All right, welcome back to another episode of Become a Calm Mama. And
Speaker:I'm Darlin. And since today this podcast
Speaker:episode is being released on Thanksgiving, I thought
Speaker:I'd share with you a little bit about gratitude.
Speaker:Gratitude and how it relates to children, how it relates to parenting,
Speaker:and what I'm calling weaponized gratitude.
Speaker:So. So let me break down first for you. What is gratitude?
Speaker:So I don't know if you have read Brene Brown's book
Speaker:Atlas of the Heart, but I love this book
Speaker:because it really takes all these complicated emotions
Speaker:that we talk about, you know, like compassion
Speaker:or generosity or envy, these
Speaker:different emotions, and defines them and sort of helps
Speaker:you understand how they look in real life. And. And so she defines
Speaker:gratitude, and I wanted to give you that definition because I thought
Speaker:it was really helpful. So she defines gratitude as an
Speaker:emotion that reflects our deep
Speaker:appreciation for what we value, what brings
Speaker:meaning to our lives, and what makes us feel connected to ourselves
Speaker:and others. Gratitude, it's not just good manners
Speaker:like saying thank you. It's actually an
Speaker:emotion. And it arises from a
Speaker:perspective on life that looks for what is good,
Speaker:like, hey, this good thing that we value is happening
Speaker:or this thing that brings meaning to our lives is happening,
Speaker:right? And so it's not something that
Speaker:comes easily or naturally to humans. It's something that
Speaker:we have to cultivate. It's a mindset, it's a perspective we have
Speaker:to cultivate and practice. Gratitude,
Speaker:it doesn't. We're not necessarily walking through life thinking,
Speaker:oh my gosh, see, so happy that I have, you know, the ability
Speaker:to breathe. Right? I value life and I'm alive.
Speaker:But if we practice that, we can get to those thoughts really easily.
Speaker:So when it comes to our kids,
Speaker:feeling gratitude is hard. And let me tell you why.
Speaker:Remember that gratitude is defined by,
Speaker:you know, appreciating what we value,
Speaker:appreciating what brings meaning to our lives, and appreciating what makes us
Speaker:feel connected to others and to ourselves. That
Speaker:requires a lot of self awareness and a lot of reflection.
Speaker:And kids really aren't able to do much
Speaker:perspective taking, partly because of the way their brain is
Speaker:developed, because they aren't able to really
Speaker:exit their own experience and enter into anybody
Speaker:else's experience. They're not able until, like around
Speaker:9 or 10 to what we call metacognate,
Speaker:like, think about their thinking or think about their life. It's just
Speaker:hard. But we can teach them how to do it, especially when it's a value
Speaker:of ours. Besides being a developmental
Speaker:stage, right? Being able to Take perspective and grow
Speaker:in your brain development. The other reason why gratitude is
Speaker:hard for kids is because, honestly, most of a
Speaker:child's experience is that good things
Speaker:happen easily for them, and it's actually a goal, right?
Speaker:As parents, we want, like our kids, life to be simple and easy and
Speaker:happy. And that means that they don't really have a lot to struggle against.
Speaker:So they don't have a lot of perspective on how things could be
Speaker:right. The other side of the coin, like, so they have the
Speaker:developmental difficulty of even imagining
Speaker:a perspective outside of their own or have perspective on themselves.
Speaker:And they have this sort of a belief that, like,
Speaker:this is just how it is. Perspective in general is
Speaker:hard for kids because, like I said, they don't have a lot of life experience.
