240: Talk to Your Boys: Raising Confident, Caring Young Men - Episode Artwork
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240: Talk to Your Boys: Raising Confident, Caring Young Men

In this episode of 'Ask Lisa,' hosts Reena Nainen and Dr. Lisa DeMor engage with authors Joanna Schroeder and Christopher Pepper to discuss their book 'Talk to Your Boys.' The conv...

240: Talk to Your Boys: Raising Confident, Caring Young Men
240: Talk to Your Boys: Raising Confident, Caring Young Men
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spk_0 Tell me a parenting issue everyone struggles with with tweens and teens, but no one talks
spk_0 about.
spk_0 Reena, I think a lot of people feel like they just don't know how to connect to their
spk_0 kid anymore.
spk_0 I'm Reena Nainen and welcome to Ask Lisa, the psychology of raising tweens and teens.
spk_0 And on Dr. Lisa DeMor, we bring you science back strategies from managing anxiety, discipline,
spk_0 intense emotions, and more.
spk_0 We decode tough parenting issues with tips you can use right now.
spk_0 So subscribe to Ask Lisa, the psychology of raising tweens and teens and join our
spk_0 YouTube community today.
spk_0 Just Google Ask Lisa podcast.
spk_0 We're here to help you untangle family life.
spk_0 Episode 236, Talk to your boys, raising confident, caring young men with authors, Joanna Schroeder,
spk_0 and Christopher Pepper.
spk_0 I'm really excited about today because having a ninth grade boy, this next book, the authors
spk_0 that we're going to talk to today, I just thought this book was incredible and every parent
spk_0 of boys should read this one.
spk_0 I agree.
spk_0 Reena, I had the opportunity to blurb this book when it came to me.
spk_0 I was so excited.
spk_0 There is so much concern about boys right now.
spk_0 It is entirely justified.
spk_0 I think about the episode we did about the TV show Adelaissants and how much traction
spk_0 it got.
spk_0 And I have to say, I think this book is a perfect response to all of the concerns that
spk_0 are being shared right now about how boys are doing.
spk_0 It is absolutely a beautiful, must read book.
spk_0 You're absolutely right.
spk_0 We did that episode.
spk_0 We got so much incredible feedback from parents.
spk_0 As a psychologist, what was it about this book that really stood out to you that made
spk_0 you think, wow, this is a really good one.
spk_0 The thing that is extraordinary about this book is that Christopher and Joanna are
spk_0 boots on the ground.
spk_0 They are talking to boys.
spk_0 They are interacting with boys.
spk_0 They get boys.
spk_0 They understand boys and they like boys.
spk_0 And at the same time, they are bringing this incredible knowledge base about all of the
spk_0 really tricky things that boys are struggling with, all the things they need help with.
spk_0 They marry this, all of this into an incredible guide that teaches adults how to talk to boys
spk_0 effectively about all of these really complex and delicate topics.
spk_0 I mean, it's just an unbelievable contribution.
spk_0 And I guess when boys are silent, you just think to be silent.
spk_0 And that was the big takeaway for me.
spk_0 I can't wait.
spk_0 Let's get right into it.
spk_0 Today, we're diving into the book that so many parents of boys have been waiting for
spk_0 Lisa.
spk_0 It's called Talk to Your Boys by Joanna Schroeder and Christopher Pepper.
spk_0 It's not just a parenting manual.
spk_0 It's really a guide to the conversations that we need to have with our sons about emotions,
spk_0 identity, respect, friendship, sex, and navigating this current world that they're living
spk_0 in.
spk_0 Lisa, what I love about the authors and what they say is having these talks, like these
spk_0 conversations are so important.
spk_0 So it's welcome to podcast Joanna Schroeder and Christopher Pepper.
spk_0 Authors of the book talk to your boys.
spk_0 Sixteen conversations to help tweens and teens grow into confident, caring young men.
spk_0 Joanna is a writer and editor in media critic known for her bold perspectives on parenting
spk_0 issues.
spk_0 Christopher is an award-winning health teacher.
spk_0 He coordinates the young men's health groups in San Francisco, public, middle, and high school.
spk_0 The group brings boys together to talk about their lives, masculinity, emotions, and relationships.
spk_0 Thank you.
spk_0 It's so great to be here.
spk_0 Thank you for having us.
spk_0 We're so excited to talk to you both.
spk_0 Welcome.
spk_0 We're thrilled to have you here.
spk_0 So let's just dive right in.
spk_0 We are just so excited about this book and about what you have done.
spk_0 And so Joanna, I want to start with you.
spk_0 You are the mother of three, two boys and a girl.
spk_0 And in the book, mental health is a foundational theme.
spk_0 It's a really, really key component of the book.
