『I Hate You. What's For Dinner?』のカバーアート

I Hate You. What's For Dinner?

I Hate You. What's For Dinner?

著者: Gillian Boudreau & Rob Galligan
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概要

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.© 2026 Gillian Boudreau & Rob Galligan 人間関係 個人的成功 子育て 自己啓発
エピソード
  • Ep 04 - There's a Place for Everyone: Lauren Hough Williams on Inclusion for all Neurotypes, Family, and Dignified Risk
    2026/02/12

    How do you raise kids who approach the world with curiosity, compassion, and the drive to make their communities more supportive and inclusive?


    Today, we’re talking to Gillian’s dear friend Lauren Hough Williams about how her childhood shaped her into an expert in building systems where everyone has a place.


    In this episode, we dig into how Lauren’s position as the eldest of five siblings helped to create her community mindset. We discuss the role of privilege and its attendant sense of safety in facilitating risk-taking. And, we learn how Lauren’s mom crafted a happy, chaotic home, all the while imparting wisdom and sly humor in equal measures. We also learn how professional experts in childhood become “experts” in their own home, winning some and losing some as we try to parent well and bring our professional knowledge into our parenting our own kids.

    Listen to the full episode to hear:

    • How volunteer basketball games helped teenage Lauren recognize that inclusive environments benefit everyone
    • How Lauren’s family and early education modeled community orientation and compassion as core values
    • How Lauren’s parents created a supportive, safe environment inside the inherent chaos of a large family
    • What Lauren learned from her mom about letting go of perfectionism and urgency, and maintaining a sense of humor as a parent
    • Why Lauren’s professional life as an educator and coach doesn’t seamlessly integrate into her parenting


    Learn more about Lauren Hough Williams:

    • Program for Inclusion and Neurodiversity Education
    • Connect on LinkedIn


    Learn more about I Hate You. What’s For Dinner?


    Learn more about Gillian Boudreau, PhD.:

    • Website
    • Instagram @clearconnectionpsychology


    Learn more about Rob Galligan, PhD.:

    • Instagram @dr.robert.galligan
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    51 分
  • Ep 03 - “I’m Doing the Song!” Ash Diggs on Cat’s in the Cradle, Comedy, and Family
    2026/01/22

    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:

    • Instagram: @ashdiggs_


    Learn more about I Hate You. What’s For Dinner?


    Learn more about Gillian Boudreau, PhD.:

    • Website
    • Instagram @clearconnectionpsychology


    Learn more about Rob Galligan, PhD.:

    • Instagram @dr.robert.galligan


    Resources:

    • Harry Chapin - Cat's In The Cradle
    • The Autobiography of Malcolm X
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    58 分
  • Ep 02 - Help! My Survival Brain is Parenting My Kid
    2026/01/08

    Survival brain is a universal feature of parenting. When our inner cave person is activated, fear dominates, as we worry about our kid’s ability to survive a dangerous world. When survival brain comes online, everything is an emergency, our ability to think rationally is short-circuited, and molehills become mountains. As our brains quickly spiral, we imagine that the kid who isn’t doing his homework tonight will be doomed to a lifetime of failure and destitution.


    While the threat-mitigation behavior coded in our DNA helps us protect our offspring from the most dire threats, it prevents us from accessing the patience and perspective we need for everyday kid problems. Survival brain eats up our mental resources when activated, and once it’s firing we can’t get to our wiser mind no matter how hard we try.


    So what is a modern parent with a cave person brain supposed to do? How do we quiet the huge reactions we have to family problems that are big, but not dire? How do we know when a threat actually is dangerous enough to warrant an emergency response? How do we tame the survival brain so it will leave enough juice to run our wisdom-centers?


    Today we’ll talk about how primal survival instincts operate for parents. We’ll talk about how survival brain drives parents’ actions and how kids’ mental health struggles are rooted in their need to feel safe. We will also discuss how therapy helps parents navigate through even the most difficult moments with their kids, including school refusal, substance abuse, and eating disorders.

    Listen to the full episode to hear:

    • The way survival instincts block our ability to access higher-level thinking
    • How survival brain distorts reality, causes disproportionate reactions, and spreads to others
    • A reframe for shifting perspective and limiting scope to right here, right now
    • How therapy gives parents a space to speak the unspeakable, and how that disrupts unhealthy family dynamics
    • The role of making sense of seemingly impossible situations, which enables new perspectives and opens up solutions to even the stickiest problems
    • How talk therapy creates a foundation of safety and understanding that other modalities (like CBT and DBT) build on for comprehensive treatment plans
    • What parents can do when things are stable to support family regulation and wellbeing

    Learn more about I Hate You. What’s For Dinner?


    Learn more about Gillian Boudreau, PhD.:

    • Website
    • Instagram @clearconnectionpsychology


    Learn more about Rob Galligan, PhD.:

    • Instagram @dr.robert.galligan



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    52 分
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