
How DBT Skills Can Help Your Family with Big Feelings with Shireen Rizvi and Jesse Finkelstein: Episode 214
The Peaceful Parenting Podcast
Helping a Dysregulated Child Step-by-Step
Jesse outlines distress-tolerance steps like ice-water grounding, validating, then moving to problem solving together.
You can listen wherever you get your podcasts, ORâ BRAND NEW: weâve included a fully edited transcript of our interview at the bottom of this post.
In this episode of The Peaceful Parenting Podcast, I speak with Shireen Rizvi, PhD and Jesse Finkelstein, PsyD, about their book Real Skills for Real Life: A DBT Guide to Navigating Stress, Emotions, and Relationships.
We discuss what Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) is, how it can help both ourselves and our kids with big feelings, and get into some of the skills it teaches including distress tolerance, check the facts, and mindfulness.
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We talk about:
* 6:00 What is DBT?
* 11:00 The importance of validation
* 13:00 How do parents manage their own big feelings?
* 16:00 How do you support a kid with big feelings, and where is the place for problem solving?
* 23:00 Managing the urge to fix things for our kids!
* 26:00 What is distress tolerance?
* 28:50 âCheck the factsâ is a foundational skill
* 34:00 Mindfulness is a foundation of DBT
* 36:45 How the skills taught through DBT are universal
Resources mentioned in this episode:
* Yoto Player-Screen Free Audio Book Player
* The Peaceful Parenting Membership
* Real Skills for Real Life: A DBT Guide to Navigating Stress, Emotions, and Relationships by Shireen Rizvi and Jesse Finkelstein
* Jesse Finkelsteinâs websites axiscbt and therahive
Connect with Sarah Rosensweet:
* YouTube
* Website
* Book a short consult or coaching session call
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Podcast transcript:
Sarah: Hey everyone. Welcome back to another episode of the Peaceful Parenting Podcast. Today we have two guests who co-authored a book called Real Skills for Real Life: A DBT Guide to Navigating Stress, Emotions, and Relationships.
And you may be wondering why weâre talking about that on a parenting podcast. This was a really great conversation with Shireen Rizvi and Jesse Finkelstein, the co-authors of the book, about all of the skills of DBT, which is a modality of therapy. We talked about the skills they teach in DBT and how we can apply them to parenting.
They talk about how emotional dysregulation is the cause of so much of the pain and suffering in our lives. And I think as a parent, you will recognize that either your own emotional dysregulation or your childâs is often where a lot of issues and conflict come from.
So what theyâve really provided in this bookâand given us a window into in this conversationâis how we can apply some of those skills toward helping ourselves and helping our children with big feelings, a.k.a. emotional dysregulation. It was a really wonderful conversation, and their book is wonderful too. Weâll put a link to it in the show notes and encourage you to check it out.
There are things you can listen to in this podcast today and then walk away and use right away. One note: youâll notice that a lot of what they talk about really overlaps with the things we teach and practice inside of Peaceful Parenting.
If this episode is helpful for you, please share it with a friend. Screenshot it and send it to someone who could use some more skill-building around big emotionsâwhether theyâre our own big emotions or our childâs. Sharing with a friend or word of mouth is a wonderful way for us to reach more people and more families and help them learn about peaceful parenting.
It is a slow process, but I really believe it is the way we change the world. Letâs meet Shireen and Jesse.
Hi, Jesse. Hi, Shireen. Welcome to the podcast.
Jesse: Thank you so much for having us.
Sarah: Yeah. Iâm so excited about your book, which I understand is out nowâReal Skills for Real Life: A DBT Guide to Navigating Stress, Emotions, and Relationships. First of all, I love the format of your book. Itâs super easy to read and easy to use. I already thought about tearing out the pages with the flow charts, which are such great referencesâreally helpful for anyone who has emotions. Basically anyone who has feelings.
Jesse: Oh, yes.
Sarah: Yeah. I thought they were great, and I think this is going to be a helpful conversation for parents. Youâve written from a DBT framework. Can you explain what DBT is and maybe how itâs different from CBT? A lot of people have heard more about cognitive behavior therapy than dialectical behavior therapy.
Shireen: Sure. I would first say that DBTâDialectical Behavior Therapyâis a form of cognitive behavioral therapy. So theyâre in the same category. Sometimes we hear therapists say, âI do DBT, but I donât do CBT,â and from my perspective, thatâs not really possible, because the essence of dialectical behavior therapy is CBT. CBT focuses on how our thoughts, behaviors, and emotions all go together, and how changing any one of those affects the others.
Thatâs really the core of DBTâthe foundation of CBT. But what happened was the person who developed DBT, Marsha Linehanâshe was actually my grad school advisor at the University of Washingtonâdeveloped this treatment because she was finding that standard CBT was not working as well as she wanted it to for a particular population. The group she was working with were women, primarily, who had significant problems with emotion regulation and were chronically suicidal or self-injuring.
With that group, she found they needed a lot more validationâvalidation that things were really rough, that it was hard to change what was going on, that they needed support and comfort. But if she leaned too much on validation, patients got frustrated that there wasnât enough change happening.
So what she added to standard CBT was first a focus on validation and acceptance, and then what she refers to as the dialectical piece: balancing between change and acceptance. The idea is: Youâre doing the best you canâand you need to do better.
Jesse: Mm-hmm.