spk_0 What do you see as the biggest emotional blind spots that parents have, especially when
spk_0 talking to boys ages sort of 12 to 15?
spk_0 Well, it's absolutely wild.
spk_0 But what we've noticed is that a lot of parents kind of stop parenting their boys around
spk_0 age 13.
spk_0 And at the very least, they stop talking to them.
spk_0 So maybe they're still driving them to practice.
spk_0 Maybe they're still supervising a party.
spk_0 But they're not engaging emotionally like they may have when their boys were eight or
spk_0 nine.
spk_0 And it's a real tragedy because our boys need connection, especially in a society that
spk_0 tells them to numb it down and quiet down and only show anger and lust and destructive
spk_0 type of emotions.
spk_0 You know, Chris, you are also the father of two boys.
spk_0 And also you've been a foster parent as well.
spk_0 I love the perspective you bring.
spk_0 I'm just curious about, you know, in the book, you say that we should normalize boys actually
spk_0 showing feelings.
spk_0 I'm curious about the research about what you've found, about how boys learn to suppress
spk_0 their emotions.
spk_0 And also from a psychological perspective, what happens when parents actually avoid these
spk_0 conversations?
spk_0 Because it's so easy to do.
spk_0 Sure.
spk_0 For the research side, I really like the research that Judy Chu and Naomi Wei have done
spk_0 on boys and emotions.
spk_0 They both have great books about how this happens in the lives of boys.
spk_0 Essentially, boys learn that to be accepted in social environments, particularly in school,
spk_0 that they sort of need to cut off some of their, cut off some of their selves, cut off
spk_0 their emotional selves and not show that to the world.
spk_0 And it's almost like putting on armor to go through the day.
spk_0 And that, I totally understand that impulse.
spk_0 It's protective and keeps the kids who are worried about bullying.
spk_0 That's one of the things that they'll do.
spk_0 But when you put on armor, it gets in the way of connecting with other people.
spk_0 And that's one of my big worries about boys.
spk_0 And we see this playing out in the data around loneliness and boys saying like they don't
spk_0 really have any friends to connect with or they don't feel like they have close friends
spk_0 they can count on.
spk_0 So that's a big concern for me.
spk_0 So when boys sort of put on this armor that you talk about and kind of shut down, how
spk_0 does it affect them?
spk_0 They're mental health and their development when they do that and the parents just don't
spk_0 have these conversations with them.
spk_0 Well, boys are really struggling right now.
spk_0 And we see this in data playing out.
spk_0 But we also hear this in the stories that boys told us.
spk_0 For our book, we had a panel of over 80 boys who answered questions about each of the chapters
spk_0 in our book.
spk_0 But they had some themes that came up over and over again with these boys.
spk_0 And they said that they felt like they wanted their adults in their lives to know them
spk_0 in a closer way.
spk_0 They wanted the adults in their lives to be closer with them.
spk_0 They wanted the adults in their lives to know who they really were and to recognize
spk_0 how they were changing and growing up as they went through their adolescent years.
spk_0 And there, I think there's a real space for adults to keep those avenues of conversation
spk_0 going.
spk_0 I know it can be challenging.
spk_0 I know sometimes boys push you away when you try to connect with them.
spk_0 I guess our message to parents is to keep, keep at it, to persist and trying to keep
spk_0 those connections going.
spk_0 Because the other thing we heard from boys is that they really want guidance around what
spk_0 it means to be a man.
spk_0 They want guidance around how to be successful in the world.
spk_0 And when we don't step in as caring adults in their lives, they are mostly going, they're
spk_0 turning to their friends some, but they're also going online a lot and getting advice
spk_0 from TikTok, from YouTube, from websites that are trying to sell them a $19.99 a month
spk_0 plan for self improvement and just getting a lot of advice that's not so great and isn't
spk_0 going to help them get to where we want them to be in the world.
spk_0 Yeah.
spk_0 No, I have to say you mentioned the panel of boys that you talked to.
spk_0 One of my favorite parts of this book that I just adore everything about was the, we
spk_0 asked boys call out boxes where you have the boys words about what they want adults to
spk_0 know.
spk_0 What's the hardest part about being a boy?
spk_0 You know, what gets in the way of talking about feelings?
spk_0 It is so compelling.
spk_0 It is so sweet.
spk_0 But it also, I think, really tells the story of what you're trying to say, which is these
spk_0 boys are dying to share this stuff.
spk_0 And it's all right there.
spk_0 It's just a matter of getting those conversations going.
spk_0 So Joanna, to that point, you know, I know that for a lot of boys that kind of man up culture
spk_0 is still really strong, right, that you're not really allowed to express vulnerable emotions.
spk_0 How can parents work against this?
