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Welcome back to Become a Calm Mama. I'm your host. I'm Darlene

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Childress, and I am about to start a two part

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series all about family values. Essentially,

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what I'm teaching is how to be value led instead

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of child led in your family. How to make

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decisions based on your values and the things that

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are important to you, how to set boundaries about the things that are

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important to you, instead of making decisions based on

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emotion, how you feel in the moment, or how your children

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feel in the moment. Parenting can be really, really

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confusing, and it can be hard to figure out what am I

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supposed to do here? Do I let my kid go to this birthday

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party? Do I let them quit the sports team? Do I

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let them not go to our religious service? Do I let

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them blow off steam by swearing? All

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of these are hard questions to answer. So one of the

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strategies that I wanna help you with is figuring

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out what is important to you as a parent,

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and your values as a family. So that when you

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have a decision to make or you see a behavior

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that is happening in your family, you get to look at your

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values and decide, is this aligned with the things

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that are important to us? Is this decision going to help us

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get our kids closer to our values and where

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we wanna take our family? Or is this decision

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going to undermine our family

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values? I'm hoping to give you some examples of this as

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we go forward, but I first wanted to start to just

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define what values even mean. Values

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are defined as a person's principles or standards

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of behavior. So you're kind of figuring out what is

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important to you, how do you wanna act in the world,

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what are the ways that you wanna show up, and then defining,

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giving some words to those values. So for

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example, I just asked my husband this. I, like, threw it on him

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out of nowhere because he's not sitting around thinking about doing a podcast episode

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on family values, but I was. And we were at lunch and I

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just said to him, hey. I'm gonna throw a question at you.

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How would you define our family values? Like, what are some things that are

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important to you as a parent and that you think we did

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or wanna establish as a family? And he was quiet for a minute. And he's

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like, oh, I don't wanna think about this,

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which I understand. I I've been hesitant to even do this

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podcast episode because I feel like it's a very simple thing, but it's

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also requires a lot of thinking and self reflection. And it's not

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something we really wanna even think about that much. But I did press him for

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a minute. I was like, just kinda off the top of your head, like, what

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is a primary value to you as a person?

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And he was quiet and then he said integrity.

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And I'm like, what does that mean to you? And he started defining it, like

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being honest, doing what you say you're gonna do, doing things

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well. And it started to encapsulate a lot

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of all of our values around honesty, around our work

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habits, around the things that we think are really important,

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taking personal responsibility, following through, all of those

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things. I'm like, oh, okay. So one of our core family values is integrity.

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So that's where to start for you or your

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husband or your wife or your partner, whoever you

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sort of co parent with is what do you think is important

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for you as a person? What are some of the things that you value as

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a person? For me, one of my strongest values is

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honesty. I am honest to a fault almost. It's

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like something that's very very important to me, and it's been something

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I've really talked about with my family and my kids. And that

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goes alongside with my husband's integrity. But for me, I

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wanna be very honest. Also, I value

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gratitude. Right? That's a very important thing for me to have perspective

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and to look for where things are going well and to cultivate

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gratitude in myself. One of my other primary values is being

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kind. I think we can all be very kind to each other

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and be respectful the way we speak to each other and the

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way that we are generous with each other and the way that we

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show generosity and show love and appreciation for

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others. And that is my value of kindness. So for you,

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I want you to start thinking about what are the values that you have for

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yourself. That's a good place to start with this

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discussion. I created a little worksheet that I am giving to

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those people on my email list. So if you did not get it, you're not

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on my email list, go and subscribe. You can get the stop yelling cheat sheet.

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You can get any of my free resources, and then we'll put you on the

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email list. We'll also put it as a link in the show notes. So

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defining your family values, the first part is really your own

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individual reflection. So in the worksheet, I give you five

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steps to defining your family values as a couple. So the first

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part is for yourself, kind of figuring out what are my values for

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me, what are the top qualities I wanna model to my

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kids, What are the values I hope my children

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have? What are the non negotiables in our family and how we treat

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each other? And what kind of environment do I wanna create for our family?

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So really kind of thinking about, like, what's important to you as a family.

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In the little worksheet, I have listed a bunch of

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common family value themes like respect,

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adventure, gratitude, growth, health, humor,

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spirituality, resilience. And as you look at

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the list, you're gonna be thinking, oh, yes. That I want that. I want that.

