『Advice I Wish I Told Myself』のカバーアート

Advice I Wish I Told Myself

Advice I Wish I Told Myself

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This is the advice that I give to my son that I wish I would give to myself. Plus an absolutely life changing mom hack that you don't wanna miss. Hey, there, I'm Jillian Kendrick and welcome to the Momentum Marketing Podcast. I'm a mama, a wife, an entrepreneur and a three time best selling co-author. In each episode you'll get real world practical advice and strategies and maybe a parenting tip or two along the way. If you're ready to create a business that supports your family and your lifestyle, then you're in the right place. Hey, it's Jillian and I'm so glad to have you. I have been thinking so much about this episode of the Momentum Marketing Podcast. I'm glad that you're with me. And this episode has actually been a long time coming. It's been something that I've been thinking about for a while and every time it pops up in my parenting life or in my personal life, there's that little reminder of “Oh, yeah, I need to talk about that. We need to discuss that. Ok. All right. Thanks for the hint universe. I get it now God.” And I am so excited to be here with you today before we dive in. As always, if you haven't checked out my master class on how I get over 600 leads every single month. Consistently. Head to jilliankendrick.com/masterclass and you can grab immediate access to the free training right there. This training is so good. I really made it just for you. I have lots of people signing up. I'm in the process of retooling and rerecording it to make it even better. But I promise even if you watched it today, it is just so good. So you have to check it out. The new version will be up in about a week or so. So if you have watched it before, give me a week and I encourage you to check it out again because it is so, so, so so good. Back to the topic at hand. We are talking about all of the advice that I consistently give my son that I now I'm going to give myself. My son just turned four. He actually as of this recording, he just turned four a few days ago. So we're super excited. We now have a four year old in the house, which comes with its own amazing challenges. We've been doing a lot of extra potty training. He's been doing a really good job. We're still working on a few things and he will still sit on the potty and be like I can't do it. No, I don't like this. I don't want to, I can't do it. I can't do it. And of course, not only being his mom but being an entrepreneur, being a go-getter, being the kind of person that has had to pave my own way through most of my life anyway, he and I, as of late have had a lot of conversations about what he can do, his ability, what fear means. And I try really hard not to talk to him like he's a four year old. I try not to dumb things down. Sometimes I will say stuff but use maybe simpler words or I'll use a word or two. But I do try to just talk to him intelligently and even if it flies a bit over his head, even if he doesn't understand all of it, I still talk to him as if he can fully understand me, because one day he will. And so when he has these moments where he's like, no, I'm afraid I don't like it. I'm scared. I can't do it. We talk a lot about perseverance. We talk a lot about overcoming fear. We talk a lot about the fact that at least for us in our family and our belief is that God doesn't put fear into our hearts. That's an outward worldly sort of thing. So we talk a lot about that. We talk about doing things in the face of fear in spite of the way that you feel about it, we even talk at length about not liking something and doing it anyway, that not liking it is not an excuse to not do it. And yes, it would be very easy and sometimes it is easy for me as the mom of a four year old to say, ok, you know what buddy? It's, it's been a long day. I know this has been hard for you. Like it's ok. And sometimes I do, like I let him kind of get off easy or sometimes I say, ok, I've driven this home enough. I've pushed hard enough like we could take a break. It's ok. But my belief is that if I'm going to be a good mom and if I'm going to prepare him for, not only how to live and exist in our home, but how to live and exist within the world, there are opportunities for me to take those lessons and teach him things that yes are way beyond what a four year old could, would like really, truly viscerally comprehend. But I believe in doing it and giving him that gift so that when it comes time that he does understand. When it comes time that things get a whole lot harder than sitting on the potty. It won't be the first time that he hears me say it. And sure, I don't remember a whole lot from when I was four years old either. But I do remember how my parents made me feel. So I might not remember their words, but I remember that feeling that stuck with me. And then as we get older, we attach those feelings to words. And then as we get older, they embed into who we are as humans. And the lessons that we learn when we're tiny are what prepares us for moving ...

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