Good Inside: A Practical Guide to Resilient Parenting Prioritizing Connection Over Correction
H**G
After all, chidren are good inside.
Parenting is about how parents treat their kids. One important aspect of what counts for good parenting is how we face the kids’ negative behaviors. When we were children, our parents did not respect our emotional needs. They only scolded us when we were naughty. After we become parents, we treat our kids the way our parents treated us. Dr Becky proposes in this book, contrary to what our parents thought, children are all good inside and thus we should treat children’s bad behaviors as if their misbehaviors are signs that they don’t know how to express their needs. With this assumption, there are three implications for parenting.First, as children are good inside, what they do outside should not be our focus. Whether it is emotional tantrums, not listening, aggressive tantrums, sibling rivalry, rudeness and defiance, whining, lying, food habits, parents should not pay too much attention to it. Instead, parents should see the cause that contributes to the resulting negative behavior. Take whining as an example. Whining, according to a Cambridge dictionary, means ‘to make a long, high, sad sound’. As parents we are easily annoyed by whining and we quickly think that kids are disrespectful. In Dr Becky’s view, whining=strong desire+powerlessness. Children whine because they feel helpless and ‘indicate they feel alone and unseen in their desires’ (p.188), rather than because they are arrogant. What does this imply? Do we have to give in, knowing that they are desperate for connection and feeling powerful? The answer is no. Dr Becky said ‘while our job as parents is to make decisions that we feel are right for our kids even in the face of protest, we can still practice understanding and connecting’. While saying no, which they probably know they do need, at the same time we can give them the sympathy they also need. Thinking that kids are bad inside often leads to power struggles or arguments when we request them to request in an appropriate tone again. Kids are good inside, and thus we should focus our attention on how to respond to their helplessness rather than their whines.Secondly, not only should we not focus on their outside behavior, we should also be aware that what is on the surface often contrasts with what the kid feels inside. One of the most-feared emotions we are afraid to see children have is anger, also known as tantrums. When children are angry, they display undesirably violent behaviors such as hitting others. Dr Becky points out that they hit not because they are angry, but because they are scared. When we adults are afraid, we may also kill people if we are irrational. Children have not yet developed their prefrontal cortex which is responsible for logic and language, and so the most severe reaction they can possibly express is through tantrums. We may wonder why children are afraid: they are “terrified of the sensations, urges, and feelings coursing inside their body” (p.158) such as frustration and anxiety. These feelings which adults are used to feel scary to kids. Naming the right emotion is the first step to solving the problem and helping kids to cope with it.Only after we identify correctly the emotion the children are experiencing can we as parents exert the right method to deal with the out-of-control behavior. Clearly we know reprimanding our kids is not correct because “they are good inside”. To stop the kid's aggressive tantrums effectively, parents should assert their authority. Parents should show the confidence that they are in charge of the situation. Then, the next critical step is to maintain the kid's safety. Regardless of how the kid feels, the parent should stop the dangerous behavior the kid is engaging in, which Dr Becky calls containment. She says it best: “kids don’t feel good when they are out of control”. That we assert our authority and contain even though kids are not happy on the surface is an act of love, maturity, and responsibility. If we don't, not only will it cause injury, it will make children think we evade responsibility, thus making them feel more overwhelmed.To conclude, as parents we need to know our roles and our kids’ roles. Our job is to keep our children safe, both physically and psychologically. We need to remember that a gap exists between kids’ abilities to feel and their abilities to regulate their feelings, and the gap manifests as deregulated behavior. While it is children’s job to explore and express their feelings, it is our job to help them regulate them by setting physical boundaries, validating their emotions, and being empathetic to their feelings. We are our kids’ role models. We are demonstrating to our kids the emotion regulation skills. As our kids are allowed to shout and protest because they are doing their jobs, we are also allowed to upset them when we set boundaries. We just need to remember that to do our job well, we must learn to connect with and understand them more because after all, children are good inside.
K**L
The Best Parenting Book I’ve Ever Read! Practical, Empowering, and Game-Changing
I cannot overstate how much this book has impacted me as a parent. It’s the most practical parenting book I’ve ever read. It is full of real, actionable ideas that actually work. It didn’t just inspire me, it equipped me.If you’re looking for a parenting approach that’s compassionate, clear, and doable, this is the book.
