Welcome back.
HostI am really happy you are here, that you are taking time for yourself, and I'm honored that you're spending it here with me.
HostWhile we tend to focus on mental health topics at specific times of the year, I really believe we ought to make it part of our daily conversations.
HostThink about the things that we do automatically, every single day to take care of our physical health.
HostWe brush our teeth.
HostWe eat healthy foods, or we at least try to most of the time, right?
HostWe exercise.
HostWe maybe even take extra vitamins or supplements.
HostAnd we proactively take care of our physical bodies because we know we are potentially susceptible or genetically predisposed to certain diseases.
HostBut what do we do automatically to take care of our mental health?
HostDo we meditate?
HostDo we do breathing exercises?
HostDo we talk to a therapist or other support person?
HostDo we take a moment when we need it instead of white knuckling it?
HostDo we talk about taking care of our mental health in the same way that we talk about taking care of our physical health?
HostThey are intertwined and they directly affect the other.
HostMy guest today works daily to normalize mental health and, when necessary, advocate for those who need it.
HostDaniel Magler is a therapist and a high school Counselor with over 20 years and 1000 clients worth of experience.
HostHe is insightful and is one of those beautiful humans who can connect teenagers in the most authentic ways.
HostDan is my neighbor on the North Shore of Chicago.
HostHe serves on the board of Paws for Patrick, which we will learn about in a few minutes.
HostAnd he is the host of the podcast Not Allowed to Die.
Heather HesterWelcome to Just Breathe Parenting your LGBTQ Teen, the podcast transforming the conversation around loving and raising an LGBTQ child.
Heather HesterMy name is Heather Hester, and I am so grateful you are here.
Daniel MaglerI want you to take a deep.
Heather HesterBreath and know that for the time we are together, you are in the safety of the Just Breathe nest.
Heather HesterWhether today's show is an amazing guest or me sharing stories, resources, strategies, or lessons I've learned along our journey, I want you to feel like we're just hanging out at a coffee shop, having a cozy chat.
Heather HesterMost of all, I want you to remember that wherever you are on this journey right now, in this moment in time, you are not alone.
DeanneWell, Deanne, thank you so much for being here with me today, and I'm really excited to have this conversation about one of my favorite topics, which I think is.
DeanneI don't know if that's the best way to say that, but I really do enjoy talking about mental health and sharing people experts on the topic and people who just have so such a wealth of information.
DeanneAnd so I am delighted that you are here.
DeanneAnd one of the things that you do that we learned, we learned about each other when we were.
DeanneWe were talking earlier, was that you are on the board for this extraordinary.
DeanneIt's located in the Chicago area, which you and I actually are both in, which is also very cool.
DeanneWe found out.
DeanneAnd I had heard about this amazing organization.
DeanneIt's called Pause for Patrick.
DeanneAnd so I thought we'd just start with that because I know everyone would love to hear.
DeanneHear about this organization, why and why it is so very important.
Daniel MaglerWell, thank you so much for having me on the podcast.
Daniel MaglerI am.
Daniel MaglerI am, as I've told you, a big fan, and I do recommend your podcast to people.
Daniel MaglerSo, like, it's.
Daniel MaglerIt's fun to actually be on, like, not just listening to your voice, but actually being part of the conversation.
Daniel MaglerSo.
Daniel MaglerPause for Patrick was an organization started by the Romer family after they lost their son Patrick in May of 2020 to suicide.
Daniel MaglerAnd I was Patrick's school social worker and knew him from his freshman year all the way into his senior year.
Daniel MaglerAnd so obviously, it had a major impact on me.
Daniel MaglerAfter he died, there was a GoFundMe that got put together by people who cared about the family.
Daniel MaglerAnd the family said, we don't necessarily need this money.
Daniel MaglerWe want to take it and use it to help other people like Patrick.
Daniel MaglerPatrick was not a huge fan of regular therapy.
Daniel MaglerYou know, he tried it.
Daniel MaglerHe didn't like medication.
Daniel MaglerHe didn't want to do any of those things.
Daniel MaglerWhat really helped him when he was struggling was his dog Cece, and being with his dog.
Daniel MaglerAnd so Patrick's parents were thinking, hey, how can we bring the love of animals to the people who need it the most?
Daniel MaglerAnd so they got people together.
Daniel MaglerAnd so Pause for Patrick has two main services that it provides.
Daniel MaglerWe have therapy dog handlers who.
Daniel MaglerAnd this is all around the Chicago area, but primarily up in Lake county or right on that borderline of Lake and Cook, where our team of therapy dog handlers, we have 25 of them who will go to schools or mental health treatment facilities and bring dogs, therapy dogs to young people so that they can spend some time with them.
Daniel MaglerAnd it has an incredible impact.
Daniel MaglerThey just light up.
Daniel MaglerAnd everybody loves seeing the dogs anytime that they're there.
Daniel MaglerSo if anybody ever wants to learn to be a therapy dog handler or training our group tells more, spreads information about that.
Daniel MaglerAnd if you are a person who has a therapy dog we would love.
Daniel MaglerWe're always recruiting more volunteers around that area.
Daniel MaglerBut the other thing we do is we help anybody all around the country.
Daniel MaglerWe focus on young people, but that young people is a pretty loosely defined term.
Daniel MaglerOur oldest client has been 89 years old, down to like down to 6.
Daniel MaglerSo anybody with mental health disorders, again, but our focus is on young people to get an emotional, help them get an emotional support animal.
Daniel MaglerSo we have a budget where we can help people acquire an emotional support animal and even get some basic training.