Speaker:They barely understand their own family, their own school, the
Speaker:city they live in, let alone the entire state or
Speaker:country that they live in or how other people live. They don't know
Speaker:enough about the world to know that not everyone lives
Speaker:in relative peace. They don't know that not everyone has
Speaker:enough food or shelter or clothes or heat or air conditioning
Speaker:to be comfortable. They don't know that not every parent
Speaker:is kind and compassionate. They just don't know. Partly because
Speaker:we've taught them to expect ease. We've
Speaker:taught them to think that the world revolves around them when
Speaker:they're little. It does, because we have to protect them and keep them safe and
Speaker:keep them alive. And then it almost becomes a habit of. When we
Speaker:create a life that is for our children's happiness,
Speaker:fine, it's not a problem. But then your child is going to have the
Speaker:perspective that the world is built for my happiness. They're not
Speaker:going to have a lot of perspective when things go sour or south
Speaker:for them. Now, we've taught our kids that, that
Speaker:the world is a lovely place, and
Speaker:they believe that. But then what happens is we get mad at
Speaker:them when they're not feeling grateful for what we told them was just
Speaker:the way things are, when they are not able to cultivate
Speaker:gratitude for a nice house or
Speaker:a loving family or a mommy that
Speaker:tucks me in every night or whatever
Speaker:that you want your kids to be grateful for. It's easy to
Speaker:get angry with them for their lack of gratitude. And I want you to know
Speaker:you don't need to make them wrong for their ignorance or
Speaker:for their lack of perspective. It's part of development.
Speaker:It's part of growing from a child to
Speaker:an adult. And so the best way to
Speaker:instill gratitude is to model
Speaker:is to decide as a Family that it is an important value for
Speaker:you, and then model that. So I want to talk about
Speaker:modeling gratitude, and I'm going to give you three really
Speaker:great strategies and tools for you today
Speaker:to practice gratitude with you, with your family, and with your kids.
Speaker:But first, I want to talk about you and your feelings.
Speaker:Because a common thing that comes up from the moms that I work with or
Speaker:the moms that I know is what I call weaponized gratitude.
Speaker:Weaponized gratitude is when a mom
Speaker:starts to share a negative emotion with me, like hurt,
Speaker:disappointment, sadness. And she's telling me what's going
Speaker:on in her life and she's kind of expressing her own feelings
Speaker:and she stops herself and sort of backs
Speaker:up a bit. It's like, oh, I shouldn't even be complaining. Because you know what?
Speaker:At least I do. At least I have. It's not that bad. I
Speaker:really shouldn't be complaining. I'm being so whiny. I know I have it better
Speaker:than other people. Oh, you're going through so much. You know, I shouldn't be
Speaker:talking about myself like this. No. That is trying
Speaker:to out gratitude yourself from your emotion.
Speaker:Using gratitude as a weapon to shut down your feelings
Speaker:when you're hurting you. Actually, you need compassion,
Speaker:not judgment or criticism. Even if it's self criticism,
Speaker:even if you're discounting your own feelings, that's not
Speaker:helpful. What you need is a safe place to dump some of the
Speaker:junk that's going on. And you need to have your feelings acknowledged
Speaker:and allowed and accepted, either by
Speaker:yourself or by whoever you're talking to. And
Speaker:gratituding your way out is a way of
Speaker:discounting the actual emotion you have. It's you're ignoring
Speaker:the feeling you have and trying to manufacture
Speaker:the feeling of gratitude. You're bypassing your negative emotion in order to
Speaker:get to the positive emotion.
Speaker:So don't gratitude yourself out of your emotions. It's not
Speaker:gonna work anyway. That's called stuffing your feelings.
Speaker:When you're shoulding yourself into a positive emotion,
Speaker:you're weaponizing gratitude. I don't want you to.
Speaker:Good vibes, only your life.
Speaker:Because good vibes only is not a reality.
Speaker:We all have lots and lots of feelings, and sometimes those
Speaker:feelings are not so great. Sometimes we're bitter, sometimes we're
Speaker:resentful, sometimes we're angry, sometimes we're sad.
Speaker:And that's okay. We don't need to judge
Speaker:our negative feeling and then tell ourselves we should be grateful.
Speaker:I love gratitude. I spend lots of time feeling grateful,
Speaker:and I'm genuinely delighted with my life.
Speaker:But I can only feel that feeling of gratitude because I've opened
Speaker:myself up to all the other feelings too. The gratitude is
Speaker:genuine because the anger has been felt genuinely. The gratitude
Speaker:is genuine because the resentment has been felt, the
Speaker:sadness, the disappointment, the grief. All any feeling
Speaker:ever wants is to be felt. So you cannot manufacture
Speaker:gratitude. But what I've noticed is that my brain and
Speaker:my heart, they want to think and feel positive
Speaker:things. I think we're all wired for that.
