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Joe Rogan podcast, check it out. The Joe Rogan Experience. Train by day, Joe Rogan podcast by night, all day.

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Hello. Hello. Hello. Good to see you again.

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It's great to see you.

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What was it like the last time you did the show?

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They tried to kick it off Spotify.

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Yeah, it was a very small, noisy group of people, by the way. It wasn't the of head people. They tried to make it seem like there was this big movement to get it kicked off Spotify. But when you examine what you were saying, and many more people are saying what you were saying. This was like, what year was this when you were on?

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2020. 2020.

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It had just started boiling. And now, four years later, there's a lot of people pushing back.

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That's right. And honestly, I thought you were going to never have me on your show Why? Because it was very... I mean, they had 10 meetings with the employees demanding that it be removed. I thought, Joe's going to be so mad at me. No, they're wrong.

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They're wrong. They're wrong. Every time someone wants to stop discussions, they're wrong. They're wrong, especially when you want to try to stop discussions about a very serious and permanent thing that people are advocating to do to children that is also very profitable. And it's It's a dark, weird scenario that we're in here right now that's unprecedented, that no one's ever experienced before. And they're using terms like life saving, gender affirming care instead of castration and removing breasts and hormones. And it's a very, very strange time. So I'm glad we had that podcast, and I would have a hundred more of them. Great. I think it's very important to talk about this. And I think there's too many people that are scared to talk about it. And that's why this stuff is getting so much traction. And it's scary. It's scary. It's scary that people aren't willing to admit that children are very easily influenced.

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That's right. I think that's the scariest thing of all, that people are afraid to just say the truth. Yeah. And that's not a good world because we can fix most problems if we can talk about them.

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Yeah, yeah, exactly. And that's my position on anyone trying to stop you from talking about things. Yeah. They're wrong. It's It's not the way to do it.

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It's definitely not the American way. And it's not the way we've ever solved problems in this country. And it's a bad thing when you can't be honest about things.

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And the reason why they want to try to do it is because they know that there's too many people that agree with it and that these people have been silenced before. So they'd like to bully them into silence. They like to scare them into silence. They like to get them canceled. Before Elon purchased Twitter, you used to be able to do that much more effectively. What?

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The silencing?

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Yeah, the silencing was so easy. If you said... Look, Megan Murphy was kicked off of Twitter for years. That's right. Just for saying a man is never a woman.

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That's right. Look, there's no question I think, that Elon taking over Twitter broke open the monopoly on a lot of conversations. I do think that had that effect, and it's really important. I mean, look, if their position, if the gender activist position was a good one, they wouldn't have to shut everyone up, right? They wouldn't have to object. I mean, they took my book off target. They threw a fit, and target removed the book. They did it because even though they have hundreds of trans celebratory books, hundreds of books celebrating gender transition for teenagers, even one that was critical of it, that was too much for them because they knew it would break their monopoly on the narrative.

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Well, the really scary thing is when you see these detransitioners get attacked. That's terrifying. That's terrifying because that's just so... It's so cruel. The complete lack of compassion for someone that's done, as the title of your book, irreversal damage to their life forever. They'll never have children again. They'll never have breasts again. The fact that this is just a part of this bizarre cult that a giant swath of our population is consumed by right now.

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That's right. And they didn't let detransitioners be part of the story. That there was a growing number of these women who were regretting their transition, and they had something, and they were brave enough to speak up, and that took real courage because they're talking about their own experience, their own damage to their own bodies. I mean, they were the most courageous of all, and they were treated horribly by the activists.

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Yeah, it's so dark. You don't want to think that people can make mistakes. Even if you think that people should be allowed to transition when they're young, you don't think that some people are going to do it and regret it? That's insane. You think that everybody who goes through surgery to remove parts of their body because they feel like they're in the wrong... You think all those people are going to be happy? That's insanity.

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Yeah. I mean, it's like a religion in the sense of the fundamentalism of belief against all evidence to the contrary. I mean, these people believe this on faith. It was a creed, and there was no disabusing them of this, even when there was growing evidence of thousands of young women regretting it.

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Well, finally, now the New York Times is on board, though, which is really interesting. It is, isn't it? I saw someone commenting on Twitter, and I think they're probably correct. They said, This is because the trial lawyers are involved now. I think they're correct. I think this is why the New York Times has shifted sides, because I think they realize the lawsuits are coming. And once a few of them are successful, and they will be, it's going to get crazy.

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Well, I think that is a part of it, but I don't think the lawsuits are going to solve it as easily as they did, say, the repressed memory scandal of prior errors and the multiple personality disorder, all these people who thought they had repressed memory of various kinds of harm and were imagining childhood molestation that didn't happen.

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Are you talking about the satanic stuff from the '80s?

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Yeah, from the '80s, that whole satan. I think that got reversed through lawsuits, in part because they weren't following clear protocols of their profession. The problem with the gender, going after the gender regime through the courts, and I'm in favor of it, don't get me wrong, but the problem is that the gender therapists, the therapists, the doctors were all following protocol when they transitioned a kid and cut up their bodies in various ways, incapacitated them in various ways. They were actually following affirmative care, which was the official protocol. Which is crazy. It's crazy.

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It's so crazy that there's so many things that we don't allow children to do because we know that children can't really make lifelong decisions at the age of 11, 12, and 13, but yet we'll let them in in this case.

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That's right.

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It's so nuts.

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When I look back on it, there were a few lessons of it, but one of the things that really stood out was that almost in every case, there were medical professionals who should have known better, and very often therapists who should have known better, encouraging a young girl who was a little anxious or had some had some depression, encouraging her down this road as the solution. Yeah.

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But it's also not recognizing what we know about what happens to people when they give them testosterone. So testosterone alleviates anxiety, testosterone Testosterone creates a feeling of euphoria. It does, especially when you give it to someone in doses that their body would never normally have. That's right.

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And so what the girls would go on it and they would feel great, and they would become evangelists. For testosterone. They would tell all their friends, You got to do this. I feel great. All my anxiety is gone. Of course, now they may have a permanent five o'clock shadow. Change in their voice.

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Change in their voice. When they detransition, that never goes away. Yeah. Yeah, it's very dark. It's very dark, and I would have never imagined this. I would have never imagined that. Before COVID, I had a completely different opinion of the medical establishment. My opinion of the medical establishment is that they were there to help people. That's it. I never questioned it. I question the motives of some of the pharmaceutical drug companies that were trying to sell drugs. But I felt like the medical establishment always figured that out eventually, and then they banned those drugs, the ones that were harmful. But that's not real. That's not really what happens. It's a money game. The whole thing is a money and influence game, and it's run by very powerful people. And no one wants to think that those same factors are at play when it comes to gender transition. But I've shown Found people the map of gender transition clinics in 2007 versus gender transition clinics in 2023, and it's fucking insane.

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It's insane. Hundreds and hundreds of new gender clinics all across the country. The industry expanded so rapidly with very little oversight, and it was just how fast could we get these drugs to these kids? I agree with you. There wasn't enough oversight, but there also weren't enough good people speaking up. A lot of the best doctors who are like, I didn't enter the medical profession to do this. They weren't silent or they referred to other. They said, Why don't you... Let me refer you to a specialist. Well, actually, The gender surgeons often weren't even adequate to the task because it's very, very complicated surgery involving transferring peripheral nerves and whatnot. So it's not easy surgery, depending on which surgery you're talking about. Very often, they weren't even the most qualified surgeons doing the surgery. So you had a lot of surgeries that didn't go quite right.

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Well, none of them go quite right. I mean, that's what's dark about it. I mean, you're creating a new thing, whether you're creating a penis or whether you're turning a penis into a vagina. This is not like heart surgery. This is not something they've been doing forever, that they have this long history of doing it successfully, and they know exactly how to do it correctly. The whole thing is very twisted.

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Yeah, the rates of all kinds of things going wrong. If you talk about the creation of the neophallus, the ones that take a vagina to make something like a penis, the number getting it urine to go in a stream as opposed to a spray or making it so that the person can have an erection, then a strong enough erection to actually penetrate. These all require separate surgeries. Very often it doesn't go quite right. Then there's all kinds of complications with the surgeries. I've talked to people who've been really butchered.

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Again, what was it like for you? When you wrote that book, did you expect the blowback that you experienced? What did you expect when you wrote the book? Obviously, you felt the need to express this, and you felt the need to share this information because you recognize that there's this contagion, this social contagion that seems to be happening. It's a big part of what's going on. And a lot of these kids are very easily influenced. A lot of them are on the spectrum, and they're being led down this road. So you write this book. What did you expect was going to be the reaction to it?

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Well, most books get very little attention at all. So most books write... I certainly didn't expect the massive reaction that I I mean, the public campaign to ban me from every possible outlet was so hyper-charged, and to some extent, it was successful. I mean, they kept the book on Amazon. It was deleted from Target. You can't find it in a public library in America, no matter how many people tried to donate it to their libraries. So to some extent, it was successful, the campaign to stifle the book, but because I made it onto places like your podcast, because I made it into Amazon, People got it. Parents got it. For the first time, I think parents had another source of information besides the activist narrative of, Oh, you're either going to have a live son or a dead daughter, this lie that your child is going to kill themselves if you don't do exactly what I say and let them transition now. This lie was the prevailing narrative, and I think I was able to break through, and I think that's what made people so angry.

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That lie falls apart under scrutiny when you look at the suicide rates of people that are trans. Right.

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There's actually a new study out of Finland showing that a really good long term study, I think it came out maybe just this week, showing that the rates when you control for other mental health issues, the rates of suicide among those with gender dysphoria, the discomfort with the biological sex, the rates of suicide are no higher than for the general population.

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That's That's crazy. Your new book, Bad Therapy: Why Kids Aren't Growing Up.

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Yes.

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What's wrong with therapy? What are they doing wrong?

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They're giving it to kids who aren't sick, who aren't actually struggling with mental illness or a disorder. They're giving it to everybody. So what they're doing is they're making existing problems worse, and they're introducing new problems because therapy has side effects. Just like any intervention that has the power help, it also has the power to harm.

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In what way?

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Well, there's a whole body research on some of the side effects of therapy, and they include things like alienation from spouse, alienation from parents, worsening of depression, worsening of anxiety, feeling of incapacity, feeling like you can't do things without consulting your therapist. All those are well-known iatrogenic effects. Once you have a mental diagnosis, the labeling, feeling limited by that label, Oh, I I have anxiety. I can't. So all those things are well known what they call iatrogenic effects, meaning whenever a medical procedure actually introduces harm, that's an iatrogenic effect. And we know that, of course, drugs and surgeries always come with, even the life-saving ones can come with some harm. And what people might not know is that therapy comes with these risks as well.

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So is this your opinion on therapy in general? Do you think there's a place for therapy?

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Absolutely. But I guess the big picture theme here is that therapy with kids and teens is totally different for therapy with an adult, right? An adult sits down. First of all, an adult makes the decision on their own. I really want to work on this. I'm going to go to a therapist. And you get the patient buy-in, and they're ready to do the hard work of therapy. But a child or teenager is usually strong-armed into therapy, so they don't want to be there in the first place. But more importantly, they can't say as easily to a therapist, Listen, I don't really think it. I think it gave you the wrong impression. I don't think I would call my mom emotionally abusive, or it's much harder for them to say, Listen, I know I was bullied in middle school, but I don't think I have PTSD. It's harder for a kid to say that because they don't have the life experience behind them to know that, and they don't know if they're getting better as easily. An adult can say, I've been seeing this therapist for three years. My depression is as bad as whatever it was.

