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One topic that I realize Iâve never done a podcast episode about before and something that I feel so called to talk about is helping your kids feel their feelings. The discoveries weâve had as humans around handling our mental and emotional wellbeing with new tools and knowledge is so transformative, and I see it as not only a gift to ourselves but a way to serve our kids and the generations beyond too.
Naming and processing our feelings, especially if youâre new to this work, can be challenging. So itâs no surprise if the notion of teaching your kids this work feels overwhelming or even impossible. Today, Iâm sharing some key pieces of understanding that are necessary for you to begin helping your kids with this, and some tips on how to make this work relatable to them.
Join me this week to discover how you can help your kids feel their feelings. I believe this is one of the greatest gifts you can give them, no matter how old they might be. This is work that I do continuously with my own kids of different ages, so I hope the action steps that I practice help you navigate this topic with your children.
If youâre a coach certified through The Life Coach School, I want to invite you to a program Iâm calling An Advanced Certification in Faith-Based Coaching. You donât have to be a coach who coaches within a religious context to join this program, but Iâll be teaching tools around this topic, along with all the tools Iâve developed over the years to help you take your coaching to the next level. Click here to get on the waitlist, and I canât wait to see you there!
If you donât currently have a life coach, I would be so honored to be yours. I created a virtual coaching program called Be Bold that I want to invite you to join me in. We have group coaching, individual private coaching, and online chats along with hundreds of hours of courses and content that Iâve created just for you, including my new upcoming course, Lighten up for the Holidays. If youâre ready to take this work to the 10X level, click here to check it out!
What You’ll Learn on this Episode:
- Why I recommend you practice feeling your feelings before teaching your kids how to do it.
- How I talk to my young kids versus my teenagers about their feelings.
- 2 things you have to understand about feelings.
- The healthiest thing we can do for ourselves with regard to our feelings.
- How to teach your kids about feelings in a way that is relatable to them.
- The difference between allowing emotion and acting out on emotion.
Mentioned on the Show:
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- When you’re ready to take what you’re learning on the podcast to the 10X level, then come check out Be Bold.
- If you’re a coach who is already certified through The Life Coach School, I want to help you take your coaching to the next level. Interested? Get on the waitlist here.
- Follow me on Instagram!
- Grab the Podcast Roadmap!
- Natalie Clay
Iâm Jody Moore and this is Better Than Happy episode 275: Help Your Kids Feel Their Feelings.
Welcome to Better Than Happy. Iâm your host, Jody Moore. Iâm a mother to four children. Iâm a huge Taylor Swift fan, and Iâm a Master Certified Life Coach. Iâm here to teach you how to manage your brain and manage your emotions so that you can create a life thatâs even better than happy. Are you ready? Letâs go.
Hey everyone. Whatâs happening? Welcome to episode 275 which is a lot of episodes. So glad that youâre still here, thank you for sharing, thank you for listening. Please do continue to share the podcast. You guys help it to grow so much. And you help me get these tools and this workout to more people in the world. Iâm appreciative of the reviews you leave on iTunes. So if you havenât left me a review yet, you could do that. That would be lovely.
If you want to just screenshot this episode and share it in your social media feed or something, that would be awesome. However you like to share I will take any and all of it and Iâm greatly appreciative of it. If you do share on social, make sure you tag me at Jody Moore Coaching on either Facebook or Instagram so I can give you a shout out as well.
Today weâre going to talk about how to help your kids feel their feelings. But I want to make sure and give you just a couple of updates about whatâs happening here at Jody Moore Coaching.
One of the things is an advanced certification program for coaches who are already certified in the model through The Life Coach School. And you want to take everything to the next level, you want to get a lot of practice coaching, you want to get feedback on your coaching of real clients. And you want to learn, gosh, there is a couple of dozen of specific tools that I have created that I use as a coach, some of those apply to my specialty in faith based coaching.
And so if you want to join me with that program, we have an information call that will be happening, I think by the time this podcast airs, it will be next week probably. So this is the last chance to get in with this group and join me for the advanced certification in faith based coaching. So you go to jodymoore.com/coach to get all the information that you need. Again, you do need to already be certified through The Life Coach School to be eligible.
