4.7 • 654 Ratings
🗓️ 20 October 2021
⏱️ 21 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
We all have big dreams for our little people, and there are so many ways to define success: finding purpose in life and work, reaching goals (whatever those might be), surrounding yourself with loved ones, to name just a few. Psychologists have pointed to a variety of practices that can help our kids achieve these things. Spending time with your child is a major one; others include letting your child make decisions and prioritizing kindness.
Jessica Rolph welcomes Esther Wojcicki to today’s episode to talk about raising successful children, her area of expertise. Her daughters, Susan, Janet, and Anne, are some of the most powerful women in Silicon Valley. They are respectively, the CEO of YouTube, a professor of Pediatrics at the University of California, San Francisco, and the Founder and CEO of the genetic testing company 23andMe. Esther, also known as the Godmother of Silicon Valley, is the author of How to Raise Successful People: Simple Lessons for Radical Results.
Key Takeaways:
[2:17] Did Esther set out to raise CEOs?
[3:24] Esther explains the acronym TRICK: Trust, Respect, Independence, Collaboration, and Kindness.
[5:19] What does trust look like in our modern-day society?
[8:00] Perhaps we shouldn’t be so worried all the time.
[8:50] Esther explains why allowing babies to self-soothe can be a demonstration of trust.
[12:02] How can parents of toddlers show respect? Just listen!
[14:15] Don’t do anything for your children that they can do for themselves.
[15:12] Esther speaks about collaboration in the home.
[17:30] The profound impact of kindness.
Mentioned in this episode:
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0:00.0 | Parenthood is a time of so much change for you and your baby. |
0:13.8 | A little reliable information can go a long way towards making this new life a good life. |
0:20.0 | I'm Jessica Rolfe and this is my new life, |
0:24.1 | a love every podcast. While the science aligns on what's healthy for a baby's brain development, |
0:30.1 | when it comes to how to care for our babies, there's a seemingly endless supply of competing |
0:34.9 | perspectives. Parents are swimming in advice on sleep, feeding, |
0:39.8 | parenting philosophies. In this season of the podcast, we aim to provide a variety of curated |
0:46.1 | perspectives so you can make informed choices for your family. |
0:53.9 | We all have aspirations for our little people, and there are so many ways to define success, |
1:00.6 | finding purpose and life and work, reaching goals, whatever those might be, surrounding yourself |
1:06.8 | with loved ones. Psychologists have pointed to a handful of practices that could help our children achieve |
1:12.9 | these things. |
1:14.4 | Spending time with your child is a big one, letting your child make decisions and prioritizing |
1:19.5 | kindness. |
1:21.4 | Today's guest knows a little something about raising successful children. |
1:26.1 | Her daughters, Susan, Janet, and Anne are among the most |
1:29.9 | powerful women in Silicon Valley. They are, respectively, the CEO of YouTube, a professor of |
1:36.5 | pediatrics at the University of California at San Francisco, and the founder and CEO of |
1:42.1 | Genetic Testing Company, 23M-Me. |
1:45.1 | Esther Wageski is known to some as the godmother of Silicon Valley, |
1:50.0 | and to her students, simply is Wodge. |
1:53.3 | She is the author of How to Raise Successful People, Simple Lessons for Radical Results. |
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