kid's help on how to get the dollhouse to someone who would appreciate it more. Playing benevolent dictator means acknowledging your child's love of the toy while holding firm on your stance of getting rid of it.
Margaret prefers the teammate approach - your kid should feel heard, but they should also know you're in charge and have final say in the toy department.
It's a good idea to rotate your child's toys out of site for a bit so that once they come out again, they feel new and exciting. And check in with your child regularly about which toys they're actually playing with to help them understand what's most important to them.
Here's the link to the resource Margaret mentions in the episode:
Birute Efe for Kidsactivities.com: "10 Ways to Get Rid of Toys without Drama"
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9/12/2023 • 7 minutes, 27 seconds
Ask Amy: My Child Is Not Nice to Her Grandparents
How do we teach our children that it's not okay to say mean things about family members, especially in front of them?
Diana emailed us to say:
"My 5-year-old daughter has a clear and strong preference for my in-laws versus my own parents, I think because she saw more of them when she was little, so is more comfortable with them. It hurts my feelings and also hurts theirs. She is very honest about her feelings and will say that she doesn’t want them to come over, doesn’t want them to sit next to her, doesn’t want them to stay when they do come over.
I hoped by seeing them more she would warm up and she usually does have a good time with them once she settles in, but she’s still saying hurtful things. I would greatly appreciate any advice on making the situation more manageable."
When children are expressing repeated resistance to spending time with certain grownups, it's always important to rule out whether there's another, more serious and unexpressed reason for that resistance. Once that's been ruled out, consider what secondary gain your child might be receiving from saying these things.
Most 5-year-olds are old enough to have empathy, and understand when they've hurt others' feelings. It's also an age by which kids can usually learn to control their impulses. A child who is saying rude things to their friends and teachers, and not just at home, might need a little scaffolding around impulse control, and learning more appropriate ways to express her frustration. In that case, these hurtful comments can become teachable moments for fostering emotional intelligence.
On the other hand, if only one person or setting is the location for these rude comments, then you know that it is in your child's control to express their frustrations differently. Model what you expect, hold the line, and you should see improvement.
For more resources and ideas, check out this article:
Amy Morin for VeryWell Family: 10 Ways to Handle Disrespectful Behavior
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9/11/2023 • 6 minutes, 58 seconds
Fresh Take: Dr. Emily Edlynn on Autonomy-Supportive Parenting
How do we reconcile the desire to give our kids independence with the desire to protect them from the world? Dr. Emily Edlynn, author of the new book Autonomy-Supportive Parenting: Reduce Parental Burnout and Raise Competent, Confident Children, explains how we can let go of the anxiety-driven controlling impulses inherent in modern parenting.
In this interview, Dr. Edlynn and Margaret discuss:
The intersection of autonomy-supportive parenting and neurodiverse kids
What an autonomy-supportive environment looks like (and what gets in the way)
Tools we can use to prevent overparenting
Here's where you can find Dr. Edlynn:
www.emilyedlynnphd.com
@DrEmilyEdlynn on IG, Twitter, LinkedIn
The Art and Science of Mom, Emily Edlynn, PhD on FB
Buy AUTONOMY-SUPPORTIVE PARENTING: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9781641709767
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9/8/2023 • 33 minutes, 23 seconds
I've Got a Mom for That
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We've got a mom for that! We asked our listeners what specialties you're the go-to people for. In this episode we discuss those unique and useful talents, from being the one who can pack an entire sectional into an SUV, to being the one who can make dinner for six out of a basically empty pantry.
To that end, if you'd like to be the mom for that, Amy recommends Sam Sifton's book No-Recipe Recipes in this episode.
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9/6/2023 • 45 minutes, 42 seconds
Ask Margaret: Should I Quit the School's Group Chat?
"I am part of a WhatsApp chat with other parents in my child's nursery. It's not set up by the nursery, nor does it seem to have all of the parents in it. The problem is it's very unpleasant and dominated by a small minority of very vocal complainers. It's causing me some anxiety and some distrust of the nursery which objectively seems unwarranted. What can I do?"
Group chats are a double-edged sword. Some are amazing, like the What Fresh Hell Facebook group, and some are anxiety-causing and more trouble than they're worth.
It's not your job to convince the other parents that they're being too negative - it IS your job to opt out for your own sanity and mental health, though. And it's perfectly fine to do so.
You can quit completely or just mute notifications and go in to ask a genuine question every once in a awhile. It can occasionally be useful to know when certain events are happening or if there is an early dismissal, for example.
Ultimately, engage with the conversations that are useful, and excuse yourself from the unhelpful negativity and complaining - you'll thank yourself later!
Special thanks to our sponsor, Pampers:
For trusted protection, choose Pampers, the #1 Pediatrician Recommended Brand. Download the Pampers Club App today to start earning free diapers.
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9/4/2023 • 5 minutes, 47 seconds
BEST OF: Debbie Reber on Parenting Kids Who Are Differently Wired
“It's becoming increasingly clear that different ways of being are more 'normal' than most people realize, and that is truer with each passing year," says Debbie Reber, author of Differently Wired: Raising an Exceptional Child in a Conventional World. In this "Best of" Fresh Take, Debbie offers concrete, actionable ideas that will allow us to become exceptional parents to our exceptional kids.
Debbie Reber is a parenting activist, bestselling author, speaker, and the founder of TiLT Parenting, a top podcast, community, and educational resource for parents raising differently wired children.
Debbie, Amy, and Margaret discuss:
why typical suggestions for parenting neurodivergent kids can be inadequate
finding opportunities to "tilt" our parenting, rather than struggling to straighten our child
why small changes can have big impacts for differently wired kids
Here's where you can find Debbie:
https://www.debbiereber.com/
@debbiereber on Twitter
@DeborahReberAuthor on Facebook
Buy Debbie's book: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9781523506316
TiLT Parenting is now part of the Adalyst Media network! Check out all of our amazing podcasts at adalystmedia.com.
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9/1/2023 • 40 minutes, 15 seconds
BEST OF: How Little Parenting Can We Get Away With? (with guest James Breakwell)
Sometimes we need to stop trying so hard for things to get easier. We asked our listeners: where’s an area of your parenting where you got better results by doing less?
In this episode we discuss our listeners' best advice on how to parent more lightly by caring less about our children’s:
homework
potty training
outfits
palates
basic hygiene
birthday parties
We also talk “bare minimum parenting” in its many forms with guest James Breakwell, author of Bare Minimum Parenting: The Ultimate Guide to Not Quite Ruining Your Child.
James says bare minimum parenting isn’t about the number of kids you have: “Two children aren’t twice as much work as one. If you’re already yelling at the first kid, just add the name of the second kid at the end.” For James, bare minimum parenting is about playing the long game. Can you look around at a group of adults and pick out which ones had baby massage or language-immersion preschool? Okay, sometimes they’re dead ringers. But most of the time you can’t, and we think James’s new book is slyly revolutionary in the way it enables all of us to do less, worry less, and get our kids to pretty much the same place in the end.
In other words, Bare Minimum Parenting doesn’t have to mean no rules. It can mean basic rules that work for your family. But those rules aren’t set by the family next door, or that clickbait-y guilt-inducing article you just read.
And when the rules don’t work? Put them aside for a bit. No regrets.
ICYMI: in this episode Margaret mentions this slackline as her key to bare minimum backyard fun— her kids play on it for hours.
Here's where you can find James:
Buy James's book: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9781982599294
@XplodingUnicorn on Twitter
@ExplodingUnicorn on Facebook
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
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8/30/2023 • 48 minutes, 29 seconds
Ask Amy: What Age Is Old Enough for Social Media?
At what age are our children ready for the sometimes shark-infested waters of social media? What limits can we set and tactics can we use to keep them safe while allowing them to communicate with their friends and stay connected?
Megan sent an email to [email protected] to ask:
"I’m getting so worried about social media as my kids grow older. As a mom of three (ages 9, 12, and 14), I find myself at a loss when it comes to navigating this digital landscape. My oldest, who is in 8th grade, is starting to express a desire to get social media. She keeps talking about how all of her friends have it. However, I can’t help but worry about the unrealistic standards it sets, and how that could affect her development and self-esteem.
Am I crazy for not wanting her to get Instagram and Tiktok? I want her to grow up like an average kid and not miss out on things her friends are doing. I just wish social media wasn’t so toxic, especially for girls."
Your kid is likely telling the truth when she says that most of her peers are on social media. That doesn't mean your concerns as a parent for her safety and privacy aren't incredibly valid.
Social media doesn't have to be an either absolutely-none or no-holds-barred decision. Privacy settings, and controlling what your child is posting, give you some control. It's possible to start with tighter reins and more oversight and then slowly let out the slack line.
Take the particulars of your own kid into consideration. You know what's right for your kid. Set the rules you want with an open dialogue, rather than have it become something that your daughter can't talk about with you at all.Approaching social media with your child, rather than forbidding until she figures out how to do it behind your back, is probably the better option.
Links to resources Amy mentions in the episode:
Wait Until 8th: https://www.waituntil8th.org/
Devorah Heitner's book Growing Up In Public: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780593420966
Bark.us (use this code for a free trial: https://www.bark.us/?ref=2R4XYRK)
Special thanks to our sponsor, Pampers:
For trusted protection, choose Pampers, the #1 Pediatrician Recommended Brand. Download the Pampers Club App today to start earning free diapers.
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8/28/2023 • 7 minutes, 17 seconds
Fresh Take: Jennifer Wallace on Achievement Pressure
Two recent national studies underlined that there's a surprising group of children at risk for worse mental health outcomes: kids who go to high-achieving schools. How do we protect our kids from the pressures all around them to succeed at any cost? Jennifer Wallace, author of the new book Never Enough, shows us how to teach our kids that they matter intrinsically.
Jennifer Wallace is an award-winning journalist and a frequent contributor to the Wall Street Journal and the Washington Post. She lives in New York City with her husband and their three teenagers.
Amy, Margaret, and Jennifer discuss:
Why achievement pressure is at an all-time high
How parents contribute to, but are not solely responsible for, this pressure
How to teach our kids that they matter independently of their achievements
Here's where you can find Jennifer:
jenniferbwallace.com
@jenniferbwallace on IG
@jennifer.b.wallace on FB
Buy Jennifer's book: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780593191866
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
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8/25/2023 • 33 minutes, 9 seconds
When Typical Parenting Advice Just Doesn't Fit
What happens when the usual parenting advice feels zero-percent applicable to our own situation? The first step is to let go of any "second arrow" self-blame that that is the case. The second step is to chart our own paths.
Amy and Margaret discuss:
What types of kids may not benefit from the one-size-fits-all parenting advice
Why the concept of default parenting advice is harmful
Why kids "irritating behaviors" are signs that they are growing and learning appropriately
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Sarah Lyons for Western NY Family Magazine: "One Size Doesn't Fit All"
Our episode "When Your Kid Doesn't Fit the Mold"
Jeanie Lerche Davis for WebMD: 10 Commandments of Good Parenting
Dana Bosu: How to Cope When Your Child is Different
Andrew Solomon: Far From the Tree
Ross Greene: The Explosive Child
Rita Eichenstein: Not What I Expected
Deborah Reber: Differently Wired
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8/23/2023 • 43 minutes, 1 second
Ask Margaret: My Kid Won't Eat a Bite of Dinner!
What do we do when, despite every tactic we can think of, our child refuses to eat dinner? Margaret puts a mom's anxieties around missed meals into perspective.
Jillian asks:
"What do you do when your two-and-a-half-year-old absolutely refuses to put a lick of dinner in her mouth? Night after night I offer multiple items. We've tried eating on the couch and in front of theTV, hoping the mindless eating scenario might happen. None of it has worked. At my wit's end!"
Margaret recommends buying the book Child of Mine: Feeding with Love and Good Sense by Ellen Satter. Satter explains that the parent decides what to serve, and the child decides what to eat. It's not our job to force feed our kids when they would rather be doing anything else. They may simply not be hungry, especially if they had a late afternoon snack.
If you think there's something serious underlying this reluctance to eat, definitely reach out to your pediatrician. But if your child eats well at other meals, there is probably not reason for concern. Don't chase your child's behavior and bend over backwards to get them to eat at all costs. Even if they don't want to eat, they can sit quietly at the table while everyone else enjoys dinner. If they start throwing food or otherwise misbehaving, don't hesitate to end the meal for them or otherwise give appropriate consequences.
And as Margaret can attest from the other side, it will get better as they get older!
Special thanks to our sponsor, Pampers:
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8/21/2023 • 6 minutes, 10 seconds
Fresh Take: Bea Kim on Rediscovering Yourself After Motherhood
What does it mean to have an identity outside being a mother? How do we forge a new sense of self that includes motherhood but isn't defined by it? Life coach Bea Kim provides tips for defining our true values and then living those values out.
Bea Kim is the founder of Parent Refresh, a company that provids parent-focused services through life coaching, fitness, and community, and Awaken, a diversity, equity, and inclusion educational company.
Bea and Margaret discuss:
The liminal space between pre- and post-parenthood
How mismanaged expectations cause problems for new moms
What it means to define our own values and why it's important for mothers
Here's where you can find Bea:
https://beakim.com/
https://medium.com/bea-kim-coaching on Medium
https://www.linkedin.com/in/beabahn/ on LinkedIn
@beakimcoaching on IG
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8/18/2023 • 34 minutes, 29 seconds
Crazymakers
We all know someone who causes chaos, lawful and otherwise, wherever they go. Those people, are called "crazymakers," a term first coined by Julia Cameron and which perfectly describes the unwelcome disruption they bring to our own peace of mind. Here's how to spot the crazymakers in your life, and how to avoid getting caught up in their mischief.
Margaret and Amy discuss:
The true definition of a crazymaker and the three top types
Why crazymakers use low-power strategies of dominance
How maintaining your own self worth helps deter crazymakers
Check us out on YouTube!
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8/16/2023 • 45 minutes, 35 seconds
Ask Amy: Should I Care If My Teenagers Curse?
How do we tell our kids not to curse when they insist that everyone around them—maybe even their parents—do so? Amy explains different scenarios for cursing and what she deems appropriate for her own kids.
A listener asks:
"Can you talk about when kids curse, when we curse...does it matter? My kids are almost 13 and 15 and they say everyone curses. We allow some cursing—heck, we have even been known to toss out some ourselves—but now I think my oldest curses too much and yet she is a straight A student."
When it comes to younger kids, Amy explains, it pays to be strict about cursing or else you'll run out of room to enforce rules around such things when they're older.
There's a big difference between cursing at, say, a stubbed toe, and cursing at someone or calling them a curse word. The latter never flies in Amy's house. You can also differentiate for your kids the kinds of conversations that happen amongst friends and those that occur in formal settings like school and work.
Special thanks to our sponsor, Pampers:
For trusted protection, choose Pampers, the #1 Pediatrician Recommended Brand. Download the Pampers Club App today to start earning free diapers.
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8/14/2023 • 4 minutes, 41 seconds
Fresh Take: Jamilla Svansson-Brown on How Motherhood Changes Us
Can we grieve the person we were before motherhood? Jamilla Svansson-Brown, who runs a YouTube channel with her wife Que, discusses how motherhood changes us, strengthening marriages, and listening to people with different lived experiences.
Jamilla and Que are a two-mom family based in Atlanta, GA, who have been creating content for over 7 years after recognizing a gap in the influencer industry and not seeing creators who were Black Women, Fem/Masc presenting, or a part of the LGBTQ community.