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It's just not working. And move on. Maybe find a different therapist. It's much harder for a teenager to know that.

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Yeah, I have never been in therapy, although a lot of people told me I should. They all are in therapy, and it doesn't seem to be helping. But The people that I know that are in therapy, the ones that are in therapy regularly, are the most fucked up. And I don't see improvement. I mean, maybe it's just a bias sampling of the people that I know that are doing it. But it's the people that, it's not all of them, but the ones that I find problematic are very self-indulgent. And there's something about going to a therapist and talking about yourself constantly and your problems constantly that reinforces this self-indulgent.

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And that's what can lead depression to get worse, sadness to get worse. As you sit and focus on your pain, if you're not careful, especially with teens and kids, it can make the the worry, the feeling of being harmed worse. And I think that's what we're seeing.

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But what about the good therapist? Aren't there good therapists that can give you tools to change your patterns of thinking and behavior and move in a positive way?

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So If you're struggling with a condition of some sort, a phobia, anorexia, OCD, any number of problems that you want to deal with, therapy can be great. Cognitive behavioral therapy, especially, can be great. But if you go, if you're a teen or kid who shows up bummed out or just generally anxious to a therapist, you have a good shot of having that problem made worse.

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But why is that? What is it about going to therapy with that problem that's going to make it worse?

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Because you're going to sit and talk about your worries regularly. They're not going to say, You know that exercise is amazing for depression? Study after study. In fact, there have been recent studies showing it's better than antidepressants for a lot of...

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Yeah, 1.25 %.

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I mean, it's amazing, right?

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Excuse me, one and a quarter, like one times better. Right.

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Dancing is apparently amazing for low mood. Now, I'm not talking about severe major depressive disorder, okay? When you have severe chronic depression, you may need to treat it with medication or therapy. But for low mood, mild to moderate depression, exercise turns out to be better, and it doesn't have those side effects. But let me give you an example of a teenager I talked to. So I talked to this girl, Becker, that's what I call her in the book. But She was a high school senior, and she had been in therapy since she aged six, okay, when her parents divorced. She didn't have any diagnosed mental disorder of any kind, but she had regularly been in therapy because her parents divorced, and they said, You got to go to therapy. So I asked her as a high school senior, so what are you working on with your therapist now? And she said to me, My therapist is getting me ready to make friends in college. She's helping me. Oh, boy. So we're rehearsing, we're going through my past experiences, and we're talking about how to get me ready to make friends in college.

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That gives me anxiety just thinking about it. Right. So my coaching me to go make friends is like, what? Right.

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Do you see this generation feels that it can't do because they've gotten so much oversight and so much needless mental health intervention that they're questioning themselves all the time. They're in their heads all the time.

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And what motivated you to write this book? Do you have personal experiences with people that are going through this?

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Well, two things. One is I'm raising three kids in this generation, so I wanted to know why was the generation that got the most mental health intervention, the most therapy, the most psych meds, the most interventions in schools, the most therapeutic parenting, why were they in the most distress? Why were so afraid to grow up. We shouldn't see that. They should be the picture of wellness. Nobody worried about anybody's mental health more than we worried about their mental health. And yet they're the picture of despair. I really wanted to know what was going on with them. Also, of course, I had written Irreversible Damage, and I knew from that experience that very often when a young woman would tell a story about when her life went desperately off track, it was with a therapist. Here's the thing. It wasn't not necessarily a gender therapist. Most often it was just your vanilla psychodynamic therapist who was there to talk to an anxious or a little bummed-out teen, mildly depressed teen, about their bad feelings. And lo and behold, during the course of regular psychodynamic therapy, they would say, And what are your feelings on gender? And with the therapist, they would go down that route.

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Wow. There's a lot of other factors, too, that's contributing to kids' anxiety today, and a big one has to be social media. Absolutely.

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Absolutely. Social media is a huge part of the story. There's no question. I wrote about it in the first book, and Jonathan Hyte, Jean Twang, you've been talking about it for eight years now, and they've brought rigor and important research to show that that has... Extracting kids from their social world is bad. Yeah. Making them getting the dopamine it and the anxious worry about who's going to write me back and when, and then getting the dopamine hit up when they get that response and that whole cycle. There's no question that plays on our natural propensities for addiction and makes kids more anxious. But I think it's part of what we're seeing. I don't think it's the whole story. The reason I don't think it's the whole story is a few things. First of all, childhood mental health has been, and adolescent mental health has been in precipitous decline in this country since the 1950s.

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How do they measure that?

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By every measure, by the way, but let's say, take between 1955 and 1988, the rates of adolescent suicide quadrupled. That's just one measure, but there are many. I mean, we've seen it from non-suicidal self-harms, suicidal self-harms. All of these rates have gone up for adolescents. But They've been in decline for mental health of teens has been in decline for years. There's also some other statistics or some other reasons. I don't think phones explain the whole story. One of them is that in 2016, the CDC came out with a report, and they said that one in six kids between the ages of two and eight, these aren't kids with smartphones, between the ages of two and eight, one in six kids had a mental health or behavioral diagnosis. That's a lot of kids. That's a lot of kids with a mental health diagnosis, right?

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Do you think that it factors parents with mental health issues? I think, more adults are anxious, more adults are suffering from anxiety and depression, at least diagnosed anxiety and depression now than ever before.

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I think adults are absolutely passing on their anxiety to their kids. Actually, we're seeing that in... Jean Twangy came out with this book, Generations. One of the things she said in it is that boys, even though teenage girls have the worst mental health in general, boys from liberal families had worse mental health than girls from conservative families in terms of anxiety and depression. So why should that be? We know the girls are on social media more, right? Boys, that's not their thing, right? They're into video games or whatever. But I think part of the reason is what you said, there are certain families that are passing on anxiety about things like climate change. But I also think it shows that it's in the environment we're giving them. We're We're not giving kids a healthy life. We think that we can give them an unhealthy life and just pour in the mental health resources and remediate, but it doesn't work like that. Then the last reason, I don't think that phones totally explain everything or social media is because in societies where they use just as much social media, it's not great for the kids' mental health, no doubt, but they have much better rates of anxiety and depression than we do.

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Countries like Japan and Israel, where kids have more independence, they have more them. They're able to take more risks on their own, and they walk home from school. They do all kinds of jobs outside of the house, like run errands for the family. They get a feeling of, first of all, short term joy and long term satisfaction from being able to take risks, see what they can handle, but also a feeling of efficacy in the world.

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So that's an interesting statistic that you were saying that So, conservative families have less depressed kids. Is that what you're saying?

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Apparently, boys from liberal families have higher anxiety rates than girls from conservative families.

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But above, if you just looked at the norm, more girls generally have anxiety. Right. But in conservative families, girls are less anxious than boys from liberal families.

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That's We could speculate as to why. There are lots of proposed reasons for that. But one of the many things that we might... First of all, we know it's in the environment at that point. It's not an organic. Whatever these kids are going through, it's not organic, right? We know it's something we're pouring into their life. I think one of the things might be that aside from the fact that parents in conservative families may be more comfortable asserting their authority with kids. That's an old finding. We've known generations now that authoritative parenting, meaning not cold parenting, not cruel, not unloving- Rules. But rules. Those kids have better mental health. They're happier and they're more successful in all kinds of ways. So it may be something to do with comfort with rules, but also they're less likely to turn their kids' lives over to a mental health expert.

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So what is the speculation as to why rules alleviate anxiety? Is it because there's structure? There's more structure to the world, so things seem less open-ended and less chaotic?

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That's right. I think it's something to do with that. Kids need guardrails. They know they're not ready to be in charge. Parents today are so quick to put kids in charge. What do you want? Where would you like to go to school? What would you like to eat for dinner? Putting kids in charge. But we've known since the 1960s, Diana Bomer did this research years ago, and it's some of the sturdiest research we have because they've replicated it hundreds of times. And they've shown that loving parents who are also rule-bound, they call them authoritative, not authoritarian, which is the cold unloving rule-bound, but the loving and rule-bound parents tend to raise the happiest kids because kids know there are guardrails. And here's the thing, the people who are making the rules aren't some expert mom hired. They're the people who love me most. They're my parents. They're the ones in charge. I think that's really comforting to kids.

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That's interesting because that's not what people people think of when they think of authoritative parents. They think of parents that are restricting their children, and the children are going to rebel.

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That's right. I mean, there's a lot of really good research on this, but it actually doesn't create more rebellious kids. By virtually every metric, they do much better in all kinds of circumstances and in all kinds of situations. And the permissive, what they used to have was permissive parents and authoritarian parents. Those were the other two extremes. Permissive Parents let kids do whatever they wanted, and authoritarian parents said, Obey at all costs, and they were fairly cold. And their kids didn't end up great in terms of mental health. But today, we don't even have permissive parents in my view. I think we have something even worse. We have permissive parents who are therapeutic, meaning they're always asking kids what they want, and they're never asserting their authority, but they're doing something else. They're hovering and surveiling their kids. And so it's permissive without the independence.

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Yeah. That's a weird one, right? Like the SnapMaps and stuff where you're following your kids everywhere on Snapchat.

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They're surveilling them. These kids have no independence. They have no space for mom or dad, and it's not doing them any good.

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Why do you think it is that things have moved in this general direction? Why do you think it is that more parents are seeking psychotherapy for their children and that it's having this negative effect?

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So I think I'm at the tail end of Gen X, 1978, the year I was born. I think we were the high watermark of divorce. I think a lot of teenagers who grew up when I did, they felt like, my parents were divorced. They weren't there for me. I wish I had had someone I could talk to. They naively, and they had good experiences in therapy, and naively watched Good Will hunting, and they thought, Therapy is good for everyone. They naively turned their kids over to a mental health expert right away. At the first, I talked to moms who signed their kids up for therapy because a cat died, because their grandma died, because basically anything that would happen in the life, even routine events. And yeah, look, having your grandparents die is very sad, but that's not an unexpected trauma. That's part of life, right? And signing up your kid with a therapist might help if they're having a real problem, but it could also introduce other problems. And I think that's what we're seeing.

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Yeah. There's a reluctant It means to let children experience discomfort.

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Right. Exactly. Yeah.

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Exactly. And that's really the only way you learn. We learn... I mean, obviously, bad feelings can be devastating, but bad feelings also can let you understand the landscape of the world better and understand what to do and what not to do and what the consequences are of certain actions. I had some friends when I was growing up that became addicted drugs. And it sealed the deal for me. Like with cocaine, it was a big one. I've never tried cocaine. And one of the main reasons is because of my friends that I had when I was in high school. I saw the negative. It was horrible. It was horrible It's horrible to experience. It's horrible as a friend to watch all that go down. But those bad feelings teach you something. They teach you something very important about what the consequences of certain behavior are.

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That's exactly right. There's this amazing long study on kids who lived through the Depression, and they found that the kids who ended up, and they followed these kids, they were born in 1920, 1921, and they followed them long term. You know who did the best in the Great Depression? It wasn't the poorest kids whose parents killed themselves or abandoned them. And it wasn't the rich kids who didn't feel the depression at all. It was the kids of the deprived middle class, the ones who had to take in extra jobs, wear hand me downs, do extra work. Those people ended up so scrappy and so strong. And here's the thing, they also ended up happy, really happy, because they were resilient. They had lived through something, they had learned it, and they learned this amazing gratitude when things went right.

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Yeah, that's the thing, the overcoming adversity and becoming resilient. There's no pill for that. You can't just talk through that. You have to actually experience it.