spk_0 How can parents sort of combat kind of these toxic messages that boys get without getting
spk_0 into sort of a battle with their boys, without having to feel like they're at odds with
spk_0 them?
spk_0 You know, we're going to be at odds with our adolescent kids.
spk_0 That is a natural part of their development.
spk_0 As you know, of course, Lisa, they will naturally push away from you and that's healthy.
spk_0 The question is, how do we allow them to explore who they want to be and the kind of men
spk_0 they're going to become safely and in a way that reflects your family's values?
spk_0 And that's what we try to try to do.
spk_0 First, we want parents to dig into, well, what really are your values?
spk_0 Like, what do you want your child's future to look like?
spk_0 And then you need to be able to kind of dis abuse yourself of the fact that you get to
spk_0 decide the specifics about your child's future life, you know?
spk_0 Oh, you want them to be a great athlete.
spk_0 You want them to go to Stanford.
spk_0 You know, those things don't really matter.
spk_0 What kind of person do you want him to be in the world and establish that before you
spk_0 do anything else?
spk_0 And then I think especially if you are a man in the home or close to the boy, model how
spk_0 you handle your own emotions and show emotions.
spk_0 So if you find out that your grandmother just passed away, it's okay to cry over that.
spk_0 It's okay to share those memories with your kids and say, man, she really did all these
spk_0 amazing things to me or whatever it is that's touching to you.
spk_0 Or maybe you had a bad relationship with her and you can share how she hurt your feelings
spk_0 in the past and the complex experience you're having with her passing when too often men
spk_0 think they need to cry in private or just to their partners.
spk_0 And when they're doing that in front of their boys, the boys are able to see, oh, here's
spk_0 this guy respect.
spk_0 And he's handling his emotions.
spk_0 And similarly, oh, yeah, go ahead.
spk_0 No, no, I was in Cato Lisa.
spk_0 This was when Lisa wrote her book, The Emotional Eyes of Teenagers.
spk_0 I was like, oh my gosh.
spk_0 This is earth shattering.
spk_0 She says that dads need to show their emotions.
spk_0 Like you need to look vulnerable and nobody had ever said, I'd never thought of that before
spk_0 until I read her book.
spk_0 And that's what I'm hearing from you guys, you know, in the research and everything that
spk_0 you're saying, I'm raising a teenage son in 9th grade.
spk_0 And I don't know sometimes how to move past the one word answers, like how sometimes
spk_0 where they don't want to talk.
spk_0 So are there ways to open up conversations?
spk_0 Do you guys have a starter line or something that is a hokey that might get them to open up?
spk_0 Yeah, you know, we find that movement is key.
spk_0 You know, the research of Dr. Stan Tak, can we cite throughout the book and it talks about
spk_0 how there's a way in which their emotional guard is let down when they're moving.
spk_0 Now, this isn't for every kid.
spk_0 Some kid may open up in the car.
spk_0 Some kid may open up when you're having dinner together.
spk_0 But if you're having trouble getting past those one word answers, doing a project together,
spk_0 you know, moving a stack of wood or, you know, if you're whatever your kid's interest is,
spk_0 taking a walk, hiking, building a tent, all of those things when you both are moving and
spk_0 engaged and looking somewhere other than right in each other's eyes directly and intensely,
spk_0 that might be a good opportunity for him to open up.
spk_0 Especially if you ask interesting questions that don't prompt just a yes or no answer.
spk_0 If you're asking how school you're going to hear good.
spk_0 So ask a more interesting question.
spk_0 Yeah, fine.
spk_0 Or it sucks.
spk_0 You know, you'll probably hear that one too sometimes.
spk_0 What happened?
spk_0 Nothing.
spk_0 Nothing.
spk_0 Yeah.
spk_0 I like asking who got in trouble today.
spk_0 That's my favorite question.
spk_0 I like kids love to talk about who got in trouble.
spk_0 It helps me keep a tab on the neighborhood too.
spk_0 But just that I do like, do anyone get in trouble today?
spk_0 Did anyone, you know, make you laugh today?
spk_0 Those kind of questions.
spk_0 And then if a Roland made me laugh, okay, what's Roland's deal?
spk_0 Tell me about Roland.
spk_0 Yeah.
spk_0 No, I love it.
spk_0 I love a getting specific.