Jamilla and Margaret discuss:
How parenthood changes our relationships with our partners
How the division of labor works in the Svansson-Brown household
What it means to be an authentic ally
Here's where you can find Jamilla and Que:
www.jamillaandque.com
@jamillaandque on YouTube, TikTok, and IG
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
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8/11/2023 • 33 minutes, 52 seconds
BEST OF: Ditching What Doesn't Matter (with the Lazy Genius)
Are people with clean houses doing a bit? Are people with messy ones somehow less worthy? Kendra Adachi, author of THE LAZY GENIUS WAY tells us how to make a just-good-enough system that works for exactly us - and stop caring about everything else.
Kendra Adachi also hosts "The Lazy Genius" podcast and is the mother of three young kids.
Kendra, Margaret, and Amy discuss:
How to implement systems that are practical rather than Pinterest-worthy
Why we should stop applauding chaos as the only indicator of vulnerability
The power of putting everything in its place
Here's where you can find Kendra:
www.thelazygeniuscollective.com
Buy The Lazy Genius Way: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780525653936
@thelazygenius on IG
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8/9/2023 • 45 minutes, 16 seconds
Ask Margaret: My Child Is Being Ostracized
When our child is suddenly being left out of their friend group, how can we help them cope without giving in to our own emotions about the situation?
A member of our Facebook group writes:
"My 9-year-old finally made a new group of friends this year in school, and the other day at recess they announced that they don’t want to be her friend anymore.
She is crushed, and while I know this is part of growing up, I don’t know how to help her. I let her stay home today- to be honest, partly so she doesn’t have to endure a recess with this group of girls ignoring her or worse.
I know missing school is not the answer. How can I help her? "
Margaret reminds this listener that she's not on the emotional roller coaster with her kid in this situation - rather, she is a neutral and safe space for her child to express their feelings about the situation.
It's important to let your child feel whatever they need to about the situation without trying to "fix" them or suggesting how they might behave differently in order to gain entry back into the friend group. Remind them that they can only control how they react to the situation, and empower them to focus on other friendships, hobbies, and activities for the time being.
In the meantime, watch out for signs that your child is suffering from severe bullying, such as weight loss, loss of appetite, or loss of interest in normal activities - this could mean that they need a more robust form of intervention on their behalf.
Here are links to some resources Margaret mentions:
Sherri Gordon for VeryWell Family: 7 Tips for Helping Kids Deal With Being Ostracized
Our episode about bullies
Our episode "Mean Girls with Katie Hurley"
Special thanks to our sponsor, Pampers:
For trusted protection, choose Pampers, the #1 Pediatrician Recommended Brand. Download the Pampers Club App today to start earning free diapers.
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8/7/2023 • 8 minutes, 9 seconds
Fresh Take: Lara Love Hardin
What happens when your perfect life comes crumbling down? Lara Love Hardin, author of the new memoir "The Many Lives of Mama Love" shares her experiences of addiction and incarceration, how it affected her children, and how it shaped the new life she has now.
Amy and Lara discuss:
What it's like to parent from prison
How the prison system keeps women down
How Lara found her own version of redemption
Here's where you can find Lara:
https://www.laralovehardin.com/
IG: @laralovehardin
Facebook: Lara Love Hardin
Buy Lara's book: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9781982197667
The Gemma Project
Watch Lara's TED Talk
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8/4/2023 • 33 minutes, 17 seconds
We Forgot What Little Kids Were Like
Once your kids are a little bit older, can you be dropped into the madness of having little ones again without missing a beat? Apparently not - here's what Margaret learned after a brief season of tending to little kids again.
Amy and Margaret discuss:
The stakes of babysitting versus parenting
All the little things we block out once our kids are more independent
How times stretches out forever when you've got little kids to entertain all day
If you're near New Braunfels, Texas, check out the McKenna Children's Museum!
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8/2/2023 • 44 minutes, 20 seconds
Ask Amy: I've Already Got the End-of-Summer Scaries
Why is it that summer never seems to be the picture-perfect, sun-washed experience we want for our kids? Amy helps a listener ditch her mom guilt over not providing her kids with the "perfect" summer.
"I have the end of summer scaries. Or end of summer mom guilt. I feel so bummed that I have spent most of the summer in survival mode instead of really enjoying it with my children. I probably have seen way too many of those "you only get 18 summers" posts. My oldest starts first grade in two weeks and I feel like I completely failed. I wish we had spent more time swimming, riding bikes, all of that quintessential summer stuff. Instead, I feel like I've spent most of it breaking up fights with his 4 year old brother, keeping the 18 month old from injuring himself, and saying "no" to every request.
I'm notoriously hard on myself so I probably just need a reality check. Does anyone else feel this way?"
It's totally normal to feel like the summer is a more difficult time of year, especially with three little kids to entertain, Amy explains. There are more hours of daylight and more unstructured time.
And, by the way, your kids don't vaporize once they turn 18, and if they're away at college, summer is when you WILL see them, at least somewhat more than you did during the school year. Try to decouple yourself from the overwhelming "you only get 18 summers with your kids" messaging. It robs you of the ability to remain present THIS summer with your kids.
So how do you try and be present with your kids without worrying about how many summers you have left in the bank? Start super small. Declare that it's "ice cream dinner" tonight or let the kids cover the driveway in chalk drawings. The "summer memories" we're supposed to be making are by definition lazy and unstructured. And those little things we may think are nothing special are probably what our kids will look back on most fondly.
Special thanks to our sponsor, Pampers:
For trusted protection, choose Pampers, the #1 Pediatrician Recommended Brand. Download the Pampers Club App today to start earning free diapers.
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7/31/2023 • 5 minutes, 46 seconds
Fresh Take: Ash Brandin, The Gamer Educator
How can we place reasonable limits on our kids' screen time— and how do we know what's reasonable? Ash Brandin, better known on Instagram as @TheGamerEducator, brings their experience as an educator (and gamer) to help families better understand and manage technology in ways that can benefit the entire family.
In this episode, we discuss:
why screens are "value neutral," and why their educational merit is derived more from how screens are being used
the one question we should ask ourselves to know whether screens are okay in a given moment
how to raise kids who will be able to set their own parameters around screens and gaming once we're no longer there to harass them
Here's where you can find Ash:
TheGamerEducator.com
@TheGamerEducator on IG
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7/28/2023 • 35 minutes, 29 seconds
Teaching Kids About Money
Teaching kids about how money works feels ever more important in a world where we pay for things by waving our phones, and where a couple of taps brings us anything we want to our doorstep twenty-four hours later.
Sometimes we feel like protecting our kids from the realities of our financial situations is what is most appropriate. But somewhere along the way we can start teaching kids financial literacy by making our family decisions around money concrete and transparent.
In this episode we discuss:
our children's many "blind spots" around money and spending (and what were once our own)
the differences in spending when people use credit cards versus cash
how to discuss your family's "money values" in terms of what you are (and are not) willing to spend
Here are some links to resources mentioned in the episode:
@bethkobliner on Twitter
BusyKid: What Your Child Can Understand About Money, Age by Age
Beth Kobliner for PBS News Hour: Money habits are set by age 7. Teach your kids the value of a dollar now
Jana B. Woodhouse for How Money Works: Can You Teach Your Kids How Money Works? (Yes!)
Shereen Marisol Meraji and Andee Tagle for NPR's Life Kit: Want to teach your kids about money? Start by including them in the conversation
Johnathan G. Conzelmann and T. Austin Lacy for Brookings: Financial and student loan (il)literacy among US college students
Our episode "Should We Pay Our Kids To Clean Our Rooms?"
Our Fresh Take with Bobbi Rebell
Check us out on YouTube!
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7/26/2023 • 44 minutes, 36 seconds
Ask Margaret: Ground Rules for House Guests
How do you host relatives in your home in a loving and generous way without becoming overwhelmed? Margaret explains that hosts, not guests, get to make the rules for timing and length of their visits.
A listener asked:
Do you have any ground rules or tips and tricks for having family come stay with you? My husband and I live interstate between both of our families of origin, so if they visit, they stay with us. We don't live in a large house and we're finding the line between hospitality and what we can handle hard to draw. How can we simplify our approach?
When people come to your house, it's perfectly acceptable to set ground rules that represent roughly 50% of what you need/want, and 50% of what your guests would prefer. Ultimately, though, it's your house, so you have veto power should a disagreement arise.
You have the right to decide when and how long people come to stay with you. You may get pushback from relatives, but you are within your rights to gently decline their requests. That being said, operate from your maximum place of generosity and do your best to accommodate the people who raised you/your spouse and want to be in their grandkids' lives.
Special thanks to our sponsor, Pampers:
For trusted protection, choose Pampers, the #1 Pediatrician Recommended Brand. Download the Pampers Club App today to start earning free diapers.
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7/24/2023 • 6 minutes, 5 seconds
Fresh Take: Erin Pepler
Why are women expected to love pregnancy and new motherhood without exception or complaint? Erin Pepler, author of the collection of essays "Send Me Into the Woods Alone," discusses the stigma that still persists around mothers expressing difficulty and displeasure with their lives—and how reading and writing about motherhood has improved her own life.
Erin Pepler is a freelance writer whose work has appeared in Today’s Parent, ParentsCanada, SavvyMom, Romper, Scary Mommy, MoneySense, Broadview Magazine and more.
Erin and Amy discuss:
Why pregnancy is "objectively weird"
Why women are expected to downplay their pain and suffering particularly as new mothers
How anxiety can shape us as parents... and when it's time to take a closer look
Here's where you can find Erin:
erinpepler.com
@erinpepler on Instagram and Twitter
@erinpeplerwriter on Facebook
Buy SEND ME INTO THE WOODS ALONE: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9781988784892
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7/21/2023 • 38 minutes, 48 seconds
Why Was This a Thing? Rules We Once Lived By
Rooms where no one was allowed to go? Saving up phone minutes? Opening one kind of cereal at a time? What odd rules did we once live by that we can't imagine following now?
Amy and Margaret discuss:
The Good Room
Snuggies
Peek Freans
Links to references in this episode:
The Onion: Bloodthirsty, Undead Ghoul Advocates Chocolate-Cereal Consumption
"Certain things are for company" - comedian Sebastian Maniscalco
"Company is Coming" - comedian Chris Fleming
Peek Freans
Follow us on Threads @whatfreshhellcast
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7/19/2023 • 43 minutes, 26 seconds
Ask Amy: When Should Kids Stop Sharing a Room?
What are the signs that kids no longer want to share a room, and when do the cons of a shared space outweigh the pros? Amy cites a study or two to help a mom decide what's best for her two boys.
Emily asks:
How do I know when the right time is for my two boys (ages 7 and 8) to stop sharing a room? Are there signs I should be looking for? For context, the boys have shared a room since they were 1 and 2. We have a guest room that we occasionally let one sleep in, but it’s usually just when one is sick. I have heard from other moms that the benefits of sharing a room can expire as they get older, but I am not sure what I should be watching for.
If the current arrangement is working for everyone in the family there's no need to immediately change things up. But there are signs you can watch for that might mean a change is worth consideration.
A child's desire for privacy, siblings who bicker constantly, a divergence in interests or habits, and increasing homework loads are all signs that separate spaces might be needed. Studies also show that kids also get more sleep when they don't share rooms. However, this doesn't necessarily mean separate bedrooms. There could be one room designated for sleeping/study ,and another room designated for play and activity.
Don't feel guilty if your kids need to share a room, or if it just works better for the whole family that way. As far as knowing when it's time to change things, the clearest signal may be if and when one of the room-sharers actually asks for their own space.
Here are links to some resources Amy mentions in the episode:
Erin Quinn-Kong for Sleep Foundation: Having Your Own Room as a Kid May Be Worth 28 Minutes of Sleep
Kara Carrero for Extremely Good Parenting: Should siblings share a bedroom? This research will help you decide!
Special thanks to our sponsor, Pampers:
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7/17/2023 • 5 minutes, 24 seconds
Fresh Take: Raena Boston on Mom Scams
What "scams" about motherhood have we become subject to without really questioning them? What would happen if we stopped subscribing to these ideas?
Raena Boston, founder of the Working Momtras, discusses ways to counteract the sexism inherent in parenting, particularly mothering, and how to make the personal political. Raena is a mom of three, co-founder of the nonprofit Chamber of Mothers, and a fierce advocate for working families.
In this interview, Raena and Margaret discuss:
Mom guilt as a scam and how we can dismantle it
Why dads need parental leave too
What federal paid family leave really means
Here's where you can find Raena:
www.theworkingmomtras.com
@theworkingmomtras on IG
@workingmomtras on Twitter
Listen to our episode with Kate Mangino on her book "Equal Partners"
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7/14/2023 • 35 minutes, 54 seconds
July Bonus TEASER: Ask Us Anything
It's July bonus episode time! We opened up the floor for our listeners to ask us anything, and it turns out we're still learning things about each other after all these years.
Topics include:
The best parenting book Amy has ever read
Pajama grams
Billy Joel's and Bill Clinton's dogs
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7/13/2023 • 2 minutes, 26 seconds
Let's Stop Caring What People Think
What if we didn't let other people's judgments change our game plans—as women, as mothers, and as humans? We're wired to pay attention to what other people think. There's a reason those judgments can be painful. Are there ways we can break free and care less?
In this episode Amy and Margaret discuss...
How our innate need to belong (and not ostracized) is hard-wired
The "behavioral inhibition system" and how it gets triggered
Whose feelings and judgments we should take into account
Why parenting is an especially problematic zone for others' judgments of us
Here are links to some of the resources mentioned in the episode:
Our episode "Parenting With An Audience"
Governor J.B. Pritzker's speech to the 2023 graduates of Northwestern University: "The kindest person in the room is often the smartest."
Rachel Moss for HuffPost UK: How To Actually Stop Caring What Other People Think Of You
hotter.com: At What Age Do You Feel Most Comfortable In Yourself?
Arthur C. Brooks for The Atlantic: No One Cares!
Naomi I. Eisenberger: Why Rejection Hurts: What Social Neuroscience Has Revealed About the Brain’s Response to Social Rejection
Sarah Coyne for The Joplin Globe: Parenting with an audience changes the rules
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7/12/2023 • 41 minutes, 21 seconds
Ask Margaret: My Kid Is Super Slow in the Mornings
How do you let your child experience natural consequences for their slowpoke actions—without going insane yourself?
Listener Katie asks:
"My 11-year-old has trouble meeting deadlines we set for her (running to catch the bus, not getting to bed by her bedtime). When my husband and I try to help her stay on track she talks back or purposefully stalls more! I don’t know how to not get triggered by that. It makes me angry which doesn’t help. Any suggestions? Either for staying calm or what to try with her?
We rely more on consequences than positive reinforcement. I would love my husband to be more of a positive presence in the morning, which might improve things. I’m only partially around for mornings (which doesn’t help). Thanks for at least letting me rant!"
Margaret has been here herself. She coordinated with her child's school and asked them to issue the appropriate disciplines for lateness to her child on days her child was late, removing herself from being responsible for the consequences.
It's important to remember that children aren't just fed by positive attention; negative attention gets them going just as much. Eleven-year-olds typically begin testing boundaries and asserting their independence, since they have no real power of their own at that age.
Try telling your child that they are in charge of their own routines, as well as all consequences for being late. Ask them what they might need from you to make the routine a success—a wake-up call, packing a lunch, whatever the thing may be—and then try to leave them to their own devices. Eventually, they will realize you are serious about their making their own trains run on time.
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7/10/2023 • 6 minutes, 2 seconds
Fresh Take: Hari Kondabolu on "Vacation Baby"
Why shouldn't you tell people your baby name ideas before the baby comes? What happens when the early mornings with a toddler clash with the late-night schedules of comedy clubs?