H**N
Parenting Pillar
Dr. Becky is a game changer. Hers is a concise, actionable, compassionate, & well-researched guide that should be a staple for all parents.
A**R
Great read
No matter if you listen to or read this book it is so worth the time. Highly recommend
J**K
Very helpful
Gave this to my daughter in law for help with her littles, she’s 4,6! Parenting is tough, young parents need all the help they can get!
M**O
Game changer
Things felt wrong to me that were ‘best practices’ when my kids were little. Time outs, rewards and withdrawals. Dr Becky first helped me forgive myself for past ‘mistakes.’ I did the best I could with what I knew then. Now I know more. My children and I are both good inside and that is the most important thing. Boundaries and empathy. Not permissiveness and unsureness. I am working very hard to build back my relationship with my 14 year old son. I have repaired with him things I knew were incongruous to him that whittled away his trust in me. I also joined her parenting group online that supports and augments everything in the book. If I only ever read one parenting book, this would be it.
E**A
Best. Parenting. Book. EVER.
I just started this book and I’m already blown away.Best. Parenting. Book. EVER.And this is coming from someone who has already invested a good deal in “Positive Parenting Solutions”, among other programs. I’ve learned a lot from PPS, but the style and language is so far from anything natural that I would ever actually say to my kids. I could never find a way to make it my own. I just couldn’t stick with it.I’ve since found other parenting coaches who are much more grounded and keep it real. But I’ve been finding that Dr. Becky really has the clearest insight and the simplest ways of describing what our kids are going through and how to help them, that I just had to try her book.Parenting does not come naturally to me. I grew up with a lot of trauma. Growing up in an alcoholic household leaves behind a lot of PTSD and triggers. My father had no coping skills. So he drank. And yelled. And he passed down his lack of coping skills to me. And while I may not drink, my first reaction to anything is to want to yell. And I don’t want my kids growing up the way I did. So I read a lot of parenting books and I try to find ways to regulate my emotions so that I don’t yell at my kids.But it’s hard. It’s all I’ve ever known.From all of my readings over the years on parenting, I still struggle with controlling my own emotions when my kids are having ‘big feelings’. It’s really been bothering me lately, because I know that if I cannot regulate mySELF, then I sure as hell am not teaching my kids how to do so. And worse, I’m showing them how to lose control when things get tough.Well….I just finished chapter 3 of “Good Inside” and I already feel like I have such a better picture as to what my kids are going through behind those tantrums. And more importantly, not only am I seeing more clearly what they’re going through, I’m fully understanding the depth of layers involved in my own reactions and how they’re truly shaping my kids. This book has stopped me in my tracks. Within the same day of parenting my kids and yelling at them in the morning, I reframed my interaction with them when they got home from school, after reading just a couple of chapters of “Good Inside”.My biggest takeaways so far:- “We all have our own jobs in the family and a child’s job is this- exploring and learning through experiencing and expressing emotions.”- “The goal is to teach our kids how to manage all of their feelings and perceptions and thoughts and urges; we are the primary vehicle for this teaching, not through lectures or logic, but through the experiences our children have with us.”- “Boundaries are not what we tell kids NOT to do. Boundaries are what we tell kids WE WILL do. Boundaries embody your authority as a parent and don’t require your child to do anything.”And the MOST impactful takeaway for me is in Dr. Becky’s discussion on what a boundary is NOT:“Here are examples of ‘not’ boundaries, but instead ways we essentially ask our kids to do our jobs for us.”"Please stop hitting your brother!""Stop running!”“Why do you have to make this so hard?"“In each of these examples, parents are asking their kids to inhibit an urge or desire that, frankly, they are developmentally incapable of inhibiting.”Mind blown. Nuff said.🤯❤️🤯❤️🤯❤️🤯❤️BUY. THIS. BOOK.
B**R
Every parent NEEDS this book!
This book changed the way I parent! It's all so confusing out there but her approach was what our family needed and what I think every family needs. She also has an app and podcasts to help you continue with the journey. It's amazing and I only wish I'd known about all this when my kids were smaller.
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
2 weeks ago