Parenting Expectations Have Changed - Kids Haven't (with Maggie Dent) episode artwork

EPISODE · Apr 30, 2024 · 49 MIN

Parenting Expectations Have Changed - Kids Haven't (with Maggie Dent)

from Respectful Parenting: Janet Lansbury Unruffled · host JLML Press

If you're the parent of young children, there's a good chance you are very hard on yourself. Australian parenting guru Maggie Dent joins Janet in this episode of “Unruffled” to discuss the unprecedented pressures and challenges today's parents face living up to ever-changing standards set by social media, peers, and even schools. Parents are often left feeling overwhelmed and unsupported. Maggie and Janet share their long view perspectives, experiences, advice, and hope.   Maggie shares her extensive resources at: MaggieDent.com.  Learn more about Janet's "No Bad Kids Master Course" at: NoBadKidsCourse.com. Please support our sponsors and take advantage of their special offers. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

If you're the parent of young children, there's a good chance you are very hard on yourself. Australian parenting guru Maggie Dent joins Janet in this episode of “Unruffled” to discuss the unprecedented pressures and challenges today's parents face living up to ever-changing standards set by social media, peers, and even schools. Parents are often left feeling overwhelmed and unsupported. Maggie and Janet share their long view perspectives, experiences, advice, and hope.   Maggie shares her extensive resources at: MaggieDent.com.  Learn more about Janet's "No Bad Kids Master Course" at: NoBadKidsCourse.com. Please support our sponsors and take advantage of their special offers. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Parenting Expectations Have Changed - Kids Haven't (with Maggie Dent)

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TRANSCRIPT · AUTO-GENERATED

Hi, this is Janet Lansbury. Welcome to Unruffled. Today. I'm delighted to welcome Maggie Dent back to Unruffled.

She's a parenting megastar in Australia. She's known as the queen of common sense, but honestly, I hope that moniker does her justice, because what she has to offer us as parents goes well beyond common sense. It's wisdom, and she's got this generous, fun, loving spirit that's a gift all its own. Maggie's a popular speaker, a top podcaster, and she's the author of nine major books.

That's right, nine. Most recently Mothering Our Boys and From Boys to Men. And she's previously been my guest here a couple of times, including a very popular episode, Mothering Boys. Secrets to Understanding Our Sons.

And she's just a joy, what can I say? She's staying with me right now here from Australia, and so I got her in person and I'm absolutely thrilled. So let's go. Hello, Maggie Bent.

Oh, my gosh. We're back together again in real time. How cool is that? So cool.

Had to take advantage of this. And of course, there are a million things that I'd love to hear you share about, but what I was thinking is that you are in this very unique position of being a longtime parent educator, a parent and a grandparent. So you've experienced. It's not just the parents that you're working with that are you younger today.

It's actually your own children as well. So you really have an insider view that I don't have yet. I'm hoping someday. And so.

So I thought you would be the best person to talk about some of the changes that have happened in this generation. Parents today, they have different challenges and expectations than I had 20 to 30 years ago when I was raising my children. And some of them aren't necessarily improvements. Right?

You're so right. Even if we start at the very first observation is that what children need to grow and thrive and become decent human beings hasn't changed, but the world around our children has changed, including the expectations that we now have for children that we didn't have, like, 25 years ago. So it's so funny because I feel like the honorary grandmother figure sitting here in front of you. I now have seven grandchildren and the oldest is nine.

So when I went back into that window, besides it being the most exquisitely wonderful thing I'd ever experienced, and even, you know, the poop nappy is just. You're just still in a state of bliss that's different to your own because there is something different in that space. But what I noticed and what I observed was that immediately, not just my own daughter in laws, but my nieces and the ones I was already working with, they were incredibly hard on themselves. I just felt they were beating themselves up with things that I, and none of the ones that I was, you know, having children with would do.

There was a sense of hurriedness, that everything had to happen faster. And that's of course we know that we stole a year of childhood right around the western world, the year of five, when our little ones are still supposed to be largely running around outside building sandcastles and pretending they're unicorns or dragons. We stole that here. And when we did that, the pressure for you to get your kid ready for school has intensified and, and yet the capacity for our children to accelerate their development on any level hasn't changed at all.

And the additional stressors that were happening for parents in all sorts of ways, we actually created too much information as soon as we became digital natives. And I hear mum say to me things like, oh, that first meltdown, I thought, oh, what do I do about that? I just go online and say, hey, fix it. And you and I, you know, hello.

We know that's an exquisitely important moment of development for children and it's not problematic in a lousy parent. Your child's not failing. But all of a sudden that's the lens with which many parents were looking at their children and they keep asking me so how do I stop that? Then there's that other layer on top of it that today's mums, not only are they in the kind of insta space of, you know, comparing things and seeing endless reels of other mothers who seem to be doing it great.

And bite size fixes. Bite size and bite size images of incredibly well dressed children. Don't put the crap photos up. And I think that also puts another.