Comedian Hari Kondabolu, whose new comedy special "Vacation Baby" is available for streaming on YouTube, discusses how parenting has changed his comedy— and the unexpected pleasures, amidst the struggles, of parenting during the pandemic.
Hari Kondabolu has been praised as "one of the most exciting political comics in stand-up." He currently co-hosts the Netflix food competition show “Snack vs. Chef” with Megan Stalter. Hari first achieved widespread recognition for his award-winning documentary "The Trouble With Apu."
In this episode Hari, Amy, and Margaret discuss:
Why having a pet is definitely not the same as having a kid
What he wants his audiences that aren't parents yet to understand about being a dad
Why representation has become even more important to Hari now that he's a parent
Here's where you can find Hari:
harikondabolu.com
Social media: @harikondabolu
Watch "Vacation Baby" on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/HariKondaboluOfficial
Get the extended version of Vacation Baby: https://harikondabolu.bandcamp.com/
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7/7/2023 • 41 minutes, 8 seconds
BEST OF: Setting Boundaries
It often becomes clear to us where our boundaries should have been set only after those lines have been crossed and left far behind. But whether it's with overbearing extended family members or partners who leave socks on the floor, how do we create effective boundaries? Especially after it's been established that we're not very good at it, and especially in a world that doesn't very much like women who aren't afraid to set them?
In this "Best Of" episode we discuss why boundaries should be set early and often– and not just in problematic relationships, either. Healthy boundaries with our spouses, partners, and co-workers are what make long-term relationships possible. And don't forget positive boundaries. Want to start setting aside more money each month? Having one date night a week, or one weekend morning when you get to sleep in? It starts with saying so.
Here are links to some writing on the topic that we discuss in this episode:
Fatherly: 16 Tips For Creating Healthy Boundaries With Your Extended Family
Mark Manson: Boundaries
Elizabeth Earnshaw for Mind Body Green: A Therapist Explains 6 Things People Get Wrong About Setting Boundaries
Sarah Saweikis for Medium: Scared to Set Boundaries? How to Set Boundaries to Improve Your Relationships and Increase Peace of Mind
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7/5/2023 • 47 minutes, 59 seconds
Ask Amy: My Kid Loses Everything!
Tired of buying new everything when your kid inevitably misplaces it? It's natural for kids to be a little disorganized, but if your kid is losing things left and right, there are some simple steps you can take.
A member of our Facebook group asked:
Any suggestions for the kid who loses everything? My son is 9. He lost three sweatshirts in the two months he was in in-person school, a tennis racquet at tennis camp, baseball glove at baseball practice, shin guards at soccer camp… and don’t even get me started on water bottles!
The “lost and found” turned up one of the many things he has lost, but that is it. He swears each time that he put the things in his bag. Unless, there is a sweaty shin guard thief, this obviously is untrue.
We’ve tried charts and check lists. We’ve tried making him earn the replacement items, but nothing seems to stop the constant misplacing of items. HELP!
For the truly forgetful kids, the oft-cited "natural consequences"– if he doesn't have his shin guards, he won't be able to play, and he'll sure remember next time!– rarely work. Your child will feel chagrined, but be just as likely to forget the next time.
In this episode Amy suggests what has worked in her household, like
making reminders unmissable (put the reminder ON the doorknob, not hanging above it)
labeling everything that costs more than the label would (Amy uses oliverslabels.com)
use list-making apps and model using them yourself (Amy uses Workflowy)
Kids do well if they can. Don’t give up on the checklists and the reminders if they don’t work right away. Keep your support system consistent– and non-shaming– and eventually your child will check for those shin guards before he leaves the field.
Here are some resources worth looking into for kids who are a little disorganized:
Check out Carolyn Dalgliesh's ideas for helping forgetful kids get organized: http://www.carolyndalgliesh.com/
Sara Olsher of Mighty + Bright has lots of great tools for helping kids stay organized
Our Fresh Take with Ryan Wexelblatt, the ADHD Dude
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7/3/2023 • 6 minutes, 50 seconds
Fresh Take: Alexandra Robbins on the Lives of Teachers
What does it really take to be a public school teacher in America? Alexandra Robbins, author of "THE TEACHERS: A Year Inside America's Most Vulnerable, Important Profession," illuminates how today's teachers battle against school shootings, shrinking budgets, irate parents and politicians, and the educational system itself.
Alexandra Robbins is an award-winning investigative reporter who has written for publications, including The New York Times, The New Yorker, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, and The Atlantic.
In this interview Alexandra, Amy, and Margaret discuss:
Our common misconceptions about what being a teacher entails
Why the "teacher shortage" is a misnomer
How we can truly support teachers
Here's where you can find Alexandra:
https://alexandrarobbins.com/
Facebook: AuthorAlexandraRobbins
Twitter: @AlexndraRobbins
Instagram: @authoralexandrarobbins
Buy The Teachers: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9781101986752
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6/30/2023 • 33 minutes, 46 seconds
The Best Advice for Dealing with Teenagers
How do we raise healthy, loving, polite, and appreciative teens? Is it humanly possible? From remaining "passively available" to taking our adolescents' seemingly trivial problems seriously, our listeners had great advice for bringing up teenagers.
Amy and Margaret discuss:
The blessing of nerd-dom
How to keep your face in check when talking to your teen
Why it's important to let your teen fail sometimes
Here's our Fresh Take with Michelle Icard, author of "Fourteen Talks by Age 14"
Here's the link to the full thread in our Facebook group
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6/28/2023 • 42 minutes, 58 seconds
Ask Margaret: How Can I Stop Repeating Myself?
How do we get our kids to do things the FIRST time they're asked, not the millionth time? Is it even possible?
A listener from our FB group asks:
"You have often given the advice from the dog-training world not to repeat yourself over and over again, because you are teaching your kids they only have to respond to the 3rd, 7th, or 100th time you ask. My question is: what do I do instead?
Say I tell my toddler, "It's time to go brush teeth," and he ignores me to keep playing because: toddler. If I immediately remove the thing the toddler is playing with and pick him up to go to the bathroom, we are in tantrum land. Then bedtime is delayed by twenty minutes while we calm down.
I don't want to turn every interaction into an exhausting battle of wills, but I also don't want to sound like a broken record. HELP."
When kids are resisting instructions, it's important to suss out the real problems and find solutions for those specific instances.
In this case of asking your toddler to brush their teeth: it's normal to sometimes have to repeat yourself with toddlers. But you also want to establish that you won't repeat yourself until they respond.
You might insert an intermediate step where you say something like "Oh, it looks like you're really enjoying your truck right now. I'm going to go get the toothpaste out and give you a few more minutes." It's a back-to-one situation!
And remember: just because you repeat yourself or get frustrated with your toddler doesn't mean you're doing anything wrong. You're doing the best you can.
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6/26/2023 • 3 minutes, 43 seconds
Fresh Take: Sara Olsher on Talking to Our Kids About Hard Things
When we're going through difficult seasons in our lives—illness, death, divorce, tragedy—it feels easier to protect our kids by leaving them out of the conversation. Sara Olsher, founder of Mighty + Bright, says kids don't miss a thing—and that we're missing the opportunity during such times to help our children learn resilience.
Sara founded Mighty + Bright after guiding her child through her own divorce and cancer diagnosis. Mighty + Bright provides visual schedules, picture books, and other tools to help parents prioritize mental health for their kids, learning together and incorporating coping skills into their day-to-day lives.
In this interview Sara, Margaret, and Amy discuss:
How to raise resilience for ourselves and kids
What works for families who are in hard seasons
Why protecting kids from difficult issues doesn't work
Here's where you can find Sara:
http://mightyandbright.com
@mightyandbrightco
Check out all the amazing children's books Sara has written: https://bookshop.org/contributors/sara-olsher
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6/23/2023 • 32 minutes, 34 seconds
Is This a Midlife Crisis?
What does it mean to have a midlife crisis? What exactly counts as "midlife," and (yikes) are we already in it? Can we avoid the disenchantment and the rash decision-making that stereotypically accompany such times in our lives?
A listener in our Facebook group asked:
"Who has been thru their midlife crisis and how did you deal? Turning 40 next week has me feeling like I've wasted my life. Can I get over the what-ifs?"
In this episode Amy and Margaret discuss:
How American culture has changed its views on aging
Why women and men experience midlife crises differently
Why the age of your children might be the thing triggering your crisis
Here are links to some of the resources discussed in the episode:
Howard P. Chudacoff: How old are you? Age consciousness in American culture
Laurence Steinberg: Crossing Paths: How Your Child's Adolescence Triggers Your Own Crisis
Mark Jackson: Life begins at 40: the demographic and cultural roots of the midlife crisis
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6/21/2023 • 43 minutes, 34 seconds
Ask Amy: Everything Is Fine—Except My Mom Guilt
When our children have a brush with danger, we moms love to punish ourselves for what might have happened. So does society at large. Amy tells a listener how to complete her trauma response and move on from a stressful event.
A listener on Instagram asked:
"How do I move past the mom guilt? I'm the mother to an 18-month-old that loves dogs. We have a rescue. I didn't grow up with dogs. We went for a walk today and came across an informal dog play date that we joined…the dogs were off leash. I asked if it was okay to bring my child, and the other owner said yes. I stupidly at one point let my little one walk away from me.
Another dog came to sniff at her, and my dog kicked into full-on protective mode. The first time I'd ever seen that. My little one almost got hurt. We left soon after that and I never let my child out of my arms again. And once I got home, I Googled and saw, no, you should never take a kid to a dog play park.
I feel so bad, so ashamed. How do I move on?
Amy suggests that this listener is stuck in an incomplete trauma response, which Amelia and Emily Nagoski discuss in their book BURNOUT. It's important, Amy says, to complete the stress cycle, or else you stay stuck in the tunnel (as these authors explain).
In our Ditching Mom Guilt episode, we discussed how mom guilt is a result of magical thinking in your primitive brain. If you're the cause of what's going wrong for your kids, you can also be the solution.
Amy suggests that gratitude-based meditation of "I am safe now, I am safe now" and extra cuddles with the little one can help complete the stress cycle, along with a healthy dose of self-compassion and conscious uncoupling from the undeserved shame all moms, not dads, are made to feel when their children are perceived to be in danger.
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6/19/2023 • 5 minutes, 27 seconds
Fresh Take: Rainesford Stauffer on Rethinking Ambition
Why do we as women get accused of too much or too little ambition, but never the right amount?
And why are mothers expected to let go of all nonfamilial ambitions once they become parents?
Rainesford Stauffer, author of the new book “All the Gold Stars: Reimagining Ambition and the Ways We Strive," started by completely reconsidering the role of ambition in her own life. In this book, she invites us to redefine ambition for ourselves. Going above and beyond doesn't have to the worthiest thing about us.
In this interview Rainesford and Amy discuss:
How and when Rainesford changed her thoughts around her own ambition
How parenting and ambition intersect
How to define ambition for yourself
Here's where you can find Rainesford:
www.rainesfordstauffer.com
Twitter: @Rainesford
Instagram: @rainesford_stauffer
Buy Rainesford's book: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780306830334
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6/16/2023 • 33 minutes, 1 second
Are Vacations Worth It?
Why don't vacations feel like vacations for moms? Could it be all the prepping, packing, and traveling, with the additional pressure to make memories that will last a lifetime for our little ones?
Here's how to make vacations truly fun and relaxing for the whole family. In this episode we discuss
the wisdom of "taking turns being tired"
why "going with the flow" is not an additive stance to vacation preparation
why vacations get better as kids age
Here are some links to some writing on the topic that we discuss in this episode:
Marie Holmes for HuffPost: Behind Every Precious Vacation Memory Stands An Exhausted Mother
CafeMom: Moms Don't Get to 'Relax' on Family Vacations, For the Husbands Who Don't Get It
Colleen Lanin for Travel Mamas: Ain’t Nobody Happy if Mama Ain’t Happy – Tips for Happy Travel with Kids
The Onion: Mom Spends Beach Vacation Assuming All Household Duties In Closer Proximity To Ocean
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6/14/2023 • 43 minutes, 51 seconds
Ask Margaret: My Kid Is Reacting Badly to Their New Sibling
How do we help our children transition from pampered baby of the family to middle child? Is the resulting misbehavior going to go on forever?
Someone in our Facebook group asked:
"My five-year-old became a middle child a few months ago. He is so sweet and loving to his new little sister, but has been acting out: spitting, running around, saying bad things, hitting another kid in his pre-K class. He has been very difficult at home, too. He was never like this before becoming a middle child. Somebody please just tell me this is a phase."
Yes, it's just a phase, Margaret assures us, citing her own experience being usurped as the baby of the family when she was five. This acting out is boundary-seeking behavior. When presented with changes in the family dynamic, kids will investigate to see if they can get away with more than they were able to previously. You can make your child feel validated in his frustration, but it's still important to set firm boundaries around unacceptable behavior.
Here's the article Margaret suggests:
Kate Marple for BabyCenter: Helping your child adjust to a new sibling
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6/12/2023 • 6 minutes, 43 seconds
Fresh Take: Jamilah Mapp and Erica Dickerson of "Good Moms Bad Choices"
What do we do when we don't fit the "perfect mom" mold? Are we still good mothers even if we don't?
Jamilah Mapp and Erica Dickerson are the co-hosts of the Good Moms, Bad Choices podcast, and the authors of the new book "A Good Mom's Guide to Bad Choices."
In this interview Jamilah, Erica, and Margaret discuss:
Being a single mother
Breaking parenting patterns
What authentic parenting looks like
Here's where you can find Jamilah and Erica:
www.goodmomsbadchoices.com
IG: @goodmoms_badchoices
Twitter: @Thegoodmoms
Listen to Good Moms Bad Choices podcast
Buy A Good Mom's Guide to Bad Choices: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780063161979
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6/9/2023 • 33 minutes, 12 seconds
What Makes You a Great Parent?
From being able to sleep anywhere to pulling loose teeth to staying calm in a crisis, our listeners are great at all kinds of things when it comes to being parents.
Amy and Margaret discuss:
Lowered expectations
Self-care for its own sake
Margaret's Fran Drescher moments
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6/7/2023 • 46 minutes, 4 seconds
June Bonus TEASER: Our Hobbies
Handicrafts? Puzzles? Competitive pickleball? Amy and Margaret discuss hobbies old and new, high-maintenance and low.
Amy and Margaret discuss:
S&H Green Stamps
Pickleball injuries
The Book of Meg
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6/5/2023 • 2 minutes, 49 seconds
Ask Amy: When Other People Discipline Your Kids
What should we do when other people, relatives OR strangers, discipline our kids in front of us? Let it go, or intervene?
Pamela recently wrote us to say:
I'd love to hear your thoughts on handling relatives (or even strangers!) that try to discipline your kids. I recently had family in town and my six-year-old was given quite a few lectures on MINOR behaviors by a relative that has no children of their own. Things such as sitting in a chair well past when he was done eating, or accidentally kicking (when said relative started the roughhousing to begin with…) I’m able to call it out but why oh why does this happen?! Frustrating, to say the least, and confusing for my son!
There are two matrixes that apply here: the "see this person 3 times a week / will never see this person again" axis, and the "totally not their business/ actually my kid was really bothering them" axis.
If a particular example of discipline leaves your child red-faced and tearful, and the adult's reaction seems like an overreach, then attend to your child and make her feel safe. There are usually minimal returns for confrontation with a stranger– let alone a relative– but do what you have to do.
But check your story. Did your kid brush it off and run along to play? Is the worst part of it all the "How dare you!" feelings you're left with? Reprimands from other people aimed at our kids can really sting us, because there are secondary (okay, primary) messages directed at our own parenting choices implicit within them. But if we keep our child's safety as top priority, other people's rights to a nice dinner or a no-throwing-sand sandbox a close second, and our own indignance a little further down the totem pole, knowing what's right to do in a given situation usually gets a little easier.