Daniel MaglerSo not service animal or therapy dog training, but the kind of just obedience training, which would mean that if they're living in an apartment, they wouldn't get in trouble with annoying their neighbors and whatnot.
Daniel MaglerAnd then I and other members of the therapists team, we will write emotional support animal letters free of charge.
Daniel MaglerI'm actually doing one of those after we get off of here today for people so that they can have their animal in their dorm or in their apartment.
Daniel MaglerBecause we just believe that it can be transformational.
Daniel MaglerAnd even if you have a great therapist, your therapist is not going to pick up the phone at three in the morning.
Daniel MaglerBut you can hug that dog, that cat, and you're that therapy bird.
Daniel MaglerEmotional support animals don't have to be.
Daniel MaglerThey can be anything.
Daniel MaglerAny animal that just connecting with it can help a person to feel better.
Daniel MaglerAnd Patrick was not lgbtqia, but a couple of his really good friends are and were.
Daniel MaglerAnd you know, we've helped them and just in, you know, in the queer community.
Daniel MaglerI know, I work with a lot of kids that for so many people, when chosen family is a thing that people are having to create, often their furry friends are a huge part of that chosen family.
Daniel MaglerSo we want to again, particularly reach out to the people who are listening to this to realize again, if a person has a mental health disorder, anxiety, depression, anything like that, Claus for Patrick, who is a place that they should go to look for maybe some help and support.
DeanneI love that so much.
DeanneAnd I love that you explain the difference between therapy animal as opposed to an emotional support animal.
DeanneBecause I, prior to us speaking, had, didn't really know that there was a difference.
DeanneAnd it makes a ton of sense.
DeanneBut, you know, kind of relate to your point.
DeanneI know that you have behind you your emotional support animal, Mariska, who is your podcast guest host.
DeanneAnd I'm so happy that she's on with us now too.
DeanneAnd.
DeanneBut having that, I mean, I have two dogs who are, you know, the biggest ding a lings in the world, but they the joy and the comfort.
DeanneAnd it is extraordinary, you know, when I always think, especially when I'm petting my one dog, like, you could have like, the most like, like the worst day ever.
DeanneRight?
DeanneAnd you sit down and you pet that dog, and it is amazing what that does for you.
DeanneRight.
DeanneAnd so I'm delighted.
DeanneI love that that is what you do for people, not just here in the Chicagoland area, but all around the country and really help educating on that piece.
DeanneBecause also to your point, a traditional therapist isn't for everyone and it's not necessarily accessible either.
DeanneSo this is just a lovely piece to know.
DeanneOh, my gosh, this can work.
DeanneAnd this is why it works.
Daniel MaglerRight.
Daniel MaglerAnd that's just again, like, anybody can have a need and we're not working.
Daniel MaglerIt's not a competition.
Daniel MaglerSo for one person, yoga might not be their thing.
Daniel MaglerFor someone else it is.
Daniel MaglerBut we should all be working together to find, to cobble together what it's going to take for us to be our healthiest selves.
Daniel MaglerAnd so that's where we want to be.
Daniel MaglerAnd also, as you were kind of talking, we want to raise the awareness piece.
Daniel MaglerAnd in the month of May, Palliser Patrick does a thing called Turn Our Towns Green around the Chicago area.
Daniel MaglerAnd we're trying to expand that to a lot of campuses.
Daniel MaglerSo for college students, if they're interested in helping promote awareness on their college campus, they can reach out to us or turn our campuses green.
Daniel MaglerAnd we're looking for people who want to be sort of captains or leading it and getting there, whether it's their fraternity, sorority, whether they're part of the marching band, and they just want to help put up signs.
Daniel MaglerSo during that month, we're really maybe Mental Health Awareness Month.
Daniel MaglerSo May and September are two big months of the year, September being Suicide Awareness Month.
Daniel MaglerAnd so we just.
Daniel MaglerBut that May Turn Our Towns Green is a really.
Daniel MaglerAlso a big.
Daniel MaglerAnd so up around the north, up and down the North Shore in the Chicagoland area, you'll see the Turn Our Town, the Paula Sir Patrick Turn Our Towns Green signs.
Daniel MaglerYeah.
DeanneYes.
DeanneThat is so.
DeanneI love that.
DeanneI'm sitting here thinking, oh, my goodness, my daughter, who is at the University of Michigan, I mean, she would be all over that.
DeanneAnd just knowing both of my kids, my older two who are away at college, who do they miss the most?
DeanneDogs.
DeanneThey cannot wait to get home to be with these dogs.
DeanneAnd you know, and just like the what.
DeanneWhat they do for them.
DeanneAnd.
DeanneAnd so it is something that if you stop and Think about it for two seconds.
DeanneYou know, whatever.
DeanneYour animal is, right?
DeanneFor us, it's our dog.
DeanneSome people, it's their cat or, like their bird, you said, right?
DeanneOr they're, you know, gigantic, you know, dragon.
Daniel MaglerThose.
DeanneThose things, right?
DeanneBecause I.
DeanneAnd I'm saying that because I'm that my daughter, my younger daughter, her freshman year, and they have an area and her high school that was kind of an emotional support area.
DeanneAnd I'm totally drawing a blank on the name of this creature, but it was like a big, gigantic lizard, and that was like the emotional support lizard.
DeanneAnd she loves this thing when she go in and pet it all the time.
Daniel MaglerIn the title of your podcast, you know, just breathe.