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That's right. And we spent so much time worrying about trying to make our kids happy, and we don't We've spent enough time trying to make them strong. And you know what? We've made them neither. Because making happiness your goal is actually a recipe for being unhappy. And if you don't make a kid strong, he can't be happy. And I think about my grandmother, and Because everybody has, if anybody thinks about their grandparents, they went through some hard stuff. I tell the story in the book. My own grandmother lived through the depression. Her mother died in childbirth, giving birth to her. She was bounced around. She had to be taken out of her father's home. I don't know if there was abuse. It's not clear, but somebody decided she should be taken out of her father's home. He was raising four kids by himself. When her oldest sister married at 17, she went to live with her. Then she She ended up at 16. She got spinal bulbar polio. She ended up in an iron lung for a year. And she went on to college. She married, she raised three kids. She went to night school.

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She became one of the first judges in Maryland, female judges in Maryland. And she was the happiest person I knew. And that's the kicker. It wasn't just that she achieved so much. She was someone who took in foster kids her whole life. She was a happy person who felt grateful all the time. And today, a school counselor would take one look at her and say, You've been through a lot of trauma. We should talk about it.

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But there's got to be some middle ground, isn't there? Is there some middle ground where children can have someone they can confide in and have conversations with that can express these things to them? That although you're going through something awful, that resilience is actually going to serve you in the long run. And even though this feels terrible now, on the other side of it, you will have new tools that will help you manage life.

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If that was what school counselors said to kids, that would be amazing. But the problem is the mental health profession doesn't look at, doesn't track. There's no requirement that they track negative side effects. They're not measuring in general. Now, I have some exceptions that I mentioned in the book, but in general, they're not measuring. Is your anxiety getting better? Like cognitive behavioral therapist will often measure, and they'll often say to a parent, I'm going to see him for this many sessions, and we're going to measure and make sure the phobia is improving. But very often, they'll just talk about the pain, and talking about the pain regularly, endlessly, is often not as good for a kid as joining the basketball team.

[00:35:16]

What you're talking about is essentially the title of your book, which is bad therapy. There has to be some good therapy, right? Sure.

[00:35:24]

Good therapy is therapy for a kid who needs it, not preventive. Only.

[00:35:29]

I think What do you think the requirements would be for someone to get good therapy? What would have to be wrong in the child's life?

[00:35:37]

I think it would be something where the parent has tried to stabilize the kid, that they have a problem, it's interfering with functioning, and they can't stabilize the kid. They've tried other methods, and if they still can't stabilize the kid, I think therapy could be absolutely really helpful. I think you should then research the therapist like you would any surgeon.

[00:35:58]

Do you think it's something like antidepressants where it's just overprescribed? Yes. Where everything looks like a nail if you have a hammer? Right.

[00:36:06]

It's way, way, way overprescribed. By the way, we have so many mentally unwell people in our streets who are completely underserved and underdreated. And I think the reason is, treating them is really hard.

[00:36:18]

We also have a lot of mentally ill therapists. I was reading this crazy story about this therapist who convinced her client, her patient, to murder her ex. Wow. Yeah. She got this guy to fall in love with her, and then she got him to go and murder her ex.

[00:36:37]

I mean, I believe it. You know? Of course. I mean, there's no question. Therapists are humans. Therapists are humans. And a lot of times when you talk to people who went through a PhD in psychology, they'll tell you that some of their colleagues were a little scary because they entered the profession because they had mental health struggles of their own. And it's important that a therapist not inject their own problems into the therapy. And for that, you need a really good qualified person. I don't think that's the majority of what kids are getting.

[00:37:09]

No. So how do you know what these kids are experiencing when they're having this therapy? What are we basing this on? Do we get reports from the children or what they talked about with the therapists and know that that has had a negative effect? Oh, okay.

[00:37:28]

So first of all, there is no oversight, which is a huge problem, right? There's no one, the profession doesn't require it. They're not measuring harms, they're not tracking harms. The medical professions, of course, do require it, right? They're federally required. If you have an adverse reaction to a drug, it gets reported. But with therapy, there is no tracking. But there's something else, too. We know that as a treatment enters a population pool and it becomes more accessible and more prevalent, the rates of disease or malady or disorder should go down. We've seen this with breast cancer. 1989 was the high watermark of death from breast cancer. As screening improved, as it got more prevalent and more accessible to people, rates of death from breast cancer have plummeted. So why are the people who are getting the most treatment and the most access to mental health treatment, they're having the worst anxiety and depression? Why? It's skyrocketing. It should be going down. If the If the treatment were effective, it would be going down.

[00:38:32]

But there are those other factors that we talked about, like social media, living in the age of the Internet. This is a bizarre time to be a child. I think that children today are experiencing unprecedented pressure in a weird way that no one knows how to navigate because no one grew up with it besides them.

[00:38:50]

Right. If you're talking about things like social media, I do think that makes childhood worse and harder. There's no question. There are other things that are making childhood uniquely hard in some sense. Now, of course, we have generations that have lived through pandemics, great depression, economic deprivation, and all kinds of things. But two things. One, with any population, you would want to see some dent in the depression. We're not seeing that. But the other thing is, where were the mental health experts with social media? They could have called for a ban.

[00:39:30]

They didn't. I don't think they knew right away, right? It had never existed before.

[00:39:37]

No, but there's been really good evidence for the last eight years. I don't think there's a parent alive who doesn't already know that social media is bad for kids, right? We've known the phones. We see what they do. We see how angry kids get when you try to take them away. We know that there's this addictive element and that kids act a little crazed. We can see it, and we've known that. I mean, there's been good research out for eight years now. Why have the mental health organizations who have been in 2020, warning the Congress about climate change, systemic racism, police tactics. They were quick to announce their views on all those things. They had nothing to say about the lockdowns. They had nothing to say about social media. They'd never called for a ban on social media. They never issued the same warning that doctors gave about cigarettes. Why?

[00:40:25]

Because social media does have some positive aspects to it, unlike cigarettes, right?

[00:40:31]

There's- Cigarettes have positive aspects. They're neural stimulants. They're social.

[00:40:35]

Right. But it gives you cancer.

[00:40:37]

Long term. Yeah. Look, I'm not an advocate for cigarettes. I see what you're saying. But bottom line, they lead to cancer. The medical establishment, the surgeon general, felt like we had to warn the public, They lead to cancer. Just like that, if you're a responsible organization, you have to warn people, Hey, you know what? The social media is really bad for kids. We're seeing their anxiety get worse. They are They're on their phones all day long, even in school. We've known for eight years now that the research has been out. Sorry, we're warning parents. We don't want to see smartphones in schools, and we think no teenager should be on social media. They could say that.

[00:41:18]

Do you think anybody would listen to that? That seems like the problem with that is it's like trying to put the water back in the dam. I just don't believe that that would be effective. Well, maybe they could have said something about it at the very beginning. If we knew the consequences of social media, let's go back to like 2005 or something like that, before it was really a thing. If they started seeing it happen, if they could put the kabash on it then. But now that it's so ubiquitous, I can't imagine a world where anybody would effectively say, there's a state that's trying, was it Montana that's trying to ban TikTok? Okay.

[00:41:58]

I don't know. I believe you.

[00:42:00]

There's some state that's trying to ban TikTok for kids. A few states just sued a multiple company. Let me find that. For what, though? Something about kids using it. Is it because of their access to questionable material. I'll find out, specifically. October 24th, here. Multi-state federal lawsuit. On the screen, dozens of states are suing Instagram parent meta over addictive Okay. Dozen of states sue Instagram parent meta over addictive features and youth mental health harms. So this is, I think they're talking about algorithms. They're talking about how algorithms target children demand users' constant attention. Metta has profited from children's pain by intentionally designing its platforms with manipulative features that make children addicted to their platforms while lowering their self-esteem. Yeah, that's that lady from New York. Social media companies, including Metta, have contributed to a national youth mental health crisis, and they must be held accountable. Yeah. Interesting. Florida has got a separate lawsuit for misleading users about potential health risks. How did they mislead them? I'd have to read the lawsuit. So it says, Metta's design choices and practices take advantage and contribute to young users' susceptibility to addiction, the complaint reads. They exploit psychological vulnerabilities of young users through the false promise that meaningful social connection lies in the next story, image, or video, and that ignoring the next piece of social content could lead to social isolation.

[00:43:46]

That seems like a stretch. I don't think they say that. No one says that ignoring the next piece of social content could lead to social isolation. What they do say is that children feel left out if they're not on social media because there's a lot of these little chat groups and they share videos and information. That's how they find about songs and bands that they like and movies that they like and television shows that they like. So it is a part of society today, and it's an inexorable part of society.

[00:44:20]

Well, why? I mean, I think there are a couple of reasons why. One of them is we made no effort to even stop them during the school day, right? That would have been really easy. You can be on your phone, just not during the school day. That's so obvious that it's almost pathetic that we don't have that already in place, right? Because why do you need to be checking your text? You're in school with your friends, right? So there were things that we could do and could have done, but we didn't do them. And I think one of the reasons was that I think that mental health experts, I know there are therapists who allow therapy over text message, right?

[00:44:59]

That seems crazy.

[00:45:01]

Yeah, it's crazy. But they have made no effort to stop this, to warn the public about this. Frankly, I think in many cases, they've undermined it. There are therapists who went on Zoom and never went back.

[00:45:14]

Zoom is a little different, right? Because you actually are interacting with a person, even though it's through a screen. You're communicating with them, right?

[00:45:22]

You are, but you get none of the benefits of in person. So this they have measured. And the benefits of being in person, seeing someone face to face, the psychic benefits are real. Even when you're with someone you don't want to be with. The kids who went home for the lockdowns and were in a big household full of relatives they didn't want to be stuck with when they wanted to be in college, they did better in terms of mental health than the kids who were isolated and stayed in school.

[00:45:53]

You're arguing against therapy, but yet saying therapy in person is better than therapy on Zoom.

[00:45:59]

Is For sure. I'm not arguing. I mean, I'm not arguing. First of all, adults can see therapists for any reason, and that's totally not only up to them. I think they have the stand to get... They are in a much better position to possibly benefit from it. I'm concerned about therapy for kids, especially kids who don't really need it, who are a little bummed out. But in any case, we know that Zoom therapy or text therapy for the most anxious generation, for the most socially phobic generation, supposedly, well, that's not helpful.

[00:46:32]

So the thing that gets me about therapy that I've always talked, the people that I know that are doing it all the time, is I don't know how much you should be thinking about yourself. I don't know. I mean, is there a certain amount of time you should allocate to thinking about yourself and your own feelings and problems? And how much of that is self-indulgent and how much of that feeds that anxiety itself.

[00:47:03]

I mean, it does. Thinking about yourself is the same as unhappiness in a certain sense, right? It is indistinguishable from anxiety and depression. And if you just think about how our football coaches motivate a team at halftime, what do they do? They focus the team on the task ahead. That's the way to get them motivated. That's the way to help them complete it, okay? What they don't say is, Johnson, are you still upset about your parents' divorce?

[00:47:30]

Yeah, that's not- Right?

[00:47:33]

That's not going to help me catch it for four. Tell me about your feelings. Yeah, that's not going to help me. Why don't they do it? It's not just because they're repressed. It's because they know that if you want to get anything done in this world, you need to, yes, repress your feelings for a time and focus on the task.

[00:47:47]

But is it even repressing your feelings, or is it just not indulging those feelings and letting those feelings be the primary focus?

[00:47:53]

I think it's the same thing. I don't mean permanently. I don't mean there isn't a place for it. But when you're in the school, focusing on school, focusing on seeing your friends and going to recess or whatever it else is, the basketball, whatever the activity, is really good for you, as opposed to sitting around and thinking about doing social emotional learning and thinking about the pain you're feeling right now, the emotional pain. That's not going to help you get through your geometry test.

