Most parents set out with the best of intentions to prepare their children for the world. Of course, our actions and behaviors don’t always have the intended effect. Parenting is hard, and sometimes we screw up in ways that damage our kids and our relationships with them.
So what do we do with our parenting regrets?
Today, comedian Ash Diggs joins us to talk about the regret and repair in parent-child relationships, using the classic Harry Chapin tear-jerker “Cat’s in the Cradle” as our jumping-off point. We dig into why that song hits some of us so hard, how class and race impact parental survival brain, and the evolution of parent-child relationships when everyone is willing to look at themselves and try something new.
Listen to the full episode to hear:
- How parents’ focus on achievement and stability can affect mental health and relationships
- Why turning real-life pain into comedy can be a double-edged sword
- How his parents’ willingness to engage in hard conversations has allowed their relationship to positively evolve
- The not-so-simple relationship between material safety and psychological safety
Learn more about Ash Diggs:
Connect with Gillian Boudreau, PhD.:
Connect with Rob Galligan, PhD.:
Resources:
What is I Hate You. What's For Dinner? ?
On I Hate You. What's For Dinner? we explore whether childhood explains everything. We'll ask our biggest questions about love and hate, rage and fear, and the awesome and mundane that all get smushed together when we're growing up.
Tune in to make better sense of childhood, parenthood, and life in general.