Daniel MaglerSo often, like, you know, it's hard when we're having anxiety attacks where the ability to slow down and to regulate our breathing is really challenging.
Daniel MaglerAnd so a lot of the research shows that just while you're petting an animal, it does that grounding for us, and it helps us to be in that moment and regulate along with them.
Daniel MaglerAnd what's interesting.
Daniel MaglerSo Dr.
Daniel MaglerJanet Oy Gerlach of University of Toledo has done a lot of research that cats are actually somewhat more effective than dogs in helping people to just regulate that breathing.
Daniel MaglerBut some of the other new research is that one of the great things about dogs is that when they make eye contact with us, and we're getting that eye contact going back and forth again, a different sort of sense of feeling known and connected with, it helps to alleviate some of that loneliness and that sense of isolation.
Daniel MaglerOne of the movies that I recommend to some people, and again, it's not everybody's cup of tea, but as Good as it Gets with Jack Nicholson.
Daniel MaglerAnd I think it's Greg Kinnear who plays his neighbor.
Daniel MaglerAnd so the dog, and he's always with the dog, but you can see that that dog is.
Daniel MaglerIt's.
Daniel MaglerIt's something that, again, is grounding him.
Daniel MaglerIt's making him feel not alone, and it's that level of connection.
Daniel MaglerSo I think for all of us, and we are.
Daniel MaglerThere's an excellent book that I can't recommend enough.
Daniel MaglerIt's called Running with Sherman.
Daniel MaglerAnd it talks about that intersection between our exercise, our mental health, and that as a species, we.
Daniel MaglerWe grew up alongside of animals.
Daniel MaglerAnd so, like, we couldn't have come as far as we did without the domestication of dogs.
Daniel MaglerAnd so it's only actually in the second half of the 20th century that we've gotten away from spending so much time with animals that we're a lot of.
Daniel MaglerWe are wired to be living alongside them and having them in our lives.
Daniel MaglerAnd so when we're not doing that, we're losing something.
Daniel MaglerSo.
Daniel MaglerYeah.
DeanneWow, that is phenomenal.
DeanneI.
DeanneIt makes total sense, doesn't it?
DeanneBut it's something that you just don't even think about or realize.
DeanneAnd because things are so fast paced and so fast moving, you know, most of us do not take the time to really stop and think about that.
DeanneThink about what that connection, you know, having that connection and what that connection is doing for us and for them.
DeanneRight.
DeanneAnd so I just applaud what you all are doing, and I'm so grateful for it.
DeanneAnd, and I, you know, it's funny being in the area I knew of pause for Patrick, but I wasn't entirely clear on exactly.
DeanneSo I'm so grateful now to know this that I can, you know, at least be a voice, if nothing else.
Daniel MaglerWell, that's, that's all we ask for it.
Daniel MaglerAnd sometimes people are saying, well, it just feels too good to be true.
Daniel MaglerLike, what do you mean?
Daniel MaglerYou're not, you're, you're not charging anything and you're not, you don't want anything from us.
Daniel MaglerIt just.
Daniel MaglerNo, all we want is for people to pay it forward.
Daniel MaglerAnd there is a lot.
Daniel MaglerIf you go online and you look about emotional support animals, there is, there is a lot of.
Daniel MaglerThere are a lot of controversies among even some people who are really supportive of them about criticizing agencies that write emotional support animal letters because they may feel like, okay, well, you're going to ruin it for all of us.
Daniel MaglerYou know, the laws have been there to protect having emotional support animals.
Daniel MaglerBut there are organizations.
Daniel MaglerFor example, certapet is an organization where people can go on there and they get an interview set up with a clinician, and it's all legitimate, it's all legal, and you pay your 150 bucks and you get your emotional support animal letter.
Daniel MaglerAnd so there are critics, though, who will say, well, that's not really a relationship.
Daniel MaglerThey don't really know the person.
Daniel MaglerAnd is that legitimate?
Daniel MaglerAnd so it all depends state by state.
Daniel MaglerDifferent states have different regulations.
Daniel MaglerBut the point is, it doesn't take as a clinician and when I've been doing, I've had to have come up with diagnosis of people in 15 or 20 minutes when I'm working in the emergency room to determine what course of treatment are we giving.
Daniel MaglerThe way it works is the law says that in order for me to write a letter for someone about an emotional Support animal.
Daniel MaglerI need to know that in my clinical judgment, that person has a disability that can be made better by being with an animal.
Daniel MaglerAnd then I also.
Daniel MaglerThat relationship is what I pause for Patrick, though, we make sure our relationship is ongo so that if that person was to have a problem, like, gosh, I thought that having an animal, like one of, again, one of Patrick's friends who got a dog, he thought it was going to reduce his stress.
Daniel MaglerBut being a college student and having.
Daniel MaglerSharing a space, even though his friend, his roommates were on board with having the dog, the dog that he got was having a lot of barking issues.
Daniel MaglerAnd so plaster Patrick, we paid extra to get some extra training for that dog, but it still was causing more stress than it was relieving.
Daniel MaglerAnd so in that case, we helped.
Daniel MaglerWere alongside and helped him find the way, the proper way to re home that.
Daniel MaglerThat animal.
Daniel MaglerSo it didn't add more feelings of guilt and sadness.
Daniel MaglerSo that's.
Daniel MaglerAnd I think that's what critics would be saying, you know, it shouldn't just be a, you know, you pay your 150 bucks, you get your letter that it's all over.
Daniel MaglerBut that's why we want to be all along the way with people throughout their journey, right?