Alright, the other update I need to give you is for those of you in Be Bold, or those of you thinking about joining me in Be Bold. One of the benefits to the advanced certification program that I offer is that it means you get free private coaching. So thatâs a pretty cool benefit to you guys in Be Bold, starting in January, that youâll be able to get free private coaching as a member of Be Bold.
But the other thing I want you to know is that in the meantime for the months of November and December I am creating a whole bonus program called Lighten Up For the Holidays. So Iâm going to be teaching some extra courses and doing some extra calls during the months of November and December only. These will be the only time you can get these courses. And they will be focused around lightening up for the holidays.
So first of all I literally mean lighten up because for those of you that are interested in losing some weight, Iâm going to help you with that. Did you know you can do that? You donât have to gain weight through the holidays. You could lose weight or you could at least maintain your weight if thatâs what you want, so that you could go into 2021 feeling really confident about where youâre at with your health goals. So weâre going to do some work around that.
But even if youâre not interested in weight loss, you donât have to come to those calls, Iâm going to do other calls that will help you lighten up emotionally, lighten up mentally, your overwhelm, your stress. A lot of you tend to at the holidays get extra heavy. You take on more responsibility, you take on more stress. You take on the emotions of the family that youâre seeing, that maybe you donât see all year long. This year with the pandemic and everything else happening in the world it might feel extra heavy. And guess what? I donât think thatâs necessary.
So Iâm going to be offering some extra tools, and courses, and programs to help you lighten up for the holidays. So if youâre in Be Bold youâll be getting all the information about what that looks like and how to attend. So just stay tuned. If youâre not in Be Bold and you want to join us go to jodymoore.com/membership.
Now, I want to talk to you about how to help your kids feel their feelings today because this is something I get questions on a lot, something that I realized Iâve never really done a podcast in this direct of a way about before. And something I feel so called to try to get out into the world. I think if we can help our children understand better what to do with emotions and how to feel their feelings, that I think that will serve that generation and us so well.
I think that kind of as human species weâre ready to evolve to that next level of us where we understand what to do with emotions that is healthy. I think about just even in my lifetime, the sort of evolution weâve seen in our understanding as human beings. I feel like we in my lifetime gained a lot of knowledge, and skills, and insight about how to be physically healthier.
When I was a baby in the 70s, I think that it was common for people to smoke, maybe not members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, but otherwise I think most people or a lot of people anyway smoked. Even I remember being in high school and a lot of my friends smoked and they even had a place where you could step outside, we called it smokersâ alley. But it was a place that the school had approved where kids could step outside in between classes or something to have a little smoke, if they needed a smoke break.
There used to be times on airplanes when they would turn the smoking light on or off, so people knew when it was okay to smoke. There were smoking sections of restaurants and hotels.
Well, we understand today how detrimental smoking is, not only to the smoker but to everybody around in the form of secondhand smoke. And so not that there arenât still people who smoke, of course you could still buy cigarettes. But weâve come a long way in terms of understanding how detrimental that is and how important it is to take care of our health. And thatâs just one example. We know that about exercise and food, and we just know a lot more, even in my short lifetime about how to be physically healthier. And I think weâre continuing to learn.
But I want you to think about that in terms of our mental and emotional health. And that I think that for my generation anyway, those of us that are raising kids right now or have recently maybe raised kids, or have little kids, that our opportunity is to advance in terms of our mental and emotional health. We have a lot more room to grow I should say in that area, than we do with regards to our physical health at this point.
And so Iâd like to think of the world, it just keeps getting better. Our knowledge keeps advancing. Our skills keep increasing. We get to build on what the generation before us figured out. And then we get to go figure out something else and pass it along to the next generation. And that is what I feel the mental and emotional tools, and knowledge that weâre gaining will be sort of our gift to that generation.
So in order to teach your kids how to feel their feelings, I highly recommend that youâre practicing feeling your feelings. Because maybe that goes without saying, but itâs pretty tough to teach your kids and tell your kids to do something that youâre not at least trying to do. It doesnât mean you have to be perfect at it. Maybe theyâre even going to be better at it than we are.
