The time I eroded my son’s self-worth.
I discovered a voice memo from 12 years ago between me and my son.
I don’t know why I recorded the conversation, but I want to share it with you.
He was 13 at the time, and I let him stay home alone periodically because he wanted more independence.
After a few weeks, I discovered he had broken the rules:
👎 He biked to the grocery store with no one knowing.
👎 He agreed to eat more nutritiously, yet he spent over $20 on junk food.
👎 And it was unclear how he paid for it.
At the beginning of the conversation, I was calm.
But I got frustrated as he repeatedly lied.
I finally said tensely, “I don’t trust you, and I don’t believe you.”
Shame poured over him. 💔
He couldn’t see a way out of the conversation.
Listening to this, I started crying.
My heart broke for my son because I eroded his self-worth.
And I felt compassion for my younger self struggling to navigate this conversation without effective tools.
Do you see yourself in me?
😩 Maybe you discovered your son hasn’t turned in homework for a month.
😩 Perhaps you found a promiscuous selfie on your daughter’s phone.
😩 Maybe you smelled pot in your son’s bedroom.
What did you do?
Why do you think it didn’t work?
What I know now that I didn’t realize then is that nothing gets solved when the conversation is about stopping their behavior.
It completely misses uncovering what’s happening inside them that caused the problem.
In parent coaching, I teach you strategies that get to the root cause of their action so that the behavior stops.
They feel relieved, and you become their go-to person. 🌈
Let’s make this happen for you.
♥️ Jeanine
➡️ P.S. Take the first step and book a consultation call. At the end of our conversation, you’ll be clear on what to do and feel hopeful that the problem is fixable.