DeanneWhich is so important.
DeanneAnd that is a great example of, you know, what could be, you know, one thing that could potentially happen.
DeanneSo that is really, really good to know.
DeanneAnd.
DeanneAnd I think that, you know, circling back to your college initiative, so huge.
DeanneI mean, really, really so huge, and just, you know, raising.
DeanneRaising awareness and letting people know that that is an option, right?
DeanneBecause I think, you know, at the base of all of this is there are options, right?
DeanneSo which also kind of circles me to, you know, your podcast, which is so wonderful.
DeanneIt's called Not Allowed to Die.
DeanneAnd because.
DeanneAnd I.
DeanneI know that you named it that for a number of reasons, but it is this whole, like, there's options.
DeanneLike, that's like, kind of inferred in that, right?
DeanneAnd it's.
DeanneThere are options.
DeanneHere's another one.
DeannePause for Patrick.
DeanneEmotional support animals.
DeanneJust having someone, you know, somebody in your school, you are a social worker in your school.
DeanneYou also do all of this work with LGBTQIA kids.
DeanneAnd so it, I think, you know, part of our.
DeanneOur work and is just kind of raising that awareness that there are.
DeanneThere's always an option, right?
Daniel MaglerLike the.
Daniel MaglerI.
Daniel MaglerI'll tell.
Daniel MaglerI tell all the students in, you know, my LGBTQIA group, you know, about the.
Daniel MaglerThe It Gets Better project where they can Go and watch videos and things, because when you're.
Daniel MaglerWhen you're young, it feel.
Daniel MaglerAnd if you've been in pain for a long time, it's natural for you to assume that your future will mimic your past and for them to believe.
Daniel MaglerAnd what they need to see is adults and older people who are saying, I know what you're experiencing right now, but you got to not trust your gut here.
Daniel MaglerYou have to not trust your experience, and you have to trust me and us, but all these other people have made it.
Daniel MaglerAnd so that's what.
Daniel MaglerThat's what we're doing.
Daniel MaglerYou know, a lot of the time is saying, let's.
Daniel MaglerLet's project forward and try to create a belief for you that your future can be better than where your past was.
Daniel MaglerAnd for so many, again of my.
Daniel MaglerMy students who are in that group, their.
Daniel MaglerTheir connection again to other people, to animals, can sometimes help.
Daniel MaglerAn interesting thing that I didn't realize until I started doing the groups is the zodiac, you know, and why.
Daniel MaglerSo when we go around and introduce ourselves in group, kids will say their name, their year, their pronouns, and they.
Daniel MaglerThe kids spontaneously started sharing their zodiac signs.
DeanneI love that.
Daniel MaglerAnd I didn't realize till there used to be a podcast called Nancy that was.
Daniel MaglerIt was a great podcast of LGBTQ issues.
Daniel MaglerAnd it.
Daniel MaglerIt was an NPR podcast and stopped running, but you can go back to the archives of it.
Daniel MaglerIt's fantastic.
Daniel MaglerBut what kind of things were in the queer canon and the zodiac?
Daniel MaglerYou know, I didn't realize part of the reason why it's in sort of the queer canon is because so many kids don't feel at home in the spiritual realm that's set up, you know, by what their parents did.
Daniel MaglerAnd so it's giving a different way of whether it's Wiccan or whether it's whichever else to say, I can.
Daniel MaglerI can explore something different.
Daniel MaglerAnd so for me, instead of saying, oh, that's weird, let's not do that, to say, yeah, how can we make this work for you?
Daniel MaglerLet me find out what it is about, you know, so even if I don't necessarily a big believer in astrology, but I can see how that might be working for you, how that might be helping you, because it's making you feel like you're creating.
Daniel MaglerAs I said, we mentioned, chosen family, well chosen.
Daniel MaglerRecreating our universe.
Daniel MaglerAnd that's so much of the piece with mental health and with awareness is to say instead of just reducing the stigma, to start to reframe it in realizing that every Challenge is an opportunity.
Daniel MaglerAnd the things that make us different, if it's anxiety, our anxiety can be my superpower.
Daniel MaglerDepression can also be my superpower because it can increase my empathy.
Daniel MaglerAnd so.
Daniel MaglerAnd being different.
Daniel MaglerAnd again, it's not an accident that all the greatest artists in history were queer.
Daniel MaglerYou know, it's like, there's something about us that are, you know, like, that there is to embrace that your difference is in this, a different perspective that you're bringing, and how can we bring that to the table?
Daniel MaglerSo that's what.
Daniel MaglerI'm not allowed to die.
Daniel MaglerOn my podcast, I'm always trying to explore different aspects of mental health and saying, what's something that might have struck me as new, and how can I amplify that out to more people with that idea of hope and that we can take that somewhere different.
DeanneOh, goodness, that is just fantastic.
DeanneAnd I do like that.
DeanneAnd I want everybody to go listen, because mental health is something that we all can learn more about, right?
DeanneThere's always more to learn and more to be aware of.
DeanneAnd as we grow and learn, then there's that much more that we can understand, right?
DeanneAnd that we can see in our kids or see in our partners or see in people we love, right?
DeanneAnd ourselves and be able to, you know, find the supports that work.
DeanneAnd.
DeanneAnd it is different for every.
DeanneYou know, for everyone.
DeanneAnd I love that.
DeanneThat's such a fantastic example about the Zodiac, because I remember when, you know, when Connor initially was like, oh, yeah, I'm totally interested in that.
DeanneI was like, huh?
Daniel MaglerReally?