Special thanks to our sponsor, Pampers:
For trusted protection, choose Pampers, the #1 Pediatrician Recommended Brand. Download the Pampers Club App today to start earning free diapers.
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6/5/2023 • 7 minutes, 28 seconds
Fresh Take: Gaia Bernstein on Gaining Control Over Addictive Technologies
How do we untangle ourselves from technology? We give ourselves a hard time for not being able to put our screens down, but the platforms we use are designed to be addictive. It's not our fault.
Gaia Bernstein's new book: Unwired: Gaining Control Over Addictive Technologies shatters the illusion that we can control how much time we spend on our screens by the force of willpower, timers, or yelling.
Margaret and Gaia discuss:
The psychological forces that make us keep scrolling
What Big Tech and Big Tobacco have in common
Why screen time limiters and other similar methods don't work
Here's where you can find Gaia:
https://gaiabernstein.com/
Twitter: @BernsteinGaia
Buy Gaia's book Unwired: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9781009257930
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6/2/2023 • 32 minutes, 39 seconds
Uh Oh, It's Summer!
Hooray, summer is finally here! No more French quizzes or spirit days to dress for last-minute! So now what? Million-dollar summer camps? Kicking our kids outside from sunup to sundown so they don't drive us crazy?
Here's how to give everyone, including yourself, a sane summer that won't send you into bankruptcy.
Margaret and Amy discuss:
Why summer light affects our mood
the Farmer's Almanac predictions for summer 2023 (you get a heat wave! and YOU get a heat wave!)
Summer camp inflation
LINKS
Johns Hopkins School of Public Health: 7 Things To Know About Daylight Savings Time
Michele Marchetti & Mia Taylor for Parents: How To Handle the Rising Costs of Summer Camp
American Camp Association: How To Afford Camp
Robin Brandshaw for Beaumont Enterprise: Summer 2023 weather predictions
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5/31/2023 • 45 minutes, 4 seconds
Ask Margaret: My Kid Is Afraid of Storms
What do we do when our kids ask us to explain scary things like natural disasters, accidents, and bad news?
A listener in our Facebook group asks:
"My 5yo is afraid of naturally occurring phenomena. Natural disasters like floods, tornadoes, hurricanes. I try to explain these things very matter-of-factly but she would continue with questions for days. “Do we get tornadoes?” “Would a flood come to our house?”
If we are watching a show and someone injures themselves she would ask about what happened for days. “Mommy, what happened to that man? Why was he bleeding? Was he breathing? Why was his arm like that?”
I realized these are very different situations but they all fuel some kind of anxiety in her. Does anyone else have a kid(s) dealing with these kinds of emotions? How can I help reassure her that she is safe and other people are safe when bad things happen to them?"
Margaret says it's best to answer the question actually being asked— like "Is a flood coming to our house?" —rather than overexplaining natural disasters in general. Be honest with your kids about the nature of dangerous things, and be present with them. Ultimately what your kids really want is to process their feelings with you, their safe space.
Lyra Fontaine for Seattle Children's Hospital: Helping Kids Cope with Anxiety Over Distressing News
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5/29/2023 • 7 minutes, 36 seconds
Best Of: Dr. Becky Kennedy on Being "Good Inside"
Dr. Becky Kennedy is a clinical psychologist and mom of three who’s rethinking the way we raise our children. She's the host of "Good Inside With Dr. Becky," named by Apple Podcasts as one of the best podcasts of 2021. She also empowers more than a million parents following her on Instagram @drbeckyatgoodinside.
Dr. Becky specializes in thinking deeply about what’s happening for kids and translating these ideas into simple, actionable strategies for parents. Her latest book is GOOD INSIDE: A Guide to Becoming the Parent You Want to Be.
In this episode, Dr. Becky, Amy, and Margaret discuss:
How kids communicate through their behaviors
How to navigate behavior regulation when you're short on time
Why "Good Inside" is a slightly different parenting approach
Here's where you can find Dr. Becky:
www.goodinside.com
@drbeckyatgoodinside on IG and FB
Buy Dr. Becky's book
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5/26/2023 • 36 minutes, 9 seconds
May Bonus TEASER: Fictional Characters We Identify With
Amy and Margaret expound on characters on the page and on the screen that they identified with strongly growing up - and still do.
Topics include:
Elf romance
Who's a Carrie and who's a Samantha
The Wicked Witch of the West
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5/25/2023 • 11 minutes, 32 seconds
Things We Should Be Able to Do (But Can't)
Don't know left from right? North from south? Estonia from Moldova? We asked our listeners what they feel they should have learned a long time ago but still get tripped up by as adults.
Amy and Margaret discuss:
Couples Jeopardy
The secret to using a tape gun
The Red Wedding
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5/24/2023 • 42 minutes, 30 seconds
Ask Margaret: When Kids Ask Embarrassing Questions
"Mommy! Why does that person look like that?!" Kids are naturally curious, and as recent guest Meg Zucker reminded us, it's not possible to program kids in advance to always fall in line with adults' preferred reactions.
It's important to have the conversation early with your kids about how it's ok to notice people's differences but pointing them out in public can hurt people's feelings.
It also helps to make your home a safe space to talk about kids' curiosities about a classmate, or someone they saw at the park, so they understand that people come in all shapes and sizes—and that the things we say, if we're not careful, still have the power to hurt others' feelings.
Bodies are Cool by Tyler Feder is a great book that shows kids bodies come in a lot of varieties and they all deserve to be celebrated.
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5/22/2023 • 7 minutes, 13 seconds
Fresh Take: Meg Zucker on Empowering Kids with Differences and Disabilities
How do we celebrate and encourage kids with disabilities and differences, without letting our fears and preconceptions dictate what we think they can do?
How do parents of kids with less understanding of differences and disabilities allow for children's natural curiosity?
Meg Zucker, author of the new book Born Extraordinary: Empowering Children with Differences & Disabilities, was born with a genetic condition called ectrodactyly. She is also the mother of three children, two of whom share this difference.
Meg is also the founder and president of Don’t Hide It, Flaunt It, a non-profit with the mission of advancing understanding, tolerance, and mutual respect for people's differences.
In this episode Meg and Amy discuss:
"Disability" versus "difference," and how people choose the words that feel right for them
How Meg's experience growing up different made her parenting kids with differences a little easier—though maybe not as much as someone outside that experience might expect
the well-meaning "thrusting of help" that we might reconsider
Here's where you can find Meg:
@MegZucker
@Justflauntit_
Buy Meg's book: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780593419380
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5/19/2023 • 30 minutes, 22 seconds
Ditching Mom Guilt
"Mom guilt" is shorthand for what we think are two pretty different things:
the universal, low-grade feelings of inadequacy that our soccer snacks aren't as good as Monica's
the intense, deeply personal shame that we are definitely the only horrible parent who has ever allowed their baby to roll off the changing table
Yes, we take on these feelings of guilt and shame—but society is pretty quick to hand them to us. In this episode we discuss
why there isn't such a thing as "dad guilt"
why mom guilt might serve as a sort of magical thinking
if we can at least skip the feeling guilty about HAVING mom guilt part
Here are links to some studies and other writing on this topic that we discuss in this episode:
Lara Bazelon for The Atlantic: The End of Mom Guilt
Amy Paturel for The Washington Post: Why we feel 'mom guilt'—and how to stop
Fresh Take: Dana Dorfman on When Worry Works
Fresh Take: Carla Naumburg on Why You Are Not a Sh*tty Parent
Fresh Take: Sara Petersen on "Momfluencers"
Fresh Take: Susan Linn on How 'Big Tech' Targets Our Kids
Batram-Zantvoort, Stephanie et al, Frontiers in Global Women's Health: "Maternal self-conception and mental wellbeing..."
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5/17/2023 • 41 minutes, 51 seconds
Ask Amy: My Kid Is Learning Sassy Talk at Preschool
How do we discipline our kids when they start sassing us with phrases they picked up elsewhere? We can view it as a teachable moment and foundation for cognitive development down the road.
A listener in our Facebook group says:
"My daughter is 3, almost 4. She’s been at daycare for about a year now and I’ve noticed she’s started picking up phrases from school that bother me. The thing is, some of them are probably also good things for her to be able to say, like “Don’t touch me” and “I don’t like you right now” and “Go away."
The last one in particular really bugs me because while trying to gentle parent and be present, she only says these things when she’s mad at me for saying no to something. It somehow feels wrong because we don’t say that kind of stuff with each other in the home.
There’s a part of me that’s glad she has the bodily autonomy to say no and I want to encourage that for her life in general. But when it’s just her and me alone I’m not sure what to do. Is this normal or should I be worried about what she’s picking up at school?"
Is it necessarily a BIG deal that your child is sassing you at home? Not necessarily. Is it a teachable moment? Absolutely. Parenting gently doesn't necessarily mean never correcting a child when they're doing something unkind or hurtful.
Your child is allowed to express when she'd prefer to play alone, for sure. "I don't like you right now" is certainly not an abnormal way for a preschooler to express that sentiment, but there are probably ways for her to express that preference without hurting the other person's feelings, whether it's a parent or a classmate.
You can offer her more polite phrases like "I would really like to be alone right now, please" or "I need a break," so she can express those same feelings she's having but in a more respectful way.
3 going on 4 is when children start to learn theory of mind, meaning they can conceive of the thoughts, feelings, and desires of others as different from their own. So within the next year or so, with your help, she's going to be able to sort out how to let a friend down easy and how to stop a bully in her tracks. It's a process, and it's proper for you as her parent to be an active part of that learning.
Links!
Kendra Cherry for VeryWell Mind: How the Theory of Mind Helps Us Understand Others
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5/15/2023 • 5 minutes, 34 seconds
Fresh Take: Laura Cathcart Robbins on Motherhood and Addiction
Is it possible to be your full, authentic self as a woman and mother without fear of failure or judgment from others? In her new memoir STASH, Laura Cathcart Robbins discusses her experiences confronting and moving through her own addiction, and how it intersects with her identity as a mother and a woman of color.
Laura Cathcart Robbins is also the host of the popular podcast, The Only One In The Room. In this interview, Laura and Margaret discuss:
Laura's journey through addiction and treatment while being a mother
What it means to live authentically as a mother
How our identities inform our choices
Here's where you can find Laura:
https://theonlyonepod.com
IG: @lauracathcartrobbins, @theonlyoneintheroom
TikTok: @mscathcartrobbins, @theonlyonepod
Buy Laura's book: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9781668005330
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5/12/2023 • 37 minutes, 20 seconds
Our Mom Friendships Are Different Now
Have you lost touch with mom friends since the pandemic? Do you feel that after so much isolation you don't even know how to make friends anymore?
In this episode, we talk about how the last few years have changed our friendships, what's gotten harder, and why we're motivated to deepen those relationships again.
Amy and Margaret discuss:
The "decreased social stamina" many of us feel
Why spontaneity seems to have gone out the window
How knowing that just about everyone feels this way can really help
LINKS:
Fresh Take: Mara Glatzel on Being "Needy"
Fresh Take: Kat Vellos On Friendship and Connection
Vanessa Dueck for Medium: Post-Pandemic Mom Friends
Catherine Pearson for HuffPost: Moms Have Held Everything Together This Past Year, Except Their Friendships
Morgan Hill for Raising Teens Today: Raising Teens Can Be Lonely
Amil Niazi for The Cut: Does Anyone Want to Hear About Burned-Out Moms Anymore?
Check out our bookshop: https://bookshop.org/shop/whatfreshhellcast
"The Mind" game
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5/10/2023 • 42 minutes, 55 seconds
Ask Amy: My Kid Just Doesn't Want to Talk About It
When we have a child who chooses to withdraw and "not talk about it," rather than unpack his disappointment, is that a reason for concern? This week's question comes from our Facebook group:
When my seven year old gets upset, he refuses to talk to us even to describe the event that led to his reaction. He seems to prefer to process things internally. And so his immediate reaction is to shut down and say, I don't want to talk.
My spouse and I have both made a strong and conscious effort to validate his feelings and to be open and available for the times he does want to talk, but more often than not, my son just prefers to bury the experience and move on without talking about it.
Sometimes this means him concluding after one bad experience that an activity is horrible and he will never try it again. Therapy is probably a direction we are heading in. But do you think we should start with the school social worker?
Some kids, like some adults, are more emotionally expressive than others. That a 7-year-old processes internally is not necessarily a bad thing. It really depends on the intensity of the precipitating events, their frequency, plus how often you see these reactions from your child. If your kid is spending half his time at home in tears, then you do need to encourage opening up.
As parents, the best approach may be to talk, in his presence, about the things that you and your spouse do to move past disappointment and hurt feelings. You don't need to draw a direct line from your own experiences to what you're asking your son to do in order for the point to come across.
While frustration tolerance is something you might need to work on with your child, it's probably not something to be deeply concerned about at this stage. Keep an eye on it, push back against it, and over time you will hopefully see some growth in these areas.
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5/8/2023 • 5 minutes, 34 seconds
Fresh Take: Virginia Sole-Smith on Parenting in the Age of Diet Culture
Once we know what anti-fat bias is, it's easy to see it everywhere: in our schools, our doctors' offices, even in our own parenting. Virginia Sole-Smith, author of the new book Fat Talk: Parenting in the Age of Diet Culture, explains the perniciousness of anti-fat bias and how we can start to move away from its toxic messages.
Virginia Sole-Smith is also the author of The Eating Instinct: Food Culture, Body Image and Guilt in America. Virginia's reporting on diet culture, health and parenting has appeared in the New York Times, Scientific American, and many other publications. Virginia also writes the popular anti-diet newsletter Burnt Toast and hosts the Burnt Toast Podcast.
Virginia, Amy, and Margaret discuss:
What anti-fat bias really is— and why it's everywhere
How anti-fat bias shows up in parenting
How we can identify and navigate anti-fat bias as people and as parents
Here's where you can find Virginia:
virginiasolesmith.substack.com
@v_solesmith on Instagram, Twitter and TikTok
Burnt Toast Podcast
Buy Virginia's book: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9781250831217
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5/5/2023 • 36 minutes, 10 seconds
Hear Us Out
We asked our listeners: what would be better if it were just a little bit different?
Margaret's ideas include a network consisting solely of TV shows that you only need to pay half attention to.
Amy advocates for magical cash dispersal from your phone.
In this episode, Amy and Margaret discuss these and our listeners' top ideas, including
LEGO vacuums
properly-sized ketchup packets
hand-dryers that don't hurt your ears
Read the entire thread in our Facebook group!
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5/3/2023 • 46 minutes, 29 seconds
Ask Margaret: My Playroom Is a Disaster
What do we do when our house is filling up with plastic toys from Happy Meals and goody bags that just make cleanup and attempts at organization SO much worse? Margaret explains how "benevolent dictatorship" helps her navigate this issue at her house.
Garbage starts at the door, Margaret explains. She tries to stop things she doesn't want in the house from coming in in the first place and expressing this (gently) to her kids. It's also perfectly okay to throw away these things and NOT involve kids in the decision-making, which only makes for tears. Margaret says that in a whole decade of this approach, her kids have noticed the absence of this "junk" maybe twice.
Listen to KC Davis's podcast Struggle Care
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5/1/2023 • 7 minutes, 49 seconds
Fresh Take: Sara Petersen on Mommy Influencer Culture
Why do the "momfluencers" who post perfect pictures of their crisply dressed children in lavender fields hold such a sway over us, and what can we do about it? Sara Petersen, author of the new book Momfluenced: Inside the Maddening, Picture-perfect World of Mommy Influencer Culture, gives us a glimpse into what makes mommy influencer culture so seductive.