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spk_0 Alright, Chris over to you.
spk_0 You have 16 essential conversations that you lay out in this book and consent is one
spk_0 of them.
spk_0 But that's a big conversation.
spk_0 So what are the psychological foundations?
spk_0 The parents need to have laid in advance before having a constructive talk about consent
spk_0 and interpersonal boundaries?
spk_0 I think for me, I really appreciate how much our society has worked on this issue of
spk_0 consent and thought about it and wrestled with it.
spk_0 I started out doing work related to this when I was in college myself as an undergraduate
spk_0 working in rape prevention.
spk_0 I was working in an office, the rape education office at my college, and would go out and
spk_0 talk to boys and men often because I was a guy, they would send me to fraternity houses
spk_0 and places like that.
spk_0 The script that we had at the time was pretty negative.
spk_0 It was sort of a list of things not to do in ways you could get in trouble and very
spk_0 kind of legalistic deficient of what does it mean to rape someone?
spk_0 I just think the language of consent really opens up a lane for engagement that is much
spk_0 more positive and creative and really focuses on how do we create an experience with another
spk_0 person that is pleasurable for everyone involved and both people will walk away feeling
spk_0 good about, hey, this was something that I was really happy that I did and was really
spk_0 enjoyable.
spk_0 I'm kind of setting that as a goal is so much more beautiful than just saying I didn't
spk_0 get arrested or I got permission.
spk_0 I mean, permission is not nearly the bar we want to be setting.
spk_0 Yeah.
spk_0 So really, I think in the book we have a quote from Shafia's Alun, where she talks about
spk_0 consent kind of being the floor.
spk_0 That's the minimum that you want, but really you're trying to create experiences with other
spk_0 people that are pleasurable and enjoyable.
spk_0 And the nice thing about this is you don't have to involve sex in this at all.
spk_0 You can teach about consent from an early age and it's really about bodily autonomy,
spk_0 not touching other people when they don't want to be touched, asking for permission.
spk_0 And people do this with young kids now that talking like, okay, we're going to go visit
spk_0 your relatives that you haven't seen in a while and trying to teach those relatives
spk_0 and maybe coach them in advance.
spk_0 My kids may want to give you a hug.
spk_0 They might not.
spk_0 I'd appreciate it if you ask them first and not just run up and grab them.
spk_0 And I think we're learning those lessons as a society.
spk_0 Obviously, not everyone is caught up on that, but we are doing a lot of learning and
spk_0 I think it's really positive and it's kind of fun to be creating a new way to interact
spk_0 with people.
spk_0 I love that frame.
spk_0 I love that way of thinking about it.
spk_0 You know, Lisa touched on earlier, Chris, that you know, one of the great things about
spk_0 this book is when you open up, there's quotes from boys.
spk_0 You interviewed 85 different boys from the ages of 10 to 22.
spk_0 And one of the things they said was a lot of what their absorbing comes from and learning
spk_0 comes from TikTok and YouTube and even porn in some cases.
spk_0 How do I as a parent counter the social media and what they're absorbing when I want
spk_0 to send a different message?
spk_0 One of my big concerns is that is about the content that people are seeing.
spk_0 That is, I'm concerned about the content that boys are seeing online.
spk_0 However, I'm also concerned about what's happening when they are spending all their
spk_0 time looking at that content.
spk_0 Because what we're seeing is that time online is really replacing in person time.
spk_0 So we're seeing a decline in the amount of time that teens say they're hanging out with
spk_0 other people, that they're spending time with other people in person.
spk_0 We're seeing a big decline in teen dating.
spk_0 So I think you do need to talk about what are you seeing online and Joanna's really an
spk_0 expert on on that and how think content online sometimes through jokes and means, means
spk_0 can lead to extremist content.
spk_0 So I'm glad that that is really incorporated into our book and it is something that we need
spk_0 to talk about.
spk_0 But I think one of the best things that you can do as an adult in a kid's life is to get
spk_0 them offline, to get them to spend time with other people where devices are not the main
spk_0 focus of that time.
spk_0 So spending time outside, planning trips together and actually as an adult, like making sure
spk_0 that you won't put your own devices away and have some focus time with them.
spk_0 In-person connections with caring people are really important and really a good way
spk_0 to address any kind of concerns that we have about what they're seeing online because
spk_0 they'll see, oh these people who care about me are not reflecting those crazy things I
spk_0 saw online.
spk_0 And that's also down to media literacy.
spk_0 I find that one of the most important skills we can teach our kids and I wish it was
spk_0 curricula in, I wish it was part of the curriculum for eighth graders at this point is media
spk_0 literacy.
spk_0 You can start these conversations when they're like five years old and they become more and
spk_0 more important as they get older and it protects them from all sorts of things from scams
spk_0 online to, you know, like you hear about sex distortion of these teenagers, especially
spk_0 teenage athletes apparently.
spk_0 They're being targeted right now to, you know, like we were saying there's all these ideological
spk_0 predators online that are looking for lonely teenagers to recruit to this extremist,
spk_0 hate-based behavior.
spk_0 And when we teach them a few basics like who made this, why did they make it?
spk_0 Who are they hoping sees this?