DeanneAnd I was so.
DeanneAnd I was more just, like, perplexed about it because I was like, well, I mean, okay.
DeanneI mean, right?
DeanneWe're learning all these other new things.
DeanneMight as well throw that on the table.
DeanneAnd you know, and quite honestly, like, we had to take our.
DeanneYou know, how I was traditionally brought up, right?
DeanneAnd how I was programmed, and I had to blow that up and completely come up with something, you know, refigure and reconnect.
DeanneBut that's mine, right?
DeanneLike, that's not Connors.
DeanneThat's not the rest of my kids to figure out.
DeanneLike, each person gets to have their own spiritual connection.
DeanneAnd the way that they want to have a spiritual connection or not have one, that's their right.
DeanneThat's their prerogative.
DeanneAnd so I think that that's such a.
DeanneThat is something that so many, you know, are queer kids.
DeanneBut I think, you know, many young people in general really identify with that.
DeanneSo bravo for adding that to the.
DeanneTo the Check, year, pronoun, zodiac.
DeanneThat's awesome.
Daniel MaglerBut in, in the book, the Courage to Be Disliked, and I know it's a.
Daniel MaglerIt's translation from a Japanese book, but they, they talk about the idea that, you know, Adler says that we need two real things to be happy.
Daniel MaglerOne is a greater overall mission in life, and two is good interpersonal relationships.
Daniel MaglerAnd I think whether even no matter if a person is atheist or really part of Christianity or orthodox faith of some sort, it's all really just trying to explain, why are we here and what am I doing?
Daniel MaglerAnd for all people, it doesn't matter who you are.
Daniel MaglerYou need that sense of mission and purpose.
Daniel MaglerAnd so for me, and again, realizing that through great suffering, we can maybe find what we were meant to do.
Daniel MaglerAnd I know for.
Daniel MaglerAgain, for Patrick's family and for whatnot, like that idea of this, they would never choose this, but now they've taken this terrible situation and they've turned it into something.
Daniel MaglerAnd for me, and I think most therapists or social workers or people like that, they went through their own struggles or things like that.
Daniel MaglerAnd then saying, now how can I channel my pain into a learning that I can share for you, bringing the.
Daniel MaglerTaking this podcast and Connor's story and saying, how can I make this a mission so that we don't have to have anybody feeling like they're doing it wrong, that they're doing life incorrectly, because there isn't a single right way to do it.
Daniel MaglerAnd so that's why for me, and what I tell my own children is we just want.
Daniel MaglerI want everyone to feel.
Daniel MaglerI want to try to reduce the suffering on this planet.
Daniel MaglerNo unnecessary suffering.
Daniel MaglerI think some suffering is necessary to help us become the people we need to be.
Daniel MaglerBut that we don't need to.
Daniel MaglerLet's.
Daniel MaglerLet's not take.
Daniel MaglerYou don't get extra points for suffering, so let's not add extra on that.
Daniel MaglerWe don't.
Daniel MaglerAnd who is it serving and why am I carrying it along with me?
Daniel MaglerSo let's try to figure out.
Daniel MaglerSo whether, again, it doesn't matter what community you belong to.
Daniel MaglerWe all belong to multiple communities.
Daniel MaglerMy nephew, who came out as gay when he was 13, he's now 16, he actually got kind of a little irritated because we were so enthusiastic for his queerness that we were buying him rainbow this and everything else that.
Daniel MaglerAnd he's like, like, this is one aspect of who I am.
Daniel MaglerThis is not the only aspect of who I am.
Daniel MaglerSo sometimes in our enthusiasm for a person, oh, you're into skateboarding.
Daniel MaglerEverything's about skateboarding.
Daniel MaglerIt's like, no, we all contain multitudes, right?
Daniel MaglerSo letting that say, you know, just.
Daniel MaglerAnd then.
Daniel MaglerAnd then also our interests or our.
Daniel MaglerThe degree to which we're impacted by a mental health disability or the degree to which where.
Daniel MaglerWhere we're at, lining up in our identity can be fluid and we're all capable of change over time.
Daniel MaglerAnd we shouldn't act as if wait.
Daniel MaglerAnd so, so many parents are, well, my kid can't possibly be depressed because I saw them laughing with their friends the other day.
Daniel MaglerAnd it's.
Daniel MaglerWell, the same person who's really depressed can also have a positive moment.
Daniel MaglerJust like generally happy people can cry sometimes.
Daniel MaglerSo allow.
Daniel MaglerAllowing for everybody to be fluid in all aspects of their life, you know, is something that we all.
Daniel MaglerInstead of deciding we want though people to fit into certain little boxes.
Daniel MaglerAnd.
Daniel MaglerAnd sometimes we're afraid with whether it's mental health diagnosis is like, oh, I'm bipolar.
Daniel MaglerNo, you are a person who has bipolar disorder.
Daniel MaglerYou know, a person.
Daniel MaglerYou are not a depressed.
Daniel MaglerYou know, you are a person might be, okay, I am gay or identify as a lesbian or whatnot.
Daniel MaglerAnd that's fine.
Daniel MaglerThat's great.
Daniel MaglerIf that's doing you, that's working for you.
Daniel MaglerJust like I am a Bears fan.
Daniel MaglerIt's not really working for me, but I am still stuck eating one.
Daniel MaglerBut again, that may.
Daniel MaglerThat may be fluid.
Daniel MaglerMy investment in the team may be fluid over time.
Daniel MaglerSo I don't know.
DeanneBears fans are pretty.