Sara Petersen also writes the newsletter In Pursuit of Clean Countertops, where she explores the cult of ideal motherhood.
Amy and Sara discuss:
What exactly a momfluencer is
How parasocial relationships can backfire on momfluencers
The benefits of momfluencers on social media
It's natural to want external validation that we're "good" mothers by collecting likes of our carefully staged pictures on social media. In addition to simply logging off Instagram for awhile, it's good to check in with yourself about what you really value as a mom versus what you feel pressured to perform for others, and that could save you a really stressful trip to a blueberry patch.
Here's where you can find Sara:
Twitter and Instagram: @slouisepetersen
In Pursuit of Clean Countertops: https:///sarapetersen.substack.com/about
Buy Sara's book: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780807006634
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4/28/2023 • 32 minutes, 17 seconds
Body Image: How It Affects Us (and Our Kids)
50% of preadolescent girls and 30% of boys report disliking their bodies. Those numbers go up in adults— 60% of women and 40% of men report the same dissatisfaction.
How do we help our kids when they struggle with their body images—especially when some of those struggles are our own? Especially when unrealistic images of bodies are everywhere on social media? Especially when dieting and weight loss are normalized, along with the assumption that all of us would change something about our appearances if we could?
We may not be able to fix the messaging that surrounds us and our kids, but there are ways we can start to subvert it.
In this episode Amy and Margaret discuss:
why body image issues and eating disorders are related but separate issues
how "media internalization" makes things worse
why TikTok's "body positivity" movement isn't the perfect answer, either
Here are links to some of the writing on the topic that we discuss in this episode:
Susan Cowden for VeryWell Mind: "Body Dysmorphic Disorder and Eating Disorders"
Lauren Muhlheim for VeryWell Mind: "The Connection Between Body Image and Eating Disorders"
Bobbie Eisenstock, Ph.D: "Media and Your Body Image: What You Need to Know"
Jean M. Twenge for The Atlantic: "Have Smartphones Destroyed a Generation?"
Jill Di Donato for HuffPost: "Gen Z Has A Body Positivity Problem, And It's Lurking On TikTok"
Quittkat Hannah, et; al: Body dissatisfaction, importance of appearance, and body appreciation in men and women over the lifespan
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4/26/2023 • 42 minutes, 28 seconds
Ask Amy: My Kid Is Not Great at Apologizing
How do we get kids to view saying "sorry" as more than a get-out-of-jail-free card? This week's question comes from our Facebook page:
I have 5-year-old and 2-year-old boys. My question: how do you help kids around 5 years old understand the meaning of "sorry"? My son will do something wrong– and know it’s wrong before he does it– then immediately say he’s sorry. I try to give him a punishment to help him understand what he did was wrong, but he will still do the action again, then say, “Well, I said I was sorry." How do I help him understand the meaning of being sorry so he won’t do the action again?
Not all kids are great at apologies. And grownups sometimes go at this the wrong way too, overemphasizing a perfunctory, mumbled "sorry" from the wrongdoer and then moving on. "That's where the conversation ends," says writer Rachael Rifkin in Today's Parents, "with little if any discussion of what happened, why it was hurtful to the person they’re apologizing to, how they can address the hurt they caused, and what they can do to change their behavior."
When it comes to apologies, elementary school teacher JoEllen Poon has a great 3-step approach that hits all the key points. Help your child complete these three sentences:
1)I’m sorry for...
2) This is wrong because...
3) In the future I will...
A 5-year-old will need some help with this at first, of course. But keep at it and he'll start to really understand what Daniel Tiger said best: saying "sorry" is only the first step.
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4/24/2023 • 6 minutes, 30 seconds
Fresh Take: Dr. Tish Taylor on Fostering Connection with Our Kids
How do we maintain connection with our kids when they're busy slamming doors or talking back to us and we are all sick and tired of each other? Dr. Tish Taylor, author of "Fostering Connection," gives us some tips for diagnosing and troubleshooting problematic elements in our relationships with our kids.
Dr. Tish Taylor is a licensed psychologist with a private practice in the greater Kansas City area. She has an established practice specializing in clinical assessment and the mental health treatment of children and teens.
Margaret and Dr. Taylor discuss:
The difference between disconnection with teens and natural cleaving from us as they age
How to start to address disconnection with our kids, and why quantifying interactions works
Dr. Taylor's "Who's Showing Up" system
Here's where you can find Dr. Taylor:
Tish Holub Taylor, Ph.D. on Facebook
@TishTaylorPhD on Twitter
Buy Dr. Taylor's book
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4/21/2023 • 33 minutes, 57 seconds
Best of: When Is This Going to Be Fun Again?
This "best of" episode explores the trap we all fall into of thinking that every day with our kids has to contain a “snow globe moment" - a social media-worthy image of perfect joy for our entire family.
And even if part of us knows that’s not realistic, another part of us thinks that it’s all supposed to be fun. That there must be something wrong with us if we don’t love every single moment of our chaotic lives with little ones.
But once we kick that shame to the curb, there really are ways to make our lives as parents more fun and lighthearted. Even on a regular Tuesday.
In this episode, we discuss:
How we can be lighthearted, even when things aren’t fun
How we can have fun even when things aren’t easy
How we can have fun even when our kids definitely aren’t
Our basic takeaway: parenting definitely gets a little more fun as our kids get a little bit easier… and by “easier,” we mean “not throwing themselves into mortal danger every ninety seconds because they don’t know any better.”
The first step to having more fun may simply be to wish that it were so. As motivational speaker Danielle LaPorte explains: “Knowing how you want to feel is the most potent form of clarity you can have."
Links!
Gretchen Rubin: "How to Be Happier: Ten Tips for Being a More Light-Hearted Parent."
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4/19/2023 • 51 minutes, 21 seconds
Ask Margaret: My Kid Is Obsessed with Getting "Stuff"
How do we convince our kids that getting all of the newest toys isn't the most important thing in life while also respecting their enthusiasm for their various obsessions?
A member of our Facebook group asks:
"What do you do with a kid who wants ALL the toys? I've got a second grader who insists his friends' parents buy all the Pokémon cards and my husband and I are the worse because we refuse to buy every single thing he asks for. He's got a pile full of Pokémon cards but they're not the cool ones, I guess? We're not going to change our buying habits, but how do we talk about this with him?"
Margaret explains that you can affirm your child's obsession with Pokémon or Fortnite to make them feel heard while also not giving in to their every whim around it. Margaret developed a shorthand with her son for the feeling of wanting things obsessively - the 'grabby greedies.' Naming it obviously didn't completely solve the problem, but having language around it helps keep the conversation going.
Setting up an allowance/chore system can be helpful, e.g., "If you clean your room and feed the dog every day this week, you can have x." Because kids have so little control over most aspects of their life, giving them some agency around things that really matter to them can be helpful. After all, one day, they WILL be making these decisions for themselves, and so the more they can practice making smart decisions with their own money, the better.
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4/17/2023 • 8 minutes, 4 seconds
Fresh Take: Dr. Lynn Koegel on the Hidden Brilliance of Autism
What if we're looking at autism in the wrong way? Dr. Lynn Koegel, co-author of Hidden Brilliance: Unlocking the Intelligence of Autism, explains how to engage with the strengths in kids with autism rather than focusing on what they're lacking.
Dr. Lynn Koegel is a clinical professor at the Stanford School of Medicine. She and her husband developed Pivotal Response Treatment which focuses on motivation. She has been supporting autistic individuals for more than 40 years.
Dr. Koegel and Margaret discuss:
Why we're focusing on the wrong things when we assess kids with autism
The power of peer support
Connecting authentically with kids with autism
Dr. Koegel explains that professionals are often trained to look at what's "wrong" with children with autism rather than what's right. It helps to look at the differences in children with autism, as Margaret likes to say, as morally neutral.
Here's where you can find Lynn:
autismPRThelp.com
@lynn.koegel on Facebook
hidden-brilliance.org
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4/14/2023 • 39 minutes, 21 seconds
Your Tween, Explained
When our kids reach a certain age—as young as eight, some experts say, and definitely well before thirteen— they suddenly don't think their parents are as great as they once did. Congratulations, you're officially the parent of a tween!
This week we're talking about what tweens are going through emotionally and psychologically... and how we can give them room to grow while still seizing opportunities to connect with them as (big) children.
Margaret and Amy discuss:
The cognitive shifts that happens in tweens' brains
Why the ways we relate to our tweens has to change along with them
Why "not taking it personally" is, and isn't, the right advice
We may feel the urge to defend our actions or intentions to our tweens when they spar with us, but we don't actually have to get down "in the mud" with our kids whenever they push our buttons.
Links!
Michelle Anthony for Scholastic Parents: Cognitive Development in 11-13 Year Olds
John Mersch, MD for Medicine Net: Tween: Child Development (9-11 Years Old)
Here’s our interview with Katie Hurley, author of No More Mean Girls: The Secret to Raising Strong, Confident, and Compassionate Girls.
Our "Fresh Take" interview with Dr. Becky Kennedy on being "Good Inside"
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4/12/2023 • 49 minutes, 6 seconds
Ask Amy: How Can I Support My Friend Struggling with Infertility?
Should we avoid talking about our children when spending time with friends who are having difficulty conceiving? A member of our Facebook group asks:
"I’m having lunch with a lifelong friend who I don’t see or talk to frequently. I do know that she recently started IVF. My life is currently extremely overwhelmed because I have 2 1/2 and 1 1/2 year-olds that I was fortunate enough to conceive very quickly. How do I support her and also talk about my life, without seeming like I’m complaining about what she wants so badly? I’ve never been nervous to see her in my life and I just feel like I’m going to indirectly hurt her feelings in some way."
Your friend can both be sad about her difficulty conceiving children and excited to hear about yours. The best thing you can do, Amy explains, is to be open with your friend - explain that you want to respect her feelings about the situation and be there for her. She may cry, and that's ok, because it means both that she's letting out her feelings and that she feels you're a safe space to have those feelings.
Once you talk about the elephant in the room, you can have a wonderful visit where you both talk about and receive support for whatever you're going through right now.
Special thanks to our sponsor, Pampers:
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4/10/2023 • 4 minutes, 38 seconds
APRIL BONUS TEASER! Our Humble Showbiz Beginnings
From playing the "Newman" character on multiple sitcoms to keeping the Steve Harvey show audience off hard drugs, Amy and Margaret have had some wild times in the business we call show. In this month's bonus episode, they tell some of their juiciest tales.
To listen to the full episode, you can subscribe to What Fresh Hell Plus at http://whatfreshhell.supportingcast.fm/ for $4.99 a month, or $39.99 a year. Get monthly bonus episodes and all of our content ad-free!
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4/7/2023 • 10 minutes, 24 seconds
Best Of: Yael Schonbrun on "Work, Parent, Thrive"
Why does it feel like our career and our family are pulling us in different directions and making it hard to be fully present in both arenas? In her book Work, Parent, Thrive: 12 Science-Backed Strategies to Ditch Guilt, Manage Overwhelm, and Grow Connection (When Everything Feels Like too Much). Dr. Yael Schonbrun explains how we can move from a zero-sum mindset to a life in which our work life and our family life are enable to enrich each other.
Yael Schonbrun is also the co-host of the "Psychologists Off the Clock" podcast, an assistant professor at Brown University, and a mother of three little comedians. In this "Best Of" interview Yael and Amy discuss:
Why the guilt that often accompanies parenting is hard-wired into us
What values clarification looks like
Why starting a "stop doing" list can be surprisingly helpful
Here's where you can find Yael:
Twitter: @DrYaelSchonbrun
#WorkParentThrive
Buy Yael's book: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9781611809657
Links!
Our Fresh Take with Dr. Jill Stoddard on how to manage anxiety
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4/7/2023 • 39 minutes, 28 seconds
Please Never Say These Things Again
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There are certain phrases that many of us pepper our conversation without a second thought, never pausing to think that we might be working the listener's very last nerve.
We have quite a few phrases we'd love to never ever hear again, and our listeners brought a lot more. In this episode we make the humble request that phrases like "at the end of the day" and "fur babies" be permanently retired from the lexicon. Is that too much to ask?
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4/5/2023 • 46 minutes, 14 seconds
Ask Margaret: Help! My Boys Won't Stop Roughhousing
How do you keep your very active kids safe when they constantly want to roughhouse with each other? Someone in our Facebook group asks:
Boy moms… help! The fighting, the yelling, the running, hitting, jumping, climbing…I have a 4.5yo and a 3 yo… Any advice or tips? We separate them to different levels when it gets out of hand. Or we say any running needs to happen outside, but it’s difficult to execute when I’m home alone (which is often). How do you all handle it?
Margaret, who has two boys of her own who love roughhousing, explains the house rules around the "sport" that work for her family.
There are actually a lot of benefits to letting kids roughhouse with each other once there are certain safety parameters in place. It gives kids the joy of physical touch, the opportunity to explore and set boundaries, and the benefit (for you!) of tiring them out! You may find that MORE, not less, roughhousing is just the ticket for your active kids!
Here are links to the resources Margaret references:
Jessica Wozinsky Fleming for The Washington Post: "Why roughhousing is good for kids, and how to keep it safe"
Big Body Play by Frances M. Carlson
The Art of Roughhousing: Good Old-Fashioned Horseplay and Why Every Kid Needs It by Anthony T. DeBenedet and Lawrence J. Cohen
Ignore It!: How Selectively Looking the Other Way Can Decrease Behavioral Problems and Increase Parenting Satisfaction by Catherine Pearlman
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4/3/2023 • 9 minutes, 24 seconds
Fresh Take: Mara Glatzel on Being "Needy"
If someone asked you "What do you need right now?" would you even be able to articulate it? In her new book NEEDY: How To Advocate for Your Needs and Claim Your Sovereignty, intuitive coach Mara Glatzel lays out a roadmap for how to ascertain our needs as human beings, how to ask for it, and how to be comfortable with receiving it.
Mara's work helps humans stop abandoning themselves and start reclaiming their humanity through embracing their needs and honoring their natural energy rhythms. In this episode, Mara and Amy discuss:
The societal pressure to be perfect and need-free as mothers
The difference between a "want" and a "need" and how they intersect
Why it's uncomfortable both to ask for what we need and to finally receive it
Mara argues that the more in tune we are with our own needs, the more we are able to peacefully coexist with others and form authentic relationships.
Here's where you can find Mara:
https://www.maraglatzel.com/
on her own podcast, "Needy."
Here is the link to Mara's free quiz to help you identify what you need and receive all of her best resources and supportive micro-practices.
Buy Mara's book: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9781683649847
@maraglatzel on IG
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3/31/2023 • 37 minutes, 10 seconds
Do We Rush Kids Too Much?
The Instagram account @mindfulmadre recently went viral with this post:
"We are becoming less tolerant of the pace of childhood. In a million ways we tell children: hurry up. Grow up. You are already behind."
Sometimes we rush our kids because we're rushing ourselves—or because we fear our kids will fall behind if they don't keep up with the increasing demands the world has of children, even very small ones.
But who decided that precocious preschoolers are really what we should be aiming for? What are the costs to rushing children? Are there small daily ways in which we can let kids do their own thing at their own paces?