[00:48:20]

Yeah. Well, that is one thing that's fascinating about human beings is that tasks and difficult endeavors seem to make people happier, especially when you complete them. That's right. And it gives you positive reinforcement that you actually can get through something difficult and that the end result, the feeling of accomplishment is very valuable.

[00:48:44]

That's right. One of the hardest, most worrisome parts of this generation is that they have the lowest sense of efficacy. They report an external locus of control, meaning they don't think they can improve their lives. See, millennials thought they could do anything. They are the Mark Zuckerberg generation. That's why we had so many tech founders in that generation. We're not seeing that with these young people. They don't want to be in charge. They're afraid, and they don't feel up to it. I talked to There's a friend of mine I call every year on her birthday, and she's a research scientist, cell biologist. Every year, she invites kids to her lab for an internship who are top kids, pre-med graduates from college before they go on to med school. She said to me in the last decade, when I called her this year for her birthday, she said to me, I can't believe you're writing about this generation. They are so different. I said, Tell me why. She said, I'm seeing the smartest, most prepared kids, and they're afraid to run their own experiments. They tell me they're getting ready. They're working on their skills. They're not yet up to it.

[00:49:51]

And they constantly report to me about their mental health, how they're feeling today. They can't just take a chance and go with It's weird because as a parent, you want to hear kids out.

[00:50:09]

And when they're having some anxiety, an issue, you want to talk with them and you want to talk through it. You don't want to tell them, Hey, you're going to have to suck it up. I never say that, and I probably should. I mean, I don't know if I should. But I mean, if I had boys, I probably would. I think I would probably treat them differently. But I think that there's a fine line. Where is the point of diminishing returns? Where is it valuable to address feelings and anxiety and thoughts? And is it irresponsible to do so without giving them tools to mitigate those things, and along with those tools, to explain to them that there's things that they're going to have to do in this life that are very difficult, but that there's a great reward in doing these very difficult things?

[00:51:01]

So the problem, as I see it, is not that you're not saying, Suck it up. It's that no one ever says, Suck it up, no matter how minor the scratch to these kids. And sometimes being told, You'll live. Remember when dad used to say, You'll live, or, Shake it off? We never hear shake it off anymore. No one says it. So they don't know they can overcome even minor injuries. And the truth is, they can. They can. But they recently did these studies on these coping techniques. They taught coping techniques to teenagers, over a thousand teenagers in Australia. It was called the Wise Teens program. They talked to... And that was the point. It was just to help them with emotional regulation. And it turned out it made kids sadder and more anxious. They measured this. And the reason was, regularly ruminating on your bad feelings can make you feel worse.

[00:51:59]

Did you talk to therapists when you did this?

[00:52:01]

Yeah, a lot of therapists.

[00:52:01]

How many of them agree with you?

[00:52:04]

There was a huge split. The academic research, a psychologist overwhelmingly agreed. They were aware of the literature, and they said, Yeah, these are bad practices. Here are things we shouldn't be doing with kids. What was interesting is a lot of the clinical therapists were either minimized the risks of therapy or denied that there were any.

[00:52:25]

But isn't that like Jiffy Loub? When you tell them, You don't need to to change oil that much. Well, it's their business to change oil. Right, exactly.

[00:52:35]

I talked to this one amazing child psychologist who said to me, I start by having my patient sign a waiver in which they acknowledge that there can be risks. And the reason I would do that is because I don't want them to experience harm. So if they see that their worries are getting worse, they have to tell me.

[00:52:54]

But would they? It seems like the therapist is the one who's in control, Right? Right. The therapist is the expert. They're the one who has the authority.

[00:53:06]

Right. Well, I mean, this one was Camilo Ortiz. He was the one I talked to, and the one that I was referring to there. And first of all, he always starts a therapy by setting the number of sessions. He doesn't treat a kid like an annuity. You're going to be my income stream for years. He attacks, and also they come to him with an actual problem, like chronic bed wetting, like various kinds of phobia. There are people who treat anorexia. They're tackling a problem. Right. And some of those therapies are extremely necessary and very successful.

[00:53:45]

When this person gets this person that you were just describing, if they get someone that comes to them that doesn't have a real problem, do they turn them away?

[00:53:54]

Well, you can ask, but very often, therapists don't turn them away. That's the problem. Too many therapists I mean, I think back to the first book, and I would ask, did anyone have a therapist who said, You know what? I don't think the trans identity fits you. That doesn't seem to make sense to me. On almost no cases did the therapist stop a girl from going down that road. No, you don't have gender dysphoria. Listen, it's mostly little boys. Okay, it's overwhelmingly starts with little boys, and you see it in men. It's overwhelmingly a friendly male phenomenon, and it always starts ages 2 to 4. So you discovering this at age 12, let me tell you something, with your friends, it's so unlikely. We don't even need to go there. They never said that.

[00:54:42]

Well, I think they get scared of the blowback as well. Yeah, sure. What they would hear from their parents. You're telling my child they don't have a problem when they have a problem.

[00:54:51]

Well, also the incentive is for therapists to treat the least sick for the longest period of time. That's the incentive. Because you don't want the schizophrenia patient who really needs you. Right. They're really hard to treat.

[00:55:04]

Almost impossible.

[00:55:05]

Almost impossible, right? You don't want the bipolar patient. Right. Some people will refuse to see those patients. But a teenager with a little social anxiety, parent pays on time. They're not getting violent in your session. Oh, boy.

[00:55:20]

Wow. I never really considered that until your book. Until I heard the title of your book and I read the synopsis of it, I never really considered it. I never considered that thinking about your problems all the time and talking about your problems all the time, literally make the problems grow.

[00:55:41]

That's right. I mean, it's the number one symptom of depression is what they call rumination, this pathological obsessing over your pain. Yeah. That's why stuff like exercise, that's one of the reasons, aside from chemical reasons, one of the reasons that doing anything... You know that running errands is good for your mental health? Getting out of your house and accomplishing anything is good for you. But sitting around talking and thinking about your problems, that's a bad habit. And the best cognitive behavioral therapists and others, the dialectical behavioral therapists, the ones who do really well with depression, the first thing they do is try to break that bad pattern. But a lot of therapists just indulge it.

[00:56:21]

It's also a luxury that's provided to you by a life that's fairly safe. People that live in war-torn countries have very difficult lives, they don't have that luxury of just sitting around all day and doing nothing and, Oh, I go outside and run errands. That's going to make me feel better. You're dealing with real stress. That's right. And I think that there's an I have a question that someone told me once, and I say it all the time, the worst thing that's ever happened to you is the worst thing that's ever happened to you. If it's you got a dent in your car or it's your parents get killed in a car accident, either one of those things is the worst thing. Depending upon the level of whatever stress or anxiety or horrible things that you've experienced in your life, that's your watermark for what you can and can't tolerate.

[00:57:14]

That's right. And what we should be telling kids is that the amazing story of human history is of resilience. It used to be the case that people lost a sibling. That was common. People lost a parent. That still happens, right? These things still happen. And the amazing story of human history doesn't mean it's not painful, but of resilience. They get on. They aren't permanently suffering with mental illness or mental problem. They form families. They are responsible in their jobs. They show up for work. They can be dependent on by their friends. That's the story of human survival and resilience. And unfortunately, we're telling kids, No, you've had trauma.

[00:57:55]

Yeah, you've had trauma, and you need to work through that trauma. It's not just this is just a part of life. And what you need to do is just go out there and live your life and you'll get over it.

[00:58:09]

And the thing is, the truth is that most kids and most people did. In other words, that didn't mean that dad didn't lose his job and they were forced out of the... They had to lose their house. These things happen. They've happened in every family. And I think one of the many reasons that kids don't know this today is we've cut them off from extended family. The story of their grandparents is a story of resilience in almost every case. You hear about your family history, and you're going to hear a story of pain and survival and resilience and overcoming. But today you've got teenagers who say, Oh, I can't drive past my middle school where I was bullied because of my PTSD. They don't have PTSD, but they think they do.

[00:58:55]

What do they have, though? If you are bullied, that does have a significant psychological effect on kids, and it can lead to lifelong depression.

[00:59:04]

I don't know that it can. I don't think so. I don't think so.

[00:59:06]

For young people that get treated like shit and told that they're nothing and useless. I didn't really get bullied in high school, but I remember going back towards my high school when I was 19, and I'd get anxiety. I'd get weirded out by it. Right.

[00:59:24]

So let me just say... Yeah.

[00:59:25]

You start feeling like you used to feel when you went there. Absolutely.

[00:59:28]

But that's not a PTSD flashback, right?

[00:59:30]

What is that?

[00:59:31]

That's a bad memory, and we have them. And by the way, when I say you can't have... Bullying can mean anything, right? So when I say... I'm talking about teasing. I'm not talking about the horrific abuse that some kids have gone through. But do you have anxiety? Yeah. Anxiety exists for a reason. It's actually adaptive. And so there are benefits to anxiety, and there are negative parts of anxiety. Now, I'm not talking about anxiety disorder. We don't want anyone to suffer with an anxiety disorder that interferes peers with daily life. But a little anxiety, feeling a bad memory, that's not only part of life, but it can have positive effects. So some of the positive effects of anxiety is it helps with performance. If I weren't nervous for this right now, I wouldn't have prepared so much to make sure I remembered what I was going to talk about. And we don't want someone with no anxiety crossing a street because he's not going to look for cars. And we're going in with medication and we're deleted leading things like anxiety, depression. Anxiety helps you make beautiful memories. You remember Christmas morning because of all the nerves about it ahead of time, or you remember your first kiss partially because of the anxiety.

[01:00:42]

That's why the memories are so clear. When we go in and we give kids a pill for that, not only are they not developing an emotional musculature they're going to need as adults, but actually they're losing a really important part of the human experience, like feeling low because you were dumped and then seeing you can get over it.

[01:01:01]

Right. That's a very important thing we just said about experience anxiety. It actually helps you be sharper. It does. It really does. You have to be nervous before you do things. That's right. That are difficult. It's just that uncomfortable feeling people avoid because they get scared of the anxiety. But if you talk to, one of the best examples is UFC fighters. Ufc fighters before they fight. They're all nervous. They're all scared. Every one of them. Terrified. And they don't want to fight if they're not. If you're too calm and too relaxed, you actually have bad performances.

[01:01:33]

I'll tell you something else. Same is true with depression. Now, I'm not talking about major depressive disorder that's chronic and needs treatment, of course, right? But if you have something bad happen to you, you go through a divorce, you go through something hard. That doesn't mean you should never use meds or therapy if you absolutely need it. But there can be good. Here's what can be good. Depression is adaptive. The purpose, I learned this from talking to We're doing a lot of evolutionary psychologists. One of the good things about depression is it shuts us down so we don't do anything rash, and we think about what change we might want to make in our life. Because sometimes we need to make a change. If we just medicate away the bad feelings. The worst feelings might be dampened, but we also might be locked into that low state and never make the change we need to make. Because we'll lose the motivation. That's the thing. We won't say, You know what? He treated me badly. I'm tired of this. I'm not getting back together with him. We might just accept it and keep on.

[01:02:38]

Right. Especially if you're medicated.

[01:02:39]

Especially if you're medicated. That will, to make a big change, often happens after we've been brought low.

[01:02:47]

Yeah. It's interesting because this conversation is such a blanket conversation. And when you're talking about people's personal experiences, their personal depression and trauma, people are always very quick to accentuate the negative aspects of whatever they've gone through. No, no, no. You're talking about, But mine was worse. But mine was this. Mine was unbearable. And I think that's something that our society, for whatever reason, encourages.