But I certainly think we should be trying because first of all, the best way to teach something is to demonstrate it and model it. So if weâre telling them, âListen, feelings are for feeling and you can just process and allow them,â but we donât do that, people tend to believe what we do and not what we say, especially our kids. So I think itâs important that we understand it first and foremost.
I also think that as you practice it and you experience it yourself, then you will find the words and the way to teach and explain it to your kids even better. Iâm going to give you suggestions today about some of the words and ways, but youâll probably do a much better job of figuring out how to explain it to your kids than I would. So I want you to understand it, and I want you to practice it.
Okay, so Iâm going to give you a few things that I just want to make sure you understand and then Iâm going to talk to you about how do I talk to my kids. And Iâm going to talk to you about how I talk to my young kids, my seven year old and my four year old. And also how I talk to my teenagers, my little bit older kids because of course itâs going to be different.
So first thing is that you have to understand that thoughts create feelings. Thoughts create feelings. Now, thatâs three simple words, if youâve been listening to me for a while youâve heard me say it many times.
But I still have moments, in fact I had one just today driving down the street, when I started thinking about how thoughts create feelings and my head sort of explodes a little bit. Because while I fully understand that, thereâs still a little part of me that thinks that feelings and emotions are important relevant information about whatâs happening outside of me, whatâs happening in the world. And feelings are not important information about whatâs happening in the world, they are important information about whatâs happening internally for me, whatâs happening in my head.
So it doesnât mean that you shouldnât be thinking what youâre thinking, in fact no feeling is off limits. Weâre going to talk more about that in a minute. But just the idea that thoughts create feelings is actually layered with complication when you allow space for it.
So hereâs what sort of prompted and triggered this aha moment for me is our gyms are open again here in Spokane. Theyâve been closed due to the pandemic. But they are open again, theyâve actually been open for a little while but I have been hesitant to go back to the gym. But I finally decided I think itâs safe, I think I can take the proper precautions and I want to start going to the gym, especially because our days are getting shorter and our weather is getting colder. And I want to be in a good habit of exercising before the bleakness of winter hits.
And so when I go to the gym I like to go to classes. And the system at our gym, at the gym I go to anyway right now is that they can only take 10 people in the class at a time for social distancing reasons. And so they have you register for the class. And once itâs full then it says itâs full and you canât get in. So I registered to attend a class tomorrow morning and then I realized that I could actually attend a class this evening and would work out better with my schedule. And then tomorrow morning I might just go for a jog or a walk or something.
And so I cancelled the class for tomorrow morning, I got onto the app on my phone and I hit cancel booking. And a message popped up that said, âYour booking has been cancelled, please check with your local gym for the cancellation policy.â And so when I read that it made me realize, oh, it could be that there is a penalty to cancelling my booking less than 24 hours before that class. They might charge me money. They have my card on file. They charge me my gym membership every month. And this cancellation policy makes me think maybe there is a fee for that.
So for a moment I thought I should call the gym, and I should look into this, and I should figure it out so that I know for the future if Iâm going to book and cancel, whatâs the penalty? And then I had this thought, or maybe not.
Maybe I donât even want to know because they could charge my card that cancellation fee and I wouldnât even know unless I go look at my bank statement. And I would save myself having to do thought work about it. Because if I find out theyâre going to charge me a fee then I might have a thought like thatâs not fair, thatâs not right. I donât think I should have to pay that fee. I donât want to pay that fee. And then Iâd have all the negative emotion that would create.
And I can do thought work around it and decide itâs totally fair and feel peaceful about it. Or I could just not even know about it and as long as my account doesnât become overdrawn, or itâs not an amount that I canât somehow pay off, then I donât have the thought work and the negative emotion around it.
Now, I know that sounds like a really irresponsible way to think about it. And Iâm not telling you thatâs what I would do or what I think you should do, is letâs just turn a blind eye to everything so we donât have to do thought work. I just was playing with the idea that isnât it fascinating that I could get charged a late fee or excuse me, a cancellation fee and not feel any negative emotion about it, if I donât know about it, because I would never have a thought about it. So that charging of that fee wouldnât be the thing that would make me feel irritated. I wonât feel that if I donât know about it.