spk_0 And does it reflect your values?
spk_0 Is it true?
spk_0 You can just go through and ask those questions even when you're just watching a commercial
spk_0 on TV during the football game and just say like, who do you think they're targeting
spk_0 with this hamburger ad with a bikini model in it?
spk_0 Like why do you think they have that model?
spk_0 And do you think this reflects, you know, real life, just simple questions like that get
spk_0 them thinking?
spk_0 And then that extends to adult content and we mentioned Shafia Zalum.
spk_0 She has a great analogy that I love and I want to shout from rooftops, which is you don't
spk_0 learn to drive from watching Fast and Furious movies and you don't learn to have sex and
spk_0 enjoy pleasure with another consenting partner from watching porn.
spk_0 That is phenomenal.
spk_0 That is phenomenal.
spk_0 Just to take that idea a little further, because Christopher talked about and you mentioned
spk_0 also these, you know, bad actors online who are waiting for lonely teenage boys to help
spk_0 them feel good if those boys feel small.
spk_0 So say that you can tell that your son is, you know, one way or another coming to this
spk_0 idea that like his job is to be tough, right?
spk_0 And champion, it's kind of tough ideas that are trafficked in those spaces.
spk_0 What does one do to foster compassion in that boy?
spk_0 How do you try to push him in a different direction from what's being offered to him online?
spk_0 Well, like I think an interesting conversation to have with a kid who's doing that is figure
spk_0 out what he gets out of it and what I have learned from interviewing boys, from raising
spk_0 boys, from my boys friends is that they want to be helpful and they want to make a change
spk_0 in society.
spk_0 They want to feel certain sense that they're a hero.
spk_0 So it starts when they're little and they like Superman and as they get older, what appeals
spk_0 to them is the sense of being able to make a change.
spk_0 So if you're starting to hear stuff that doesn't reflect your values, you can instead
spk_0 of reacting how I first reacted when I first heard some of these things from my children
spk_0 instead of being like, where did you get that?
spk_0 What is going on?
spk_0 Don't you know who does that?
spk_0 I reacted from a trauma place.
spk_0 I'm a woman writing online and when I heard my kids, one of my kids, maybe he said,
spk_0 Alpha or some phrase that wasn't quite as common then but was, I'm used to it from hateful
spk_0 trolls online.
spk_0 I reacted from like, not my kid, but to be able to be like, what's the context that's being
spk_0 used right now?
spk_0 And like, what do you think of that?
spk_0 What do you think it means?
spk_0 And just kind of asking about it in a way that puts your fear and anger aside.
spk_0 And that has been my personal work.
spk_0 And it is hard to do, especially when they're saying something that feels offensive,
spk_0 just inquiring about it.
spk_0 And then finding ways to engage them with who might be being hurt by it and replacing that
spk_0 behavior with another way to be helpful.
spk_0 They want to be helpful.
spk_0 So like, okay, you're worried about, you know, if kids are getting a good education,
spk_0 and maybe the kid is reflecting some kind of hateful ideology, and that's where it comes up,
spk_0 like, what can we do to help kids in your community?
spk_0 Like, do you want to go read a book during library hours?
spk_0 Do you want to try and give them opportunities?
spk_0 And just keep reminding them that our choices and our words do affect people,
spk_0 and we can choose if that's for the better or for the worse.
spk_0 What I love about that Joanna is what you're saying is they're looking for purpose.
spk_0 They're looking for something that gives them a sense of value and meaning.
spk_0 And so you're like, great, give them one.
spk_0 Right?
spk_0 If they are looking for purpose by being, you know, some tough guy,
spk_0 well, or you can also get purpose by helping people out at the library, right?
spk_0 That to go for the motivation and try to not be completely blown out of the water by,
spk_0 you know, the offensive stuff that may be on the surface of it.
spk_0 Yeah, exactly.
spk_0 And ultimately, getting to the root of what he's getting from what he's consuming that makes
spk_0 him feel tough.
spk_0 And another thing that I think is so important is to model how we handle our anger,
spk_0 because anger is one of the few acceptable emotions that men are able to show in society.
spk_0 So it's great if a man or a dad can do this in front of your boys, but you can do it too.
spk_0 And I keep bringing up this idea of like road rage when we're driving the car with a kid
spk_0 and we start to get angry, talk through how you're handling your anger.
spk_0 I'm so mad that guy cut me off.
spk_0 Oh my gosh, I am so tempted right now flip that guy the bird.
spk_0 I'm going to take a breath.
spk_0 Okay, I feel better.
spk_0 I'm glad I didn't do that because I don't know what his reaction is.
spk_0 And ultimately, I feel better now, whatever.
spk_0 Just process out how you're handling that anger to show them.