[01:03:19]

That's right. So one of the psychiatrists I interviewed was this man, Paul McHieu, who used to be the head of the Johns Hopkins Psychiatry Department. And he looked at vets, combat vets in America and Israel. And what he wanted to know was why was there less PTSD among the combat vets in Israel? And one of the things he noticed was that they treat them very differently when he When an Israeli soldier saw something traumatic, a potentially traumatic event, maybe an IED exploding or something, their buddies torn apart and killed, they took them out of battle. They said, Listen, just so you know, your reaction is totally normal. We're sending you home for a few weeks. You're going to feel better, and then we're going to put you right back, but you're going to recover. We're going to put you right back with your men. And with America, when someone had seen something horrific, they would pull them out of battle. They would meet with a therapist who would tell them, You have the symptoms of PTSD. Here is PTSD. Your government did this to you. It's possible you may be suffering with this chronically. And they didn't recover at the same rate.

[01:04:29]

Hmm. So it's a get back on the horse type thing?

[01:04:33]

Yeah, it is, which doesn't minimize all the traumatic things. I mean, some people will have harder time getting back on the horse. They may need more treatment than other people. But what's amazing is, most people, even who go through traumatic experiences, even most combat vets, the majority don't get PTSD, because actually the story of human history, the story of our experience is of resilience. And if we We must think back to our grandparents, we know this is true. We can't guarantee for our kids that they won't go through hard things. In fact, the one certainty is that they will. But the message to them has to be, But you're so strong. Our family is strong. Our family has gone through hard things. I've gone through hard things, and you can, too. If you say that to kids, you have a much better shot that they will.

[01:05:22]

How do we know that the majority of combat vets don't experience PTSD?

[01:05:26]

Because they... There's this crazy study. They look through, this is just one example. Vietnam vets, they know what percentage saw combat. It was something like 12 to 15% actually saw combat. But for whatever reason, when they surveyed Vietnam vets, 30% of them were reporting PTSD. That's iatrogenesis. That means that they've been hearing about the symptoms of PTSD. They were thinking about their friends who've had PTSD, and more people were coming to believe they had PTSD than actually could have had it. But you're still talking about a small percentage of people who go through some really hard things in combat. Something like at 70% to 80 %, no matter how many traumatic experiences they've seen, four tours in Iraq, they still, for whatever reason, don't have the symptoms.

[01:06:21]

Yeah, I've talked to friends of mine that are veterans about this. And one of the things they said is that my friend who was a SEAL said that Special Forces guys experience it less, although they do experience it, because they're proactive, they're acting, they're doing something, they're moving. Whereas he said the real people that experience it are sometimes people that are stuck on a base. They're always worried about being attacked.

[01:06:47]

Oh, wow. I love that.

[01:06:49]

Yeah. The fear of constantly being worried that you're going to be attacked versus the fear of going out on a mission. That's exactly right. Having a deployment, going out there and and engaging the enemy, that they're task-oriented and that they're the ones in control.

[01:07:06]

That's right. What we want to say to kids is be a Navy SEAL. Go out there and attack those tasks, whatever they are. Make a new friend. Go play a sport. Go do things. Don't sit around thinking about yourself.

[01:07:17]

Well, there's a rite of passage that goes with being a Navy SEAL. It's a very difficult thing to acquire. Most people quit. That's the ringing the bell thing. They bail. They can't take the stress of it because they put you through hell, and they put you through hell to find out who's resilient and who's not, and to show you that you could do it.

[01:07:37]

But we're not even teaching kids to aspire to that anymore. No. There's a lot of ways to be a Navy SEAL. I mean, some as the official being a Navy SEAL, an actual Navy SEAL. But there's so many ways to be strong and make a difference in the world and do things. And that message that your friend mentioned, that's a good message for kids. It's not what we're telling them.

[01:07:56]

Right. It's also to speak to him in his situation, he said that they're trying to lower the standards. They're saying that because occasionally guys will die or get severely injured in training, that they're trying to make it more easy. That's right. And he's like, That's terrifying. The last thing you want is someone who can't quite make it on your team.

[01:08:17]

Yeah, that's right. And we're lowering the standards and expectations. I mean, this is the trauma generation, right? We've told them over and over, You can't handle very much. Don't worry, I'm going to write you in. They They have these things in schools called anytime passes, where if a kid's feeling a little anxious, they'll get a pass from the school counselor and they're allowed to leave class anytime they're feeling anxious. Well, how's a kid going to sit through anything if they've been given this pass to leave class, any class they don't like? Right.

[01:08:48]

I would use that constantly.

[01:08:50]

Anybody would. And teachers tell me it's getting abused like crazy. Of course. They're not keeping the standards for kids high. And you know what? Kids who've gone through hard things, and there are those kids, they need high standards, they need expectations, and they need to be told, You can do it. There's this one woman I talked to. She was raising three kids out of foster care with her wife, okay? And these kids had gone through horrible traumatic experiences. I mean, so bad, so abused by their birth parents that the detective who took them from their home cried on the stand talking about what they had lived through. And she said to me, My kids, I therapists who are dealing with them. They are in a lot of serious there. They've been through a lot. And I can't... One of the hardest things in my life is that I have to send them to public school where teachers and counselors are constantly playing amateur therapist, asking my kids to open up about their trauma. I'm trying to get them with actual professionals that I have picked to get through the day and not think about the hard things they went through.

[01:09:55]

And all these teachers are just asking them about their trauma all day long. It's not helping.

[01:10:03]

That's a very specific case, though, right?

[01:10:06]

Well, yeah, but I guess the point is it doesn't help the kids who've lived through serious trauma, and it doesn't help the kids who are just fine. So who are we helping?

[01:10:14]

So is the problem that these people that are teachers, they're well-intended, they just don't understand that dwelling on this and talking about it constantly is not beneficial? Yes. And in fact, it would just be more beneficial to be friendly to that kid and kind and offer encouragement. That's right. Give them activities and give them encouragement and support.

[01:10:33]

That's right. Most people who work with kids care about kids. I have that prejudice. I assume, and I think it's true, that most people who work with kids want to do what's best for kids. Sometimes they do things that aren't best for kids. And them focus on their feelings all the time is not best for kids. That's the way to make you more emotionally dysregulated.

[01:10:52]

This is going to be very difficult for people to hear that are very sensitive and very concerned about their children. Their strategy has always been to move it in this general direction. Also, people that are experiencing a lot of anxiety and depression themselves who are raising children, I think they become accustomed to talking about it and dwelling on it.

[01:11:17]

That's right. And in fact, some of the most effective ways to treat childhood anxiety is by treating the parents.

[01:11:23]

Oh, boy.

[01:11:24]

Parents are a huge source of anxiety for kids.

[01:11:28]

What's the primary source of anxiety that comes from parents?

[01:11:32]

Worry over everything. Teaching kids they have to be afraid of everything, that they can never do anything without the parents supervision. They could never go anywhere where their parents won't see them because they could be abducted or hurt or abused, calling the teacher and saying, My daughter was bullied because someone said something mean to her. The child gets the message, I can't handle something mean said to me. I will fall apart. That's what my mom's saying. She's so scared, I'm going to fall apart. She's calling my teacher.

[01:11:59]

Yeah. There's also the opposite of that, too, where if you grow up with a parent that's very weak, you despise that and you become strong because of that. I have a friend whose mom was a severe alcoholic, and because of that, he became very disciplined because he realized if you let something like that control your life, he saw what happened to his mother, and he's like, That's never happening to me. Wow.

[01:12:28]

And that's a really strong person as a result. And part of his strength, which I'm sure, is having that real life experience, which was hard, and it was painful. And it taught him a lesson that no teacher could give him, which is that you need discipline in life.

[01:12:44]

Right. But It's very difficult to learn from a bad example sometimes, especially if your parents are constantly worrying and constantly negative about things. Right.

[01:12:52]

But you know what we do? We let kids try. We give them freedom from our oversight. You know what they do in Japan? In Japanese preschools, they have these little areas. They're designed to have areas for kids where the teachers can't see so that they work out their own problems. Remember we used to say to kids, Work it out. Now the teachers get involved in every squabble. They think it's their job to go in there and give kids tips on how to make friends and get involved. We never tell kids, Look, work it out.

[01:13:23]

Yeah.

[01:13:23]

And you know what they learn from working it out? I can. I don't need my mom calling my boss, as a lot of this generation's parents are doing. I'll handle it. I can. I've been doing it since preschool.

[01:13:38]

What has the reaction to this book been? Have you had some negative reactions? Have you had anybody that wants to debate you on this?

[01:13:45]

It's a good question. Overwhelmingly, it's actually been surprisingly positive, but you want to know the truth? The dads especially love the book. Really? The dads will be like, Can you give this to my wife? I mean, sometimes they'll say that to me because I think the biggest change in the last generation in parenting, aside from the role of therapy taking over, and I think therapeutic parenting take it over, everybody's trying to be a mental health expert with their kids. But I think the biggest change was dads. Dad stopped, I think, being a a backstop and saying, he's fine, he'll handle it. I did it, he can do it. Or I did it, she can do it. She's fine, shake it off. Go back to keep playing soccer, whatever it is. They stopped doing that in part because they didn't feel like we were told. I mean, in general, we've all been told, right? The mental health experts tell you how to talk to your children. They tell you what your child can handle. They pretend they're experts on the brain. When the truth is, and I've interviewed a lot of neurobiologists and academic psychologists and psychiatrists, and they will tell you, We know very little about the brain.

[01:14:54]

And a lot of these therapists don't know anything about the brain. We certainly don't know much about emotion in the brain, right? And so the idea that we need brain science in order to raise our kids is just not true, and it's not helpful. It's undercutting parents' confidence. Parents need to trust themselves. We've been raising good kids for a long time.

[01:15:16]

Are there any studies about the cultures or the civilizations, whatever countries that have the most mentally healthy people?

[01:15:27]

Well, that's a good question. So I interviewed one who runs the Georgetown Emotions Lab, and she's a cultural psychologist.

[01:15:35]

The Emotions Lab.

[01:15:35]

It was actually really neat. I went into her lab and we did these. She showed me these tests she does with subjects behind a one-way mirror, and she hooks them up to electrodes. She looks at, her name is Julia Czensova-Dutton. She's amazing. She looks at Russia, Japan, America, and other countries, especially in the West. I guess you want to look at like and compare like to like. So similar Western cultures, I guess Asian, but similar levels of development and stress, a certain stress. And one of the things she noticed in her research was that American kids tended to exaggerate dangers. So when they listed things they were afraid of or things that scared them, they would say, Stranger looking at me funny, things that weren't actual dangers. But teenagers teachers from other countries, Russia, Japan, they tended to be able to calibrate what was an actual danger much better. And that's what we're seeing on campus. We're seeing these kids having nervous breakdowns because someone dumped them or because a teacher gave them a bad Yeah. Because they couldn't hand her a paper in on time.

[01:16:48]

One of the things that drives me the most nuts about universities is this term microaggressions. Right. Which is so crazy. It's like looking for things to be bigger than they are, taking a very small thing, whether it's someone rolling their eyes at you or saying something that might be insensitive and calling that insensitive thing a microaggression.

