In this episode, you will discover the one imperfectly human trait that will help you be a better parent to your LGBTQ child.
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 AHeather Hester let's get started.
Speaker AIn this episode, you'll discover the four pillars that guide this movement.
Speaker ACuriosity, compassion, courage, and connection.
Speaker AYou'll hear how these principles can transform the way you parent, lead, and love.
Speaker AAnd you'll learn small, meaningful ways to practice being more human, More kind in your daily life.
Speaker AAnd be sure to stick around for the unlearn, where I will break one of the biggest myths of all that kindness equals weakness.
Speaker AWelcome to More Human, More Kind.
Speaker AI'm Heather Hester.
Speaker AThis episode is a little different.
Speaker AIt is actually about the heartbeat behind everything I talk about here.
Speaker AIt's about remembering who we really are underneath the performance and the pressure, and returning to the most simple, albeit probably hardest and most beautiful truth that our humanity is not something to fix, it is something to honor.
Speaker ALet's start with a question at the heart of each Everything I do what does it really mean to be human?
Speaker ATo me, being human means embracing the beauty and the messiness.
Speaker AWhat does that mean?
Speaker AIt means letting go of all of the preconceived notions of perfection.
Speaker AIt means seeing other humans, humanity, life, not as black or white or as a series of boxes to be checked, but as a colorful spectrum.
Speaker AIt means holding the tension of the opposites, laughing and crying in the same breath, feeling anger, clarity and peace all in the same moment, holding boundaries as an expression of love.
Speaker AIt means being both brave and afraid, loving and learning, all at the same time.
Speaker AWe spend so much time trying to be together, composed, even perfect.
Speaker ABut the truth is our power, our beauty, our humanity lies in our imperfection.
Speaker AWhen we try to be perfect, we disconnect.
Speaker AWe focus on should and ego.
Speaker AWe become critical of ourselves because this pursuit is impossible.
Speaker AAnd out of frustration, we become judgmental of others.
Speaker AWhen we remember our shared humanness, kindness becomes possible again, not as a performative gesture, but as a radical act of seeing and being seen.
Speaker AThink of it as like a giant sigh of relief, remembering, oh yeah, okay, I don't need to be anyone or anything other than exactly who I am.
Speaker AThe only perfection that exists when it comes to being human is that true connection with our authenticity.
Speaker AResearch from the Greater Good Science center shows that empathy and perspective taking increase when people are reminded of shared vulnerability, Even something as simple as hearing.
Speaker AI've felt that too.
Speaker ASo what are these four pillars that I talked about in the introduction?
Speaker AWell, I always feel like a tool is easier to remember and use when it's in an easy to remember format.
Speaker AAnd in this case, the alliteration was kind of just the cherry on top.
Speaker AThe four pillars that the more human, more kind movement is built upon are curiosity, compassion, courage and connection.
Speaker ACuriosity is the antidote to judgment.
Speaker AIt says, tell me more.
Speaker ATake a moment and think about or remember how your body feels.
Speaker AWhat types of thoughts race through your mind when you are judging yourself or judging someone else.
Speaker ANow take a deep breath and ask yourself to feel curious.
Speaker AWhat happens in your body, in your mind?
Speaker AWhen we approach ourselves and others with curiosity, we quiet the part of the brain that's wired for fear and activate the part that is wired for learning.
Speaker AThat shift you feel allows for the next pillar, which is compassion.
Speaker ACompassion is the willingness to acknowledge and hold space for pain even when it's not yours, and perhaps especially when it's not yours.
Speaker AIt's not pity or fixing, it's being present.
Speaker AIt's the ability to at least try to put yourself in someone else's shoes, to feel and honor what they may be experiencing on a physical, mental, emotional or spiritual level.
Speaker AThe ability to have compassion for others as well as yourself is a practiced skill.
Speaker ASkill and one that in time allows for the next pillar, which is courage.
Speaker ACourage is the daily choice to act from love and not fear.
Speaker AIn fact, fear may still have a few tentacles holding on and you make the choice to act anyway.
Speaker ACourage is really loud.
Speaker AThere is a difference between being loud and speaking with the quiet strength of courage.
Speaker AThe openness of curiosity and the warmth of compassion provide strength to be courageous, to be uncomfortable, to speak up, to do the right thing.
Speaker AAnd all of these lead to the ability to connect.
Speaker AConnection is the quiet magic that happens when we stay open, even in disagreement.
Speaker AConnection doesn't mean sameness.
Speaker AIt means remembering we're on the same team.
Speaker AHumanity.
Speaker AIt is the heart level communication or that ability to stay connected to oneself no matter what is happening all around you.
Speaker ATrue connection with self and with others requires curiosity, that open wondering of I want to understand who you are.
Speaker AIt requires compassion, that soulful I see you and it requires courage, that wisdom to acknowledge fear and act anyway.
