In this episode, you will be invited to examine how the stories you carry about love affect the way you parent.
Speaker AWelcome to More Human, More Kind, the podcast helping parents of LGBTQ kids move from fear to fierce allyship and feel less alone and more informed so you can protect what matters, raise brave kids, and spark collective change.
Speaker AI'm Heather Hester.
Speaker ALet's get started.
Speaker AIn this episode, you'll understand how childhood experiences shaped your definition of love.
Speaker AYou'll begin identifying where old stories about love no longer serve you.
Speaker AAnd you'll learn one simple journaling practice to start repairing your relationship with love today.
Speaker AAnd be sure to stick around for the unlearn, where we will dismantle one of the most tips damaging myths of all that staying, no matter the cost, is proof of love.
Speaker AWelcome to More Human, More Kind.
Speaker AI'm Heather Hester.
Speaker AToday we are exploring how the earliest versions of love we received shaped the ones we know how to give.
Speaker AAnd how, with intention and care, we can rewrite that story.
Speaker ASometimes the love we were taught to chase isn't the love that helps us grow.
Speaker AAnd the moment we stop performing for love, we start remembering how to receive it.
Speaker AWe don't enter adulthood with as blank slates.
Speaker AWhen it comes to love, we carry emotional blueprints, usually written long before we had the language to read them.
Speaker AMaybe you grew up in a home where love meant helping, where your worth was tied to how useful you were.
Speaker AMaybe love meant silence, keeping the peace, never rocking the boat.
Speaker AMaybe it meant sacrifice and putting others comfort before your own.
Speaker AAnd maybe, if you were lucky, it meant safety and belonging.
Speaker APsychologists call this your attachment style, the pattern your nervous system learned to recognize as love.
Speaker ADr. Sue Johnson, founder of Emotionally Focused Therapy, explains it this way.
Speaker AFrom our earliest relationships, we learn whether love is a safe haven or a dangerous place.
Speaker AWhen love came with strings attached, whether it was obedience, performance, or perfection, it wired your brain for survival, not connection.
Speaker ABut what if real love doesn't require you to vanish to be worthy?
Speaker AOur definitions of love aren't just emotional.
Speaker AThey're biological.
Speaker ANeuroscience tells us that the patterns we formed around love as children, how we were soothed, scolded, or seen, literally shaped our neural pathways for attachment.
Speaker ADr. Dan Siegel calls this the window of tolerance.
Speaker AIt's the range where we can safely give and receive love without tipping into anxiety or shutdown.
Speaker AWhen love has hurt us, that window narrows.
Speaker AWe either over function to keep people close or withdraw to avoid pain.
Speaker ABut here's the good news.
Speaker ALove can be relearned.
Speaker AEvery time you offer yourself compassion Instead of criticism, you're widening that window.
Speaker AEvery time you pause before people pleasing, you're teaching your body that love and safety can go exist.
Speaker AI want to say that again because this means so much to me as well.
Speaker AEvery time you offer yourself compassion instead of criticism, you're widening that window.
Speaker AEvery time you pause before people pleasing, you're teaching your body that love and safety can coexist.
Speaker AHow cool is that?
Speaker ABell hooks wrote love is a combination of care, commitment, knowledge, responsibility, respect and trust.
Speaker ANot control, not perfection and not suffering disguised as devotion.
Speaker AIf you can take a moment right now, find a quiet space.
Speaker AIf you can't take that moment right now, it will be bookmarked for you so you can come back later.
Speaker ATake a breath, close your eyes for a moment, and just let the word love sit in your body.
Speaker ANow ask yourself, what messages did I grow up hearing about love?
Speaker AWere they spoken?
Speaker AModeled?
Speaker AImplied?
Speaker AWhen have I felt most loved?
Speaker AAnd what made that moment feel safe?
Speaker AWas it words?
Speaker APresence?
Speaker AHonesty?
Speaker ATouch?
Speaker AQuiet?
Speaker AAnd where does love still feel tangled with guilt or fear?
Speaker AWhat do you tell yourself you have to do to keep it?
Speaker APause here.
Speaker AAnd if you feel emotion rising, don't worry, there's nothing wrong with you.
Speaker AYou're not broken for needing to relearn love.