Because we're wider women, you know, we're all looking for am I doing as well as those other women are? That's what another whole layer and then the other layer. There's some things that are great about having a smartphone, a cell phone and that you can already go through delivered tutorial. Oh heck, then I wish that was happening to me.

But what I now know, especially as a children transition into primary school, you know, big school, you have to have so many different apps in order for you to keep up with what's happening at school, what's happening in your classroom, what's happening when you want to order Food for your children, whether the bus schedule's changed. And that's just within the school sense. If children are playing sport or doing music, you are in other organizational apps, which means that they are forever on their phone when I didn't have that to interrupt me in my connections with my fairly feral boys. So that's just a, a few of the things that means the landscape's changed.

However, what children need has actually not changed. Not changed. And just to be clear, I want to make sure I'm understanding everything you're saying. So when you're talking about here in the U.S.

our children start kindergarten at 5 to 6, summer, even late fours, 4, 5, 6 years old. Now, that used to be completely the teacher reading books to you, just socializing, learning how to be in school. And I remember the nap time, those little carts of milk. And then what you brought up about the parents being so hard on themselves.

Okay, I noticed that too. And the parents I'm working with, and they're getting so into the, into the weeds sometimes in, well, what if I just say this? And how should I do that? And it's hard to trust ourselves, right, when we've got so much information telling us that we could do it this way better.

And this is how you do that and how you fix that. But is that in your mind? Does that seem the cause of this perfectionism is all the information, or you think it's something else, like a generational thing? Yeah, I do.

I do think it's a generational thing. And you and I both know we're very much into respectful, responsive and parenting that doesn't need to use shame and fear and, you know, opinion and punishment. So what happened is a lot of parents today that did have that still, even the ones coming through now. So when I go to do something and I know that's wrong and I don't know what else to do, so therefore I have to go and find it.

And you look for something that's going to fix it. And there's no one size fits or fixes it. And that's when they start to go, well, I have nothing else like, can we have a manual? And there's the other thing that happens to.

We have a sense of patient that children don't turn up really different like the first one might be like the second one. And that that's caused a lot of confusion again because my special girlfriend had this Beautiful Baby Boy 9, 10 months before I did. And he was a lamb, what you know, I call a lamb as a sleepy Little baby, you know, nods back off to sleep, doesn't even cream. We yell very much.

In other words, it's a pretty crazy baby. And I thought, can't wait to have one of them. I reckon I'll be reading books. I've been teaching 150 kids and I've been on the school board and I've coaching basketball.

I've got to lay around, read a book. I didn't get one like that. So when we have the children who are born with the extra sometimes feistiness, sometimes they've got special challenges, whether they're, you know, and you're a diversion or whatever, and all of a sudden, in front of others, you appear to really be not doing your job because you know that we know what happens in supermarkets and people judge us and things. And I think the world has become far more judgy.

Generally, we're all judged so much more. I think that's added another layer to the why I need to beat myself up at the stick. You know, we know that there's enough research out there that now shows you get your really beautiful, connected, loving parenting right about 30 to 40% of the time, the kids are actually gonna be okay. No human can possibly meet all the needs of their children or their child every minute of the day.

It is just an impossible thing to do. And you can understand all the needs, much less I meet them. Can you see? So can you see why now?

If I learn more, will that happen? And sometimes with my hand on my heart, because, you know, I love early childhood educators who are deeply passionate about what they do. Sometimes they're the ones that come up to me after they've had a child saying, I thought I knew it all, what the heck. Because, you know, that lived experience of, you know, having a child you brought into the world or you've been blessed with who you love just beyond measure and who at times you don't like.

Yes. You know, I think it's. We're supposed to be happy and loving our children all the time. No, you can be.

You can be stressed and find it really difficult to love your children. And I think we need to make sure they get that message. Yes. And we lose the plot with them a lot.

And that's okay. I mean, that's expected. The answer is just find your way back as best you can. Just find your way back.

But don't expect that you're always going to be in sync because you're not. Sometimes you're going to really not connect with them. Well for an Entire day or two days or three days, it's okay. It's part of learning.

It's part of the process. And yeah, if we could give ourselves that permission. But I think it's so hard because there's all the information, there's the new expectations of kindergarten that are totally unreasonable to accept. Children have not changed in the way that they develop, but the expectations have changed.

And there's something. There's a big mismatch there. But then there's also. What I hear about too, is peer pressure between parents, partly because of the Internet.

But I mean, I remember when my kids were little, there was that wonderful book, the Hurry to Child. And that was very eye opening for a lot of people because it was about doing less, waiting for your child, that they're on the slower speed. They don't need all this enrichment in classes. I mean, today it feels like the parents I talk to, it's totally expected that their child from infancy is in different classes for different things all the time.

And God forbid, if my child shows an interest in dance, I gotta get them to a ballet class. But in fact, that can actually discourage their interest in dance. Because now somebody's putting a structure on something that came from their heart that was so free. And.

