That tricky parent-child-adult loop
Dear everyone, Lately, I have been spending lots of time on Twitter, following many fine minds as they think out loud and share fantastic ideas. Being relatively new there, I feel like a kid in a candy store: So much idea-candy to try. An hour passes, and I have since forgotten why I even logged in in the first place. Why? Letâs track back for a second. Youâve probably heard of this idea before. Our minds are home to three distinct voices: the parent the child and the adult. The concept comes from Transactional Analysis, a theory in psychotherapy that helps identify recurring patterns in human behaviour. So what do the parent, child, and adult voices say, and why does that matter? Hereâs a simplified explanation: Itâs driven by curiosity and desire. If it doesnât get, it complains. It might even break stuff. It doesnât know self-control. The parent reprimands and punishes. Itâs self-righteous, and can be condemning. Itâs got high expectations. âYou always do thisâŠâ âYou never listenâŠâ âHow could you be so ____?â You get the idea. It tends to demand too much self control. The adult voice is balanced and reasonable. It understands. Itâs how we might comfort a friend after theyâve made a mistake. âItâs okay, sh*t happens. Donât beat yourself up.â The adult gets it. It doesnât judge. All three voices work within us at different times, and triggered by situations. Personal examples: The child. It doesnât matter how many unread books sit in my Kindle library, the moment I see a big price drop in my wishlist, Iâm so tempted to buy it. They call it a âfelt concept.â Meaning, the child is really innocent - it just follows the feeling. Whenever I feel upset because I donât get something I really want, itâs often the child in me. The parent. Well, I am a parent, and I hate to admit this - my expectations can get the better of me, and frequently do. I almost instantly regret it but itâs like a pre-set reaction. The parent voice is a âtaught concept.â Sadly, many of us were taught this way as kids, and it may take years or decades to unlearn. The adult. Being reasonable is a learned concept. Isnât that encouraging? For me, during an upset, sometimes it just takes a few deep breaths and thinking out loud. By expressing the problem clearly, I find myself looking for a solution in a more reasonable way. We can learn to rely on the inner adult voice by invoking it when the other two are out of control. This is the part I want to emphasize on. Letâs say, you find yourself standing before the open fridge and thinking, I donât remember why I opened the door, but now that Iâm here, Iâll eat something. Thatâs probably the inner child whoâs often âhungry.â Instead, put a little sticky note in the fridge that says: âAdults only.â Suppose youâre spending too much time on social media. You donât realize when getting sucked in but at some point youâre going to notice it. Thatâs the time to say: âThe adult in me is here now. What would I rather be doing at this moment?â The adult within will gently point the way. No blaming, angry parent needed. Itâs not about self-control or resisting anything. Itâs just about becoming aware. When we sit down to eat, when we unconsciously grab the phone, when we enter the candy-store (or the amazon wishlist), it just takes becoming aware. We say hello to the inner adult and we become conscious of how the inner child wants to take over. Becoming aware gets easier as we ask for the adultâs help more and more. The more we do, we realize how much of our behaviour is just a set of unconscious programs triggered by situations. By becoming conscious we find it easier to get off the willpower-and-subsequent-guilt cycle. The power of consciousness starts to take care of it effortlessly. Try it today. Thank you for reading! If you found this helpful, please share it with a couple of friends. Feel free to say hello or follow me on Twitter :)
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