DeannePretty intense and die hard.
Daniel MaglerI mean, unfortunately, yes.
Daniel MaglerWhether I like still.
DeanneOh, my goodness.
DeanneWell, I think, yes.
DeanneI mean, that is such.
DeanneThose are really, really great examples.
DeanneAnd we are so complex.
DeanneI mean, human.
DeanneHumans are complex, right?
DeanneAnd which is one of the most beautiful things.
DeanneI think that's part of this.
DeanneThis growth is embracing that idea.
DeanneAnd as we support our kids and embrace our kids, empower our kids through adolescence, whether it does include coming out as LGBTQIA or having a mental health disorder, helping them realize that I love that your nephew was the one who called you out on it.
DeanneRight?
DeanneBecause that is something that.
DeanneAnd especially at that age.
DeanneHoly cow.
DeanneI mean, he is a really mature kid.
DeanneTo be like, hey, this is just part of me.
DeanneLike, it is not all of me.
DeanneBecause I think that is a very.
DeanneThat's part of the beginning of the coming out process.
DeanneRight?
DeanneIs where it is your complete identity.
DeanneAnd I think that goes for also, you know, if you are, you know, really understanding, like, beginning to realize, okay, I've been diagnosed with generalized anxiety disorder, for example, I have anxiety that becomes my entire world because I'm trying to figure it out.
DeanneI'm trying to figure out how.
DeanneWhat are my coping mechanisms, what are my tools available to me, and then how do I just make that a piece?
DeanneIt's just a piece.
DeanneAnd as I continue to work with it, it can become my superpower.
DeanneAnd I've watched this with my.
DeanneMy girls especially, who each struggle with different types of mental health disorders.
DeanneAnd.
DeanneAnd even in the.
DeanneTrying to figure out, like, okay, what.
DeanneWhat exactly are you struggling with?
DeanneWhat is the struggle?
DeanneWhat is the disorder?
DeanneHow do we support.
DeanneWhat do you.
DeanneWhat support do you need here to get you here?
DeanneRight?
DeanneAnd then it's going to change again.
DeanneRight.
DeanneBut I do appreciate you really fully illustrating how we are these beautiful, complex beings.
DeanneAnd it's not necessary to cling to that one identity factor.
DeanneJust one thing.
Daniel MaglerWell, that's for so many of the students I work with.
Daniel MaglerRight now, I'm working with 15 transgender gender non binary students on my caseload and things like, you know, if they're having a really bad day and mental health challenges, but they've also just started testosterone.
Daniel MaglerThey can have this fear of, well, if I let my parents know that I'm struggling, maybe they're going to second guess their decision to help me start taking T.
Daniel MaglerAnd, you know, and then also, one of my guys, he.
Daniel MaglerHe also had a really bad ear infection this week.
Daniel MaglerIt was like, okay, just because wouldn't it be great in a scientific study we could say, okay, we only have one variable.
DeanneRight?
Daniel MaglerUnfortunately, life does not work that way.
Daniel MaglerLike, yes, you have to deal with the ear infection while you're also starting testosterone, and you might also be struggling with your anxiety really badly.
Daniel MaglerAnd for this guy, like, where he just.
Daniel MaglerHe just got a new.
Daniel MaglerHis parents got him a new emotional support animal.
Daniel MaglerHis.
Daniel MaglerHis bunny that he had hoped to take to college one day died.
Daniel MaglerAnd, and so, you know, then.
Daniel MaglerThen, okay, well, now let's try a cat.
Daniel MaglerWell, the first cat that they tried, and this was not.
Daniel MaglerHe didn't do it through Prosser Patrick.
Daniel MaglerThey just did it on their own.
Daniel MaglerI did encourage them to, but the first cat would just kept biting his head in the middle of the night.
Daniel MaglerThis little kitten, super cute.
Daniel MaglerBut if we're not getting good sleep while we're also having mental health challenges, like, that wasn't working.
Daniel MaglerAnd then the grief of, oh, no, I'm a terrible person because I can't.
Daniel MaglerThey ended up swapping out cats at the place where the shelter.
Daniel MaglerAnd the shelter was great about it, but all the feeling of, I'm such a failure now.
Daniel MaglerI'm abandoning this cat and whatnot.
Daniel MaglerSo, again, our lives, as you say, that complexity, but again, for so many, particularly of the LGBTQIA kids, it's like, that's one more aspect.
Daniel MaglerIt is one.
Daniel MaglerAnd it's.
Daniel MaglerBut there was a great experience recent.
Daniel MaglerThis last week, we had a student who.
Daniel MaglerShe was recently diagnosed with freshman, but finally recently diagnosed with autism.
Daniel MaglerAnd she's like, I've been kind of knowing this about myself for a while.
Daniel MaglerShe has major depressive disorder, anxiety and autism, and her parents are trying to come to terms with that.
Daniel MaglerAnd she just also decided to finally come out to her parents this last week.
Daniel MaglerYeah.
Daniel MaglerSo parents are kind of reeling with a lot of that, and they've.
Daniel MaglerAll they really wanted was her to have some friends, because making friends has been super difficult.
Daniel MaglerBut the great thing is that now joining that LGBTQ group, those kids have been such a welcoming community, and we have a number of students who are, you know, and again, that particularly our Arrow Ace kids are.
Daniel MaglerSeveral of them are on the spectrum.
Daniel MaglerAnd so it's like the.
Daniel MaglerSome kids who are really understanding and open to and supportive of people who are, you know, maybe built a little bit differently and saying like that as opposed to.