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I want that. So I'd rather you start from within and try

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to figure out what's important to you as a person. What are the things that

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you care about? When you get angry about

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something, about a behavior, what value is that kind of rubbing

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up against? When you act in a way that you don't

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like, what value are you not aligned with within

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yourself? Looking at what's important to you and

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what bothers you and what bothers you about other people or yourself

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is going to be a big clue about what you value as a

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person. So the idea, if you're in a co parenting

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situation, is that you do this on your own, you ask your partner to do

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it, and I give you some questions that you can use from the worksheet. Then

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you come together and you just talk about it. You say, hey, why don't you

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share with me one of your values that you think is important? And your partner

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will share a little bit, necessarily, what the value is and you can ask some

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questions like, why is that important or what does that look like? How does that

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show up for you? What do you think that means? And you kind of

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take turns sort of talking about your values. And over the

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conversation, the idea is that you'll identify some shared

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themes. So you're trying to come up with maybe five

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to eight core values as a family,

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as a couple that you would like to work

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towards in your parenting. Next week, I'm gonna

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help you understand why this is important, but I thought it would be helpful for

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the first week is just to have a conversation about family values

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in general. How do you come up with them? What are they even? And, like,

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how do you make them up? So looking at your core

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values as a couple, as a parenting collaboration, if

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you are divorced or separated or you never married with your partner,

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but you have a partner that also helps raise your kids, If

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it's a good relationship, it might be interesting to talk to your

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co parent and ask them what their values are. And,

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like, see if we're aligned. Right? Looking at each

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value, and then you wanna go through a process of sort of defining

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it. So, for example, kindness. When you think

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about kindness, or my husband was integrity, so

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what does that mean to you? What will

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it look like in your home, in your family? So, for

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example, you would say in our family, kindness means

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treating each other with care and respect even when we're upset. We

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speak gently, offer help without being asked, and apologize when we

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hurt someone's feelings. For example, we say please and thank you every

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day. We check-in on each other after tough days and

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we do kind things for each other. And if someone makes a mistake, we

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forgive them and we respond with understanding.

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We are kind even when people make mistakes. That

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is a way to cultivate kindness in your family is

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defining what does kindness even mean? What does it look like in

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practice? What does integrity look like in practice?

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So we were talking about this, my husband and I, about, well, what does

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integrity mean? And it means committing. If you say you're gonna do

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something, then do it. So if that means you're committed to

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a sports team, or you're committed to being a participation in a in

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a play, or some sort of extracurricular, or on a group

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project, and you said you were gonna bring in the

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cookies or whatever it is for the group project, that you do the thing you

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said you're going to do. If you can't, for

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some reason, that you take responsibility and you're honest

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with the reason you're not doing it, You make that hard phone call and

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you tell the truth. Instead of blaming or lying or white

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lying and saying, oh, it's because we got stuck in traffic or

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something like that. I'd rather you be honest. So we have cultivated

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that with our kids. I think I think so. I mean, we we

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might not know everything. Right? That they maybe haven't

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had always integrity around. And I and I was saying that

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to my husband that one of our strong values is work habits and that

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goes in with integrity for us. And I was like, I don't know

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if we cultivated that well with our kids. And he's like, but they're

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still learning. And that's the other thing you wanna remember

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is that you have values that you sometimes

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aren't aligned with, that you go outside of your values sometimes

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and it feels uncomfortable. That's because of life,

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becomes of circumstances or maybe you feel insecure sometimes or

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you have your own work to do, your own growth to go

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through. That's okay. You are also learning. So when your

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children show up in a way that goes outside of your

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integrity, that counteracts or contradicts

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your values, then you get to think, okay,

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this is an area that my child still needs to grow.

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This is like a gap in where they are and where

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we wanna push them towards, where we wanna guide them towards.

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The way we guide our children towards our values in

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the comm mama process is through connection, which

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means helping our children understand themselves,

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connecting our kid to themselves.