And anyway, so I feel like that's one big shift that I hear about that I just, you know, I can't be the one just to say, you don't have to do that. I mean, that doesn't help. How do parents believe that? How can they know in their hearts and feel good about their choice and that they're actually being not this person that's, you know, doing something wrong with their friends, but they can be a model of something different.

I don't know. I just feel that should be talked about more. How unnecessary that is and how that actually isn't the road to your child learning more and being more enriched. Because that learning happens when they're cuttering around after they had that experience where you took them to the zoo.

And now they're lashing it all out in their minds and they're integrating everything they've learned. And they're thinking of ways that they want to play out some of. I mean, not consciousness, or they play out some of what they learned to learn more about it and explore what it means. So all of that is the higher order learning that goes deep, that lasts about a lifetime.

That's critical thinking. That's imagination, creativity, all those things that we want. And being able to be present in a classroom as a child instead of being so overdone that, like, more stimulation is just too much. I think there's, like, parenting has become a competition and that is being pressured by just simply the opportunities that you can do.

You know that we think the more I do, the more, the better it will be. And I'm a huge advocate for simplifying it to being. Sometimes the less that we do, the more authentic and the more real it is. As you just explained beautifully, one of the.

Let's touch on one little window that I have to keep reframing and that's one of the things I think you and I do well. Every now and then we give a reframe to something that we're telling ourselves because it's just a story that may be triggered by our own childhood. And that when toddlers do the things that they do with all their senses to explore the world, whether it's smearing Mum's very best face cream on the cupboard and then on the floor and then on the dog and then on their hair, they are doing this massive scientific experiment around texture and location and surfaces. And when we do it, we see a naughty child ruining our face cream.

So I keep saying, I want you to keep in mind that this incredible seeking mechanism that Michael Sunderland talks about is they're just so curious to see what's out there and how does it work. They're meant to be doing these sorts of things. And that when the toilet does something, you know, whether it's the lipstick picture on your wall or the toilet roll has been unraveled and being shoved somewhere, we didn't really want it to be that if we can just pause, and that's the big one we talk about a lot, if we just pause and not reacting to that situation and then we'll go, oh, I get this. Like, there's a potential genius in front of me, right?

You know, did you do that all by yourself? And then we're going to come up with the next statement, which is, we don't draw on walls with the lipstick. We use paper and we will get some soon. Now you're going to help me clean it up, because what then happens, even though that's still really curious, is that in the cleaning up, then that just.

So it's a slightly bit of a dampener on the experience. And the chances of them doing it again has reduced a lot, but sometimes they need to do it again. And that's one of the things I think parents think, I just told you not to do, that you should automatically know that's not what you do next. And an example of a toddler exploring something was one of my little ones.

What do you call baby tomatoes? Cherry tomatoes. Little baby ones. I had a punnet on the kitchen bench next to her, and I was making a salad.

She was popping it in her mouth and just going till it exploded and then put it down and then got the next one. It was the explosion in her mouth that she was just right in the zone of. Right. And of course, I could have stopped her in that moment and said, she should be doing that, but I just watched that little face and those little brain cells that are going absolutely crazy about, does it again, does it again, does it again.

That was a massive learning experience for her that didn't need me to give it any context or to explain why that might not be okay in our world. And I think when we can see that this adventure of the first five years holds the most incredible potential for learning on all sorts of levels, their whole mind, body, heart, and soul, that they're not just supposed to be a brain that sits on a seat to be tested and a source of data. We can reframe. Exactly the magical moments that really, some days want you to just pull your hair out.

Yes. But I thought when you were starting married, I just wanted to interject. We don't have to be happy about the makeup of the lipstick. Obviously, we're upset about that.

But I think what you modeled or explained is try to see this from your child's point of view, that they didn't do this to anger you. However, they may have done it to experiment with your responses and to maybe get your attention in some way like that is another reason that children do that. Unconsciously, impulsively, they do that kind of stuff. So it can be pure exploratory.

It might also be, I'm uncomfortable, and I really need you to see me in a way that you're not. See, even if it's an angry way that you see me, I need you to see me. And of course, they prefer it's not an angry way. But I think that the.

The difference in those two different examples that you gave is that the tomato, that is a harmless thing. Right. Unless you needed those tomatoes or something, you were begging tonight. So you could just say, here's a little bowl.

Can you put this in the bowl? That would help because, you know, but from that lens of knowing that there's a reason that they're doing this, that makes sense, at least to them, and it's not that They're a bad. Intentionally being naughty. No, thank you.

And then I'm going to put that cream so much higher up on my life, or when I see you going towards my bathroom, I will stop you right there and not let you into the thing where I have to say, no, no, no, no, don't do that, don't do that, don't do that. Like, that's. That's an uncomfortable place for us to be. I feel like to me, it's not sitting at the limit early that we're allowing that.

