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TILT Parenting: Strategies, Insights, and Connection for Parents Raising Neurodivergent Children

TPP 458: Dr. Emily Kline on How Motivational Interviewing Helps Kids Get Unstuck

TILT Parenting: Strategies, Insights, and Connection for Parents Raising Neurodivergent Children

Debbie Reber

Education, Parenting, Kids & Family

4.8 • 983 Ratings

🗓️ 12 August 2025

⏱️ 41 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this episode, I’m joined by clinical psychologist Dr. Emily Kline for a deep dive into motivational interviewing—an approach to communication that helps parents move from fixing and convincing to connecting and collaborating. We talk about how to have hard conversations (think: hygiene, responsibility, and independence) in a way that respects our kids’ autonomy and actually opens the door to change. Emily brings nearly 20 years of experience working with families, has taught at Boston University and Harvard Medical School, and is the author of The School of Hard Talks. She shares practical, compassionate insights that any parent navigating the teen and young adult years will find incredibly useful. About Dr. Emily Kline Dr. Emily Kline is a clinical psychologist with nearly 20 years of experience working with individuals and families in community mental health settings. She has held faculty positions at Boston University and Harvard Medical School and led research studies focused on early course psychosis, adolescent and young adult mental health, and parent-focused interventions. Dr. Kline is the author of The School of Hard Talks: How to Have Real Conversations with Your (Almost Grown) Kids and the creator of The School of Hard Talks Online. She has published dozens of articles appearing in a range of peer-reviewed scholarly journals, textbooks, and popular magazines, and she has spoken with audiences all over the world about mental health and communication. Dr. Kline completed her bachelor’s degree at Haverford College, her master’s and doctoral degrees at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, and her clinical and post-doctoral training at Harvard Medical School. She lives in Boston with her family. Things you'll learn from this episode Why motivational interviewing is a powerful communication tool that can improve family dynamics How fostering a sense of control in children leads to more thoughtful and responsible decision-making Why validating a child’s feelings and using reflections helps deepen understanding and connection How open-ended questions encourage more meaningful conversations and reveal what’s beneath the surface Why advice lands better when it’s offered after establishing trust, empathy, and true understanding How practicing these skills in low-stakes moments builds confidence for navigating harder conversations Resources mentioned  Dr. Emily Kline’s website Free e-course on motivational interviewing The School of Hard Talks: How to Have Real Conversations with Your (Almost Grown) Kids by Emily Kline, PhD The Self-Driven Child with Dr. William Stixrud and Ned Johnson (Full-Tilt Parenting) Dr. William Miller / Motivational Interviewing Motivational Interviewing Network of Trainers Dr. Stephen Rollnick Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

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0:03.8

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0:06.0

It's all about proportions.

0:07.7

Abercrombie has their classic fits and athletic fits for guys who want a little more room in the thigh.

0:13.1

When you find your staple fit, it'll be the pair you reach for day after day for every plan.

0:19.2

Shop Abercrombie denim in, in the app, online, and in store.

0:28.8

I'm Debbie Reber, and this is Full Tilt Parenting, a podcast for anyone who is raising or

0:33.5

supporting neurodivergent kids.

0:35.4

Today I'm being joined by clinical psychologist, Dr. Emily Klein,

0:39.4

for a deep dive into motivational interviewing. This is an approach to communication that

0:44.5

helps parents move from fixing and convincing to connecting and collaborating.

0:49.7

We're going to talk about how to have hard conversations, think hygiene, responsibility, independence,

0:55.6

school in a way that respects our kids' autonomy and actually opens up the door to change.

1:01.8

Emily brings nearly 20 years of experience working with families. She's taught at Boston University

1:07.4

and Harvard Medical School. And she's the author of The School of Hard Talks.

1:12.1

She shares practical, compassionate insights that any parent navigating the teen and young

1:16.7

adult years will find incredibly useful. So here's my conversation with Dr. Emily Klein.

1:23.7

Hey, Emily, welcome to the podcast. Thank you. I'm thrilled to be here. I'm thrilled that you accepted my

1:30.9

invitation. You're like, who is this person who invited me to come and talk about this? But I really

1:35.0

appreciate that you said yes to my invitation. Anytime. So we are going to be talking about

1:41.5

motivational interviewing today. And I'm really excited about it. As we were

1:45.9

talking before I hit record, I think it is such a powerful tool for listeners of the show to have

...

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