spk_0 Like, I'm just going to take a moment.
spk_0 And when they make you angry, you know what, I'm feeling really angry right now.
spk_0 I'm tempted to raise my voice down.
spk_0 I don't want to do that.
spk_0 I want to be able to talk to you calmly.
spk_0 So I'm just going to take a beat.
spk_0 Let's talk in five minutes so that they're seeing us process that.
spk_0 And what if you're a parent who like yesterday did not do that during a roadway?
spk_0 Instead of a very bad example because she was very angry.
spk_0 Well, I live in Los Angeles.
spk_0 So there's so many opportunities to get angry at people on the road.
spk_0 And I will often just say, okay, let myself get way too reactive to that guy.
spk_0 Like what that guy did was not okay.
spk_0 And I felt scared because I felt like we were at risk because of what they did.
spk_0 But that was not my best way of handling it.
spk_0 And you know, that's making a repair and showing them that there's a way back from that too.
spk_0 We don't have to lean all the way into our wild emotions.
spk_0 Yeah.
spk_0 Yeah.
spk_0 Thinking about this kind of combining these two threads of conversation.
spk_0 We were talking about how you feel emotionally when you see something,
spk_0 and you see your kid doing something online or see them looking at content that you find offensive.
spk_0 I think a lot of parents right now are pretty alarmed.
spk_0 They may be read about concerns about social media or they watched adolescents or other movies
spk_0 like that.
spk_0 And they're coming in kind of a little freaked out about what's going on with boys right now.
spk_0 And I think the tendency when you're feeling alarmed is to come in hot and be what are you
spk_0 looking at online?
spk_0 Oh my gosh.
spk_0 Turn that off right now.
spk_0 I'm taking your computer and you're never going to see it again.
spk_0 Kind of coming in with a lot of emotion.
spk_0 One of the phrases we tried to introduce in the book was to get curious, not furious.
spk_0 And it's really going back to this idea where Joanna was talking right before this about
spk_0 if you're the parent you're saying, I'm going to take a minute to just
spk_0 let my emotions cool down and I'm going to be strategic.
spk_0 And I'm going to talk to my kid and say, what are you getting out of this material that you're
spk_0 looking at?
spk_0 Why is that joke funny?
spk_0 What are your friends all looking at this?
spk_0 Can you tell me about how you found this?
spk_0 Like just being curious about what they're getting out of it, why they're engaging with it?
spk_0 And my sense is that is going to be a lot more productive than just coming in and being angry
spk_0 and putting down a lot of restrictions.
spk_0 And it will also help you connect with where your kid is and give you a sense of if there is
spk_0 something to be really concerned about, you'll have more information.
spk_0 If you come in that way, then if you just shut everything down without a conversation.
spk_0 And I think we're wired to almost believe that they're up to something bad or something is wrong.
spk_0 You know, a couple of days ago, I couldn't find my son anywhere and I realized he's in like some
spk_0 parking lot somewhere. I can see on the phone and I set my husband over to go find him
spk_0 and my husband's like, yep, we got to figure out a punishment for this kid very, very bad.
spk_0 He was teaching elementary kids in the neighborhood who didn't know how to hit kickball fast enough.
spk_0 They were down at the school playing kickball and like learning because one of them said they
spk_0 didn't know how to kickball. So they just went and so I think sometimes and for some of us who might
spk_0 be in the moment of Perry Manipaz and Manipaz, we can go from zero to a thousand very quickly.
spk_0 I'm not making excuses, but I'm just being honest about this.
spk_0 I'm just like so many moms out there when I see the reading struggles affecting kids
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spk_0 You know when it comes to device use, even the best parenting approaches fall short without
spk_0 supervision. I'm saying that as a mom of a high schooler and middle schooler, it's so hard to
spk_0 get this right. That's why I want to tell you about Bright Canary. It's powerful AI scans your
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spk_0 or even self-harm. It scans texts, Snapchat, Instagram, Google and every app they use. What you
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spk_0 But, Christopher, one of the things you also write about in this is what shocked me. I found
spk_0 this to be a shocker in the book was that sometimes boys lose their closest friendships in adolescence.