So again, these are just things that I play with in my head because Iâm a little bit of a crazy person. But this idea that â I was like, yeah, because thoughts create feelings, cancellation fees donât create feelings, thoughts do. My brain is so powerful, I can create any feeling I want to because my thoughts always create it. So in other words, the irritation that feels so necessary and justified is just a made up thing in my head.
So again, if youâre new to me and youâre thinking this sounds nice, Jody, so just walk around in ignorance and feel good. Thatâs not what Iâm saying. I just want to use this to illustrate the point that thoughts create feelings.
Now, the next thing that I want to make sure you understand, which piggybacks off of thoughts create feelings is that if itâs true that itâs just our brains creating it. Which by the way, I should say, except in the case of a chemical or a hormonal imbalance, in which case I highly recommend you seek clinical help for that. But Iâm talking about all the other times, all the other feelings that we feel. And when I say feelings, I mean emotions, not sensations like hot, cold, hunger. I mean feelings, like happy, frustrated, mad, sad, joyful, compassionate, curious.
Then this means that feelings are not emergencies, negative feelings even are not emergencies or fires to be put out. Negative emotions are not sicknesses, theyâre not problems. Theyâre not indicators that something is wrong. Theyâre certainly not a sign that you need to change something. So that includes things outside of you and your internal thoughts.
Negative emotions donât mean thereâs something in the world that you need to fix or change. And they also donât mean you should be thinking a different thought. They just are indicators. Theyâre not demands to be met. Theyâre not something that you need to escape in some way, even though our brains think so. We donât need to get onto Instagram quickly because weâre feeling anxious or restless.
We donât need to eat something because weâre feeling stressed. We donât need to escape them. They just are vibrations or sensations in the body that indicate that weâre thinking something. Theyâre also not something that we should push away or numb in some way. Theyâre not these big crises, fires, problems that we tend to think they are, negative feelings. Theyâre not any of those things. What they are is just information that the body feeds us about whatâs happening in your mind. Thatâs it.
Feelings, all of them, but weâre going to talk about the negative ones a lot today, are just information that your body feeds you in order to inform you about whatâs happening in your brain. Now, theyâre powerful, donât get me wrong. I think itâs fascinating to notice how the mind and body are so connected and how they can create such powerful reactions within us. So at their most extreme, really strong emotions, especially negative ones can create diarrhea for us. They can affect our digestive system. They can even make us vomit.
I was watching a TV show the other day and the guy on the show witnessed somebody get killed. And then he ran over to the sink and he threw up. And I thought â now, this was a fictional show, but that can happen. When we have really extreme thoughts about what we observe in the world it can create a vibration in our body thatâs so strong it can cause us to vomit. So I get it, theyâre strong, theyâre powerful, theyâre not usually creating diarrhea or vomiting, but they can, at the same time itâs just information.
So when you start viewing that information as interesting, and Iâm not saying we donât want to pay attention to it. But sometimes itâs useful, sometimes itâs relevant, sometimes itâs just brain chatter. And itâs not anything we need to do anything about other than process.
So in other words, feelings, even the negative ones are just part of the human condition. Theyâre part of being a human being. And theyâre an amazing part, the fact that we have these emotions is sort of like this internal compass that naturally tries to steer us in a useful way as people in the world. But we just want to be onto ourselves and we want to question them because a lot of times they are just what I call brain chatter.
So most of them, letâs talk about what most of them feel like. We have really extreme ones like I talked about that can create diarrhea, or vomiting, or other extreme things like that. But most of the time theyâre not quite that extreme. Usually what they feel like, and I know this because I ask my clients over and over again as I help them feel their feelings. I say, âWhat does it feel like?â And often they describe it as a heaviness or tightness. Often itâs in their chest or in their throat.
