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Child temperament: how we start to become ourselves | David C Rettew | TEDxBurlingtonED

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    What I'd like to talk about today
    is making kids.
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    Now it's not what you might
    be thinking about, this is a family show.
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    Rather what I would like to talk about
    are those amazing, adorable,
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    and sometimes incredible irritating traits
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    that we call 'temperament'
    or 'personality'.
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    Some kids are very quickly brought
    to feel anxious or angry,
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    while other kids seem almost unflappable.
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    Some kids love to be surrounded by noise,
    and people, and activity,
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    while others prefer some quiet,
    maybe even some solitude.
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    Some kids wear their emotions
    on their sleeves,
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    while for others you can't even
    figure out how they are feeling sometimes.
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    Where do these temperamental
    traits come from?
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    And what, if anything,
    should we do about them?
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    From twin studies, we know
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    that about 50-60% of child temperament
    comes from our genes.
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    That sounds like a lot. That is a lot.
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    However that still leaves a lot of room
    for other influences.
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    Such as the environment.
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    For a long time, there was a debate
    that went back and forth
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    about whether it was nature or nurture
    that determined behaviour.
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    Now, for the most part,
    that debate is over.
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    And I can tell you that the answer
    to the question
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    of whether it is nature
    or nurture is "Yes."
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    (Laughter)
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    The story doesn't end there.
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    When you talk to parents,
    many of them marvel
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    about how unbelievably
    different their kids are.
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    They'll say, "I don't get it. They had
    the same mom, they had the same dad,
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    they were raised in the same house,
    and I did the same thing,
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    and my kids are nothing alike."
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    Many times that is true.
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    The question about whether we really do
    parent our kids the same way
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    is an interesting one.
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    If you ask most parents, they say, "Yes,
    we did pretty much the same thing."
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    You ask the kids on the other hand,
    and they will generally tell you
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    they were parented completely differently.
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    If you actually do observational studies
    of parents and kids together,
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    you will often find something in between.
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    But things get even more complicated.
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    There's a term that geneticists call
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    "evocative gene environment correlations"
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    and that's a mouthful.
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    What it means when it comes
    to child development
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    is that the environment that a child is in
    is not some random event
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    that just descends upon them,
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    but is associated or correlated with,
    genetically influenced behaviour.
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    That still sounds
    a little technical, I know.
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    I would like to argue that this is
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    a very important
    and very practical concept.
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    For this Vermont crowd, I thought
    of a metaphor that I think could work.
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    That is that kids,
    just like big mountains,
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    have the ability to create
    their own weather.
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    Think about a child who was
    temperamentally happy,
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    and outgoing, and warm.
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    And think about how the universe
    tends to respond to those traits. Right?
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    Those are the kids
    that make parents look like stars.
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    What about the child
    who is a little bit more anxious?
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    Or a little bit more irritable?
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    How does the world often respond to that?
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    Very often it's with more anxiety,
    or more irritability.
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    Then those traits can become larger.
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    Then the snowball starts to grow,
    and it starts to move downhill
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    and what starts as small temperamental
    differences can then grow
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    into sometimes, full-fledged disorders.
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    What do we do about that?
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    We could blame the parents, right?
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    Psychiatry did that for a while,
    and it wasn't great idea, in my opinion.
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    We could blame the kids,
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    and we could focus all of our energies
    on fixing those 'bad' behaviors.
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    Or we could use this new knowledge
    to see if we could figure out strategies
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    that might turn that snowball
    and have it move in a different direction.
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    When I'm talking to parents,
    the word I often like to use,
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    especially when talking about
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    parenting more challenging
    temperaments is "override".
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    "Override".
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    When your little mountain is provoking you
    into having that thunderstorm,
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    that response might be entirely normal,
    entirely understandable,
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    but as well all know,
    often makes things worse.
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    In those moments, what often
    can really help,
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    is to recognise that you are in one
    of those 'override' moments.
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    And then take what's sometimes
    a small but a very deliberate step
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    in a different direction.
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    Now, easier said than done, right?
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    I know. I have been there.
    I am still there.
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    With practice, just like anything,
    we can get better at it.
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    I am also aware that when I'm saying this,
    this may sound counter to what parents
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    have been hearing for years and years.
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    The great Dr. Spock said one of his main
    principals was that we should parent
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    in a way that is instinctual,
    that feels natural to us.
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    I think actually, that's very good advice.
    I wouldn't want to contradict that.
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    I would say there are times,
    there are many moments,
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    when the best response may be
    the most unnatural response for us,
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    if we want to move things
    into a different direction.
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    Two very famous temperament researchers,
    Stella Chess and Alexander Thomas,
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    proposed almost 50 years ago
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    that temperament traits by themselves
    are neither good nor bad.
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    Rather, what makes them work,
    or in their words,
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    what makes them "adaptive",
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    is the degree to which that trait,
    and that environment, are a good fit.
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    That theory, the "Goodness of Fit" theory
    is still taught today.
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    If you think of all of our ways,
    all of our efforts
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    to try and improve that fit,
    you can boil them down
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    to two things, I think.
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    This is true whether we are talking
    about parent guidance,
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    whether we are talking
    about school interventions,
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    or whether we are talking about
    individual therapy sometimes.
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    You can try to change the child
    to fit the environment,
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    and/or you can try to change
    the environment to fit the child.
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    Although I have to say,
    lately I have been impressed
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    with a third strategy.
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    Which is that sometimes you can back off,
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    you can trust what you have done so far,
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    and you can let that child's temperament
    interact with the world on it's own terms.
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    I have to confess that that third one
    is a challenge for me.
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    As my wife might say,
    has caused there to be
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    some "override" moments for myself.
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    (Laughter)
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    I bring that up because I think
    when we talk about parenting,
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    especially as a mental
    health professional,
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    we have to approach the topic
    with a fair amount of humility.
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    I've gone to many conferences, I've heard
    many excellent parenting talks.
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    I've left some of them thinking
    that as a father,
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    the very best thing
    that I could do for for my kids
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    is to figure out how that speaker
    could adopt them.
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    (Laughter)
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    That's just not an option, is it?
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    We are stuck with our kids,
    and our kids are stuck with us.
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    Children don't come
    with instruction manuals.
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    I think that's OK
    because unlike a Christmas toy
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    which has to be put together
    in a very precise way,
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    when it comes to kids, there is no single
    final product that has to be assembled.
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    I like metaphors and when I try to explain
    what temperament is to my students,
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    one metaphor that I really like is music.
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    In particular, the key, F major, A minor,
    that that piece of music is in.
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    Because that key is with you,
    you can hear it,
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    still the possibilities of what that song
    will eventually sound like remain endless.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Child temperament: how we start to become ourselves | David C Rettew | TEDxBurlingtonED
Description:

This talk was given at a local TEDx event, produced independently of the TED Conferences.

This talk will start with a very brief description of what child temperament is and how it develops over time. Particular attention will be given to how a child's temperament can pull from the environment certain qualities that often serve to accentuate traits and propel them to become more extreme. The role of a parent will then be discussed, including issues of labelling children and the important task of being able to "override" natural but sometimes suboptimal parental responses. Finally, there will be a short investigation into what we know about the boundaries between what are called temperament or personality traits and what are called psychiatric symptoms or disorders.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
10:03

English subtitles

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