In this episode we discuss:
how a "daily context of stress" affects developing brains
whether small pushbacks are enough, or at least better than nothing
the moments when we've let our kids move at their own paces—even (especially) at Disney World
Here are links to some writing on the topic that we discuss in this episode:
Laura Markham for Psychology Today: 11 Reasons to Stop Rushing Through Life
Alison Gopnik for The WSJ: What Children Lose When Their Brains Develop Too Fast
Kim John Payne: SIMPLICITY PARENTING
and these past episodes of our own:
"Fresh Take: Michaeleen Doucleff on Raising Happy, Helpful Little Humans"
"Pushing Kids the Just-Right Amount"
"Fresh Take: Katherine May on Enchantment"
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3/29/2023 • 45 minutes
Ask Amy: My Kid Cries Over Everything
Is your child who seemingly overreacts to ever minor scrape and bruise really suffering, or are they just looking for some extra attention? Amy explains what could be behind this behavior and how to address it constructively.
A listener in our FB group says:
"I have a 5 year old boy who cries wolf. He's constantly crying as if he broke a bone or has been severely injured after minor bumps and falls. It's gotten so frustrating that I've stopped responding altogether. Has anyone had a kid like this? What did you do/find helpful?"
Amy explains that it's important to contextualize your child's emotionality. When during the day are they acting out - when they're tired and rundown or when they're well-rested? Are they truly experiencing a sensory overload because they have a naturally sensitive nervous system? Are they easily redirected when you offer distractions like a snack or a show?
You can't ignore or diminish the sensitivity out of your kid, but when navigating this issue, it helps to frame your child's reactions as coming from an authentic place that warrants investigation, rather than a devious one that warrants suspicion.
Special thanks to our sponsor, Pampers:
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3/27/2023 • 6 minutes, 24 seconds
Fresh Take: Beth Leipholtz on Teaching Inclusion
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Raising a child with a disability is complicated, especially when you're navigating an ableist world on their behalf. Beth Leipholtz is an inclusion and accessibility advocate who believes in creating a more accepting world for our children.
As the hearing mother of a deaf child, Beth is raising her son, Coop, bilingually in both hearing and Deaf cultures. Beth shares her parenting journey on TikTok, YouTube, Facebook and Instagram @bethandcoop, where she has built a community of more than 1 million people around disability inclusion.
Beth's new new children's book is THE ABCs OF INCLUSION.
Beth, Amy, and Margaret discuss:
Beth's experience learning about and processing Coop's disability
Learning ASL as a hearing person
Why she decided to share her experience on social media and become an advocate for inclusion.
Encouraging your kids to ask questions about other people's differences - and letting those people lead the conversation - is one of the best ways to teach them that everyone has value no matter who they are and what they can do.
Here's where you can find Beth:
https://bethandcoop.com/
@bethandcoop on IG, Tiktok, and Youtube
THE ABCs OF INCLUSION: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9781634895965
In this episode Beth mentions the "Welcome to Holland" poem by Emily Perl Kingsley
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3/24/2023 • 33 minutes, 43 seconds
Even More Minor But Life-Changing Tips
Flat tire? Mismatched kids' socks? Lost luggage? Here's part two of our listeners' minor, life-changing tips that might just make some aspect of your life much easier from now on.
Margaret and Amy discuss:
Tasks you should delegate to your butler
How to fit all that stuff you need in your glove compartment
Margaret's next birthday present from Amy
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3/22/2023 • 43 minutes, 35 seconds
Ask Margaret: My Kid Keeps Running Away!
If you've ever had a child bolt from you in a parking lot or at preschool drop-off, you know it can be a scary experience. Today's question comes from email ([email protected]):
I am a mother of 4-year-old twins, a boy and a girl. In the past six months my daughter has been running out to the car, not listening to me when I ask her to walk with me or when I say "stop." I'm always asking both my kids to "stop" and "come back."
It became almost a dangerous situation for us just yesterday when my daughter just kept running through the parking lot during school pickup. She thought it was a game and began giggling when I yelled "Come back!" I was partly terrified and partly so angry.
I love my kids to the moon and back, and I know part of this is four-year-old boundary-testing, but my job as a parent is to keep them safe. How can I teach and motivate my kids to walk with me and not to run ahead?
Sometimes when we are reactive to our kids' behavior – like when we yell out because we are terrified of them running into the street – they find it hilarious. The solution? Find a special word that you can use calmly in these situations. Margaret offers the example "red light."
In a calmer moment, explain to your child that running away is dangerous and against the rules. Tell them that you have a special word like "red light," and when they hear "red light" they must freeze. They are not allowed to move again without your permission. Practice this, and remind them when heading anywhere that you expect them to stay still if you say it. Then when your child takes off, say "red light," and try to keep the emotion out of it, which can be tough. Then, if the child keeps running it is time for immediate consequences, whether that means returning to the car to "try again," or leaving the activity altogether.
A few stern and consistent "red light" reminders should make a big difference in your child's behavior.
Check out this article by Corinna Vangerwen for Today's Parent: 5 ways to get your preschooler to stop running away from you
Special thanks to our sponsor, Pampers:
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3/20/2023 • 6 minutes, 45 seconds
Fresh Take: Katherine May on "Enchantment"
What do we do when it seems like there's nothing new or wondrous in the world for us to enjoy and feel deeply connected to? Katherine May, author of the new book ENCHANTMENT: AWAKENING WONDER IN AN ANXIOUS AGE. tells us about her own journey of rediscovering the world and her own sense of wonder.
Katherine May is the author of the New York Times bestseller WINTERING: THE POWER OF REST AND RETREAT IN DIFFICULT TIMES, which has been translated into 25 languages.
Katherine, Amy, and Margaret discuss:
Why we're all suffering from a "pandemic hangover"
How to make space for reflection and worship in today's world
Why you can't force enchantment (and how your enchantment may vary)
Flaco the escaped owl
Here's where you can find Katherine:
Buy ENCHANTMENT: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780593329993
Katherine's newsletter: https://katherinemay.substack.com/
Katherine's podcast: https://katherine-may.co.uk/podcast
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on our website:
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3/17/2023 • 34 minutes, 31 seconds
It's Not "Nagging"
Want to see a mother get mad? Tell her she's "nagging" you after she's been obligated to repeat an entirely reasonable request several times over. And just why is "nagging" a word that's almost exclusively applied to women?
We need the other members of our households to show up and do their share. As the default parents, we own the lists. So do we stop caring whether others like how we ask and remind? Do we enforce a back-to-one where we're not forced to ask repeatedly in the first place?
In this episode Amy and Margaret discuss:
The sexism and etymology of the word "nag"
What Amy says are the three types of "nagging," and why we should separate them out
What to say when our repeated asking is framed as annoying to other people (guess whom it's also annoying, too?)
Links!
Jessica Zhang on LinkedIn: "What's In a Nag?"
Episode from If Books Could Kill podcast: "Men Are From Mars, Women Are From Venus"
McClelland, T., & Sliwa, P: "Gendered affordance perception and unequal domestic labour."
Our episode with Lynyetta Willis on "Stable Misery"
Our episode with Eve Rodsky on "Changing the Invisible Workload"
Anne Helen Petersen's newsletter Culture Study
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Special thanks to our sponsors for this month:
For trusted protection, choose Pampers, the #1 Pediatrician Recommended Brand. Download the Pampers Club App today to start earning free diapers.
This episode is brought to you by BetterHelp. Discover your potential with BetterHelp. Visit BetterHelp.com/FRESH today to get 10% off your first month.
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Indeed is the only job site where you're guaranteed to find quality applicants that meet your must-have requirements. Visit indeed.com/LAUGHING to start hiring now. Terms and conditions apply.
LuvBug is the world’s first socio-emotional gaming platform. Go to LuvBuglearning.com and sign up for a 7-day free trial, or simply download from the app store and subscribe.
You can try Peloton Tread risk-free with a 30-day home trial. New members only. Not available in remote locations. See additional terms at onepeloton.com/home-trial.
Rakuten is an online shopping platform that gives you cash back when you shop at thousands of stores. Start shopping at rakuten.com or get the Rakuten app to start saving today.
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3/15/2023 • 43 minutes, 28 seconds
Ask Amy: We Have a Newborn - and Houseguests
Is the postpartum support you're getting actually more harmful than helpful? Here's how to ask for what you really need in the days and weeks after birth.
A listener wrote in to ask:
Has anyone found that 'more is not more' when it comes to help/house guests with a newborn? My in-laws have been here for a week (my newborn is two weeks old) and I'm finding it all more annoying and inconvenient than helpful to have "extra sets of hands."
I also feel like I'm exiled to the bedroom for all breastfeeding and just in general, because I can't handle the constant interaction and endless questions about what I'm doing, where I'm going, what I'm looking for in my own kitchen every time I wander into a common area.
I know my in-laws have the best of intentions and I feel in some ways I should be grateful for the extra help and grateful my son has such loving grandparents who want to spend time with him - but I'm just overwhelmed with resentment at the moment and taking it out on my husband for indirectly facilitating this scenario. Am I just being crazy and ungrateful?
As a new mom, YOU get to decide who's living with you and when! If at all! The first weeks of a newborn's life are for brief visits that don't interfere with routines or make things harder for the new parents. If your in-laws or family are smothering you, you are perfectly within your rights to ask them to leave (if they are staying) or to give you and your partner a little breathing room. Once your baby is older, you'll most likely welcome the help and social interaction from relatives, but for now, it's perfectly ok to just focus on recovering from birth and bonding with your nuclear family.
Special thanks to our sponsor, Pampers:
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3/13/2023 • 7 minutes, 6 seconds
Fresh Take: Dr. Dana Dorfman on When Worry Works
How do we know when our anxiety as parents is warranted and when we're catastrophizing? Dr. Dana Dorfman, author of the new book When Worry Works: How to Harness Your Parenting Stress and Guide Your Teen to Success. gives us a framework for channeling our anxiety into something productive rather than something that hampers us.
Dr. Dana Dorfman is a New York City-based psychotherapist with 30 years' experience treating adolescents and parents in her private practice, schools, and agency settings. In this interview she explains
Why anxiety is actually advantageous
How to contain our teen's anxiety without absorbing it
Cognitive distortions
Knowing your values is key to managing anxiety - what are the three or four core principles that guide everything you do? In a non-anxious moment, reflect on those values, and then use them as your guiding star for parenting decisions - rather than fears you may have about your children's future or current wellbeing.
Here's where you can find Dr. Dorfman:
https://drdanadorfman.com/
@drdanadorfman on IG
Dr. Dana Dorfman on FB
Dana Dorfman, PhD on LinkedIn
Buy Dr. Dorfman's book: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9781538164532
Take Dana's anxiety type reaction quiz!
Now you can Sign up for What Fresh Hell Plus on Supporting Cast! You'll get all episodes ad-free, plus monthly bonus episodes no matter where you listen. What Fresh Hell + is $4.99 a month, or $39.99 a year. Subscribe in two taps! Go to whatfreshhell.supportingcast.fm.
Special thanks to our sponsors for this month:
For trusted protection, choose Pampers, the #1 Pediatrician Recommended Brand. Download the Pampers Club App today to start earning free diapers.
This episode is brought to you by BetterHelp. Discover your potential with BetterHelp. Visit BetterHelp.com/FRESH today to get 10% off your first month.
Care.com is where you can find the help you need to make it all work for your family. Sign up at Care.com/book now and see why over 3 million families use this amazing platform.
EveryPlate plans meals and delivers pre-portioned ingredients right to your door. Get started for just $1.49 per meal by going to everyplate.com/podcast and entering code wfh149.
Hello Fresh is America’s #1 Meal Kit. Go to HelloFresh.com/wfhpod60 and use code wfhpod60 for 60% off plus free shipping!
Indeed is the only job site where you're guaranteed to find quality applicants that meet your must-have requirements. Visit indeed.com/LAUGHING to start hiring now. Terms and conditions apply.
LuvBug is the world’s first socio-emotional gaming platform. Go to LuvBuglearning.com and sign up for a 7-day free trial, or simply download from the app store and subscribe.
You can try Peloton Tread risk-free with a 30-day home trial. New members only. Not available in remote locations. See additional terms at onepeloton.com/home-trial.
Rakuten is an online shopping platform that gives you cash back when you shop at thousands of stores. Start shopping at rakuten.com or get the Rakuten app to start saving today.
Ritual’s Essential for Women 18+ is a multivitamin you can actually trust. Visit ritual.com/laughing to get 10% off during your first 3 months.
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3/10/2023 • 36 minutes, 39 seconds
Our Quirkiest Personal Rules
From avoiding shuttles, to separate inside pants and outside pants, to always ordering a different meal than your dining companion, we reviewed - and sometimes eschewed - our listeners quirkiest quirks.
Amy and Margaret discuss:
Nanking Chicken
Merging onto the GWB
Whose husband can fall asleep the fastest
Read the rest of our listeners' quirkiest personal rules on our FB group page!
Now you can Sign up for What Fresh Hell Plus on Supporting Cast! You'll get all episodes ad-free, plus monthly bonus episodes no matter where you listen. What Fresh Hell + is $4.99 a month, or $39.99 a year. Subscribe in two taps! Go to whatfreshhell.supportingcast.fm.
Special thanks to our sponsors for this month:
For trusted protection, choose Pampers, the #1 Pediatrician Recommended Brand. Download the Pampers Club App today to start earning free diapers.
This episode is brought to you by BetterHelp. Discover your potential with BetterHelp. Visit BetterHelp.com/FRESH today to get 10% off your first month.
Care.com is where you can find the help you need to make it all work for your family. Sign up at Care.com/book now and see why over 3 million families use this amazing platform.
EveryPlate plans meals and delivers pre-portioned ingredients right to your door. Get started for just $1.49 per meal by going to everyplate.com/podcast and entering code wfh149.
Hello Fresh is America’s #1 Meal Kit. Go to HelloFresh.com/wfhpod60 and use code wfhpod60 for 60% off plus free shipping!
Indeed is the only job site where you're guaranteed to find quality applicants that meet your must-have requirements. Visit indeed.com/LAUGHING to start hiring now. Terms and conditions apply.
LuvBug is the world’s first socio-emotional gaming platform. Go to LuvBuglearning.com and sign up for a 7-day free trial, or simply download from the app store and subscribe.
You can try Peloton Tread risk-free with a 30-day home trial. New members only. Not available in remote locations. See additional terms at onepeloton.com/home-trial.
Rakuten is an online shopping platform that gives you cash back when you shop at thousands of stores. Start shopping at rakuten.com or get the Rakuten app to start saving today.
Ritual’s Essential for Women 18+ is a multivitamin you can actually trust. Visit ritual.com/laughing to get 10% off during your first 3 months.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
3/8/2023 • 43 minutes, 42 seconds
Ask Margaret: What Do You Do When Your Kid Ruins His Own Playdate?
A listener asked: "How do I respond when my child gets upset about something during a playdate and they are dealing with their own feelings and end up ignoring their friend?"
Margaret explains that as mortifying as this may be from our perspective when our kid acts out at a playdate or other event, we've all had this happen to us, because kids are kids.
Once there's a blowup, an immediate and completely smooth reset is probably not possible. The best you can do is let your kid cool off by themselves and check in with them every few minutes about possibly rejoining the others. Check in with your kid's guest to make sure they can keep playing happily.
And if your kid feels bad about how they acted after the fact, it's okay to confirm that and help them sit with the discomfort of how their bad choices affected everyone else.
Special thanks to our sponsor, Pampers:
For trusted protection, choose Pampers, the #1 Pediatrician Recommended Brand. Download the Pampers Club App today to start earning free diapers.
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3/6/2023 • 8 minutes, 8 seconds
Fresh Take: Francesca Royster on "Choosing Family"
How do we find support when our family of origin is no longer around or has otherwise rejected us? Francesca Royster, author of the new memoir Choosing Family: A Memoir of Queer Motherhood and Black Resistance, explains the concepts of chosen family, finding joy in the everyday, and the resistance that is part of telling hard stories.