But I think the overall message is that the way children are learning things is actually different than what we might think, that it's not going to that class where the teacher's saying, this is music and this is an instrument and you need to do it this way and all that. The real learning is happening when they're playing in the mud, when they're playing with tomatoes. So that's okay with us. When they're doing all those things that look like messing around and even when they're kind of unsubeled, wanting to wind us up, they're learning a lot right there.

They're learning about their power with us. They're learning about, you know, what their parent does when they get upset and therefore learning what do I do when I get upset and lash out at somebody because of it, maybe. So they're learning. They're learning all the time, basically.

And I think I was telling you last night at dinner, there were so many times was just in these weird little areas like a corner of a park next to the trash can where there were cigarette butts nearby that I wouldn't let my child touch. But they were playing with little pebbles and something, you know, watching an ant go and. And I'd be sitting there nearby thinking, or at least with a few of them thinking, this is my life. I sit by a trash can apart.

But my child is learning something important here. I trust their journey and if they're interested in that, they must need to learn something from it right now. I think consumerism has a lot to answer for as well in this space because we are bombarded. And now that I'm a grandmother that likes to buy, you know, their gifts, but I've come to the point where they already have enough toys, like, trust me, way more than we ever had.

And then the toys that have educational on a family might think, well, that's going to be better. That's going to make them cleverer. But there's no necessarily justification. So playing with pebbles On a pavement is equally as educational and it's in the child's direction and it's using what is there right in front of them.

Can I tell you, I was in a big huge baby and toddler shop in Western Australia at one point and I saw knee pads for toddlers. I've seen this, right? Oh, they're for, they're for crawlers. Crawlers as they're starting to crawl.

And I was sitting at it thinking, is this for real or is this a bit of a joke? Like, how many thousands of years have our babies managed to find their way to their feet by crawling without this? And then I realized, if you're a new parent, how are you to know that there's a biological kind of growth and development that allows that to happen for most of our kids? Or do you think this will help them do that and I need to spend money to do that?

Or you think they won't hurt their knees? But what children do when you observe them, these babies, when you observe them doing their motor skills naturally, is they learn to go gently on their knees. But if there's a pad there, they're not going to learn to go gently on their knees. So it's like using floaties in the pool can be dangerous because now they think they can do whatever they want in the pool.

Yeah, and that's how it can get so much more confusing. Because I walk around some of those stores and I'm overwhelmed. You know, like a parent who's. Just because my parents wants to buy, you know, pram.

What do you call them here? Pram. Pram, stroller. There are 50 to choose from.

And so you want to get the best kind of thing that you can afford. And sometimes that means you'll go down a rabbit hole of three or four days looking at reviews to things to find that out. And I think how many of those hours could you have spent, you know, gazing into your little baby's eyes or laying on the floor and watching them kick their legs around, you know, And I think the time stealer, I think that's like the giant elephant in the room we haven't mentioned, of course, is that the digital world also has been put into our little one's hands and far earlier because it seems to be what everyone does. And so I just want to touch on the displacement effect of that as well.

So the four things that have come up for teachers of five year olds is that we have children with poorer, fine and gross motor skills because they're not outside, they're not catching balls and climbing trees and putting things apart, building blocks. They have an iPad on their lap. The second one is the inability to initiate and sustain play because they're not playing as much. And if I want to, you know, put a really big heart centered message out there is that, you know, that's actually what children still need as much as possible.

Multi age children, all genders in environments, they can get dirty, muddy and fall over and graze themselves with a safe adult. And then the next one from that is their self regulation today has dropped so much that they are not as capable. And the last one is they've got less vocab, they're coming with less words and marinating our little ones in language, whether it's songs or it's conversations or it's. Everything is unbelievably important not only for them.

As we go towards learning how to be literate, if you haven't got enough words, how can you initiate play? So when we look at those four things, we kind of go, that wasn't happening 30 years ago because those kids were all in those environments. And so being mindful that you can still, especially if you're on a long haul flight sitting near me. Yeah, there's no problem with an iPad on a toddler's life with some wonderful, you know, healthy thing that they can watch.

But I still think we need to go where are our boundaries around these things so that our kids are still able to use their bodies and their minds and their heights to explore the world with wonderful, safe humans the way that we've done for centuries. Yes. I want to hear you offer more ideas about that because it is a hard one. You know, this whole thing of keeping our children safe, it's always been the most important thing.

But our definition of safety has changed so much it seems over the years when everybody's superior in this. But we were kids, you know, we went off all day and blah, blah. No we do that anymore. I feel like it's been overturned.

But why did our parents need less assurance than we do, for one thing. And how can we mitigate that? How can we still give our children all the gifts of that play that was so open ended and with other children and learning so much, so rich, especially learning about themselves, that they are capable of being out in their small world a little bit even without their parent looking over the shoulder? We're not talking about toddlers, I'm talking about, you know, school aged children.

How can we make room for that? Well, what we've done in Australia is that we've created a massive movement, and you have to have a movement and revolution to turn around a social norm that's locked in. And I've just been reading Jonathan Hatzley's book on the anxious generation, and he says that it's not just smartphones that have created our teens to be so mentally unwell. It's the absence of the childhood that builds those resilience and that he's calling for, particularly America, to go back to that.