Think about feelings like fear, anxiety, sadness, frustration, there are some differences, slight differences in how they feel. But most of them have some component that the main thing people describe to me is a heaviness or a tightness in the chest or the throat, maybe down in the abdomen as well. Maybe thereâs something happening down there thatâs like a queasiness or an unsettled type of feeling. Thatâs it.
So I get it, people tell me this, theyâre like, âItâs just really heavy, tight in my chest, like itâs sort of hard to get air, itâs sort of hard to breathe.â And what I say to them is, âOh, sort of like when youâre exercising?â Because I had this realization myself the other day, I was out jogging and I realized that when I jog, especially if Iâm jogging up a hill, thereâs moments when itâs sort of hard to get air in my lungs, having a harder time breathing. Itâs like a tightness, a heaviness.
My lungs are constricted and theyâre not bringing in as much air as my heart needs to beat that fast. But I donât freak out about that. I donât think oh no, I need someone to solve for this. I just know that the reason why is because Iâm jogging up a hill. And maybe I go a little slower. I want to make sure that Iâm not going to pass out or something. But itâs not a big deal. Itâs not a big problem for it to be a little bit harder for me to get air for a while. Now, again, Iâm not talking about extreme situations where youâre having a panic attack and you do need to figure out some intervention.
But I think if you apply what Iâm giving you here today youâll avoid escalating to that point in many cases. So itâs just a little bit harder to get some air because weâre experiencing a negative emotion, because weâre human beings and because weâre thinking thoughts in the brain.
So understanding all that now, I want to offer to you that the healthiest thing that we can do for ourselves is to just feel those feelings, to just process them, to just open up to them and allow them. Rather than turn into crazy people trying to control the world outside of us, rather than push them away or resist them, or eat food to cover them up, or whatever else weâre doing. We could just, at times anyway, open up to them, allow them and learn how to feel them or process them. We donât have to be mad at them. We donât have to be in a hurry to get rid of them.
I can always tell me when my clients think that theyâre processing and allowing emotion, but theyâre not because theyâll say, âIâve been doing it but itâs just not going away.â Part of allowing it is that weâre not in a hurry to get rid of it. It can stay as long as necessary if weâre really allowing it, because itâs not a problem. Itâs kind of inconvenient, itâs not my favorite thing but I can handle it as long as necessary, as long as my brain needs to keep thinking those thoughts, I can keep feeling this feeling.
So letâs get around to now how we do this with kids. I hope that gives you a good kind of base understanding though, especially if youâre brand new to me of what I teach about feelings and emotions, because youâre going to need to understand that. Now weâre going to talk about how do we explain that in a way that our kids can understand and relate to.
So I have two boys who are both my emotional children, I have two boys and two girls. And my boys are just more emotional than my girls, which is, I know often itâs the opposite. But thatâs how it is in our family. And so Iâm going to use them as the example, because my one child is in first grade, heâs seven years old, Oliver. And my other child is 14 years old and heâs a freshman in high school. And so the way I talk to them is different because theyâre at different developmental stages as kids.
So with Oliver, my seven year old, I use this trick that I learned from my sister, Natalie Clay, whoâs also a coach. And that is to talk about an animal. And by the way if you have the Family Home Evening lessons, those are in the bonus content of Be Bold. And I guide you through several lessons that help you to teach this to your kids. One of them is where we talk about the monkey in your brain. And I give you coloring pages and things like that to give your kids if you want to go grab that.
But the monkey in the brain, and with my Oliver we use monkey. But you could use whatever animal your kid chooses. And we just talk about that monkey gets really upset sometimes. And he gets overactive, and he gets worried about things. And itâs okay, we love him. So we donât dislike the monkey, we donât hate the monkey, weâre not mad at the monkey. Weâre just like, okay, little monkey, itâs okay, just settle down. So itâs sort of my way of helping my seven year old, Oliver have distance between his thoughts and his own experience of them.
Now, we donât really go in and find the thoughts, itâs just my way of saying, âThis is just your brain, itâs just because of sentences in your brain. Itâs because of thoughts that youâre feeling this feeling.â And thatâs a powerful thing to understand you guys, because it helps you calm down a little bit. Otherwise we think thereâs something outside of me I have to fix. But when you realize, no, this is just in my head, this is just my sentences in my brain, then you realize I donât have to panic and try to control everything.
So with Oliver, thatâs how we talk about it, âThat silly monkey again, he just gets so worked up sometimes and we can just love him. We just need to hug him. Itâs okay for him to be upset.â
Now, with my older son, Isaac, I donât use the monkey analogy, I just tell him about his brain. I just say, âOh yeah, thatâs just your brain.â Thatâs what brains do. Brains get upset. Brains think that we should be worried, and scared, and nervous, and they donât want us to have to do new things, or meet new people, or have experiences that are hard. Thatâs what your brain is supposed to do, but I constantly talk about the brain to him. So Iâm like, âThis is just your brain.â
So Iâm still giving the credit for the emotion to him internally, but Iâm not telling him, âSo you should think something different.â Iâm just like, âYeah, itâs totally normal, my brain does that too in different ways and about different things. But thatâs what human brains do.â
Then if theyâre in the thick of emotion I like to, like I said, use either the animal or the brain to explain to my kids what emotions even are, whatâs going on for them. Right away that starts to demystify and make it less scary. Now, itâs important that you do your work as the parent to get to peace about your kids having negative emotion.
I talk a lot about that on here but it is okay, just like we talked about earlier. It doesnât mean somethingâs wrong, it doesnât mean thereâs an emergency. It doesnât mean that theyâre sick, they donât have the flu. They donât have coronavirus. Theyâre just a human being experiencing frustration, or fear, or anxiety. So I say that to them as Iâm teaching them about their brains either through the monkey or just the brain. And I say, âItâs totally normal, itâs part of being a human.â
And I say things like, âI feel that emotion too.â Or, âI think thoughts that make me feel that way a lot too.â Or with Oliver Iâll say, âI have a monkey in my brain too. And he gets upset when you leave your toys out and I tell him, âSettle down, itâs fine that Oliver left his toys out. We donât need to freak out about this. Weâll just talk to him.ââ So I give them examples of how I have, of course, around different circumstances, but I have similar thoughts to them.
Now, the other thing I do is if theyâre crying at all, and this happens with my older kids sometimes, and my younger kids. If theyâre genuinely crying, Iâm not talking about like sometimes my younger kids will start having a little bit of a tantrum, or sort of trying to generate crying to get some sympathy or attention. Iâm not talking about that. Iâm talking about true emotion, when I can see that theyâre fighting back tears and theyâre trying to push down emotion, theyâre trying not to cry, especially because these are my boys, boys think they shouldnât cry. I totally encourage crying.
I say, âJust cry, if you want to cry, itâs totally fine.â Because crying is part of how we process emotion. So when we try to fight back tears, and we try to push down the crying, we actually are intensifying it. So I encourage crying if itâs true crying, I say, âYou know what, just let yourself cry, itâs totally fine, nothing wrong with crying. Itâs nothing to be ashamed of. Itâs not weakness; itâs just part of how your body processes what youâre feeling. And part of how your brain wrestles with what youâre thinking is through tears, so just allow the crying.â
So thatâs the first thing I do, explain whatâs going on for them. I try to make it really safe to feel negative emotion. I even encourage crying.
The second thing I do is I sit with them and we process it together. And it sounds like this. With my seven year old I say something like, âWhat does it feel like buddy?â And I should say that we actually name it first. So Iâll say, âIt seems like youâre really anxious. It seems like youâre nervous. Or it seems like youâre sad.â So often I will offer an emotion that I think they might be feeling. And he might say, âNo, I donât feel sad, I just feel worried,â or something. He might give me a different one, thatâs fine. I go with whatever he picks.
But I like to offer one because especially with my seven year old, heâs not really thinking in terms of emotion usually. So I name the one I think it is. Now, remember, emotions are just one word, you guys, so if itâs more than one word you probably are grabbing thoughts. We donât want to go into thought land right now with the kids. We donât want to try to change their thoughts. We donât want to talk them out of feeling what theyâre feeling. We donât want to tell them not to feel it. Thatâs the opposite of what we want to do.