Speaker AYou're healing from being taught it conditionally.
Speaker AHere's the truth most of us were never told.
Speaker ALove isn't something you earn.
Speaker AIt's something you allow.
Speaker AYou don't have to chase, fix, or prove it.
Speaker AYou just have to stop running from your own enoughness.
Speaker ARepair doesn't mean rewriting the past.
Speaker AIt means updating the story your nervous system is telling you about what love feels like.
Speaker ASo here are three places you can start.
Speaker AThe first is to reparent yourself when an old trigger hits ask what would I say to my younger self right now?
Speaker ADr. Kristin Neff's research on self compassion shows that talking to yourself as you would to a friend decreases shame and builds emotional resilience.
Speaker AAnother thing that you can do is to learn secure love through example.
Speaker ASurround yourself with relationships that feel safe and reciprocal.
Speaker AThis could be friendships, mentors, communities, the people who feel like your people.
Speaker AOur brains are social learners.
Speaker AWatching others give love freely teaches our system what's possible.
Speaker AAnd the third thing that you can do is practice micro love moments.
Speaker AThese are just 5 to 10 second acts of self or relational kindness.
Speaker AThings such as small moments of caring for your body, drinking water and saying, this is an act of love for myself.
Speaker AIt can also be putting your hand on your heart when you're anxious and taking a slow, deep breath.
Speaker ASmiling or giving someone a compliment is telling them, I see you.
Speaker ALove becomes real again.
Speaker ANot in grand gestures, but.
Speaker AAnd these micro acts, these micro moments of truth.
Speaker ADr. Barbara Fredrickson's work on positivity resonance found that brief, mutual moments of warmth create measurable changes in heart rhythm and vagal tone, literally the synchronizing of hearts.
Speaker AThat's what repair looks like in real life.
Speaker ANot perfection, presence.
Speaker AI used to think that love had to be this quote, unquote perfect expression.
Speaker AAnd to me, that meant being accommodating, always forgiving and overflowing with lavish praise, even if it didn't feel true.
Speaker AIt also meant staying small, quiet, agreeable.
Speaker ABut what I've learned through the course of my marriage and being a mom of four really extraordinary kids is that real love is messy.
Speaker ASometimes it looks like boundaries.
Speaker AActually, a lot of the time it looks like boundaries.
Speaker ASometimes it sounds like silence while you find your breath again.
Speaker AAnd sometimes the most loving thing you can do is starting over with yourself.
Speaker ALove and freedom aren't opposites.
Speaker AThey're partners.
Speaker AReal love expands everyone it touches.
Speaker AToday's Unlearn is about releasing the myth that love always means staying.
Speaker AThe story says if you walk away, you didn't love enough.
Speaker AYou didn't try to love enough.
Speaker ABut staying in harm isn't love.
Speaker AIt's survival.
Speaker AWhat if leaving or healing or changing course was the deepest expression of love because it honors truth?
Speaker ALove doesn't always mean holding on.
Speaker ASometimes it means creating a space for new beginnings.
Speaker AThis week, I want you to write one sentence of love to yourself that begins with the future version of me will thank me for fill in the blank, or I'm learning to speak to myself like and fill in the blank, and then read it out loud to yourself every single day.
Speaker ALet it become your new evidence of love.
Speaker ALove that is tender and unconditional.
Speaker AWhen we repair our relationship with love, we become capable of loving others more honestly, without fear, without performance, and without losing ourselves.
Speaker ATake one last deep breath with me.
Speaker ALove is still worth believing in, just not the version that breaks you.
Speaker AYou learn today how early experiences shaped your understanding of love, how to start repairing what was distorted, and how to recognize that real love doesn't cost you your wholeness.
Speaker AIf this reflection resonated with you, join me on Substack every Friday for live guided journaling sessions and a Q and A.
Speaker AThis is a space to reconnect with your heart for the holidays and remember that new episodes of More Human, More kind dropped every Tuesday and Friday.
Speaker ASo make sure you follow and subscribe so you never miss one.
Speaker AUntil next time.
Speaker ABe gentle with your healing heart.
Speaker AYou are not hard to love.
Speaker AYou are learning what love actually means.
Speaker AFeels like you are already enough.