Daniel MaglerSo I almost.
Daniel MaglerI.
Daniel MaglerWe're joking.
Daniel MaglerHer older sister also, at times struggled with building friendships and whatnot.
Daniel MaglerWe were joking.
Daniel MaglerLike, yeah, I wish your poor older sister had been queer, because she could have had this community.
Daniel MaglerShe's stuck being heterosexual, so she doesn't have that.
Daniel MaglerThat helps support her.
Daniel MaglerJust.
Daniel MaglerBut, yeah, so.
Daniel MaglerSo sometimes having all those things at once can feel terrible, but at other times, we can realize that there is a.
Daniel MaglerFor each one of these aspects of who I am, there's a community where I can find connection and strength.
Daniel MaglerAnd whenever possible, can we flip that dilemma on its head and start to say no?
Daniel MaglerNow, that's not to say we can't mourn the sadness of the way we thought things were going to go, that they're not going to go that way.
Daniel MaglerBut at the same time, now, after mourning that for a little bit, now let's say, okay, but how.
Daniel MaglerWhere is the new opportunity that's hiding within this dilemma?
DeanneRight.
DeanneWell, and I, you know, I think that is a vitally important piece that I do.
DeanneI wish I would have thought of this earlier when we were talking, because it is something that I do talk about a lot, which is the morning of the movie reel, and it's not just for parents to do when their child comes out.
DeanneIt's for any human being to do when their life, you know, changes in some way that they weren't initially.
DeanneWhich, I mean, let's be.
DeanneLet's be honest.
DeanneI mean, who's desert to some degree, right?
DeanneBut I think it is very important to have that mourning period.
DeanneAnd that doesn't mean that you're in denial or that you're angry or that you're.
DeanneI mean, you could be, but it just means that's a very important, important piece to allow yourself that sadness, to allow yourself that grief so that you can then move forward.
DeanneAnd so nothing to feel shame, you know, ashamed about or, you know, feel shame about.
DeanneSo there was a book, too, that popped into my head that I love, love, love.
DeanneIt's called Differently Wired.
Daniel MaglerOkay.
DeanneAnd I've had the.
DeanneActually, the author on.
DeanneShe was my book coach as well, and she wrote this beautiful book, and her.
DeanneHer child is on the spectrum, is.
DeanneIs not lgbtqia, but the.
DeanneThis book is.
DeanneI recommend it to everybody who has a kid who's differently wired because it's really just a lovely way not only to realize the support pieces, but to really understand kind of the scientific side.
DeanneRight.
DeanneAnd just to understand some of these, you know, chemical things that are going on and all of this type of stuff.
DeanneSo that's my right.
Daniel MaglerI actually literally wrote that one down.
DeanneSo we're taking turns here.
DeanneI have, like, a ton of things.
DeanneI'm like, oh, that's a good one.
DeanneOh, I need to recommend that.
DeanneThat's great.
DeanneWell, I want to be respectful of your time, and I did want to ask just, you know, as for your recommendations, because I know you are a huge podcast listener and just working with so closely with LGBTQIA teenagers first, podcast recommendations second.
DeanneAny advice that you would give to parents?
Daniel MaglerWell, so I'll start with yes.
Daniel MaglerI mean, I could go on forever about podcasts.
Daniel MaglerI love.
Daniel MaglerI think for anything by Brene Brown is you're always going to be going the right direction.
Daniel MaglerSo whether it's unlocking us or dare to lead, understanding the science behind vulnerability, shame, and whatnot is great.
Daniel MaglerThe Happiness Lab is with Lori Santos really beneficial.
Daniel MaglerI, again, for some people, you and I have talked.
Daniel MaglerWe're both fans of Dan Savage, but for some people, it's a lot.
Daniel MaglerBut I do think, you know, he will make you think.
Daniel MaglerAnd so the Savage Love Podcast is going to push your boundaries and think about things that you have never occurred to you before.
Daniel MaglerAnd so the great Thing is, he doesn't expect listeners to always agree with him.
Daniel MaglerAnd he has people who, you know, I love how he has people come on and take him to task about different things.
Daniel MaglerBut so those are just some that I start with.
Daniel MaglerNico Barraza is another podcaster who, gosh, what's the blank on the name of his podcast?
Daniel MaglerI'll get it to you.
Daniel MaglerBut just like again, oh, starve the ego, feed the soul.
Daniel MaglerAnd that one was one that was.
Daniel MaglerAnd recommended to me by some of my students.
Daniel MaglerSo that, like, just again, I always love the ones that are recommended to me by my clients or whatnot because, oh, they must be on to something there.
DeanneYes, exactly.
DeanneWell, I mean, what better way to understand if we're listening to what our, our kids are listening to, right?
DeanneI mean, that is a good way to understand, just another little piece of understanding and, and, you know, learning.
DeanneSo I love that.
DeanneAnd then, you know, working with.
DeanneYou've already shared so much about working with things that you learn from the kids and the kids share with you.
DeanneBut what are just some really key takeaways for parents who either their child has just come out to them or they're going into the holidays?
DeanneWhat are some things that the kids really want their parents to know?
Daniel MaglerWell, again, first of all, and that to listen to your kids and to speak with them directly about how relationships and to make your kid feel like they are the priority over any other of these external relationships.
Daniel MaglerI know one of my clients, his younger sibling came out as trans and just decided that didn't want to have, didn't want to do holidays with some other parts of the family who had shown they'd never said anything overtly homophobic.