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So we kind of narrate, like, oh, I hear you want to

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quit the team or not show up or, you know, you don't wanna go to

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school because you didn't study for that test or you're angry with your

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brother and you hit him. Like, I understand that

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frustration you feel and that overwhelm and that

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embarrassment. So we narrate to them the circumstance and

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then we validate their feeling. And then we

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say, and in this family, that

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doesn't work. That strategy that you're using

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to deal with your feelings doesn't work. So we go

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to limit set. So connect and limit set go together

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to help our kids grow, understand themselves,

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understand why they behave the way they behave so they don't get stuck in a

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shame cycle. We wanna validate their feelings, validate

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their strategy, like, yeah, I get it. You don't wanna go to school. You didn't

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study for the test. Like, that makes sense. But in this family,

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we are we have integrity. We stay committed. We do the things that

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are hard. So you're still going to school. So our values

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are leading our decision making when it comes

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to those sort of game day in the

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moment hard parenting choices, look back and go

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is this aligned or not aligned? Now when your child

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is saying that I don't wanna go, I don't like it, or

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their teacher is mean to me, or whatever. That's why I yelled at her, that's

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why I hit my brother because he's a jerk. Okay?

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They are demonstrating immaturity. They're

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demonstrating emotional dysregulation. We don't need

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to shame them and say like, what's wrong with you? That's not nice. Don't be

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a jerk. You know, instead we want to say, well, okay, I understand why you

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would act that way. It makes sense. And in this

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family, we show up differently. This is

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what is the boundary. This is how we expect you to behave, and we

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set limits around that. So I wanted to this to be a short

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episode because I don't want you to feel

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overwhelmed with the concept of values. I want it to be

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simple and something that's accessible to you, that

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you scroll down on a piece of paper your values, your things

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that are important to you, and you ask your partner to do that the same.

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Just be like, what what do you think is the most important things we need

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to teach our kids? And then come together and talk about them.

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Find some core values together. Define those a little bit. Okay. What

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does this even mean? Let's define it. Let's talk about what it looks like in

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practice. Then if you want to, you can turn those

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core values into a family value statement. So

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this can be a very short paragraph that weaves

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your values into a vision or commitment. You can put it up if

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you want or whatever you want. An example would be, in our

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family, we value connection, kindness, and honesty. We

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speak respectfully, listen deeply, and prioritize time

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together. We grow through challenges, we laugh often, and we treat others

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the way we want to be treated. And then that's it. You can have a

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little family meeting. You share with your kids your family values.

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You see, these are the things that it, we're all about. We oftentimes,

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as a couple, we would talk about being a Childress. It's our last

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name. And we'd say, this is what it means to be a Childress. And

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we just kind of created a narrative around our family

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name. You don't have to, but it was just something for us that was kind

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of anchoring. Like, we're all Childress' here. This is how we behave.

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Now, obviously, if you have a different last name than your partner or your kids

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and, you know, if there's multiple stepchildren and things like that,

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that might not work for you. So you just kinda define to your children

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what it means, what your values are. And then when

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life happens and you go along your way, you can

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come back, revisit your value statement every four to six months.

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Just like, are we aligned here? Are we on track here?

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So where are the gaps that we're seeing with our kids? What do we wanna

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add more of? You know, where are we kind of off?

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So if I have, value for generosity, but

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I don't have any places in my life where my kids

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have opportunities to demonstrate generosity, to be

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generous, to be giving. Well, that maybe

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means that I need to add something like that. So maybe we are more

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careful about making things for someone's birthday

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or they become more part of picking out

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birthday presents for family members or going and using their own

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money or their own, like, wrapping a toy if they're little and they're giving

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it to their friend, just to practice that value of generosity.

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So you look at your lifestyle, you'll get your values, and then you can look

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at your life and be like, well, are we aligned here? We say that

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service is a very important value, but yet we don't have any

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opportunities for service. We say spirituality or our religion is very

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important, but yet we are not attending services or

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reading from our religious text to our children. So just kinda

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catching yourself, not a shame y way, not in a gotcha way, but a

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little bit more curiosity. A little bit more of like, okay. Well, they we

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say this is important, but where are the opportunities for

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demonstrating it? Do we need to add some more? If you're off track, have

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some more boundaries around it. You guys are welcome to go to your friend's

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house on Saturday as long as we have all done a big cleanup in this.

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Because in this family, we value cleanliness. Like,

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it's fine. If that's your value, great. That's a very good value.

