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Annie Fox, M.Ed., is an internationally respected parenting expert, award-winning author, and a trusted online adviser for tweens and teens.

A little breakfast, a big lesson in Emotional Intelligence

October 14, 2009

As we were in 1959

As we were in 1959

Today I interviewed Rachel Simmons for my podcast series: Family Confidential: Secrets of Successful Parenting. (No, it’s not posted yet. Gimme a week or two, ok?) We talked about her must-read new book The Curse of the Good Girl: Raising Authentic Girls with Courage and Confidence and about emotional intelligence. For me, EI (aka EQ) is the ability to:

  • identify what you’re feeling
  • accept the emotion as it is (without editorializing about your right to feel it)
  • express emotion in responsible ways to people who need to hear what you have to say

I’ve immersed myself in this stuff for decades and love talking with people like Rachel, who’ve also made EI their life’s work.

After the interview I recalled a 2003 keynote speech I delivered in Los Angeles. The title: Why 21st Century Kids Need 21st Century Parenting. This feels as good a time as any for a revisit. Here’s a excerpt:

Before we were parents we had parents. People who showed us what it took to be a mom and a dad.

I woke up one morning when I was 5 and heard my mother sobbing behind the door of her room, my father comforting her. My brothers told me that Grandpa had died. A while later, Mom emerged, hair freshly brushed, lipstick bright red. She cheerfully asked what I wanted for breakfast. I wasn’t hungry, I was confused. I wanted to ask about Grandpa, but Mom’s tight smile warned me not to say anything that might upset her. While I pushed a piece of French toast around my plate I had a realization–an absolute epiphany: To be a grown-up means that you have to hide your sadness!

When I was 15 my father died suddenly of a heart attack. His passing left a huge hole in my heart, but instead of grieving I did what I thought grown-ups do, I suppressed my sadness.

Fast-forward 25 years. I’m in the dentist’s chair getting a replacement for an old childhood filling. The doctor pauses in the procedure, gently rests a hand on my head and asks how I’m doing. At his touch a tidal wave of sadness overwhelms me and I start weeping. For the next 48 hours I’m emotionally numb and clueless about what the hell is happening.

David helped me realize that the dentist’s touch had reminded me of my father, who often tousled my hair. With that revelation, the floodgates burst… finally I was able to grieve for my dad. And through my expression of loss I released myself from feelings which held me hostage for decades.

That day I learned about the power of unexpressed emotions. They don’t actually ever go away. Instead, they work like a mild acid, slowly eroding your insides, boring holes in your emotional foundation, creating gaps in your ability to connect with others. I decided not to ever bury feelings that need to be expressed. I vowed to teach my children, through my own example, to express their emotions in healthy ways.

I got my chance soon enough. During most of 1994 my mom was dying of Lou Gehrig’s Disease. Every day I drove an hour each way to visit her. During endless games of Scrabble we finally found the words to communicate with an intimacy we’d never shared before. I am eternally grateful for those last 10 months we had together… grace-filled and excruciatingly painful as they were.

After spending the day with Mom I’d arrive home each night to my own family, scared, stressed, worn down and so raw. I offered no one a lipstick smile. Instead, I trusted that our daughter and son (then ages 15 and 9) would know how to respond to a person in need. And they did. Their backrubs, cups of tea and loving words of encouragement got me through that endless year. I don’t know how I’d have coped if not for David and our sweet kids. If I’d chosen to play the game of “Everything’s fine, honey” I’d have betrayed myself and robbed my children of an opportunity to learn what it means to be a real human being. By sharing the truth of my emotional experience I gave them the chance to exercise their compassion (toward me and their grandmother) and to grow beautifully toward adulthood.

For years we’re on the receiving end of our parents’ choices, observing closely everything they do. As little children we accept that they knew best about what we need. As teens we wonder if they’ve got a clue about who we were or how to parent. After all that watching and evaluating and on the job training with kids of our own, at this point, what could we possibly not know about being a parent?

We know it all, right?

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12 Comments »

  1. Simply put, you are a genius!

    Comment by William Passero — October 14, 2009 @ 8:20 pm

  2. This is such a poignant post at a time when parents sometimes forget about how they, like their parents, actually do have a clue. It’s maybe a matter of remembering who is the parent!

    Nicely put. Thanks for sharing! You rock.

    Comment by Rebecca — October 15, 2009 @ 5:39 pm

  3. […] This post was Twitted by Echostone […]

    Pingback by Twitted by Echostone — October 15, 2009 @ 8:03 pm

  4. I love when you mention me in your posts, Mom. I remember what a difficult time that was when Grandma was dying. I recall our discussing the difference in your parents’ deaths – completely sudden vs. a gradual demise. At fifteen I learned there are no easy answers and both are difficult for the families in different ways. I feel like you gave me so much strength and wisdom during those months about being present with Grandma and learning how to say goodbye. I’m touched you feel I was a help to you as well. Thank you for being honest with us as always.

    Comment by Fayette — October 16, 2009 @ 3:40 pm

  5. Brilliant. Emotional Intelligence has so many applications, just as other types of intelligences do. Nice to hear someone talk about practical application. If you want background on the study of how it came to be named such, and its practical applications in the workplace (where rubber meets road), you might want to read a post I wrote: http://tinyurl.com/yzgehzg

    Comment by Julia Marrocco — October 29, 2009 @ 9:15 am

  6. Well done.

    Comment by Tammy — August 12, 2010 @ 11:52 am

  7. I agree, it’s important to be honest about your emotions with your family. On the other hand, at one particularly difficult point in my life, it was also good to have friends with whom I needed to shut out the trauma and go through the motions of being my usual self. It reminded me that there was a usual self, who would eventually return.

    However, overall, it’s better to set an example of emotional awareness and acceptance with your children. There’s no better way for them to learn, as your daughter’s message shows.

    Comment by Kathy Quimby — October 26, 2010 @ 6:44 pm

  8. Wow, Annie, this was so touching and powerful!

    When Gal and I lost our baby, I cried and cried and had my sister to support me, but he took care of the funeral, went back to work and only went to the counselor once. Years later, after doing Chris Howard’s Breakthrough to Success and then again after seeing a psychologist, he finally cried his grief out into the night and found relief.

    Our oldest daughter went through the loss with us, had a terrible time trusting us (“You promised me a baby”), but recovered and is now the most caring and balanced person we know.

    When our 8-year-old daughter asked about that event, we told her openly, including out own feelings of loss and helplessness. She spent some time watching videos from around her own birth (maybe to make sure she was OK as a baby and she wasn’t going to die too) and then she got over it.

    Thank you for sharing,
    Ronit

    Comment by Family Matters — October 26, 2010 @ 7:26 pm

  9. Wow. This is such a powerful post. Wise words, thanks so much for sharing.

    Comment by Heather Mundell — January 27, 2011 @ 11:51 am

  10. Wow – this post blew me away and brought tears to my eyes in the middle of a work day. Thanks for writing and sharing!

    Comment by Jenya Cassidy — July 28, 2011 @ 4:31 pm

  11. Beautiful story. I cried while reading it, especially because my parents were just like yours. Yes, we owe it to our sons and daughters to teach them how to understand, process, and express emotions. Thanks for a wonderful post!

    Comment by Muriel Rand — January 23, 2012 @ 8:48 am

  12. Even the saddest things can become,, once we have made peace with them, a source of wisdom and strength
    for the journey that still lies ahead. Frederick Buechner

    Comment by Vicki — May 15, 2012 @ 9:43 am

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