Margaret and Francesca discuss:
What inspired Francesca to write her memoir
What it's like to enter motherhood at an older age
The process of adopting her daughter
Taking pleasure in the reality of everyday life can really help you connect with loved ones in your family, chosen or blood-related. And telling stories about hardship and tragedy can actually help us gain perspective and have more hope about the world, not less.
Here's where you can find Francesca:
Her faculty page on the DePaul University website
@roysterfrancesca on IG
@francesca.royster.1 on FB
Buy Francesca's book: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9781419756177
Special thanks to our sponsors for this month:
For trusted protection, choose Pampers, the #1 Pediatrician Recommended Brand. Download the Pampers Club App today to start earning rewards with every diaper & wipes purchase.
This episode is brought to you by BetterHelp. Discover your potential with BetterHelp. Visit BetterHelp.com/FRESH today to get 10% off your first month.
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You can try Peloton Tread risk-free with a 30-day home trial. New members only. Not available in remote locations. See additional terms at onepeloton.com/home-trial.
Rakuten is an online shopping platform that gives you cash back when you shop at thousands of stores. Start shopping at rakuten.com or get the Rakuten app to start saving today.
Ritual’s Essential for Women 18+ is a multivitamin you can actually trust. Visit ritual.com/laughing to get 10% off during your first 3 months.
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3/3/2023 • 38 minutes, 17 seconds
BONUS TEASER! Our Jobbiest Jobs
This month we are reaching back into our brain archives for the worst, best, and jobbiest jobs we've ever had! To listen to the full episode, you can subscribe to What Fresh Hell Plus at http://whatfreshhell.supportingcast.fm/ for $4.99 a month, or $39.99 a year. Get monthly bonus episodes and all of our content ad-free!
Topics include:
Petty cash
BJ McKay and his best friend, Bear
Baskin-Robbins flavors
How to thank a waitress (money - it's money.)
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3/2/2023 • 10 minutes, 32 seconds
So What Do You Do All Day?
If you're a stay-at-home parent, how do you answer to the people who frequently– and annoyingly– ask, "So, what do you do all day?"
A listener in our Facebook group posted?
"During Covid, I quit my job and I’ve been home. I drive my kids to school, work out, and manage the house and family. I’m very happy and fulfilled, especially knowing that my eldest will be leaving for college soon, I’m soaking up this time. My problem is trying to explain this to others. I have a good college degree and worked in a decent field before I quit. I guess I feel pressure to work and use my skills. One well-intentioned retired woman at my gym was actually trying to figure out how I can not drive my kids to school so that I could go back to work. I’ve even considered lying and saying I work part time at home to get people off my case."
A pre-pandemic Gallup analysis 60,000 women in the U.S. revealed that more than a quarter of SAHMs report feeling depressed. The researchers suggested that “societal recognition of the difficult job stay-at-home mothers have raising children would perhaps help support them emotionally.” Don't stay up waiting for that to happen. America’s mothers have continued to say that society is not supporting them.
Do we just decide not to let these misperceptions of stay-at-home parenthood bother us? Do we fight back, bring lists, demand the respect that our hard work deserves? Will that get us anywhere?
Links:
Our episode with Laura Vanderkam on time management for moms
Laura's piece: "The working stay-at-home mom"
Motherly’s 2022 State of Motherhood Survey Report
Consider This on NPR: The Great Resignation: Why People Are Leaving Their Jobs In Growing Numbers
Gallup: Stay-at-Home Moms Report More Depression, Sadness, Anger
Emily Glover for Motherly: It’s harder than ever before for families to get by on a single income
Sign up for the What Fresh Hell newsletter! Once a month you’ll get our favorite recent episodes, plus links to other things to read and watch and listen to, and upcoming special events: http://eepurl.com/h8ze3z
Special thanks to our sponsors for this month:
For trusted protection, choose Pampers, the #1 Pediatrician Recommended Brand. Download the Pampers Club App today to start earning rewards with every diaper & wipes purchase.
This episode is brought to you by BetterHelp. Discover your potential with BetterHelp. Visit BetterHelp.com/FRESH today to get 10% off your first month.
Care.com is where you can find the help you need to make it all work for your family. Sign up at Care.com/book now and see why over 3 million families use this amazing platform.
EveryPlate plans meals and delivers pre-portioned ingredients right to your door. Get started for just $1.49 per meal by going to everyplate.com/podcast and entering code wfh149.
Hello Fresh is America’s #1 Meal Kit. Go to HelloFresh.com/wfhpod60 and use code wfhpod60 for 60% off plus free shipping!
Indeed is the only job site where you're guaranteed to find quality applicants that meet your must-have requirements. Visit indeed.com/LAUGHING to start hiring now. Terms and conditions apply.
LuvBug is the world’s first socio-emotional gaming platform. Go to LuvBuglearning.com and sign up for a 7-day free trial, or simply download from the app store and subscribe.
You can try Peloton Tread risk-free with a 30-day home trial. New members only. Not available in remote locations. See additional terms at onepeloton.com/home-trial.
Rakuten is an online shopping platform that gives you cash back when you shop at thousands of stores. Start shopping at rakuten.com or get the Rakuten app to start saving today.
Ritual’s Essential for Women 18+ is a multivitamin you can actually trust. Visit ritual.com/laughing to get 10% off during your first 3 months.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
3/1/2023 • 48 minutes, 17 seconds
Ask Amy: How Much Micromanaging Is Too Much?
How do we know when to control the choices our teens make and when to let them make their own mistakes?
A listener asked:
"Moms of teenagers, how do you stop trying to micromanage their worlds? My daughter is no longer interested in an extracurricular activity she’s done for years. I'm trying to talk her into continuing but she’s pushing back. It’s hard to know when it’s okay to let them decide what things they want to do as opposed to the things you think are good for them to do."
Amy explains that it's okay to micromanage your teens sometimes, as long as you choose your battles– which means everything can't be a battle. Making sure kids sign up for standardized testing might be a place where you micromanage– but that might also mean letting that their desperate need for a haircut go without mention.
Making mistakes and learning from them is part of the work of becoming an adult. As hard as it can be to watch our kids make choices with which we might disagree, when we can let those ramifications play out, we're helping our teens grow.
Special thanks to our sponsors for this month:
For trusted protection, choose Pampers, the #1 Pediatrician Recommended Brand. Download the Pampers Club App today to start earning rewards with every diaper & wipes purchase.
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2/27/2023 • 5 minutes, 9 seconds
Fresh Take: Lisa Damour on the Emotional Lives of Teenagers
There's a mental health crisis among teens. Teens are also highly emotional creatures by design. Adolescent psycholost Dr. Lisa Damour thinks the two are starting to get conflated– and that means parents and educators can sometimes overcorrect in their responses to teens' emotional outbursts.
Dr. Lisa Damour co-hosts the Ask Lisa podcast and writes about adolescents for the The New York Times, in addition to her clinical practice. She is the author of two New York Times bestsellers: Untangled: Guiding Teenage Girls Through the Seven Transitions into Adulthood and Under Pressure: Confronting the Epidemic of Stress and Anxiety in Girls.
Dr. Lisa's latest book is called The Emotional Lives of Teenagers: Raising Connected, Capable, and Compassionate Adolescents. In this interview Amy and Lisa discuss:
Why good sleep is the first thing we need to help dysregulated teens solve
What the pandemic actually revealed about teens' mental health
Key myths and misconceptions about adolescent emotions
Dr. Lisa says that we– and our teenagers– can gain much by asking if the strong emotion a teen may be feeling is uncomfortable or unmanageable. If it's uncomfortable, learning to sit with that is part of the process of healthy emotional maturation.
Here's where you can find Lisa:
our previous interview with Dr. Lisa
https://drlisadamour.com/
@lisa.damour on IG
https://www.facebook.com/lisadamourphd
Buy Lisa's book: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780593500019
Special thanks to our sponsors for this month:
For trusted protection, choose Pampers, the #1 Pediatrician Recommended Brand. Download the Pampers Club App today to start earning rewards with every diaper & wipes purchase.
Author Accelerator’s Book Coach Certification program provides resources to help you launch your own thriving business coaching writers. Head to bookcoaches.com/podcasts to find out more.
This episode is brought to you by BetterHelp. If you want to live a more empowered life, therapy can get you there. Visit BetterHelp.com/FRESH today to get 10% off your first month.
Hello Fresh is America’s #1 Meal Kit. Go to HelloFresh.com/wfhpod65 and use code wfhpod65 for 65% off plus free shipping!
Indeed is the only job site where you're guaranteed to find quality applicants that meet your must-have requirements. Visit indeed.com/LAUGHING to start hiring now. Terms and conditions apply.
You can try Peloton Tread risk-free with a 30-day home trial. New members only. Not available in remote locations. See additional terms at onepeloton.com/home-trial.
Rakuten is an online shopping platform that gives you cash back when you shop at thousands of stores. Start shopping at rakuten.com or get the Rakuten app to start saving today.
Ritual’s Essential for Women 18+ is a multivitamin you can actually trust. Visit ritual.com/laughing to get 10% off during your first 3 months.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
2/24/2023 • 34 minutes, 30 seconds
Minor, Life-Changing Tips
We asked our listeners what minor and yet life-changing advice they have to offer. From bringing Sharpies everywhere, to cleaning the shower in the shower, to milkshakes after doctors' appointments, our lives just got a whole lot better!
Margaret and Amy discuss:
The correct way to boil corn
What really goes in the glove compartment (not gloves)
Amy's meet-cute with her husband
"Let's Make a Deal"
Links!
"Bag o' Glass" on SNL
Special thanks to our sponsors for this month:
For trusted protection, choose Pampers, the #1 Pediatrician Recommended Brand. Download the Pampers Club App today to start earning rewards with every diaper & wipes purchase.
Author Accelerator’s Book Coach Certification program provides resources to help you launch your own thriving business coaching writers. Head to bookcoaches.com/podcasts to find out more.
This episode is brought to you by BetterHelp. If you want to live a more empowered life, therapy can get you there. Visit BetterHelp.com/FRESH today to get 10% off your first month.
Hello Fresh is America’s #1 Meal Kit. Go to HelloFresh.com/wfhpod65 and use code wfhpod65 for 65% off plus free shipping!
Indeed is the only job site where you're guaranteed to find quality applicants that meet your must-have requirements. Visit indeed.com/LAUGHING to start hiring now. Terms and conditions apply.
You can try Peloton Tread risk-free with a 30-day home trial. New members only. Not available in remote locations. See additional terms at onepeloton.com/home-trial.
Rakuten is an online shopping platform that gives you cash back when you shop at thousands of stores. Start shopping at rakuten.com or get the Rakuten app to start saving today.
Ritual’s Essential for Women 18+ is a multivitamin you can actually trust. Visit ritual.com/laughing to get 10% off during your first 3 months.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
2/22/2023 • 40 minutes, 52 seconds
Ask Margaret: Can We Help Kids Get Better at Losing?
A listener asks:
"Has anyone had success in helping their kids becoming ”better” at losing? Sports, board games, even school work…anything that they get frustrated with, it is to an extreme degree. I have three boys ages 7, 5 and 4 and they all do the same things—always throwing a huge tantrum."
Margaret explains that it's important to have a good offense in situations like these. Don't try and reason with your kid right after they've suffered a loss and lecture them on Buddhist philosophies of nonattachment. Talk to your kid before the game/event about what is important in these situations, like being a good teammate and practicing in order to get better at something.
Links!
Cleveland Clinic: "Sore Loser? How to Help Your Child Handle Disappointment"
Special thanks to our sponsor, Pampers:
For trusted protection, choose Pampers, the #1 Pediatrician Recommended Brand. Download the Pampers Club App today to start earning rewards with every diaper & wipes purchase.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
2/20/2023 • 6 minutes, 58 seconds
Fresh Take: Susan Linn on How “Big Tech” Targets Our Kids
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Psychologist Susan Linn, author of WHO'S RAISING THE KIDS? BIG TECH, BIG BUSINESS, AND THE LIVES OF CHILDREN, isn't anti-technology. She's anti-advertising to children, and has spent her long career spotlighting the "monumental shift towards a digitized-commercialized childhood."
With smart speakers and screens at arms' reach wherever kids go, digital technologies continue to evolve much faster than our understanding of the ramifications of their dominance in our kids' lives.
Susan began her career as award-winning ventriloquist (here she is on Mr. Rogers' Neighborhood!) and has become a world-renowned expert on creative play and the impact of media and commercial marketing on children. In this episode, Susan tells us
Why her point isn't to make parents feel guilty
Why the best kinds of toys for children do very little
How branding can creep in where we sometimes don't even perceive it
What we can do to set parameters on the commercializing of our own kids' lives
Here's where you can find Susan:
Twitter: @drsusanlinn
susanlinn.net
fairplayforkids.org
Buy Susan's book: https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9781620972274
Special thanks to our sponsors for this month:
For trusted protection, choose Pampers, the #1 Pediatrician Recommended Brand. Download the Pampers Club App today to start earning rewards with every diaper & wipes purchase.
Author Accelerator’s Book Coach Certification program provides resources to help you launch your own thriving business coaching writers. Head to bookcoaches.com/podcasts to find out more.
This episode is brought to you by BetterHelp. If you want to live a more empowered life, therapy can get you there. Visit BetterHelp.com/FRESH today to get 10% off your first month.
Hello Fresh is America’s #1 Meal Kit. Go to HelloFresh.com/wfhpod65 and use code wfhpod65 for 65% off plus free shipping!
Indeed is the only job site where you're guaranteed to find quality applicants that meet your must-have requirements. Visit indeed.com/LAUGHING to start hiring now. Terms and conditions apply.
You can try Peloton Tread risk-free with a 30-day home trial. New members only. Not available in remote locations. See additional terms at onepeloton.com/home-trial.
Rakuten is an online shopping platform that gives you cash back when you shop at thousands of stores. Start shopping at rakuten.com or get the Rakuten app to start saving today.
Ritual’s Essential for Women 18+ is a multivitamin you can actually trust. Visit ritual.com/laughing to get 10% off during your first 3 months.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
2/17/2023 • 32 minutes, 22 seconds
Pushing Kids the Just-Right Amount
Do you worry about finding the balance between forcing your kid to keep doing activities that are good for them (that you already paid for) and not letting them be miserable all the time? How do you keep them on track academically without having to run flashcards with them about the Peloponnesian War for the billionth time? Here's what the research says about when to push our kids - and when to let sleeping (Peloponnesian) dogs lie.
A listener in our Facebook group asks:
"How do you decide when to push your kids? Like when to go from YMCA basketball to the travel team. Or when to go from regular school to the accelerated program, or the private school that's more rigorous. When to apply for the stretch school or the internship? We don't want to ruin hobbies or turn the stress up to 11, obviously. So how do you know which knob to turn and when to turn it so that their ambition, their ability, and their achievement all line up in perfect balance and harmony?"
Amy and Margaret discuss:
The “optimal push” and how it's different from over-parenting
Achievement-by-proxy distortion (sing out, Louise!)
The factors to consider when pushing your child to do something
Ultimately, kids are optimally supported when they believe their parents’ love is not performance-contingent. The answer lies in helping them fulfill their potential without damaging their self-esteem.
LINKS!
Amy Wilson for New York Family: Finding the Optimal Push
Our episode "How Not To Live Through Our Kids"
Dr. Eddie Brummelman et al: My Child Redeems My Broken Dreams: On Parents Transferring Their Unfulfilled Ambitions onto Their Child
Special thanks to our sponsors for this month:
For trusted protection, choose Pampers, the #1 Pediatrician Recommended Brand. Download the Pampers Club App today to start earning rewards with every diaper & wipes purchase.