Speaker APut these four pillars together and you have the true essence of what it means to be more human and more kind.
Speaker ALet's take a moment to reset together.
Speaker ALet's pause.
Speaker AAnd wherever you are whatever you are doing.
Speaker AUnclench your jaw, wiggle it around, drop your shoulders, feel your feet on the ground, the steadiness beneath you.
Speaker ANow take one deep, slow breath in.
Speaker AAnd let it all go.
Speaker AFor a moment.
Speaker ANothing needs to be fixed or figured out.
Speaker AYou are safe enough to just be human.
Speaker ANow picture someone who makes your blood boil.
Speaker AInstead of defending your position, ask yourself what pain might they be protecting.
Speaker AYou don't have to excuse them or excuse it.
Speaker AJust recognize for one small moment the humanity underneath the armor.
Speaker AThat's where change begins.
Speaker AThat's what more human, more kind looks like in practice.
Speaker AThis week, try this.
Speaker ABefore reacting to something online or in conversation, pause and ask, what might I not know here?
Speaker ACompliment a stranger not for what they do, but for who they are.
Speaker AAnd check in on one person you've been meaning to reach out to.
Speaker AThese micro moments of humanity ripple outward and they can change families, workplaces and communities.
Speaker ASocial psychologists Nicholas Epley and Juliana Schroeder found that initiating small moments of authentic connection, even brief conversations with strangers, significantly increases well being for both people, despite most assuming it will feel awkward.
Speaker ASo why did I choose this name?
Speaker AWell, initially it was for concern I had for what was going on in for us socially, for us politically, and a lot of the chatter that I had been hearing about words that were going to be banned, concepts that were going to be banned.
Speaker AAnd for longtime listeners, you may remember that my original name of this podcast for the the first five plus years in its existence was Just Breathe parenting your LGBTQ teen.
Speaker AAnd I love that name.
Speaker AI still love that name.
Speaker AAnd that is 90% of what we still talk about on this podcast is still very, very important to me.
Speaker AAnd that is my, my work that I do and my, my advocacy that I feel very passionately about.
Speaker AAnd I felt like it was time to begin to reach out to more people, to bring in more people to create curiosity and a greater outreach.
Speaker AOver the past six months or so since we've changed the name, I feel like that we've really settled into this place of balance and creating.
Speaker AContent and sharing information in a way that feels like we've really broadened our reach.
Speaker AAnd, and also.
Speaker AAt the same time, I still feel.
Speaker ASo intimately connected to the subject matter.
Speaker ASo I think there is a lot that's intertwined in that.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AThe message I'd like others to take from More Human, More Kind, not just as a podcast, but as a movement, really does lie in those four the four pillars.
Speaker ABeing curious, being compassionate, being courageous, and connecting on a very human human level.
Speaker ASo here is your moment of kindness for this week.
Speaker AThink of someone who has been quietly steady in your life, whether that's a teacher, a friend, a coworker, maybe even your barista.
Speaker AAnd send them a short note or a voice memo or a text.
Speaker AAnd just say something to the effect of I wanted you to know.
Speaker AI notice the light you bring.
Speaker AIt doesn't have to be elaborate.
Speaker AIn fact, the simplest words are often the ones that heal the most.
Speaker AKindness doesn't just change their day.
Speaker AIt rewires your brain toward empathy and connection.
Speaker AToday's Unlearn is about one of the most misunderstood ideas in our culture, the idea that kindness equals weakness.
Speaker AWe're told if you're kind, people will walk all over you.
Speaker ABut that's not kindness.
Speaker AThat's codependency.
Speaker AKindness with boundaries is strength in action.
Speaker AIt says I can love you and still say no.
Speaker AYour action this week is to practice one boundary that feels uncomfortable but necessary.
Speaker AThen celebrate yourself for doing it.
Speaker ABoundaries are how love stays healthy.
Speaker AWhen we choose to be more human and more kind, we model what the world needs most.
Speaker AStrength wrapped in softness and conviction rooted in care.
Speaker AThank you for being here today, for choosing curiosity and courage over comfort.
Speaker AWhen we practice these four pillars curiosity, compassion, courage, and connection, we don't just change our relationships, we change the emotional climate around us.
Speaker AAnd that's how this movement grows.
Speaker AOne conversation, one boundary, one act of kindness at a time.
Speaker AIf this message resonates, please share the show with someone who's ready to live A little more human and a little more kind.
Speaker ANew episodes drop every Tuesday and Friday, so be sure to follow and subscribe so you never miss one.
Speaker AAnd if you're ready to release fear, shame, and outdated patterns in your own life, I'm accepting a few private clients right now.
Speaker AYou can learn more at more human more kind.com keep breathing, keep learning, and keep choosing to be more human.
Speaker AMore kind.