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If it's not your value, drop it. Who cares? Right? You

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don't have to have all the values be all of yours. So pick

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yours, define them, make a statement if you want, and

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then align your values with your lifestyle. And then

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if you notice that there's a behavior or there's some place in your life that

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you feel off track, you can look back at your values and say, oh, okay.

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This is why I don't like this behavior. This is why this lifestyle choice

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isn't working for me, and I'm gonna make some different decisions about

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it. So hopefully, it doesn't feel that complicated. I don't want

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this to be this big dragged out, oh, we

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have to have a big Sunday meeting with my partner. I want it

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to be a little more interesting and kind of a opportunity for

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exploring within yourself. I don't want this to be a to do list

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thing. So if this isn't something that you're interested in right now,

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it's okay. You don't have to like, oh, darling said we have to do

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family values, so let's do it this week. Like, if you don't have the

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capacity or bandwidth to think about this right now, it's okay.

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Just earmark this podcast episode and come back to it. Sometimes the

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beginning of the year is a good time to talk about values. Sometimes

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the beginning of the school year, sometimes around a birthday

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or a day of grieving can be good days to take a look at

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it. I also like to look at seasons in my

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life. So going into the summer, what are my

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intentions? What are the things that I wanted to make sure

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I do this summer? Like, what are our values this summer? Where how do

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I wanna show up? Do I wanna have my kids still be

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working on, like, work ethic and work habits? Okay.

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Great. So I'm gonna bring in, you know, some type of schoolwork

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or maybe they stick to the swim team or something like that

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over the course of the summer. So looking at your values and

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then looking at your summer plans and being like, was there any opportunity for me

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to align with that value in this

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season of my life that can look like, you know, during winter

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breaks or other religious holidays? Like, oh,

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let this could be a good opportunity to take a look at our values and

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maybe bring some more of those things in. So I want it to be

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interesting. I want it to not feel heavy. I want it to be light,

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and I want you to do it when it feels like you have the bandwidth

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to do it. It's a good exercise. I enjoy doing it myself. And like I

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said, I we do have a downloadable called defining your family values,

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a step by step guide for creating a family value statement to guide

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you on your parenting journey. And it's kind of the prompts that I

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offered to you in this episode. You can download that

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on the show notes or if you're not on my newsletter, be

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sure to be on there because I send all sorts of resources

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when I release the podcast episode. There's a blog

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post and an email that goes out letting you know what the topic is,

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and there's also kind of an overview of what the topic

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is all about. So if you don't get to the podcast, you can't listen to

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it, it's fine. You can just skim it. You're like, oh, okay. I'm gonna that's

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like my next one. Right? Be sure you're on the podcast email list. If you're

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not, get on there. You can do that by signing up

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on the blog page or whenever you sign up for any of those

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free resources I have on my website, which there's a lot by

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the way. I was just looking at these. Let me get a look at them

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real quick while I'm talking to you guys. Okay. So there's the stress free

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summer with kids, the stop yelling cheat sheet, the overview of the

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calm mama process, one called managing meltdowns and

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misbehavior, the stress reset guide for moms,

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easy morning with kids, and then, of course, the defining your family

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values. So there's, like, a ton of free resources on there.

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You sign up, you get the free downloadable, you get on the

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newsletter, and you get the email to tell you about the

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podcast and any resources. So it's pretty cool. Highly

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recommend you being on the newsletter, email list, and

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also taking advantage of these free resources that are on the website.

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So you can go to

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callmamacoaching.com/tools,

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and you'll be able to find all of those free resources.

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Callmamaisspelledcom,mama,coaching.com.

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Alright, mamas. I hope you have a great week and dads because I

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think that there might be some dads listening to this episode. So shout out

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dads and don't make it too complicated. Just

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think for yourself, what are my values? What do I care about?

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And make a little list. You can do it in your phone. You can

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do it on the worksheet that I provide or on a piece of paper.

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Doesn't matter. Just think about it, make a note, and then talk about it with

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your partner. Okay. Next week, I'm gonna talk to you about how to use

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these values to be value centered, value

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led instead of child led or

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feelings centered. So good episode on trying to help you

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get out of permissive parenting and into leadership

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parenting more around your family values and what

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is important to you and helping your children thrive.

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Alright. I can't wait. I will talk to you next week.