Author Accelerator’s Book Coach Certification program provides resources to help you launch your own thriving business coaching writers. Head to bookcoaches.com/podcasts to find out more.
This episode is brought to you by BetterHelp. If you want to live a more empowered life, therapy can get you there. Visit BetterHelp.com/FRESH today to get 10% off your first month.
Hello Fresh is America’s #1 Meal Kit. Go to HelloFresh.com/wfhpod65 and use code wfhpod65 for 65% off plus free shipping!
Indeed is the only job site where you're guaranteed to find quality applicants that meet your must-have requirements. Visit indeed.com/LAUGHING to start hiring now. Terms and conditions apply.
You can try Peloton Tread risk-free with a 30-day home trial. New members only. Not available in remote locations. See additional terms at onepeloton.com/home-trial.
Rakuten is an online shopping platform that gives you cash back when you shop at thousands of stores. Start shopping at rakuten.com or get the Rakuten app to start saving today.
Ritual’s Essential for Women 18+ is a multivitamin you can actually trust. Visit ritual.com/laughing to get 10% off during your first 3 months.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
2/15/2023 • 42 minutes, 9 seconds
Ask Amy: Can I Politely Decline a Playdate?
Is there anything worse? Your kid is begging for a playdate at a friend's house, while that friend is standing right there listening. Plus that kid's mother. And the thing is, you think this other kid is not such a good friend for your child to have. What do you do?
A listener in our Facebook group asks:
"My kid is 7 years old. Has anyone ever experienced your child making a friend but you don’t feel comfortable with your child going over to their house solo for play dates? Any advice for how to navigate and what to say when your child is invited over? What if you got a chance to know the parent meeting at the park or a school event or sports but you didn’t get the vibe that you’d be comfortable with your child going over there— but you see them all the time and talk to the mom often and the kids beg for play dates in front of both parents?"
Amy suggests preparing a script ahead of time for politely declining in the moment and then exploring later what it is that's making you hesitant about this playdate. Is it the parents? The kid him/herself? Do you have anxiety about your kid playing at anyone's house, or just this kid? Sit with the discomfort and try to determine its root cause. Then go with your gut, while remaining open to receiving more information about the friend (or the friendship) later on that just might change your mind.
Special thanks to our sponsor, Pampers:
For trusted protection, choose Pampers, the #1 Pediatrician Recommended Brand. Download the Pampers Club App today to start earning rewards with every diaper & wipes purchase.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
2/13/2023 • 5 minutes, 31 seconds
Fresh Take: Ryan Wexelblatt, The "ADHD Dude"
If you're parent of a child with ADHD, you are familiar with the battles of will that can result. What are the best ways to help kids with ADHD succeed without either coddling them or coming down too hard on them? Are you the parent of a child with ADHD who feels like nothing you try is working?
Ryan Wexelblatt, also known as the "ADHD Dude," is here to help. Ryan, a licensed clinical social worker and father to a son with ADHD, creates content for the ADHDude YouTube channel and ADDitude Magazine. Ryan also provides parent training, in-person school-year programs, and a summer camp for boys.
Ryan, Amy, and Margaret discuss:
How to talk to kids with siblings who have ADHD
Why behavior prompts actually don't help long-term
How to use scaffolding to build important skills for kids
Firm boundaries and consistency, rather than permissive parenting or special treatment, are going to help kids with ADHD more in the long-run, Ryan explains. Helping kids visualize the consequences of their actions– whether those kids have ADHD or not– is a good first step.
Here's where you can find Ryan:
@adhddude on YouTube
@theadhddude on Instagram
@adhddude.ryanwexelblatt on Facebook
www.adhddude.com
Special thanks to our sponsors for this month:
For trusted protection, choose Pampers, the #1 Pediatrician Recommended Brand. Download the Pampers Club App today to start earning rewards with every diaper & wipes purchase.
Author Accelerator’s Book Coach Certification program provides resources to help you launch your own thriving business coaching writers. Head to bookcoaches.com/podcasts to find out more.
This episode is brought to you by BetterHelp. If you want to live a more empowered life, therapy can get you there. Visit BetterHelp.com/FRESH today to get 10% off your first month.
Hello Fresh is America’s #1 Meal Kit. Go to HelloFresh.com/wfhpod65 and use code wfhpod65 for 65% off plus free shipping!
Indeed is the only job site where you're guaranteed to find quality applicants that meet your must-have requirements. Visit indeed.com/LAUGHING to start hiring now. Terms and conditions apply.
You can try Peloton Tread risk-free with a 30-day home trial. New members only. Not available in remote locations. See additional terms at onepeloton.com/home-trial.
Rakuten is an online shopping platform that gives you cash back when you shop at thousands of stores. Start shopping at rakuten.com or get the Rakuten app to start saving today.
Ritual’s Essential for Women 18+ is a multivitamin you can actually trust. Visit ritual.com/laughing to get 10% off during your first 3 months.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
2/10/2023 • 37 minutes, 33 seconds
When Our Kids Have Different Relationships with Our Parenting Partners
Do you feel like the odd parent out in your house? Or do your kids want only you to do everything with them all the time? A listener in our Facebook group asked:
"Is there an episode about one parent having a very different relationship with a child than the other parent? My 12yo and I seem to have a pretty functional (not perfect) relationship, but he and my hubs seem to end up arguing constantly. Thought at first it was a phase, but if it is, it’s a LOOOOONG one. Would love some perspective on this!"
Margaret and Amy discuss:
How preferential treatment plays out in younger vs. older kids
Why kids save their worst behavior for their primary caregiver
Which one of them is conflict-averse and who's conflict-attracted (one guess which is which)
Preferring one parent over the other can be developmentally appropriate, but there are times when ganging up on one parent can become too much and needs some course correction.
Links!
Our episode "When Kids Prefer the Other Parent Over You (Or You Over Them)"
Ryan C. Martin for McSweeney's: "GOOD PARENTS CAPITALIZE ON THEIR INDIVIDUAL STRENGTHS. MY WIFE’S IS SEEING TO OUR KIDS’ EVERY NEED, AND MINE IS ROUGHHOUSING"
Marni Feuerman for VeryWell Family: "How to Cope With Parenting Differences"
Mariah Maddox for Motherly: "If your kids act differently with you than dad, you’re not imagining it"
Special thanks to our sponsors for this month:
For trusted protection, choose Pampers, the #1 Pediatrician Recommended Brand. Download the Pampers Club App today to start earning rewards with every diaper & wipes purchase.
Author Accelerator’s Book Coach Certification program provides resources to help you launch your own thriving business coaching writers. Head to bookcoaches.com/podcasts to find out more.
This episode is brought to you by BetterHelp. If you want to live a more empowered life, therapy can get you there. Visit BetterHelp.com/FRESH today to get 10% off your first month.
Hello Fresh is America’s #1 Meal Kit. Go to HelloFresh.com/wfhpod65 and use code wfhpod65 for 65% off plus free shipping!
Indeed is the only job site where you're guaranteed to find quality applicants that meet your must-have requirements. Visit indeed.com/LAUGHING to start hiring now. Terms and conditions apply.
You can try Peloton Tread risk-free with a 30-day home trial. New members only. Not available in remote locations. See additional terms at onepeloton.com/home-trial.
Rakuten is an online shopping platform that gives you cash back when you shop at thousands of stores. Start shopping at rakuten.com or get the Rakuten app to start saving today.
Ritual’s Essential for Women 18+ is a multivitamin you can actually trust. Visit ritual.com/laughing to get 10% off during your first 3 months.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
2/8/2023 • 39 minutes, 33 seconds
Ask Margaret: Is It Normal to Feel This Lonely?
Is the never-ending work and exhaustion and loneliness of parenting small children getting to you? You're not alone– but better days are coming.
Jordyn in our Facebook group asks:
"I have a three-year-old and 9-month-old. Is it normal to feel lonely all the time? Feel somewhat bored and left out? Feel like a non person? From the moment I wake up to the moment I fall asleep, I'm DOING for the kids, for the house, for the job, for the husband. I know I'm supposed to make time for myself but when? Wake up at 4am after being up with my baby all night? Will I ever go back to a human person? Or now that I have two kids, should I settle into this new normal? How long? 5 years? 10? I'm so anxious to feel well rested, feel pretty, feel healthy, be social and ENJOY my kids. I'm so tired."
Margaret explains that once your kids go to school full time, your life changes for the better. Even if it feels like there's no end in sight to putting your kids' needs first every single second, there will come a day when you can leave the house sans kids with REAL pants and maybe even some earrings!
Special thanks to our sponsor, Pampers:
For trusted protection, choose Pampers, the #1 Pediatrician Recommended Brand. Download the Pampers Club App today to start earning rewards with every diaper & wipes purchase.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
2/6/2023 • 8 minutes, 13 seconds
Fresh Take: Jen Lumanlan of "Your Parenting Mojo"
Do you feel like you're at the end of your rope with trying to get your kids to behave? Jen Lumanlan takes us through the steps for getting at the root cause of our children's behavior - and the root cause of our negative reactions, too.
Jen Lumanlan is the host of the Your Parenting Mojo podcast, which Lifehacker named "Best Research-Based Parenting Podcast." She runs a course called Taming Your Triggers, which helps parents to understand why they feel triggered and to feel triggered less often. Jen holds a Master's in Psychology focused on Child Development and another in Education.
Jen, Amy, and Margaret discuss:
How to determine your child's most frequent needs (and when to do it)
Where hair ties come into the picture
The importance of non-cognitive shifts
While inserting a "slip of paper" between our emotional response and our actions is important, the best thing we can do for ourselves and our kids is heal the reasons we are triggered by specific things in the first place.
Here's where you can find Jen:
@yourparentingmojo on FB/IG
www.yourparentingmojo.com
"Your Parenting Mojo" Podcast
Links!
13 Reasons Your Child Doesn't Listen (And What To Do About Each One) cheat sheet: https://www.yourparentingmojo.com/whatfreshhell
Taming Your Triggers workshop: https://www.yourparentingmojo.com/tamingyourtriggers
Our "Pattern Breaking" episode
Special thanks to our sponsors for this month:
For trusted protection, choose Pampers, the #1 Pediatrician Recommended Brand. Download the Pampers Club App today to start earning rewards with every diaper & wipes purchase.
Author Accelerator’s Book Coach Certification program provides resources to help you launch your own thriving business coaching writers. Head to bookcoaches.com/podcasts to find out more.
This episode is brought to you by BetterHelp. If you want to live a more empowered life, therapy can get you there. Visit BetterHelp.com/FRESH today to get 10% off your first month.
Hello Fresh is America’s #1 Meal Kit. Go to HelloFresh.com/wfhpod65 and use code wfhpod65 for 65% off plus free shipping!
Indeed is the only job site where you're guaranteed to find quality applicants that meet your must-have requirements. Visit indeed.com/LAUGHING to start hiring now. Terms and conditions apply.
You can try Peloton Tread risk-free with a 30-day home trial. New members only. Not available in remote locations. See additional terms at onepeloton.com/home-trial.
Rakuten is an online shopping platform that gives you cash back when you shop at thousands of stores. Start shopping at rakuten.com or get the Rakuten app to start saving today.
Ritual’s Essential for Women 18+ is a multivitamin you can actually trust. Visit ritual.com/laughing to get 10% off during your first 3 months.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
2/3/2023 • 34 minutes, 5 seconds
Our 2/1 Back-to-Ones
Are you already punishing yourself for breaking your impossibly difficult New Year's resolution? Yes, the one where you were going to eat 12 vegetables or run for 20 minutes or read an entire book every single day of 2023 (or do all three, for you masochists out there.) Here's how to work towards goals while remembering that so much of what we feel guilt over is actually morally neutral.
In this episode Amy and Margaret discuss how a "back to one" is different from a resolution, and how viewing resets as inevitable, rather than deep personal failings, is a much more productive approach. Still working on the same resolution from last year? Of course you are! Always be resolving–to move forward without guilt over what you didn't do yesterday.
LINKS!
Melissa Kirsch for the NYT: "Broken Promises"
Mick de Boer for Inside Out Mastery: "19 Mind-Blowing New Year’s Resolution Statistics"
Our "Back to Ones" episode from 2022
Listen to the "Edit Your Life" podcast, the newest addition to the Adalyst Media network!
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2/1/2023 • 45 minutes, 7 seconds
Ask Amy: How Do I Prepare My Kids for Leaving Them for the Weekend?
Leaving your kids for the first time in, well, forever? Getting anxious about how saying farewell will fly? A listener wrote in to say:
"My spouse and I are planning to leave our kids for the weekend for the first time (they're 6, 5, and 3). what's the best way to prepare them? 2 of my kids- yes, including the oldest- cry if I'm going out to dinner. We'll be leaving really early on Saturday morning- do I get them up to say goodbye? Is that a bad idea? How long beforehand do I tell them- or is this something best addressed at the last minute?"
Rebranding your trip as a special time for your kids may help assuage some of the anxiety they may feel at your leaving. Ultimately, these short trips away are a good reminder for you and your kids that they can be without you and still have a good time!
Links!
Sorry, Grownups, You Can't Go to School by Christina Geist https://bookshop.org/a/12099/9780593480328
Special thanks to our sponsors for this month:
For trusted protection, choose Pampers, the #1 Pediatrician Recommended Brand. Download the Pampers Club App today to start earning rewards with every diaper & wipes purchase.
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1/30/2023 • 6 minutes, 29 seconds
Fresh Take: Liz Gumbinner on Ditching the Hustle
Contrary to what social media would have us believe, not every hobby has to turn into a madly successful side-hustle that takes the world by storm. Margaret talks with Liz Gumbinner, co-host of the podcast "Spawned with Kristen and Liz," about why it's okay to just make really delicious cookies.
Liz Gumbinner is a writer, award-winning ad agency creative director, and mom of teens. Online she’s better known as the publisher of coolmompicks.com and the author of the OG mom blog Mom-101. Her Substack newsletter, I’m Walking Here, looks at media, politics, and culture through a witty parenting lens.
Liz and Margaret discuss why parenting itself has become another thing to "hustle" around, as well as the difference between ambition and "the hustle."
It's great to spend a night with your family or friends without taking/posting any pics at all and just being present, says Liz. It gives you perspective on what's important in life and helps you refocus how you want to spend more of your time.
Here's where you can find Liz:
@mom101 on Twitter, IG, Mastodon, and Post.news
"Spawned" podcast
https://coolmompicks.com/
"I'm Walking Here" substack
Links!
Liz's post "648 words about my one-word resolution"
Our episode with Eve Rodsky on Changing the Invisible Workload
Our episode with Amber Thornton on Finding Real Balance
The Happiness Project by Gretchen Rubin
Margaret's episode on Spawned
Special thanks to our sponsors for this month:
For trusted protection, choose Pampers, the #1 Pediatrician Recommended Brand. Download the Pampers Club App today to start earning rewards with every diaper & wipes purchase.
Author Accelerator’s Book Coach Certification program provides resources to help you launch your own thriving business coaching writers. Head to bookcoaches.com/podcasts to find out more.
This episode is brought to you by BetterHelp. If you want to live a more empowered life, therapy can get you there. Visit BetterHelp.com/FRESH today to get 10% off your first month.
Hello Fresh is America’s #1 Meal Kit. Go to HelloFresh.com/wfhpod21 and use code wfhpod21 for 21 free meals plus free shipping!
You can try Peloton Tread risk-free with a 30-day home trial. New members only. Not available in remote locations. See additional terms at onepeloton.com/home-trial.
Rakuten is an online shopping platform that gives you cash back when you shop at thousands of stores. Start shopping at rakuten.com or get the Rakuten app to start saving today.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices