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The Dad Edge Podcast

Parenting Big Emotions Without Yelling Punishing or Guessing featuring Alyssa Campbell

The Dad Edge Podcast

Larry Hagner

Health & Fitness, Education, Self-improvement

4.81.6K Ratings

🗓️ 16 January 2026

⏱️ 48 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Why do kids raised in the same home react so differently to the exact same situation? In this episode, I'm joined by Alyssa Campbell, author, educator, and founder of Seed & Sew, to unpack what's really happening beneath our kids' behaviors—and why understanding their nervous systems changes everything about how we parent.

 

Alyssa returns to the show to talk about her new book Big Kids, Bigger Feelings, and we go deep into the overlooked developmental stage of kids ages 5–12. We discuss why "shouldn't they know better?" is the wrong question, how regulation and access to skills are two different things, and why each child's unique sensory profile determines how they experience stress, connection, discipline, and learning. This conversation will give you clarity, compassion, and practical tools to parent each child for who they actually are—not who you expect them to be.

 


 

Timeline Summary 

[0:00] Why kids raised by the same parents can behave so differently

[2:33] Introducing Alyssa Campbell and her work in emotional intelligence

[3:27] Alyssa's first book Tiny Humans, Big Emotions and its success

[3:49] Celebrating Alyssa hitting the New York Times bestseller list

[4:11] Introducing the new book Big Kids, Bigger Feelings

[5:00] Why ages 5–12 are a massively overlooked developmental stage

[6:03] Central nervous systems and why kids respond differently to the same stimulus

[7:36] "Knowing better" vs. having access to skills in the moment

[9:15] Dysregulation in adults—and why kids struggle even more

[14:24] Why kids under 25 don't have fully developed prefrontal cortexes

[16:03] How screens and overstimulation dysregulate kids

[18:12] Why nervous system awareness builds empathy instead of frustration

[22:45] The nine sensory systems every parent should understand

[24:01] Vestibular, proprioceptive, and interoceptive senses explained

[26:17] Sensory sensitivity vs. sensory seeking

[28:12] Introducing the Seed Quiz as "GPS for your kid's brain"

[29:05] How the Seed Quiz works for kids, parents, and families

[31:10] Real-life school example of regulation transforming behavior

[33:09] Why behavior improves when regulation improves

[35:25] Trauma, environment, and how nervous systems evolve

[41:03] Why understanding nervous systems transforms marriages too

[42:06] Parenting two kids with opposite sensory needs

[44:48] Why the same parenting response can calm one child and escalate another

[45:30] Tapping out to your partner when regulation styles differ

[47:01] Where to find Alyssa, her books, and Seed & Sew resources

 


 

Five Key Takeaways:

  1. Every child has a unique nervous system, which determines how they experience stress, connection, and learning. 
  2. Knowing what to do and being able to do it in the moment are not the same thing, especially when kids are dysregulated. 
  3. Behavior improves when regulation improves, not when punishment increases. 
  4. One-size-fits-all parenting often backfires because kids need different inputs to calm and connect. 
  5. Understanding nervous systems builds empathy, patience, and more effective parenting strategies. 

 


 

Links & Resources

 


 

Closing Remark

If this episode helped you understand your kids—and yourself—on a deeper level, please rate, review, follow, and share the podcast. Parenting isn't about getting it right every time; it's about learning how to show up for the unique humans we're raising.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome to the Dad Edge podcast. The Dad Edge movement creates leaders of men, leaders of families, and leaders of communities. We will not only impact this generation of fathers, but the next generation as well. The kids we are raising will have better chances and odds stacked in their favor because of the amazing example

0:21.2

that their fathers emulated for them. We are here to change the world. We are here to change

0:27.6

relationships. We are here to positively disrupt this generation of fathers so no man goes to their

0:33.6

grave with regret. We disrupt the drift of busyness and replace it with razor-focused intention,

0:40.3

passion, purpose, and direction.

0:43.7

We are the Dad Edge,

0:45.7

and we're here to change the game.

0:47.8

We're here to change the game.

1:02.9

I don't know. What's up, guys?

1:08.3

Have you ever wondered, why do I have kids with such different personalities?

1:11.9

Like, if you have more than two kids, you know, or if you even have two kids, they're probably not very similar. They're probably very, very different. Yet they were

1:16.1

both raised by you and your wife. They're both related, but they're both totally different, right?

1:21.2

This one upsets, you know, this, this thing upsets this kid over here, this kid over here doesn't

1:26.3

even worry about that thing that the other kids worried about or upset about. Then we have like our bigger kids with even bigger emotions, right? And maybe it's not so much the meltdowns, but maybe it's rebellious activity or something like that. But we just quite don't understand it as parents because we're just trying to figure out how to be a parent or self. And that's why today's show I think is so important. It's going to add a lot of clarity

1:48.0

to perhaps what you guys might be experiencing. I know with four boys, you know, from 20 years old

1:53.8

to nine years old, there is a plethora. There's like a buffet of different things that happen

1:58.5

is from an emotional standpoint in this house every single

2:01.7

day and sometimes I am like left scratching my head I wouldn't even say sometimes I would say

2:06.0

most of the time I'm left just really scratching my head wondering like what is happening in my

2:12.0

house and like all these people are they all have the same parents but they're all so different

2:17.0

I don't really understand I think it's it's common sense that all of our kids are different, but that's why I think today's show is so important. So gentlemen, welcome here. My name is Larry Hagner. I'm the host and founder of the Dad Edge podcast, The Adage Movement. Also the founder of the Dad Edge Alliance. That's our mastermind for all of our career guys out there. It doesn't matter if

2:34.2

you're a white collar, if you're blue collar. We help you with marriage. We help you with parenting and leadership, health, fitness, emotional intelligence, all of those things, which we're talking about emotional intelligence today. We help you inside that mastermind with that. For all my business owners out there, if you own an operated business, I'm not talking about these side hustles. I'm talking like full operational. You are a 100% an entrepreneur. You do not have a W2 job. You're out building empires. You're scaling businesses. You're probably have a team. You have employees. You're also married. You're also a dad. You also have your needs and the things that you're trying to accomplish and fulfill. We have a program just for you called the Dad Edge Business Boardroom Brotherhood.

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