[01:17:12]

That's right. And it's exactly right. And one of the things I looked at was, are we turning these kids into emotional hypochondriacs? What I mean is, I interviewed a world expert, this man, Arthur Barsky, at Harvard Medical School on hypocondriasis, being a hypochondriac, what they now call it illness, anxiety disorder, or somatic symptom disorder. And what is it? So it turns out what it is, is people who put hyper focus on the normal pains we all feel. They're not faking it. They're just attending to the normal pain and increasing their pain by doing that. And people who turn their pain into an organizing principle of life, of their whole lives, they have a hard time overcoming it. It becomes their identity. It becomes their identity. And that's what kids are doing today about their emotional pain. Oh, I have social anxiety. I had trauma for my breakup. You don't have trauma from your breakup, okay? You had a breakup, and it's painful. But using these psychiatric terms-Trauma. It's not helping. It's not. It's exaggerating the pain, and it's making that pain feel worse. And I'm not minimizing these kids pain. They are in real pain, and they're making it worse.

[01:18:25]

I would be really fascinated to see you have a conversation with someone who is a therapist who engages in this, who thinks it's beneficial?

[01:18:34]

I'd be happy to. I would love to. I would like to see... Look, there are therapists that I've met who I would take my own kids to, who I've very impressed by what they have to say and what they've done. But the therapists who claim that everyone needs to talk about their problems, well, no, they don't. That's not true. I interviewed a lot of great therapists who tell me that a lot of people who have experienced terrible trauma, they do better by not talking about it. They're therapists who deal with, and I'm talking about people who work with convex, people who have unspeakable childhood abuse, actually are very helped by acknowledging, I know you went through some hard stuff. Let's talk about what you're doing now. It turns out to be better for some people. So this endless rehashing of your pain, this myth that you can only be helped by talking about your pain, it's just not true. There's no evidence behind it. And in fact, there's these crazy studies studies that burn victims, people who have experienced all kinds of first responders, breast cancer survivors have been made to feel worse by talking about it, by being in therapy.

[01:19:43]

They had control groups. They've done these studies where burn victims, one portion of them went to group therapy, the other portion didn't. And the ones who didn't go to therapy ended up better with less symptoms after nine months, I think it was.

[01:19:59]

And why do you think that is?

[01:20:01]

Because they did other things that are healing, too, like spend more time with family, like get involved in work, like pick up a phone and call a friend you haven't seen in a while.

[01:20:11]

Find a natural way to mitigate that.

[01:20:13]

Exercise is amazing. Study after study has shown that exercise is amazing. You know what it doesn't have? All these bad side effects, right? Of loss of sex drive like SSRIs have, right? We know that the antidepressants come with all these horrible side effects, especially for adolescents, like the risk of suicide and other things. You know what doesn't have that?

[01:20:35]

Exercise.

[01:20:37]

I'm not saying don't get help. And if you really need it, get the medicine and get the therapy. What I'm saying is if you don't really need it, gosh, there's a lot of ways to feel better, and we seem to have forgotten about those.

[01:20:49]

Is there a chart or graph that shows the amount of therapy that was given to children over the years, now versus the past?

[01:20:59]

So we know that it's gone way up. I don't know if there's a chart, but I know that they say roughly 40% of the rising generation has had therapy. That's a lot. It's way more than any prior generation. 42% of them have a mental health diagnosis.

[01:21:15]

That's a lot. 42% of kids have a mental health diagnosis? Yeah.

[01:21:19]

Do you know that- 42? There was just a news article saying that 86% of them think they have menu anxiety.

[01:21:24]

Menu anxiety?

[01:21:26]

That's ordering from a menu in a restaurant. What? They have a friend order for them.

[01:21:30]

Oh, my God.

[01:21:31]

Yeah. I mean, these are kids who think of themselves as unwell.

[01:21:37]

Menu anxiety? Really?

[01:21:39]

That's a thing? I mean, climate anxiety, summer anxiety. When your parents move, dislocation depression.

[01:21:49]

They call it- Summer anxiety?

[01:21:51]

Summer anxiety.

[01:21:52]

Here it is, 42% of Gen Z diagnosed with a mental health condition. Jeez, Louise.

[01:21:57]

That's a lot.

[01:21:59]

That's crazy. Right. But that's what my question would be, what is that internationally? When you're dealing with other countries- Oh, it's much better internationally.

[01:22:10]

There's no question. We have the most anxious and most depressed teens and adolescents.

[01:22:18]

And what caused that? Is that the rise of this industry, the rise of the therapy industry? Is it something that is in the zeitgeist where people in this culture gravitate towards that thinking that therapy and talking it through is very important? What is it?

[01:22:40]

I think we're not giving them a healthy life. And that includes... It's like, remember they used to give us what's sugar cereals. They used to say there'd be a bowl of sugar cereal, and there'd be like eggs and toast, and orange juice, and they would say, frostaflakes, part of your nutritious breakfast. And we knew it was bad for us, but we had these other healthy things around us.

[01:22:58]

I don't think we knew it was bad for us when I was a kid. Frosted Flakes? I never thought it was bad for you. Really? We didn't know sugar was bad for you.

[01:23:04]

Well, in my- We thought it gave you cavities.

[01:23:07]

That was the only thing anybody worried about.

[01:23:09]

But kids weren't allowed, at least in my house, we weren't allowed to have sugar.

[01:23:13]

I'm a little older than you. I'm 10 years older than you. Okay.

[01:23:15]

So we weren't allowed to have sugar cereal, and the best thing we ever got was Honeynut Churios. That was like a miracle. When that came in, it was so exciting.

[01:23:23]

We used to put sugar on our Frosted Flakes. You were allowed to have sugar and put sugar on everything. I love that. Yeah. In my generation, people ate sugar all the time, and there was no fear. It was just brush your teeth. I know. It's psychotic. That's amazing. But obviously, you know the story behind that. That was all because of the sugar industry, bribing scientists to pass the blame on saturated fat. I didn't know that. Yeah, because sugar was causing heart disease. It was causing all sorts of problems that people were having. It was causing obesity. And the The sugar industry bribed some scientists in the 1960s to pass the blame onto saturated fat. And that's where margarine came from and all the other stupid shit. It's terrible for you. Seed oils, all these different things. Canola oil, the people thought was actually better for you. It's not. It's not better for you at all. Your body doesn't even know how to digest that shit.

[01:24:20]

Right. So we've given kids worse diet over the years. We've given them- Processed foods. Yeah, we've given them less exercise. We've given them less connection to family, people, relational stability, having this set of friends or relatives who are cousins around you, grandparents who love you, unconditionally over your life. Kids don't have that anymore. They don't have the neighborhood. And they don't have space from mom monitoring them, or another adult, she's hired to monitor them, or the recess monitor, or my kids have bus monitors. They have monitors everywhere. And monitoring is the same as stress for kids. A wonderful academic psychologist, Peter gray, told me this, that when they want to introduce stress to a subject, they introduce monitoring because it's the same thing.

[01:25:13]

Really? So if they have a subject and then they're going through a test, they have someone stand over and watch, that introduces anxiety?

[01:25:20]

That will introduce stress. Yeah, yeah. And that's the condition we're raising kids in. We're going to track you on your phone, even in college. Oh, How is your trip to the right aid? I can see on my phone. We're doing that.

[01:25:35]

Kids are doing it to each other.

[01:25:37]

Kids are doing it to each other.

[01:25:38]

My daughters, all our friends know where everyone is on SnapMat.

[01:25:43]

It's not good for them. They don't have freedom to just be. So I think we're giving all kinds of things. We're making their lives less healthy. And then we just pour in the mental health resources. Oh, we're going to keep your life unhealthy, but we're going to pour in SSRIs, antidepressants. We're just going to pour in therapy. Well, that doesn't remediate.

[01:26:03]

Have you had anybody push back on this? You said the response has been overwhelmingly positive, but what has the negative response been?

[01:26:12]

I think that some parents feel, it seems to be mostly moms, but some of them feel insecure, like, well, you don't know my kid really had sensory deprivation issues, so I really did need to see that therapist. But I don't know the situation. I mean, I think in general, parents know their own kids, right? And if they have tried other things. The problem is not parents seeking out help. The problem is it's when it's the first resort. The problem is not that parents ever allow their kid to get a diagnosis. The problem is that some parents are going diagnosis shopping because sometimes a neuropsychologist will say, your kids, sorry, they're within normal range, and the parents will keep going. And they're doing it because they don't have... Sometimes they're unwilling to be an authority in their home, maybe because they feel that that's traumatizing. They're unwilling to impose any discipline. The kid is disordered. The kid has a lot of tech. Then, lo and behold, he can't concentrate in school, and the teacher has a problem with him. Well, I talked to parents where they said, One year, my teacher thought my kid had ADHD, and the next year, they didn't.

[01:27:28]

Why would that be? And why is the teacher diagnosing the kid?

[01:27:32]

Yeah. Are they qualified?

[01:27:34]

Are they qualified? Well, they're a little conflicted, right? Yeah. Because they have an interest in getting you bolted to your seat. Right. They don't care about the long-term effects of... Or they might not We're aware of them. The long term effects of, or they might not be aware of them, the long term effects of strotera, cancerida, Ritalin.

[01:28:01]

Yeah. The fact that you might need to take more and more of it over time to get the same effects. The withdrawal for some of these things, Adderall, people have told me it's brutal. Yeah, it's brutal. Well, it's amphetamines. They're highly addictive, and we're giving them out like candy. Like candy. That's the problem. It's the light candy part. There was a recent study that said 39 million... What is the number of prescriptions per year of Adderall. It's something bonkers when you really know what Adderall is. Essentially this is like what they were doing in the 1940s with crystal meth in Germany. They were giving it to soldiers. They were giving it to people. They're giving them methamfetamines because methamfetamines make you more alert, makes you more hyper-focused, makes you more productive, makes you more willing to engage in things. And it's an unnatural stimulant that you're adding to someone's mind and you're getting a result and you perceive those results to be positive because they fit along with what we're looking for in terms of outcomes. But You're not thinking of a long term consequences of ramping up someone on fucking amfetamines all day long.

[01:29:09]

What's the number? Even worse. 41.4 million Adderall prescriptions Wow. We're dispensed in the US in 2021, up more than 10 % for 2020, according to IQVIA, a health research firm. What's happening? Getting a diagnosis of attention deficit, hyperactivity disorder or ADHD, which can be treated by Adderall and other stimulants got significantly easier during the pandemic. A wave of telemedicine startups hit TikTok and Instagram with advertisements suggesting that people look into ADHD medication if they felt distracted. By the way, that would have been me. If this shit was around when I was a kid, I'd never paid attention in school, and I would have probably thought that I had a disease. Some startups diagnose people with ADHD and prescribe stimulants after 30 minutes video calls entirely remotely and much faster than a typical diagnosis from an in-person psychiatrist, the Wall Street Journal reports. Yes, but the trouble with such rapid diagnosis is that it can be difficult to tell whether ADHD is actually the problem. Anxiety can present as ADHD, and depression can present as ADHD. As Sanford Newmark said, Sanford Newmark, a professor, University of California, San Francisco Medical School. Of course. Look, if you give someone stimulants, they're going to feel better.

[01:30:18]

That's why people do coke. It makes you feel better. And what if you start them on it when they're four or five? And guess what? There are a lot of jobs where ADHD might not harm them. In other words, it might even be an asset.

[01:30:34]

It's a superpower. I think it can be. There's an amazing piece in the Wall Street Journal by a guy who argued that in the military, in venture capital, where you have to have... You're constantly checking other companies or constantly looking into, being able to someone who's constantly shifting their focus turned out to be an asset. Unmedicated. Well, I think that the idea is that it came from Hunter-gatherer tribes. Oh, interesting. Yeah. See if you could find that, that ADHD, the trait emanated from Hunter Gatherers.

