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Parental Detachment

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Manage episode 415638410 series 3494891
Content provided by Sarah Pollak & Quinn Faison, Sarah Pollak, and Quinn Faison. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Sarah Pollak & Quinn Faison, Sarah Pollak, and Quinn Faison or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Parenting is a relationship. A relationship which parents do not want to detach from!

Letting a child hit “rock bottom”, “suffer the consequences” or many of the other “tough love” practices (which have been debunked but are very much still out there and are often suggested by friends and family who feel at a loss as to how to help and who often feel the pain themselves).

What we suggest in this episode isn’t radical, it just feels logical - to us.

First consider, what are you attached to?

Your kids-and obviously you don’t want to detach from them. Digging a little deeper what we often discover, as we discovered for yourselves, is that what we are attached to are behaviors, outcomes, and choices, but not the child!

Detaching from the behaviors of others is not necessarily an “Aha! Flip that switch!” moment but taking the time to look at our attachments makes it possible to detach from some things while still staying in relationship.

What keeps you connected? Slammed doors? Resentments? Are you suffering? Is your child suffering? Detaching from our parental dreams of a particular outcome allows us to get curious about their fears, their hopes, their anxieties and their dreams.

When you are in communication you can then be clear about what they can expect from you, not what you expect from them.

Detaching with love does not mean detach from love. Quite the contrary. It actually allows a deeper more genuine love into a relationship.

The Practice: Look at what you are attached to. Write those things down.

Resources

Alanon

ITC

Katy Milkman

Nedra Tawwab

Viktor E. Frankl

  continue reading

45 episodes

Artwork

Parental Detachment

Plan P

published

iconShare
 
Manage episode 415638410 series 3494891
Content provided by Sarah Pollak & Quinn Faison, Sarah Pollak, and Quinn Faison. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Sarah Pollak & Quinn Faison, Sarah Pollak, and Quinn Faison or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Parenting is a relationship. A relationship which parents do not want to detach from!

Letting a child hit “rock bottom”, “suffer the consequences” or many of the other “tough love” practices (which have been debunked but are very much still out there and are often suggested by friends and family who feel at a loss as to how to help and who often feel the pain themselves).

What we suggest in this episode isn’t radical, it just feels logical - to us.

First consider, what are you attached to?

Your kids-and obviously you don’t want to detach from them. Digging a little deeper what we often discover, as we discovered for yourselves, is that what we are attached to are behaviors, outcomes, and choices, but not the child!

Detaching from the behaviors of others is not necessarily an “Aha! Flip that switch!” moment but taking the time to look at our attachments makes it possible to detach from some things while still staying in relationship.

What keeps you connected? Slammed doors? Resentments? Are you suffering? Is your child suffering? Detaching from our parental dreams of a particular outcome allows us to get curious about their fears, their hopes, their anxieties and their dreams.

When you are in communication you can then be clear about what they can expect from you, not what you expect from them.

Detaching with love does not mean detach from love. Quite the contrary. It actually allows a deeper more genuine love into a relationship.

The Practice: Look at what you are attached to. Write those things down.

Resources

Alanon

ITC

Katy Milkman

Nedra Tawwab

Viktor E. Frankl

  continue reading

45 episodes

All episodes

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