Speaker:Biologically speaking, a calm and peaceful brain is one
Speaker:that can think clearly and make better decisions and then
Speaker:that preserves our well being in the long run. So having a
Speaker:calm, non stressed brain is really good
Speaker:for the survival of you and our species.
Speaker:So the brain is kind of longing for a
Speaker:better emotion or a better mental state because then
Speaker:from that mental state it can think
Speaker:and make better decisions. Because reactivity
Speaker:and stress, they're not meant to be long term coping strategies, right?
Speaker:They're meant to be bursts of energy that move us to safety so that we
Speaker:can think and feel more calm and more clear and
Speaker:so you can trust. This is something I've
Speaker:struggled with. Like, I don't want to wallow in my
Speaker:negative emotion because I'm going to end up being like this kind of
Speaker:sad, pathetic, bitter, angry woman. What I've
Speaker:learned is that's not true. At my core, I
Speaker:am a loving, kind, grateful, you know,
Speaker:person. And sometimes I have these negative
Speaker:emotions that come up and I need to move through those in
Speaker:order to, like, grow into, you know, who I either
Speaker:want to be or who I am. Gratitude is a wonderful
Speaker:emotion, but you cannot fake it. It's the
Speaker:calm after the storm. It's like the
Speaker:sunshine after the clouds clear up. It's what we get
Speaker:after we dump a bunch of our complaints. Because what
Speaker:gratitude really is, it's perspective. And perspective
Speaker:only comes when we take an honest account of our lives.
Speaker:When we're looking at what is hard and what is great. When
Speaker:we're honest, it's a lot easier to get to gratitude.
Speaker:It's okay to feel disappointed, it's okay to feel angry, it's okay to feel
Speaker:sad, it's okay to feel hurt. None of these
Speaker:are the opposite of gratitude. You can feel more than one emotion.
Speaker:At the same time, you can feel super grateful and also
Speaker:really frustrated. You might find that
Speaker:today it's like Thanksgiving, you know, holly jolly
Speaker:period of time. And you might be like, why am I making the
Speaker:mashed potatoes? This isn't fair, right? And then
Speaker:you're like, oh, I Should be grateful that I have mashed potatoes. No, don't
Speaker:weaponize gratitude today. Using gratitude as a
Speaker:weapon to avoid feeling and avoid processing your negative emotion
Speaker:will keep you stuck. So once you process your negative
Speaker:emotion, like I said, gratitude is on the other side. Gratitude
Speaker:is so great. It helps us appreciate the
Speaker:value of something. And the more we appreciate the value,
Speaker:the more benefits we get from the thing we appreciate.
Speaker:When I appreciate my husband and
Speaker:I spend time appreciating him, then I get more
Speaker:benefits from him because I actually
Speaker:like, am enjoying him. And then he's more enjoyable.
Speaker:Right? It's like an asset. It appreciates.
Speaker:So the thing we have when we're grateful for it, it appreciates in value.
Speaker:And that's why we want to spend time
Speaker:in gratitude. So I wanted to tell to talk to
Speaker:you about weaponizing gratitude as a way of bypassing your negative emotion
Speaker:so that you could process your negative emotion and then get to the good
Speaker:gratitude stuff, because the gratitude is amazing.
Speaker:So I have three unique strategies that I have
Speaker:for cultivating gratitude and that I want to share with you now. These
Speaker:practices, when I practice them regularly, they help me
Speaker:access gratitude faster. They help me shift
Speaker:towards gratitude with greater ease so that when I do move
Speaker:from my negative mindset and my negative emotion to
Speaker:a new emotion to a new mindset, click. Gratitude is easy for me to find
Speaker:because I've been practicing that neural pathway. It's like, I want to
Speaker:be able to have gratitude be available to
Speaker:me easily and quickly so that when I move through my negative emotion,
Speaker:my brain's like, oh, but darlin, remember, remember,
Speaker:you do really like whatever it is. Remember you're
Speaker:really grateful for that thing. So that when I'm kind of
Speaker:complaining about it, I don't need to weaponize and make
Speaker:myself feel bad for not appreciating it. I can feel whatever
Speaker:I'm feeling and then go, but, oh, that's true. I do actually appreciate it.