[01:31:04]

The thing is, a lot of ADHD people, if they find a thing that they really enjoy, they get very focused on it. Right. Which is what was the thing with me. Exactly. I thought that because I couldn't pay attention in school, that I was going to be a loser. A recent review of the evidence by child and adolescent psychiatrist, Annie Swamipole, how do you say that? I don't know. And colleagues made the case for the latter. They argue that ADHD traits likely evolved in early human environments that rewarded exploration, novelty seeking, and movement such as nomadic and migrating communities. Wow. Yeah, it's probably how you stayed alive. If you stayed alive and if you were strapped down doing something really fucking boring, that seems completely unnatural, which is part of the problem with children in the first place. We're subjecting them to eight hours a day of doing something you don't want to do because they say it's for your mental development. And what they're essentially doing is teaching you how to do something that you fucking hate so that you will be able to do that for the rest of your life. Right. And you know what they could do with those kids?

[01:32:14]

Give them longer recess. They could. They also could tell them that there's other things you could do for a living if you could find the thing that you actually enjoy and focus on that.

[01:32:26]

And that was the thing that I didn't know until I started doing things outside of school.

[01:32:31]

I didn't know that there was things that I could Excel at because I actually enjoyed them. And I would focus on those things and get very good at them. And I didn't know that that was a part of me. I had never been told that. Everybody was just like, If you can't do this, you are going to be a loser. If you can't sit and pay attention to this boring ass teacher, teach this boring ass thing that they have no emotional investment in whatsoever. It was never true. That's the thing. You were incredibly successful despite what they said. But Imagine if they had said to you, actually, there's something wrong with your brain.

[01:33:11]

It's called ADHD. You need a pill so you can be like everybody else. Would you have had the same motivation to go keep looking for what you were good at and what you were passionate about? No, I probably wouldn't have. I probably would I would have been medicated.

[01:33:28]

If I had the wrong parents at the wrong time in history, I probably would have been medicated. Who knows I probably would have some fucking horrible job where I couldn't wait to get to my pharmacy so I could refill my prescription because I'm running low, and I talk the doctor into ramping up my Adderall. We're putting seven-year-olds on Lexapro.

[01:33:48]

That's crazy. That is so crazy.

[01:33:51]

Fda just approved it for seven-year-olds.

[01:33:52]

These are kids who are going to have their sex drive deleted before they ever have a sex drive. When they reach the teenagers, because kids do not go off them, they put them on antidepressants and they put them on more, they'll never have had a sex drive. They won't even know what they're missing. That's the problem. The problem is not, and I'm not saying no medication for anyone ever. What I'm saying is when you get in there and change a kid, you put a kid in an emotional snow suit, not only will they never have the feeling, I overcame that on my own. I thought I had HD, but I'm so excited about this other thing I got into.

[01:34:34]

Not family, well, they'll never know they could get through a breakup without a pill because they've never done it. Isn't that the problem with the diagnosis of depression in the first place? Because one of the things to never ask is, how's your life? It's always you have depression, you have a clinical issue. You have a disease. You have a thing called depression. It's not your fault. It's not you have a terrible life.

[01:34:59]

Your job sucks, your apartment sucks, your neighborhood sucks, your friends suck, your family sucks. You don't have any joy. That's exactly right. Which will make you depressed. Right. And by the way, of course, the best psychologist would point out those things. And here's the most important. If you start such a person on an SSRI, meaning they're feeling depressed because of their circumstances, they might be less likely to make the important change they could make because it takes an acute problem and it turns it into a chronic one.

[01:35:30]

But it's also very profitable, and that's the problem. That's the really difficult thing in getting these out of our lives. And despite Despite the fact that as time goes on, we find out that the research on the efficacy of SSRIs is dubious at best.

[01:35:45]

It's not good. It depresses all emotions. So does it treat depression? I don't know. It seems to depress all kinds of things, maybe also depending on the drug, some depress anxiety, but they depress everything.

[01:35:58]

But I do have to say that I have had friends that were suicidal that got on SSRIs and then because they felt better, improved their life and then weaned off of those drugs.

[01:36:09]

I think that there's a place for these drugs. Absolutely. And by the way, trying to get off of them, if you can, is a good program. In other words, not saying, I'm going to be on it forever. But in a kid, they won't even know what life was like, what it was supposed to be like without it. They'll never know what they could handle. And so they will show up for college and say, I've had trauma because of a breakup.

[01:36:37]

I have PTSD because of my breakup.

[01:36:40]

And they'll believe it. They won't know any better because they never went through that heartache on their own.

[01:36:46]

And psychiatists are incentivized to prescribe these things. Yeah, but who else is prescribing them?

[01:36:51]

Regular physicians who aren't experts in these drugs.

[01:36:53]

So regular prescriptions, regular physicians are allowed to prescribe?

[01:36:56]

Pediatricians are a huge source of SSRI prescription. And they're not even psychiatrists? No. So it's very easy.

[01:37:02]

According to psychiatrists I spoke to, they feel that pediatricians pediatricians are giving out these drugs way, way too easily. That seems crazy. So a pediatrician has to look at legitimate problems, all sorts of issues that a child might have medically. And then on top of that, psychiatric disorders and then prescribe medication for those psychiatric disorders?

[01:37:22]

Pediatricians are usually the ones who give you the ADHD medication.

[01:37:25]

That seems insane. Is that insane? I think it is. Am I being judgmental?

[01:37:30]

No, I think it is. That seems like malpractice. Because they're doing it more easily than they should. I think too many of them are not appreciating. I'm going to go in there and mess with this kid, change this kid. Before I do it, I better make sure this is urgent. And there's nothing else we can do to improve the life, just like you said, improve the life and see if we can get there without it.

[01:37:56]

And then there's also the problem the parents want to fix. And if the parents believe the narrative that these medications are beneficial and they believe that this is what this stuff is for, and that this pediatrician wouldn't be prescribing this if they didn't know what they were doing. We went to an expert. The expert has an opinion. That's right.

[01:38:17]

Let's listen to the expert. Let's get little Johnny on pills. Now little Johnny is doing better. He just sits in front of the TV with a fucking blank stare on his face. Right. Parents aren't exercising their authority, and they're not trusting themselves. They're feeling like, Oh, this is above my pay grade. The second the kid isn't what the teacher wants, they're sure they need an expert involved, and they never asked their own parents who raised kids to adulthood. My take is, if you want to talk about a parenting expert, to me, a parenting expert is someone who raised successful people to adulthood, meaning people who are good, stable, adults who are productive, who can be dependent on by others.

[01:38:59]

Right, but you might not have access to those. Why? I didn't have access to those when I was a child. I didn't have access to people that had raised successful stable people. I see, when you were a child. Yeah, I didn't. Even Look, I know a lot of people today that had terrible parents, and they had terrible grandparents, and they never had an example of someone who raised good children. They had the occasional child that was exceptional, that made its way out of that fucked up maze, and it usually became hyper successful. But the other siblings oftentimes are a mess. Sometimes the parents want to take credit for the hyper successful sibling.

[01:39:38]

Like, Oh, I showed you the way. No, you didn't do shit. That kid figured it out on their own without having anybody as a positive role model or example. But I think that if they were successful, there were certain good things in their life, meaning they weren't on the couch.

[01:39:55]

They weren't the 54% of Gen Z who doesn't want to live with anyone but mom.

[01:40:01]

These are 18 to 25-year-olds. That's wild. Sorry. 54% of them are living with parents. Well, that's that old expression, right? The healthy bird leaves the nest. Right. Yeah. Right. There was something healthy. There was some healthy message or example that at least made the kid think, I can.

[01:40:17]

And the kids today are thinking, I can't. I need to be with mom and dad, even at 18 to 25. Yeah, because it offers you comfort.

[01:40:26]

Right. Yeah. But then there's other cultures where people are happy and the family is a very tight unit and people don't leave the house until they're married. Right. That's not our culture. So in those cultures, I think it's a different situation and it is healthier, meaning they have their own ways of doing things, and they get a job, and they don't leave the home until they're married. And that is the way they define growing up. But in this culture, we have always defined growing up is leaving your parents home, getting some job, supporting yourself in some way, making strong, enduring relationships with others, starting a family.

[01:41:03]

We have a vision in this culture, and we are not producing that. Which one's right? Which culture is correct, though? Is the culture that enforces family and they have this very tight bond, and they don't leave until they're establishing their own family, and then that family stays in connection with the other family?

[01:41:22]

Is that the way to do it, or is the way we do it? Will we cast them out? I tend to think that they have a version of adulthood in their culture. It's just defined differently. Those are people can rely on. They do become adults in other cultures, depends on what you're talking about. But in cultures, say India, where families live in the same home with extended family, and as soon as you marry, you go and live with the mom and dad, they know how to do that so that the young people who are raising the family are absolutely dependable, independent adults, right? They're not sitting home playing Xbox while they're living with their parents, right? That's the difference. That's the difference. It's a healthy It's different from ours, but it is healthy, and you can rely on those people. They are raising children. They are being good neighbors. We've got a generation who's sitting at home and doesn't want to show up for work because they think they have mental health issues.

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I have to attend to my mental health. I can't. Trump was just elected.

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I need a mental health day. Yeah. Emotionally fragile. Yeah. It's a problem, right? Yeah. What's going on?

[01:42:32]

It doesn't matter who's President. Get to work. Yeah. Coddling. Yeah. What a complicated thing. And it's so complicated if you're a parent, if you're dealing with this medical establishment that's so quick to prescribe drugs, and you're dealing with this world where therapy is so ubiquitous, and you're dealing with this world where people think that the way to handle things is to constantly discuss all these small problems and so that people can be heard We want people to be heard. I don't know if you've ever seen, there's a hilarious video of this socialist meeting, and they're calling each other Comrade. Have you seen this video? No. It's a wonderful video because one person says, Could everyone please stop making as much noise because I'm easily distracted? I forget the term that they use. And then Could you guys please do that? Just recognize that there's others around us that are... This is it. Listen to this. This is amazing. When you're in a socialism, thank you so much. A quick point of privilege, quick point of personal privilege. Guys, first of all, James Jackson, Sacramento, he/him. I just wanted to say, can we please keep the chatter to a minimum?

[01:43:40]

I'm one of the people who's very, very prone to sensory overload. There's a lot of whispering and chatter going on. It's making it very difficult for me to focus. Please, can we just... I know we're all fresh and ready to go, but can we please just keep the chatter to a minimum.

[01:43:58]

It's affecting my ability to focus.

[01:44:01]

Thank you. Thank you, comrade. Right. Comrade.

[01:44:03]

Point of personal privilege.

[01:44:05]

Yes. Please do not use gendered language to address everyone. It goes on further. That's just a clip of it. But that's what you're dealing with. Right. And if you're going to a university and this is a part of the environment, this is the culture that you are existing in, it can't help but have some an effect on you, especially if you're young and impressionable and naive and you don't understand these people are mentally ill. That is a mentally crippled person. Point of privilege. Good luck. Good luck out there in the world, you fuck. Good luck. But I'll tell you this. All these things, there are things to be negative about or pessimistic about in society, not this. Because you know what? Honestly, parents have an absolute ability to turn this around.

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We don't need to let our kids down this way and tell them, You need to silence an entire room because of your sensory discomfort. We're going to focus on your sensory issues, and we're going to tell an entire room of people to be quiet for you. No. This thing happened to me that I thought... I was on a plane, and I was seated behind this family of four. There were two little girls, and one starts to scream, and I mean, scream like it was painful to listen to. And I hear the father tell her, Honey, what's wrong? What did your sister do? And she's screaming, okay? It is so loud. It's so late at night. And, Okay, well, Let me just see what I can do. All right. Well, don't be upset. He never once said to her, You know there are other people on this plane? And when I ask people from other countries, I talk to the emotions expert who does cross-cultural research. I said, What would they say in other countries about And she said to me, They would say that's bananas. They would not believe in Japan that you do not tell your kid, You know there are other people on this plane, not just you.

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We're part of a society. We have to care about others. The world isn't just you and your feelings. And that's a message parents can absolutely give to kids. They don't have to say, Oh, let me attend to your every discomfort. They can say, I know you're feeling a little discomfort. We're in a with a lot of other people. We need to think about them. But also you're dealing with emotionally challenged parents. Parents could relay that message to children and tell them, Hey, you're not the only person on this plane, and you are ruining this flight.

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In this experience for a lot of people that are trying to sleep and trying to relax. You are causing damage. You're causing a problem. These parents are fucked up, too. You're not going to just fix them by having them fix their kid, which is part of the problem, is that there's no real test to see if you're emotionally stable enough to have children. You just have children. I don't think those parents are necessarily emotionally unstable. I tend to think they've just got it all wrong. They think the old-school parenting is unloving and cruel, and the most gentle parenting will produce the most gentle children.

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It's not true. But they think, if I always ask a child, How are you feeling? And attend her ever feeling, I'm going to stronger, happier, kinder kids. No, you're not. You're going to raise a child who thinks she can scream or thinks she can march into a room and silence the entire room based on her preference. They aren't liberated to trust their own instincts and what they have seen work for others. You know what? The examples are all around you if you look. There are people who are good people, and you can ask them... By the way, immigrants, because they don't go for this nonsense, usually. You can ask them, What What was it like in the old country? Or what was it like where you came from? What are you doing? They call this... Have you ever seen this? The Latino paradox? They call this in the psychology. Why are Latinos? Why do they have better mental health when they come to this country, when they are immigrants, the more they assimilate and the more they acculturate to American culture, the worse their mental health gets. Why? And part of the reason is they have social stability in their relationals.

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They are surrounded by extended family, which also means people They're saying the wrong things to them. They're saying insulting things. They're making inappropriate jokes. They're giving them foods mom doesn't approve of, and they're surviving it all, and they know they can. The reality of hard work is inescapable. That's right.

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They're not afraid of authority. Parents are in charge.

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They will give their kids chores and hard work. They will teach them, You know what? Mom's working two jobs. I'm not going to bother her with my trivial problem. But that liberates the kid to realize, Hey, my problem is trivial. There are bigger problems. We're doing the opposite in this country. We're telling kids, The small problem you have is so big. I'm going to stop everything to focus on it. But if you're dealing with these parents that are emotionally challenged themselves, how are you going to fix them?

[01:49:11]

Because it's not just the child. It's not just them raising the child in a certain way. It's them realizing the harm that they're doing to their child and the fact that their own view of the world is fucked up.

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Well, I mean, that's why I wrote the book, right? I'm trying to get the message out that actually the best psychological research, and there is good psychological research, shows that the things we're doing with kids are not helping. They're counterproductive. And there's a lot of research that shows that, that the old way of doing things, which is, don't take a pill if you don't need it. Don't go to a therapist if you don't need it. You have a problem, talk to a friend, talk to an aunt, talk to someone who loves you and really cares how you turn out. You can go to a religious priest, But go to a therapist if you really need it. But don't do it casually. I mean, I talked to moms who did it because a pet died, or they did it prophylactically before the kids had any problems. They said, I wanted my teenager to know she had someone who was on retainer to talk to in case she had a problem, not having any sense that that therapist could also introduce worries.

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Then there's also probably the issue of the child going to the therapist and enjoying the fact that the entire conversation revolves around them.

[01:50:35]

Sure, of course, wouldn't you? And they get to rise above it all. They get to evaluate the job the parents are doing. They get to casually pass judgment on whether the parents are doing... They might not have any kids themselves, but they have no problem passing judgment on the job that the parents doing to the child. And by the way, alienation, and I interviewed an expert in parental alienation who is a psychologist, and Coleman was his last name, I think first name, Jules Colman. Or no, sorry. Colman, first name was... I'm blanking on his first name. But he said to me, one of the things he said to me was that alienation, very often, we're seeing very high rates of parental alienation in this generation.

[01:51:19]

Very Often the story is the therapist.

[01:51:21]

The therapist made the relationship with the parents worse. This is a heavy book. Joshua Coleman.

[01:51:26]

That was his name.

[01:51:28]

Sorry. This is a heavy book. I hope not. I hope it's a happy book. No, it's not.

[01:51:34]

I think it is. I think it is. Literally, you're saying bad therapy, why the kids aren't growing up. That's not good. You think it's good in that you're offering solutions and you're explaining the problem.

[01:51:46]

The solution is something we can all do. It's less intervention. It's telling parents, you don't need them. Your kids don't need them. They never needed them. It's telling parents, trust yourselves. If you don't think that diagnosis it sounds right for your kid, don't go with it, because you might just convince a kid for the rest of his life that he's got a brain problem and a limitation when he might not have one. So if you don't think it sounds right, trust yourself. It should be the most liberating book in the world.

[01:52:19]

It's saying that you can trust your gut again. Have you talked to any parents that have gone down the road, the bad road that you describe, and then reverse course?

[01:52:29]

Sure. All the I talk to parents who say, I had my daughter in therapy for three years, and honestly, she was no happier at the end. I don't know why I did that. Really? Yeah, I hear that all the time.

[01:52:43]

And did they reverse course with positive results?

[01:52:45]

It depends on the individual case. The one I was thinking about, I don't know the answer, but I know that the three years of therapy didn't help. I talked to one wonderful cognitive behavioral therapist, Roger McFillin, who often tells people that their kids don't need therapy. Probably got a good business. It doesn't need more clients.

[01:53:05]

That's the problem, right?

[01:53:06]

You know what?

[01:53:07]

That's the problem, right? The truth is, they all have a good business.

[01:53:11]

It's just some of them have more integrity. And they'll say, You don't need it. You don't need this pill. You don't need this therapy. Right.

[01:53:20]

Did you ever watch that Netflix series, Pain killer, about the Sackler family? No. About the a opioid crisis. Right. No, I never watched it. But what's fascinating about it is, first of all, it's fascinating seeing how the regulatory bodies get captured by money and about how they just decided to make it normal and normalize this idea of prescribing opiates to people and having them on them all the time. But also that there were certain doctors that did have integrity, where the doctors who had integrity were like, What are you talking about? What are you saying? You're saying you want to prescribe heroine to people? And in the film, in the series, rather, they have these women who are hired, these very attractive women who were hired to go to these clinics and talk to these doctors. And push this stuff and try to get these doctors to start prescribing this. And they don't have any medical background. And one of them has this conversation with this ethical doctor. It's fascinating because you realize that there are those doctors. And if you get lucky, that will be your doctor. But if you get unlucky, you get that doctor, that 30-minute video call is going to give your fucking kid speed.

[01:54:32]

You know, I talked to this one psychiatrist who told me this story.

[01:54:36]

This guy had come to him, young man had come to him for years. And he was saying, I'm really paranoid. I'm really paranoid. I've got this about my girlfriend cheating on me. I know there's something wrong with me. I need medication. So this psychiatrist, who was a very good psychiatrist, he said, Let's talk a little bit about your life. Why are you so paranoid? And it It turned out that the guy, the girl, his girlfriend, had this very close male friend, and sometimes they would have sleepovers. Oh, Jesus. And the psychiatrist said, You're not paranoid.

[01:55:09]

He was like, No, no, no.

[01:55:12]

It's totally platonic. They've been friends for years. And he said, You're not paranoid, and it's not platonic. Yeah. Yeah, it's not. You're getting hosed, son. Right. That's what he told him.

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Yeah, you're not paranoid if That's what's actually happening. Right. Yeah.

[01:55:26]

Right. That's a funny story.

[01:55:27]

And sometimes people need to... A good...

[01:55:30]

By the way, a good mental health professional psychiatrist, whatever. That's a crazy story. Right. This is my platonic friend. We sleep over together. Yeah. Yeah.

[01:55:39]

And he was convinced there was something wrong with him. Wow. That he was having Trust Issues. That's what he thought. I'm sure he was getting gaslit.

[01:55:48]

She was probably saying it to him. Right. Gaslet is real. It's real. Yeah.

[01:55:52]

Boy, God. The journey of becoming a healthy human being is so fraught with peril.

[01:55:57]

It's so much difficulty.

[01:55:58]

It's so complicated. Well, I think we make it more complicated than it has to be. Don't you think it is? Just it is complicated? I think it is. Look, I'm scared for my kids like everybody else. Sure it is. I mean, especially in our current society with all the crazy influences. Yeah, but I know they've done these studies on human happiness.

[01:56:20]

People who love you and you love back over a lifetime, family, friends you keep for a long time, wow, That does a lot to help you be happy, surrounding your kids and giving them freedom to make friends. Maybe you don't like their... Maybe they're not your favorite friends, but realizing that they're entitled to have their own friends, trusting them to start a job or take a chance you wouldn't have picked for them. You have to let them figure some of this stuff out on your own. One of the things I did, so I changed a little while I was writing the book, and one of the things I did was my daughter was begging to walk home from the bus stop by herself, and she was little. She was nine, and I was scared. I don't even know if it's allowed in my state, but she really wanted to walk home from the bus stop. She had to cross two streets, and I led her. I let her because I was interviewing parent after parent parent who weren't letting their kids do things like that. And then they had 13-year-olds who didn't want to leave the house.

[01:57:28]

I was a latchkey kid. So when I was young, there was no supervision. You just left. When I was six years old, we just open the door and walk out of the house.

[01:57:39]

Younger than that. I mean, there was never a time where there was any supervision. Walking, by the way, things like walking to school are really good for kids. They learn to navigate their world.

[01:57:51]

It's really really healthy to have competency. And that's something you don't have to spend money on. That's the thing. All of these fixes, or really a lot of them, are just common sense. And they're things we used to give kids and we stopped because we became so obsessed with the idea that anything could be traumatizing. Well, we're also worried because the media is constantly depicting these stories of children getting kidnapped and killed and this and that and predators.

[01:58:18]

Sure. That's a real fear. Right. But you can't protect kids from every pain, right? We are so obsessed with... I've had parents call me about a bad...

[01:58:28]

Or I've heard teachers getting upset about bullying. And what was the bullying? Someone said something not nice to someone else. Now, I tell my kids to treat people kindly, of course. But I have to tell you something. If my kids came to me and said she said something mean to me, I would say, Work it out. It's not going to kill you. You'll live. Why? Because if I make my kids think, and Can I learned this from the process of writing the book, if I make them think that my job is to make sure they never feel any emotional distress ever, boy, that's a lifelong journey, and it's going to be a losing one. Yeah. Well, listen, Abigail, I really appreciate your courage. Oh, please.

[01:59:11]

I appreciate what you did with your first book and the way you handled all the stress and the way you handled all the blowback. You're a courageous person. Thank you. I think the things that talking about are very important. Oh, thanks. It's great to be here. I appreciate you. It's great to be here.

[01:59:30]

Thanks for inviting me back despite the trouble I caused last time. It didn't cause any trouble.

[01:59:36]

Okay, good. I mean, it was attempted trouble, but it didn't really work. I know. You succeeded.

[01:59:41]

It's important to talk about really important issues.

[01:59:45]

It is. And these are both very important issues. So your book, it's out right now. Bad Therapy. Go get it. Read it. I'm going to read it. I appreciate you very much. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. All right. Bye, everybody.

[01:59:59]

Bye.