If you have a backyard and a lot of people don't have one, what's in it? What can you put in your backyard? And quite often, we find that some of the loose parts play where you can just get some logs or anything, rocks or anything, a pile of sand and just step back, right? You can tie ropes out of trees and see what kids will do.

And the really important thing is that the science shows really carefully that children take themselves to the edge of their own fear each time they participate in something that allows them to stretch and grow. And so we don't have to push them up the tree. If they can't climb the tree, they're not ready for the tree. But we give them opportunities, you know, to climb a low log or have we got uneven surfaces, which is amazingly good for the brain.

Have we got opportunities for them to spin and tumble and balance and roll? Because they're the things that also work with parts of the brain that means they're better to sit in a classroom without falling out of a chair. So, you know, there are some things we can do. But I also want you to look around your community, because there's nature everywhere.

And of course, across this amazing continent from Canada to the U.S. and the most stunning forests and woodlands are everywhere where we need to be able to take our kids out sometimes, preferably with other children for picnics. Bumpy. Whatever.

Let's just get them back into nature. Because nature is not only a restorative thing. Sort of calm your kids. Before you know it, they will have found something and turned it into a wand, or they will be trying to build themselves a den or a cubby.

We just step back and allow the magic to happen. You know, small bits are all going to add up to something later. There's a magic in the joy of children having the autonomy to create the play experience without a prescribed adult or somebody saying, this is how this works. And then don't forget the magic of cardboard boxes.

But they're everywhere, right? And if possible, the best ones are the big ones. And Be prepared for your house to look messy, you know, while that cardboard box turns into a castle and then it's an underground cave. And we got a new refrigerator at one point and it was a big box and my sons played in it for about three months.

It was just so many things, I could hardly get them out of the box. Sometimes I even let them have it in the box because it was just the way we went. One day they left it outside and it got wet. They grieved like a pet had died.

And that's when I realized there was something beyond magic in that experience with that big box. With these four little boys over a couple of months, we don't always have to organize them into an activity, wherever it is. But if you do have an NH organisation and I see they're starting to grow, please find it. Because what we're finding is these wonderful educators are re educating children about how they can interact with the natural world.

Because some of them, it's almost been a generation that haven't and that we need to work with them around the genuine fears of what might be something you need to watch out for. I laughed when I was in Tofino up in Canada because there was a Sarnist walking trail, beware of bears, coyotes and wolves. And I went, oh, wow. And then I thought, hang on, I'm Australian.

We've got sharks, crocodiles and all sorts of fluff. Yeah, we go for this walk. Right. But there is a beautiful wildness all across and the kids just need to come back into it.

And they will. They will do what they need to do to grow. Yes, I agree with that. I'm also thinking as you're talking about parents who aren't home with their children all day, and I hate to keep harping on this, but it's okay for your child doesn't do any after school activity if they're going to a preschool program or it's a grade school program.

There's only so much time in a day. So we want to give our children free time so the weekends we don't have to plan a bunch of entertainment. Yes, the parent wants to get out and do something great, but maybe do it for you more than your child because children need to have that unmeasured time. That's not an appointment and not people telling them how it's done.

And they really need that. So there's always room for that, even if it's just at the very end of day after childcare, you pick your child up, you maybe sit and watch them for a bit. Then you say, this is what I got to do. You look and be mad at you.

They transition from that. If it happens every day, you're giving them a chance to transition into, gosh, I just want to sit here and look out the window. I want to pick my nose. I want to just do something that may look inane but is really important for that child.

I often say about the extracurricular activities, we know that some is good for children but too much is not. And that sometimes you also have to look at the child you have and work out. You have a high energy rooster child, a lot of energy. You know, they might be able to do a few more things in a week, but be very careful about your lambs and your children without the same amount of energy because they might want to go and participate in things that their friends are doing, but three weeks in, they can't, they're done.

So we're going to look at the child and we're going to look at what are we like as a family, what's the stress in our family when we have too much on and we are now going to sit down as parents and say, I know you'd love to do all these activities, but we've worked out that we actually need to have two afternoons where we're not racing around dropping you all off. And I know that can be very disappointing and you're sad at the moment, but choose what two you'd like to do and maybe we'll work, you know, to get better at how we do those things. Because when you are walking in the door after you've collected children, you know, in your mind there's a part of you that wants to cook a delicious, nutritious meal with broccoli and things. And I can't chat around the meal and then gets going to pop in and do a little bit of homework and then there's a lovely kind of bath and bedtime.

It just is not going to happen. Right. We all end up screaming at the end of the day. It's not good for mum and dad and it's not good for our children.

And we need to be the people that says it's too much and this is it. Yes, I like to try to help parent to have the expectation that your child, especially if your child's in a long, many hours of a program, no matter how old they are, they're after school, time to bedtime, there's screening, there's pushing you, you know, trying to get those boundaries from you Unconsciously, so that they can yell at you. There's maybe not every child, but there's discontent. And that's the balance.

That's the yin yang that they need to have to be able to go and perform all day in these schools. And I think it's easy to forget that because to us now we're home from work and we want to relax and all. Well, children, it goes the other way. It's opposite relax a lot of the time.

And I think, yeah, so it's a setup for a lot of frustration and disappointment, especially if we see somebody's videos on Instagram where the children are helping make dinner and cleaning up. And because maybe that happened once in the parentheses, the more we have a reasonable expectation, the more we're going to be able to have the perspective that we need to stay a little cooler. We're going to have feelings if people are, you know, not behaving well, but a little bit more. Being able to come down into that and relax ourselves and to say, okay, this is what I expect.

And if it doesn't happen, okay, that was nice, but that's not what I expect. Because all the things that happen all day, you're going to vent them out somehow. And not in this easy, simple way where it says, I have all my day, Mom. Let me tell you about it.

I mean, unfortunately, it comes out because we don't even know they're doing it. But they need to. I like that concept, that kind of. Based on Dr.

Mona's work about being an energy detective that does the body, it has no energy left. So therefore the last thing you need to do is to go to the grocery store on the way home and do some shopping. No, that. That is going to end up like a really big meltdown if I'm not able to help them restore some of that, you know, and quite often that's the meltdown in the car.

Your child's not, you know, might have had a great day at school. There's just nothing left because it's taken everything to try and be that child at school. And so that we have to keep tuned into that going, okay, so this might know. That might not work right now.

And do I have, you know, some food to restore them? Do I have a smile on my face? Whatever it is we've got to work out how do I restore my child and how often, you know, the kids just get dropped somewhere else to something else and, you know, that was already depleted by the time you get home. That's just going to be A massive flood.

And that's why I always encourage people to play really lovely, calm music around the home and hopefully cook the dinner on Sunday before that day. So all you do is walk in, quickly, heat some food up and you're straight into that. Whereas trying to cook the food with children that have got nothing in the tank and are completely flooded or just frozen with absolute stress, we have to tint that in a way. And I would even say that it's not so much up to us to restore because already to me, in my head, that sounds like, oh, I have to do all this work.

It's to. It's to allow space for your child and be the energy balance for your child to naturally restore in their messy, maybe ugly interface way. Not to let the interface, you can move your other side, but just letting it happen and knowing that it may very well happen and also not cooking the meal, that you're gonna be mad at your child for just eating the cracker instead of all the wonderful broccoli and beautiful seafood you made for them. Yeah.

A parent recently was telling me how frustrated she gets with the cooking. And I said, I said, cook it for your partner and you and then give your child whatever they want from it, you know, but don't cook special for your child. It's a setup for disappointment, especially on a weekday. I find that it's.

Again, the pressure I find on women is that you're supposed to be exceptionally good at everything. Like, you're supposed to be charging. You're supposed to be like, it's just like that. That is piled more on women today than it was.

So therefore it puts more pressure on me. Have I got the right gear on when I drop them off? And things like I said, no, just this is too much. You've got to look at that to do list and see what can I put off it and can I just be comfortable, Just be me.

Our kids don't really care sometimes about those things. So one of the tips I just want to throw out to parents is I suddenly realised one day it was taking me an hour to fold up my boys washing and putting it into their rooms. And I suddenly had this epiphany that said, I'd like that hour. Okay.

So we had a single bed and it became the lucky big bed. So all the clean washing went on that bed and I had to find their own washing. They thought it was hilarious. I died on it for years.

So even now, every now and then the lucky bed comes up. Because when I made a cup of Tea and went outside and regrouped myself, or I was able to cook the middle, I don't know. But I suddenly realised I wasn't full of so much resentment. And I realized sometimes maybe we need to just lower the bar.

Especially while they're little because, gee whizzy. Hardwood. Oh, my gosh. 100%.

Yeah. What is lucky dick luck? Lucky dip. Lucky.

Lucky, not dick. No. Oh, my gosh. Lucky dip.

Dip pee. Oh, my God, that's hilarious. This is the high Four sons. Lucky dip.

What does that mean? Yeah. So you put your hand into a fairgrounds, you put it in, you pull a puzzle out, which is a lucky one. You get that one.

Does that make sense? Yes, that's hilarious. Yeah. Yeah.

I love that image of you just saying, you know what? Who cares? Like I care. But, you know, there's gonna be many years of my life like the ones I are having now, where I can have my bed perfectly made and that's another thing we can let go of.

And some people, that's really important to them. And then. Yes, but just weighing it, maybe to the person that the laundry away is really important to. Maybe there's something else.

Like I remember a mom saying, oh, I don't care about the main rooms in the house, but the bedrooms, I'd like to all be nice and neat. I mean, that wouldn't matter to me. But that was her thing and that's what she did and that's what she expected and she, you know, had to do it for her kids a lot. I'm sure they didn't just snap to that.

So knowing yourself, letting go of a lot of things, I remember you're also reminding of the getting fit thing. I remember when I was the first time mom and I'd been an actress and I'd been a model and even then I would see or hear that these actresses, they had the baby and then two months later they're back working and starring in films and they look fantastic. And I had this expectation, not all the way to that, but at least that I was going to be able to use. We had a Scare Master machine, I remember.

Probably was used about three times before we gave it away. But I remember thinking, I should at least be able to do this. And of course I would want to do it. It would be three in the afternoon and my baby was not a happy camper.

And it was so frustrating for me because I thought, I'm just trying to do this one thing and they're not letting me. And now that must be with the whole Instagram thing must be so much harder because you see the moms, they all look great. Some of them are doing really honest things, which I love. Those with heroes, as far as I'm concerned, they're doing important stuff.

But we're seeing all of this around us. The truth is, those actresses had nannies. They weren't with their children. As much as I wanted to be, you know, they didn't have the same investment in that.

And I don't judge that, but that wasn't what I wanted anyway. I think a lot of times too, the things that we think we want, when we really examine it, that's not us. That doesn't matter to us. So kind of tuning in, I think could help and figuring out what matters to me, just in terms of housekeeping, in terms of what my kids are doing.

And really so much of that. We have to trust, I believe, and I've said this on my podcast before, but as far as the extracurriculars, if you really let your child be the one to come up with the idea, and maybe you take them to watch first so they know that what their idea was is actually how it is or isn't, then they don't tend to get into things, they drop out. I really trust kids to know themselves and sometimes we think it's coming from them, but we're not realizing how much of an influence we are when we're lighting up at the idea of seeing them in the tutu and the performance and understandably, but just knowing that that could end up being us trying to drag a child somewhere to do something that we're paying for, that they don't want to do. And that's just another recipe for frustration.

I think the one thing we haven't touched on, which we need to a little bit, is that the village has disintegrated so much more from when I was. I was mumming. And that is huge. It doesn't matter whether you've got a fabulous group of mums you've met with your first baby, nobody's synchronizing for having another one.

And before you know it, they've gone back to work and you're by yourself. That's massive in terms of our ability to sustain this journey. And I'm loving that there's some really good, you know, high quality groups online that are created in order to support women who have no one. And sometimes, like there was one in Australia, I'd just been to Motherland, which was for rural women, many of them Never met each other.

But if you're in miles from anywhere and you have a baby and you know you are struggling with master or your baby hasn't slept for days and the male that you live with is out working all day, that's not good for anyone. So what we're looking at, if you can't create a few people who you can call on, reach out to, who are reaching to you, as we used to do, if you think of looking into community, there were always women around. If you weren't well, if your children weren't sick, there was always other women. And I think that we have to look at that in terms of their mental health as we go forward and recognise if you're going on the journey that if you've got other people who have kids your age or similar work that tribe like can I pick them up?

Can you look after mine? Can you get, you know, let's just share and share and share because every now and then that's going to be a godsend to you. As I've said in some of my seminars, if suddenly your car breaks down and you're on the way to pick your kid up from school, right, and you can't get there, who's the person that a the school knows you have given permission to pick up and are they available? Because that would just drive every parent into a state of unbelievable angst.

And I think how can we rebuild that? We need it. And then not only that, that tribe allows you to have a neighbourhood play and also have a break when you've got the child that really drives everyone mad, you know, that they don't drive the other people mad when you go for a play at their house. And that's kind of a thing we would do when we've got a functioning village, you know, whether it's in your neighborhood close by, that we absolutely need to prioritise that night regardless of how many ns hours that we're working, even if it's just on weekends that we have a chance, we catch up.

What do you mean by the child that drives everyone mad? Oh yeah, I remember that. So there's a few parents who've said to me when we did the farming community, they have a really hypo boy that just never stops and he's really into risk taking. He was six or seven, his parents are just exhausted every weekend but one of the other neighbours would come and pick him up so they would take him over for the day.

So he got a day without him, which is at school. The other day. And the difference. But he doesn't do all because not quite as interestingly challenging when he's over at someone else's house.

But that three or four hours can restore. It's like you can restore yourself with one hour break from any of your children because he reset your nervous system. Right. And there are some children who are really, really hard work.

And I just want to hear all this out there. Reach out if you know someone who's got one of them and you can change your life for that job as well as that family. I love that. And it also speaks to something that's very true that when you said also about the early childhood educators when they have a child.

So our child is going to be very different with us than they are with other people. Very different with their teachers. So. And a lot of teachers are giving parent advice and that's wonderful.

But just know if they don't have children, they might not be recognizing how different the relationship is and how much more inclined a child is to perform well with a teacher or another parent than with their own parent. And this is this backhanded compliment they give us that I trust you, I can vent with you, I can be all my dark sides with you, I can relax with you and be my wacky self and you'll still love me through it. And that's the model that we want. If you think about it, I think we want.

Most of us want. But yeah, to know that, that it's not a bad sign that your child is like that because they're probably totally different out there than most children are when they're out with others. But yeah, that's another reason for parents like that, to meet with other parents. And the kids of those other parents prob think this is a really fun character to be around because they're dynamic, right?

They have all the ideas, let's play this, let's do that, we're going to do that. And they're exciting. So it's a win win. Like getting a phone call saying, oh my gosh, your son's got fabulous manners.

You haven't seen them in your house at all. And you go, are you talking about my son? Same sort of thing. I'm raising my eye.

That happened to me. Not so much. I knew he had good manners and he has good manners for me. But it was the neighbor saying he's the first one to clean up, to pick up, to ask me as soon as he walks in the door, what can I do to help with the gathering.

They're having to this, and my husband and I are sitting there at dinner with these parents having a dinner party. And she's saying this in front of all the other parents while the other parents are hating me. Right. And I said, I don't recognize who you're talking about, but that's wonderful news.

I love it. Because wherever they're safest, they can be real. Yeah. So we can be that.

And it really takes a lot less than we think. And I think as we get to the Mindy upgrade, we need to remember that every stage of development will bring you a gift as well as a challenge. Like, you couldn't wait for your child to be able to walk, and now you can't find them. Couldn't wait for, like, a talk.

And they wish they would shut up. And so it's exactly the same all the way through, isn't it? They'll come. Oh, gosh.

They're able to do that for themselves. Oh, my God. They're just not a perfect trajectory. Just focus on the gifts, the magical moments, the snuggles in bed, because that really lets the other stuff just settle in the dust.

Just focus on the good bits, the ones that melt your heart. And there'll be really small, innocuous moments in your day that you don't expect, not the ones that you planned for and made the perfect birthday party for it. Yeah, I know. It's so true.

Ah, well, thank you so much, Maggie. Thank you. I hope I've worn you out. No, no.

Like, I still say that in this whole journey, you know, I'm just beyond blessed that I have the opportunity to go back and be amongst the little Easter, to be able to kind of share the love and joy of being a much more patient mama figure around them. Because I probably was a disposition as I wished I had been all those years ago. So to all those grandparents that sometimes need to hear, yeah, it's a different journey for us to different families today. We need to be able to support them in whatever way.

They need our support. But the last thing they need is a lecture on how they should be doing it better. Right. And nobody really knows.

And anybody that tells you they know the best way or the only way or there is none, run. Am I good enough? Remember, 30 to 40% the lucky dip. Lucky dip.

No Dixie there at all. I'm with that. All right. Thank you, beautiful lady.

Thanks for all your work and you too. Thank you so much. Love it.

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IT IS WHAT IT IS with SHALLZ - SHALLY ZOMORODI Shally Zomorodi What?  "It is what it is" with ShallZ – Shally ZomorodiWhen? WeeklyHow long? 35 minutesEvery week, Mother of 4, wife, morning TV news anchor and ultimate hostess, Shally Zomorodi talks about life - its up's and downs and how to stay on track in her weekly podcast, ‘It is what it is.’  Known for her high energy, infectious smile and ability to see the cup as half full Shally talks about all things in life and how to work through its challenges. From parenting, marriage, friendships, current events to how to smile when it just seems impossible ‘It is what it is’ is the perfect podcast to help inspire you to dance through the rain. Not Your Mother's Mom Group Katy Monnot and Sunnie Wicker Katy and Sunnie explore the world of motherhood online. Raising seven boys between the two of them, the only thing they know for sure is that they don't know what they're doing. And that parenting in the age of the Internet can make anyone feel inadequate. Each week they bring you their favorite questions from Internet mom groups, articles on motherhood, and a bit of personal experience as well. True Family Men David Johnson Hey I’m David Johnson founder of True Family Men. I believe the lord has called me to build a strong community of men. The mission of this community is to allow men to learn from one another's successes and failures in marriage and parenting. The True Family Men Podcast was born to give men a platform to share their testimonies of how Jesus Christ has brought them out of life greatest challenges and how to begin the healing process. We as men face many problems in life from lust, pornography addiction, drug and alcohol addiction, anger, stress, false sense of manliness, the list is endless, but through a strong community of believers and the redeeming power of christ's blood we can overcome! I enjoy camping, eagle scouting, hiking, and the weekly chic-fila splurges! I personally enjoy reading, weight lifting, and connecting with new men across the world who have a love for Jesus Christ.I believe that God has called us family men to be the spiritual leaders of our homes. It's time Fearless Parent Radio Fearless Parent Radio delivers fresh social media perspective on parenting and wellness.

Frequently Asked Questions

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This episode is 49 minutes long.

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This episode was published on April 30, 2024.

What is this episode about?

If you're the parent of young children, there's a good chance you are very hard on yourself. Australian parenting guru Maggie Dent joins Janet in this episode of “Unruffled” to discuss the unprecedented pressures and challenges today's parents face...

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