Speaker:So here are the three strategies. The first one is
Speaker:a simple way to think about it, is I'm grateful because.
Speaker:So the word because is the practice.
Speaker:So a lot of times we'll say, you know, you go around the thing, Thanksgiving
Speaker:table or whatever, and you're like, I'm grateful for my family. I'm grateful for this
Speaker:chicken or turkey or whatever. I'm grateful for my house. I'm
Speaker:grateful for my dog. Okay? Right.
Speaker:I like to add the word because and I
Speaker:love to add because to the sentence because it
Speaker:helps me see the benefit or the reason I'm grateful and it
Speaker:deepens my appreciation of it. So a few recent
Speaker:examples that I have for from my own journal
Speaker:is that I am grateful for learning about thought work.
Speaker:And then I added, because managing my mind has changed my
Speaker:life. I love it. I'm so grateful that I learned about
Speaker:these coaching tools that I share with you on this podcast I wrote.
Speaker:I'm grateful for the ocean because it makes my heart
Speaker:swell. Like, I have a physical reaction when
Speaker:I am near the ocean. My chest opens
Speaker:up and I feel much more free and expansive.
Speaker:Like, I have a. It's really cool. So I'm super grateful for the ocean
Speaker:because of that. My heart swells open, it feels
Speaker:bigger, the world feels more possible. I am grateful for my children,
Speaker:but let me tell you why, because they give me
Speaker:purpose, they give me meaning, and they teach me so
Speaker:much. Now, of course, as they get older, my purpose
Speaker:changes, but as they've been young, it gave my whole life
Speaker:a lot of meaning, a lot of purpose. You know, keeping these people
Speaker:alive and healthy and, you know, getting to know them and all of
Speaker:that, right? Gives me meaning. And it also teaches me.
Speaker:Someone I wrote, I saw someone on Instagram say, like, had a little picture of
Speaker:their kid and them, and they said, oh, my guru about their child. And,
Speaker:like, your guru is what you learn from, you know, and it's
Speaker:cool to think about how much we learn about ourselves because we're parents. So
Speaker:right now, as you're listening to this, I want you to pause for a second
Speaker:and just think about something you're grateful for. Like, really let
Speaker:it sink in. Like, what are you grateful for now, really let it
Speaker:sink in. And then ask yourself, why
Speaker:are you grateful for this thing? Find your. Because
Speaker:if you're listening to this episode before your Thanksgiving dinner, maybe you're prepping your
Speaker:Thanksgiving dinner and I'm in your earbuds. I love that. So when you go to
Speaker:sit down at the table and you know, whether it's your table or someone else's,
Speaker:and you know, everyone's like, let's go around the table and say what we're thankful
Speaker:for, I'm grateful for, right? I want you to say, hey, everybody,
Speaker:let's add the word because. And it will teach your
Speaker:kids a greater level of introspection, and it will give you an
Speaker:opportunity to get to know your kids on a deeper level so they get to
Speaker:know themselves and you get to know them. And then whoever else is at the
Speaker:table also gets to benefit. So that's, number one, is
Speaker:I'm grateful because. All right, number Two. This one,
Speaker:I think, is a. It's like a hack. It's fun. You write a list
Speaker:of 10 things that you really, really wanted in the past,
Speaker:like, that you really wanted and that you have now.
Speaker:This gives you a lot of perspective to appreciate what
Speaker:you currently have. Like, if I would have. I
Speaker:mean, before I was a mom, God, all I wanted to be was a
Speaker:mom. And it was not easy for me to become a mother.
Speaker:And we struggled with infertility, went through adoption, and
Speaker:so for me to become a mom, it was like this deep, deep desire.
Speaker:I wanted it and then I got it, and, like,
Speaker:I'm grateful for it. Right? So some people, you
Speaker:know, were, like, really wanting to be married or find the love of their life.
Speaker:I met Kevin super young. I don't even know if I had time to, like,
Speaker:you know, desperately want to be married, But I did want to be married growing
Speaker:up. I wanted to have a partner, a life partner, and now I have one.