spk_0 Can you tell me a little bit more about that? Thank you for asking. So I think we need to be
spk_0 attentive to boys' friendships. One of the things that I really took away from from Lisa's work
spk_0 actually is how important it is for kids to have at least one friend to have someone that they
spk_0 can count on in their lives. And I really get concerned when boys say they don't have any
spk_0 close friends that they can depend on. But this sort of rigid definition of masculinity
spk_0 sometimes interferes with friendships in a way that causes boys to separate. So I think we need to,
spk_0 you know, one of the, I think one of the things that we need to do with boys is really make it safe
spk_0 for them to have a range of emotions and to have a range of experiences. And there are a lot of
spk_0 things that are kind of traditionally coded as girl things. So you might think about like dancing
spk_0 or wearing pink clothes or singing and acquire things like that. And sometimes a boy will say,
spk_0 oh, I like to do those things. And other boys will be like, sorry, you can't be my friend. People
spk_0 might think that I'm gay if I'm friends with someone who likes those things. And this sort of rigid
spk_0 rules around masculinity and what you're allowed to like. And not like our, I'm amazed at how persistent
spk_0 they are and how strong they are. And they're particularly strong in the minds of boys when they
spk_0 are just forming their identities and trying to figure out who they are in the world. So I think
spk_0 we have to be careful with this. We just say like middle school, like that they, they, would you say
spk_0 like around middle school, they hit a really intense peak? That idea. Yeah, middle school is
spk_0 exactly the time where this really comes in because we're as students often move from one
spk_0 school to another. So there's, they're sort of having to define themselves at this new school.
spk_0 People are trying to figure out who you are and there's a real tendency to act tough and act
spk_0 in a way that matches with what they think society wants from them as a boy. So it's at a time where
spk_0 they're not really sure of themselves and they put on a lot of performance about how they think
spk_0 they're supposed to act. And this other element that comes in often now right at middle school is
spk_0 that kids get a lot more access to electronics. They start playing video games a lot more heavily.
spk_0 They usually, it's a common time for kids to get phones. And so a lot of their behaviors are
spk_0 both informed by what they're seeing online and mediated by conversations that they're having
spk_0 online. So there's this whole other conversation that adults often don't know much about that's
spk_0 going on in the lives of young people that is also influencing how they act and behave and treat
spk_0 one another. I've noticed that I can spot, especially after doing all of this work and research,
spk_0 I can spot a sixth grade boy from five miles away just based on how much they whoop and holler and
spk_0 yell and how much space they take off in public. And I think about it is a, they're the littlest
spk_0 the littlest fellas in school and oftentimes the girls are developing much faster. So the girls
spk_0 might be taller. The girls tend to be a little more mature and it brings out a lot of cockiness
spk_0 that that's the part you can spot. They're just, their feathers are always puffed in, they're walking
spk_0 around the mall and making a mess. And I think when we have, at first when it was my boys, I was like,
spk_0 what is this strange? And I was like, you know, this is a time when that comes from insecurity.
spk_0 It comes from they feel small. They feel small, but they also, and they don't want to be vulnerable.
spk_0 We've to remember that generations of men were literally physically traumatized for seeming
spk_0 gay or seeming weak. And so this fear of being seen as gay or fear of being seen as soft,
spk_0 it's not something that's just going to go away because feminism waved its magic one and thank
spk_0 God for feminism, but we can't just snap our fingers and wish away generations of trauma, right?
spk_0 They're getting this message. It is a very serious message. Seeming gay to others was literally
spk_0 risking your life, a few generations ago, even when when Christopher and I and probably you two were
spk_0 young. We all remember Matthew Shepard. So yeah, just saying to our kids, like, who cares if someone
spk_0 thinks you're gay? There's something deeper there. Yeah. Well, I'm just curious, you know, as we wrap
spk_0 up now, if you, if we could go to both of you to just give us your sense when you conducted the
spk_0 research for this book, was there something that stood out to you in the process that surprised you?
spk_0 Well, I keep coming back to the fact that boys are really wanting adults to be connected with
spk_0 them and to be guides. They want, they want to share with adults in their lives. And one of the things,
spk_0 one of the places where I've actually learned a lot in my career is that I've had the fortunate
spk_0 experience of being able to run boys groups in schools, coordinate this program where we have
spk_0 social emotional groups for boys in schools. And I've got to tell you how amazing it is to see a
spk_0 group of teenage boys come together and say, we're here for you and we want to talk about your
spk_0 feelings and what your life is like right now. And we want to help you. And as soon as you build
spk_0 some trust with them, they want to talk. They want to give each other hugs. They want to be there
spk_0 for each other. It is very sweet. And it is totally unlike most people's stereotypes of what
spk_0 teenage boys want or need in their lives. And I think there's a big space that we are sort of
spk_0 missing as a society of providing those places for conversation and connection with
spk_0 twin and teen boys. I think there's a lot more that we could do. And I would encourage anyone
spk_0 who wants to be a mentor or a big brother or the uncle who takes your nephew out more often
spk_0 than maybe you're expected to or actually go into a school and say, can we run a group at this
spk_0 school? You don't have to be a gender studies PhD or something. You have to be somebody who shows up
spk_0 and shows up regularly that they can count on that has a good ear for listening and can help
spk_0 provide a safe space for boys because they really need it. You know, one thing that struck me
spk_0 is how much our kids believe us when we tell them things. And it doesn't seem like that when
spk_0 you're the parent because if you say, you know, I like this brand of eggs, they're going to say those
spk_0 those are terrible. I only like this brand. Yeah, those are dumb. That's so dumb. Like, why are you being so
spk_0 dumb? And we don't realize how much they believe us. And I remember a story told by one of the
spk_0 boys I was we were interviewing who said to me, you know, I had my heart broken by this girl.