We want to help them feel it, so we stay in feeling land, which is one word descriptors. So Iâll say, âSeems like youâre feeling scared.â And then I say, âTake a deep breath and letâs just be scared right now. Letâs just do some fear.â
Somebody recently said to me, âWhen you say that you do fear with your kids, it sounds weird, itâs like a coachy thing to say.â And I was like, âYeah, but I purposely say it that way because when we say, âI am afraid,â it feels scary. But you are not fear. You are not your emotions. Youâre just feeling fear.â
And we could do that, we could just feel some fear, just like sometimes we bake cookies, sometimes we do fear. I think thatâs a gift I can give my kids, is to do it with them, alongside them anyway. I might not be feeling fear but Iâm probably feeling sadness or something about their fear. So I say, âTake a deep breath and letâs just do some fear right now.â
Then I ask them, âWhat does it feel like in your body?â And my seven year old will say, âI donât know.â Heâs usually crying though, so itâs like, âI donât know.â It sounds more like that. And I say, âWell, when I feel fear, my stomach feels queasy and my chest feels heavy.â And maybe he just nods his head. Maybe he says, âNo, it feels like this and he gives me something different.â Doesnât matter, what matters is that weâre in the body now, Iâm helping him focus on what heâs feeling. Iâm encouraging him to take breaths.
Iâm telling him things like, âJust relax your shoulders, relax your forehead, relax your eyebrows, stop scrunching up or youâre going to need Botox in no time.â I might make a joke along the way. âAnd we take a deep breath, letâs just do some fear, there it is, right in your belly or right in your chest. Thatâs just fear, buddy.â
And again if it seems appropriate and my childâs comfortable I might put my hand on his heart and be like, âOh, feel how your heart is beating so fast right now.â Or Iâll say something like, âItâs beating so strong, I can feel it. Can you feel that? Thatâs because of fear. And itâs just your monkey, remember, heâs just jumping up and down in your head and heâs making your body respond this way, but itâs okay. Itâs totally fine.â
So notice weâre not in thought land at all, Iâm not asking him, âWhat is he scared of,â yet. Weâll get to that, but first I just help him feel it, and then he stops crying every time. Because when you process emotion it runs through your body. Now, if he starts crying again, that means heâs thinking thoughts again now. And then we just do it again. I say, âOh, the monkeyâs not done yet. Alright, letâs do it again. Letâs do it again. Get in your body. Tell me what your tummy feels like. Tell me what your chest feels like. What does your heart feel like? Whatâs happening in your throat?â
It doesnât matter if they can describe it well or not, they might just say, âI donât know. I donât know.â They might not answer you. They might just stare at the floor. It doesnât matter, youâre still there helping them get in their bodies and feel it.
Now, with my 14 year old, my older son, or my daughters, not that my daughters are without emotion ever, but I basically say the same thing except I leave the monkey part out. But I say, âWell, it seems like youâre feeling nervous. Is that what it is, do you think, nervous?â And he might correct me if itâs something different. He might say, âNo, Iâm just worried.â And heâll usually go into thoughts, and heâll start giving me thoughts. Like, okay, so thatâs fear, or thatâs sadness, or thatâs disappointment.
So I kind of help him name it if necessary, if he canât, until we get to the one word emotion. We get out of thought land, we get into emotion land. And then I do the same thing, I say, âWell, okay, just take a deep breath, itâs totally fine that youâre feeling that. I feel disappointed all the time, welcome to being a human. Letâs get good at it. Itâll serve you well in life to get good at disappointment.â
So I say that and then I say, âLetâs just take a deep breath, just relax your shoulders, relax your face, relax everything, take some breaths. Letâs just do disappointment. What does it feel like in your body?â And he will also say, âI donât know.â And Iâll say, âHereâs what it feels like to me. It feels like this. Does it feel like that to you?â And itâs basically the same process and I just help him feel it, all the while saying, âNothing wrong with you that youâre feeling this emotion.â
Now, after we do that a time or two, and I can see that the emotion is calming a little bit then we can start talking about the thoughts. Then I can say, âWhat are you worried about? What are you afraid of?â And I can offer them different thoughts. I can say, âYou know, I can see why you would think that, nothing wrong with thinking that, but also donât forget this.â
So with my younger guy right now, itâs about going back to school. And I remind him of things like, âYouâre going to be with your teacher who youâve been seeing on Zoom every day. Youâre going to be with your friends. Iâm going to make sure youâre taken care of. Youâre going to have tons of fun, itâs going to be so much better than being on Zoom all day. And at the same time itâs normal to be worried about something new and different that you donât know what to expect.â So Iâm offering him those thoughts but Iâm tying it back to that monkey is just scared, he doesnât like new things.
