-
One of the most
rewarding experiences for me
-
has been to study brain science
-
and apply it
to the experience of parenting.
-
And the hand model of the brain
that I use to teach parents
-
is very useful
to understand that.
-
So if you take your thumb
and put it in the middle of your palm,
-
put your fingers over the top.
-
This is a very useful model
of the brain
-
and when we can actually see
in front of us
-
what's going on in the brain
-
then we can change
what the brain does.
-
So let me walk you through
very basically
-
what happens in this brain
and the structures in it
-
and it goes like this.
-
The spinal cord comes up,
representing the wrist
-
and then you have coming up
into the skull
-
the brain stem and the limbic area
which work together
-
to regulate arousal
and your emotions
-
and the way you have
a fight-flight-freeze response.
-
These are below the cortex,
the limbic and brain stem areas
-
and the cortex
is this higher part of the brain
-
that allows us
to perceive the outside world
-
and to think and reason.
-
And this frontmost part of the brain
right behind your forehead,
-
so the person's orientated like this,
is actually the part
-
that regulates the subcortical, limbic,
and brainstem areas.
-
This regulation is very important
-
because sometimes we can have
all sorts of things happen
-
in our life:
we're tired, we're exhausted,
-
someone pushes a particular
emotional button,
-
and we can flip our lids.
-
So rather than being tuned in,
-
and connected and balanced,
and flexible,
-
we can lose all that flexibility,
even lose moral reasoning
-
and act in ways
that are terrifying to others
-
including our children.
-
Now, you can actually
bring yourself back online
-
and come back to the high road
and make a repair with your child
-
and that's important to explain to them
-
and you can also use
this hand model of the brain
-
to explain to children
even as young as five and six
-
how to understand when their emotions
-
are rising up from the brainstem
and limbic areas here
-
and how it's overriding
the prefrontal area
-
and making it so they may be about
to flip their lids.
-
So I've had kids come tell me
-
that they're about to go flip their lids
and they need a break.
-
They need a time out.
-
And by even just naming that,
they can tame it.
-
And that's the power
of using the hand model for ourselves
-
and our children
-
to help us all make sense
-
of what goes on
in the emotional communication
-
that we have
in the course of day-to-day life.