spk_0 And I know I don't really know what love is, but I really am really, really sad. And I was like,
spk_0 who told you you don't know what love is? Well, my parents said you don't really know what love
spk_0 is until you're older. And I said, well, listen, your parents are probably great, but I disagree.
spk_0 I think you do know what love is. I think you did love her. And I think you probably do love her.
spk_0 And I think your heartbreak is very, very real. And it's going to take some time to get over it
spk_0 because he felt like he was broken. He believed his parents when they said that wasn't even real love.
spk_0 Oh, they're just breaks my heart and gives me goosebumps at the same time what you said to that boy.
spk_0 Well, thank you both. What an honor to get to be with you. This book is a must read, as I said,
spk_0 I feel like it's actually to be waiting for families at the hospital and I think, um, go home with
spk_0 the boy. I think it should also go home with that family. Um, it's out now. It is absolutely fantastic.
spk_0 And congratulations. And thank you both. Just thank you for what you have done here. Thank you so
spk_0 much. I really appreciate this. And thank you for your, your beautiful blurb on our cover.
spk_0 We are so grateful. You are welcome. That's the best part of my job is getting to support
spk_0 incredible work like yours. The book is called Talk to Your Boys. 16 conversations to help
spk_0 tweens and teens grow into confident, caring young men with Joanna Schroeder and Christopher Pepper.
spk_0 Thank you both. Wow. You know, you know, Lisa, I, when we have on authors, you're always so cutting
spk_0 edge on who we have on that, um, just really has impressive research in their, their books and
spk_0 raising a son. I didn't even realize the things that I carry that I assume he doesn't want to talk
spk_0 to me. He doesn't want to do this. And to hear them just now say that no, no, no, they're actually
spk_0 listening to what you say and they do want to talk and engage. It's true. And actually what Joanna
spk_0 said, we do have research that absolutely confirms that that kids actually pick up and actually
spk_0 heed a lot of what we say, even if they roll their eyes when they, we say it, but we know that what
spk_0 we say does shape their behavior. And so we want to be really mindful to use that both for good
spk_0 and then to avoid use again ways that might hurt their feelings.
spk_0 Well, this was all news to me. So what do you have for us Lisa for parenting to go?
spk_0 Well, I was really taken with Joanna's description of her road rage moment where she was sub-titling
spk_0 what her emotional experience was. And that's how I would describe it. And you know, she did it a
spk_0 few different times where she was talking through what was happening internally in front of her son.
spk_0 And what it made me think about is our research on emotional intelligence, which is very much what
spk_0 we're talking about here and trying to cultivate emotional intelligence and boys. And there's a
spk_0 beautiful line from that research that says that emotional intelligence is seeing oneself from
spk_0 the outside and seeing other people from the inside. And I think it's such a great line. And I
spk_0 think that that's exactly what was happening when Joanna was describing herself, you know, driving
spk_0 down the road, walking her, you know, kid through what was happening internally. And so I think
spk_0 any time we can take those moments to subtitle what may not be obvious or to help sort of bring
spk_0 to the surface what's happening inside of us, that's an emotional intelligence building moment.
spk_0 It's good with all kids. And for today's conversation, maybe especially good with boys.
spk_0 So being able to sort of subtitle and tell them what you're really feeling can really make a
spk_0 difference in a moment, especially a moment of writing. I think it can. I think it can. I think it's
spk_0 a great way to bring the feeling down to size, use it as a way to connect, and do some really
spk_0 important teaching. Great advice, Lisa. Thank you. And actually, we're going to talk about a letter
spk_0 about a teen who seems to be defining herself by her depression. What should parents do? I'll see you
spk_0 next week. I'll see you next week. Thanks for joining us. Be sure to subscribe to the Ask Lisa
spk_0 podcast so you get the episodes just as soon as they drop and send us your questions to ask Lisa
spk_0 at doctorleesademore.com. And now a word from our lawyers. The advice provided on this podcast
spk_0 does not constitute or serve as a substitute for professional psychological treatment therapy or
spk_0 other types of professional advice or intervention. If you have concerns about your child's well-being,
spk_0 consult a physician or mental health professional. If you're looking for additional resources,
spk_0 check out Lisa's website at doctorleesademore.com.