Speaker:So I wanted to be a mom, and now I am. I wanted to have
Speaker:a life partner, and now I have one. I didn't grow up with a car.
Speaker:I always really wanted a car. I wanted a reliable car, and
Speaker:now I have a reliable car. I never. I don't. Like,
Speaker:this is not to be weird, but, like, I don't buy used cars because
Speaker:I just so want to have a reliable car. Like, I want to have a
Speaker:car that I know works, and I have a car that works,
Speaker:and I love it. I always wanted to own a home. I really
Speaker:wanted the stability of owning a home. I really wanted the. That feeling of
Speaker:knowing where I had a place in the world, and now I own one,
Speaker:and I love my house. And I really wanted
Speaker:to have a career. Helping parents. That was like
Speaker:one of my life dreams. I wrote it down in 2012
Speaker:that I was going to help parents find
Speaker:calm, and now I have that. So I want
Speaker:you to sit today, if you can, or tomorrow and just write a list of
Speaker:things that you used to want to have. Oh, I also really always wanted to
Speaker:have a dog, and now I have one. Right? So I want you to write
Speaker:down things that you wanted that you now have.
Speaker:And it's very fun. And you can actually ask your kids this, and this is
Speaker:interesting because they're littler and so they might be like, oh, I
Speaker:really, really, really wanted you to let me play Minecraft and now I can.
Speaker:Or I really, really, really wanted to go to Disneyland and then we
Speaker:did. Or I really, really, really wanted to see the
Speaker:snow and. And we did. So that
Speaker:helps give your kids some perspective, which is really fun.
Speaker:All right, number three, this one is to focus not just on today
Speaker:or, like, on Thanksgiving, but really this whole holiday season
Speaker:to help your kids shift
Speaker:from the season of getting and shift
Speaker:to a season of giving that will help your
Speaker:kids grow some perspective. So bringing your kids
Speaker:into the gift giving process is a really cool way,
Speaker:especially if, like, you're listening to this on Thanksgiving, tomorrow's Black
Speaker:Friday, people are going to start making purchases. And then you got Cyber Monday,
Speaker:and there's like, okay, you know, maybe you're with your family and everyone's like,
Speaker:let's share our wish lists and whatever, right? And so gifts
Speaker:are starting to be on people's minds. So what I'd love for you to do
Speaker:is make a list of all the people in your family that you're going to
Speaker:give a present to, and then set a budget, talk about the
Speaker:reason you chose that amount for each gift, and then let
Speaker:your kids pick gifts within that range, have them
Speaker:wrap them. The more invested they are in the giving, the
Speaker:less they will focus on. On the receiving. So when you do your gift
Speaker:exchanges, oh, don't you remember, like, that feeling of having,
Speaker:like, a gift you're so excited to give? You're like, oh, I can't wait. I
Speaker:can't wait. I can't wait. You, like, hide it and stuff. You can't, you
Speaker:know, like, that feeling is fun. So we want to let
Speaker:our kids have that feeling of giving
Speaker:instead of just waiting and waiting and waiting for their own turn to open their
Speaker:presents. I will do an episode on the podcast that I call the
Speaker:Gimmes. And it's all about how to deal when your kids really want a lot
Speaker:of stuff and when they're grumpy about it. But for now, this will help
Speaker:you is by having them take a look at, like, hey,
Speaker:so here's your cousins, and here's what we usually, you know, here's how much we
Speaker:spend, and here's why we spend this much. And what would you guys like to
Speaker:do? What would you like to give them? It's really fun. It'll be fun for
Speaker:you. And having them wrap them, you know, you don't have to do that if
Speaker:you don't want to. If you like it or it's too annoying or they're too
Speaker:little, that's fine. But just pulling them into the process will help
Speaker:them be more invested in the giving. So I hope you
Speaker:have a really wonderful Thanksgiving. If you're. If you're listening
Speaker:to this After Thanksgiving is over. I hope you had a wonderful
Speaker:Thanksgiving and that you're finding some time to take some rest
Speaker:and just be quiet and be in gratitude as long as you do not
Speaker:weaponize it. All right, Have a great week and
Speaker:I will talk to you next week.