Daniel MaglerBut they have been really judgmental about other racial groups and things like that.
Daniel MaglerAnd this younger sibling, and the sibling is gender non binary.
Daniel MaglerAnd so saying like, I don't want to.
Daniel MaglerYou can tell them I came out or whatnot, but I don't want to interact with these people because they've made me feel just generally unsafe.
Daniel MaglerAnd as a family, just honoring that and not saying, well, we need to suck it up for grandma or do anything else like that.
Daniel MaglerI do think grandmas get underrated and what they can handle.
Daniel MaglerI mean, when we think about, if we just do some math, a lot of grandmas were like Woodstock level age, you know, so they were probably doing some other things in their youth.
Daniel MaglerSo I think we should give them a little bit more credit and stop trying to protect everyone.
Daniel MaglerBut mainly taking things at the pace of the kids and honoring that and making sure that if they, if that kid needs to not go to certain other family members homes, that okay, we can make another plan, we can make things smaller because we want to make you feel like you are not a burden, an add on and that anybody who doesn't accept these things about you is, you know, we're not going to prioritize their feelings over yours is that really, really hurts for a lot of the kids.
Daniel MaglerSo that's something I think just having those frank discussions and saying, and it's okay to not know the answer.
Daniel MaglerIt's okay to say, hey, we're still working through this.
Daniel MaglerKids are.
Daniel MaglerTeachers are all the time talking to me about, oh no, I'm afraid I'm going to mess up so and so's pronouns or I did it.
Daniel MaglerThe kids are always incredibly forgiving if they feel like your heart is in the right place and you're trying.
Daniel MaglerAnd so as long as you are saying, hey, here's where I'm at right now and let me think about.
Daniel MaglerYou might have to give me some time to think about how I need to handle this conversation, this other thing.
Daniel MaglerBut at the end of the day, the most important thing to me is that you feel supported.
Daniel MaglerThen kids are, they're elated.
Daniel MaglerBut it's when they feel like.
Daniel MaglerIt's when they feel like they are something that may be an object of shame that needs to be hidden away in some direction that, that causes lasting scars and feelings of embarrassment and shame.
Daniel MaglerSo these kids are, they've been carrying so much of this for so long and that's what we, we often forget when we're saying, hey, are you sure this, that by the time a kid tells a parent or any other family member that they think they might be queer, Trust me, they've been wrestling with it.
Daniel MaglerBut, and the vast majority of them, part of the queer experience generally is an ongoing questioning.
Daniel MaglerAnd even in the queer community, things like, and I know you talked about on your podcast about bisexuality or more and more kids identifying as being pansexual because, you know, again, it's something that it's, it's a pro.
Daniel MaglerThere's nothing wrong with continuing to be fluid and figure things out and to have things change.
Daniel MaglerSo it doesn't mean that the person wasn't sure and it doesn't mean any damage will occur.
Daniel MaglerAnd I think that's.
Daniel MaglerParents have this fear.
Daniel MaglerIt's like they're nervous as if their kid was getting a tattoo on their forehead of like, okay, I am this.
Daniel MaglerAnd it's like, no, we don't.
Daniel MaglerWe don't have to lock in.
Daniel MaglerIt's okay to just one day at a time.
Daniel MaglerSo that's what I guess I would advise them.
DeannePerfect.
DeanneI could not have said it any better.
DeanneIt's beautiful.
DeanneThank you.
DeanneAnd so important.
DeanneAnd so, you know, it's part of that shifting from the focus on the external and the fear.
DeanneAnd really, once you shift that and kind of let that go and have your focus be your kid, it makes things so much easier and really takes the anxiety level down.
DeanneSo.
DeanneGreat.
DeanneWell, thank you.
DeanneThank you so much for being on my show.
DeanneI appreciate it and I'm so, so.
DeanneI'm just really thrilled that everyone has gotten to hear all of this.
DeanneThis is just a fantastic amount of information and.
DeanneAnd so different and needed.
DeanneSo thank you.
DeanneThank you for sharing and for everything that you do every single day.
Daniel MaglerWell, thank you for the opportunity to come and spread the word, particularly about Pause or Patrick.
Daniel MaglerAnd if people want to, they should, please go to the website@paws for patrick.org I used to say pastorpatrick.org but then somebody made it sound like I was.
Daniel MaglerThey thought I was saying orgy, which would be more of a Dan Savage thing.
Daniel MaglerSo, anyway, but so it's posturepatrick.org if you think that that might help you.
Daniel MaglerAnd yeah, thank you.
DeanneWe'll never forget that now.
Daniel MaglerSo thank you, though, for letting me come on and talk about that.
Daniel MaglerI really appreciate it.
DeanneOf course.
DeanneAnd then really quickly again, your podcast, if you.
Daniel MaglerMy podcast is not allowed to die, and it's on Apple podcast and Spotify.
Daniel MaglerYou can find it at either of those.
DeanneAwesome.
DeanneAll right, well, this will all be in the show notes as well, so you can click through and check it all out.
DeanneSo, Dan, thank you so much and have a great, great rest of your weekend.
Daniel MaglerYou too.
Heather HesterThanks so much for joining me today.
Heather HesterIf you enjoyed today's episode, I would be so grateful for a rating or a review.
Heather HesterClick on the link in the show notes or go to my website, chrysalismama.com to stay up to date on my latest resources as well as to learn how you can work with me.
Heather HesterPlease share this podcast with anyone who needs to know that they are not alone.
Heather HesterAnd remember to just breathe until.
Heather HesterTill next time.