And again, same with my older child, might be about something different. It might be about a camp out he doesnât want to go on or something. And I just remind him, âYeah, itâs understandable, none of us like unknown things or new things. But donât forget this and donât forget that.â
And also because heâs a little older, Iâll push him sometimes, Iâll be like, âIt will be good for you to do something hard. Thatâs what we do as humans. And Iâm not going to put you in a situation where I feel like youâre unsafe. You might be surprised and you might actually have a lot of fun.â
So thatâs what we do as parents, we offer new thoughts. And Iâm all for you still doing that. Just make sure that first you teach them how to feel their feelings and make it safe too.
A couple other points I want to make here before we wrap up which is that there is a difference between feeling a feeling and acting out on a feeling. So Iâm not suggesting that you want to let your kids act out in ways that you feel are inappropriate. So in our home we donât really like yelling. We donât swear at each other. We donât hit one another.
We donât act out in really aggressive obnoxious ways, even if weâre feeling really angry. So if I have a child doing that I might say, âListen, if you canât control your behavior, you need to go sit in your room for a while. Youâre totally allowed to be angry and disappointed, but youâre not allowed to hit your sister. Youâre not allowed to talk to people that way. We just donât do that in our home.â
So itâs sort of like violating an expectation that we have, thereâs a consequence for the behavior. But that doesnât mean that the emotion isnât okay. And I try to always preface it that way. âYouâre totally allowed to be disappointed. Youâre allowed to be,â you know, Iâm thinking of my four year old, Taylor, right now. âYouâre allowed to be disappointed that your brother got the swing before you, but youâre not allowed to hit him. Did you know you can be disappointed and not hit people?â
So, again, depending on the age of the child I am teaching them slowly but surely that you can experience and allow emotions and you donât have to act out on them. And in fact when you really just get in your body and feel them, you donât feel the need to start hitting people around you.
So thereâs a difference between allowing an emotion and acting out on emotion. And then the final thing Iâll just say is that itâs normal for kids to ebb and flow through different periods of intensity with things.
And I donât know why, but as human beings our emotions seem to get more intense at night, or that monkey in the brain, if you will, tends to come awake at night. I think heâs kind of nocturnal. As where you start to wind down the brain starts to wake-up and go, âWait a second, we should be worried about all this stuff.â Ever notice by morning things donât feel as much of a crisis as they do at night?
So those are just things to keep in mind both for yourself and for your kids. I like to remind my kids of all of this, but I think just more than anything, thereâs nothing wrong with feeling a negative emotion, thatâs true for you and itâs true for your kids. You donât need to fix them. You donât need to solve it. If you offer them some different thoughts and they reject them all, thatâs okay.
Let them feel their feelings, because theyâll probably work through it on their own and they might need to keep that feeling and keep those thoughts for a little while. They might need to wrestle with it. They might not want to be talked out of it. So when you understand that you can offer help but if they donât want it, thatâs perfectly fine. Teach them how to just feel their feelings. And remember, youâve got to go first.
Alright, we can do this. Bring me all your questions on this topic in Be Bold, because I want to help you. You can DM me on Instagram or whatever, and tell me about your own practices. And you have some best practices that maybe I can share with others. I would love to hear those stories of how youâre using this work to help your kids and weâll get it out to everybody. Alright, thanks for listening. Have an amazing rest of your week and Iâll see you next week. Bye bye.
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