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Pulling The Thread with Elise Loehnen

On Self-Regulation (Aliza Pressman, PhD)

Pulling The Thread with Elise Loehnen

Elise Loehnen

Society & Culture, Religion & Spirituality, Self-improvement, Education

4.8900 Ratings

🗓️ 18 January 2024

⏱️ 59 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

“I think that with regulation, the funny thing is that it's either I want to control the weather around my children, or I want to control my children, but regulation is very much a self thing for adults and a co regulation thing between you and other, especially you and a young person whose brain isn't fully able to self regulate. But if you're so focused on controlling all these outside things that you can't, like the weather, then you get to let yourself off the hook of getting into the much harder, but more possible work of self regulation and of figuring out your own stuff. And all of that has much bigger benefits to your kids, of course, than making the weather perfect around them, but it just is harder. Even though it shouldn't be so easy to change the weather, but it does appear that is what happens, right?”  So says Aliza Pressman, development psychologist and Assistant Clinical Professor in the Division of Behavioral Health Department of Pediatrics at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai Hospital where she is co-founding director of The Mount Sinai Parenting Center. Aliza is also the host of the hit podcast, Raising Good Humans, and the author of The Five Principles of Parenting: Your Essential Guide to Raising Good Humans. I love Aliza for many reasons: Yes, we all want friends who are developmental psychologists on speed-dial, but she’s also different in the way she delivers advice. For one, she cuts right to the point, reminding and reaffirming that while yes, every family has its own complicating factors, the basic tenets of raising good humans are simple. You don’t need your own PhD in parenting to do the job, nor do you need a PhD to re-parent yourself, you need to focus on the elements she outlines in The Five Principles of Parenting: Your Essential Guide to Raising Good Humans: Relationship, Reflection, Regulation, Rules, and Repair. As she explains, through practice and normalizing imperfection, along the way you’ll discover the person you’re ultimately raising is yourself. By becoming more intentional people, we become better parents. By becoming better parents, we become better people. In today’s conversation, we touch on these tenets while also exploring the particular social world we find ourselves in, one in which there seems to be an expectation that we can and should control the weather for our kids.  MORE FROM ALIZA PRESSMAN, PhD: The Five Principles of Parenting: Your Essential Guide to Raising Good Humans Raising Good Humans Podcast Aliza’s Website Follow Aliza on Instagram Aliza’s Newsletter To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hi, it's Elise Lunan, host of Pulling the Thread. Today's guest is the brilliant developmental

0:06.0

psychologist, Elisa Pressman, author of The Five Principles of Parenting, Your Essential Guide to

0:12.4

Raising Good Humans, and host of the Raising Good Humans podcast. Hi, friends, throughout this holiday season,

0:19.7

you will find me right here per normal. We will keep publishing new episodes every week and a few solos thrown in as well. So when you just need to escape from the business of the holiday shuffle or take a break from mom or dad or who knows who, we'll be here as we always are.

0:47.6

Hi, it's Elise Lunan, host of Pulling the Thread. On this show, we pull apart the web in which we all live to understand who we are and why we're here.

0:59.8

Pulling the thread is about big questions, why we do what we do, how we can understand our own experiences within a larger spiritual and historical context,

1:08.8

the ways in which we might begin to understand ourselves and

1:11.6

each other better, and what's required to heal ourselves and our world. I'll be joined in conversation

1:17.4

by luminaries and wise elders, those who have laid tracks in their work and lives to help us

1:22.3

bring meaning and understanding to a world that often feels chaotic and overwhelming. My hope is that these conversations

1:29.2

spark moments of resonance and plant tiny seeds of awareness so that we might all collectively

1:34.7

learn and grow. I think that with regulation, the funny thing is that it's either I want to

1:42.6

control the weather around my children or I want to control

1:46.4

my children. Regulation is very much a self thing for adults and a co-regulation thing between

1:55.1

you and other, especially you and a young person whose brain isn't fully able to self-regulate. But if you're so focused on

2:05.0

controlling all these outside things that you can't, like the weather, then you get to let

2:11.2

yourself off the hook of getting into the much harder but more possible work of self-regulation and of figuring out

2:21.0

your own stuff.

2:23.2

And all of that has much bigger benefits to your kids, of course, than making the weather perfect

2:29.7

around them.

2:31.0

But it just is harder.

2:32.5

Even though it shouldn't be so easy to change the weather, but it does appear that is what happens, right?

...

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