Shireen: And even though DBT was developed for that very severe group that needed a lot of treatment, one of the aspects of DBT is skills trainingâteaching people skills to manage their emotions, regulate distress, engage interpersonally in a more effective way.
Those skills became so popular that people started using them with everyone they were treating, not just people who engaged in chronic suicidal behavior.
Sarah: Very cool. And I think the population youâre referring to is people who might be diagnosed with borderline personality disorder. I bring that up only because I work with parents, not kids, and parents report to me what their children are like. Iâve had many parents worry, âDo you think my child has borderline personality disorder?â because theyâve heard of it and associate it with extreme sensitivity and big feelings.
A lot of that is just typical of someone whoâs 13 or 14, right? Or of a sensitive childânot diagnosable or something youâd necessarily find in the DSM. Iâve heard it so many times. I say, âNo, I donât think your child has borderline personality disorder. I think theyâre just really sensitive and havenât learned how to manage their big feelings yet. And thatâs something you can help them with.â
With that similar level of emotional intensityâin a preteen or early teen whoâs still developing the brain structures that make self-regulation possibleâhow can we use DBT skills? What are a couple of ideas you might recommend when you have a 13-year-old who feels like life is ruined because the jeans they wanted to wear are soaking wet in the wash? And Iâm not making funâat 13, belonging is tied to how you look, what jeans youâre wearing, how your hair is. It feels very real.
So how might we use the skills you write about for that kind of situation?
Jesse: Well, Sarah, I actually think you just practiced one of the skills: validation. When someone feels like their day is ruined because of their jeans, often a parent will say, âGet over it. Itâs not a big deal.â And now, in addition to fear or anxiety, thereâs a layer of shame or resentment. So the emotion amplifies and becomes even harder to get out of.
Validation is a skill we talk about where you recognize the kernel of truthâhow this experience makes sense. âThe jeans youâre wearing are clearly important to you. This is about connection. I understand why you feel this way.â That simple act of communicating that someoneâs thoughts and feelings make sense can be very powerful.
Alongside thatâback to what Shireen was sayingâthere are two tracks. One is the skills you help your teen practice. The other is the skills you practice yourself to be effective. In that moment, your teen might be dysregulated. What is the parentâs emotion? Their urge? What skills can they practice to be effective?
Sarah: I love that you already went to the next question I was going to ask, which is: when that kid is screaming, âYou donât understand, I canât go to school because of the jeans,â what can parents do for themselves using the skills you describe?
Shireen: I often think of the oxygen-mask analogy: put on your own oxygen mask before helping others. That was certainly true for me when I had fussy infantsâhow do you manage that stress when you are already heightened?
What do you need to do to regulate yourself so you can be effective in the moment? Sometimes thatâs literally taking a time-outâleaving the room for a minute. The kid comes after you about the jeans, and you say, âHold on, I need a minute.â You sequester yourself in the bathroom. You do paced breathingâa DBT skill that helps regulate your nervous system. You do that for a minute, get centered, and then return to the situation.
If youâre not regulated and your child is dysregulated, youâll ping-pong off each other and it becomes messier and messier. But if you can regulate yourself and approach calmly, the whole interaction changes.
Sarah: Itâs so interesting because people whoâve been listening to my podcast or know my work will think, âOh yeah, these are the things Sarah talks about all the time.â Our first principle of peaceful parenting is parental self-regulation. It doesnât mean you never get upset, but you recognize it and have strategies to get back to calm.
And I always say, if you forget everything else I teach about dealing with upset kids, just remember empathyâwhich is another way of saying validation. I tell parents: you donât have to agree to empathize. Especially with situations like the jeans.
I love the crossover between the skills parents are practicing in my community and what youâve written about. And again: those flow charts! Iâm going to mark up my book with Post-its for all the exercises.
One of the things you talk about in the book is problem solving. As parents, we can find ourselves in these intense situations. Iâll give an example: a clientâs daughter, at 11 p.m., was spiraling about needing a particular pair of boots for her Halloween costume, and they wouldnât arrive in time. No matter what the mom said, the daughter spiraled.
This is a two-part question: If youâve validated and theyâre still really upset, how do you support a kid who is deep in those intense feelings? And when is the place for teaching problem solvingâespecially when there is a real logistical problem to solve?
Jesse: Iâm going to say the annoying therapist thing: it depends. If we think about how emotions impact our thinking on a scale from 0 to 10, itâs very hard to engage in wise-minded problem solving when someone is at an 8, 9, or 10. At that point, the urge is to act on crisis behaviorsâyell, fight, ruminate.
So engaging your child in problem solving when theyâre at a 9 isnât effective.
Often, I suggest parents model and coach distress-tolerance skills. Shireen mentioned paced breathing. Maybe distraction. Anything to lower the emotional volume.
Once weâre in the six-ish range? Now we can problem solve. DBT has a very prescribed step-by-step process.
But itâs really hard if someone is so dysregulated. Thatâs often where parents and kids end up in conflict: parent wants to solve; kid is at a 9 and canât even see straight.
Sarah: Right. So walk us through what that might look like using the boots example. Play the parent for a moment.
Jesse: Of course. Iâd potentially do a couple of things. I might say, âOkay, letâs do a little âtipping the temperatureâ together.â Iâd bring out two bowls of ice and say, âWeâll bend over, hold our breath for 30 secondsâŚâ
Shireen: And put your face in the bowl of ice water. You left out that part.
Jesse: Crucial part of the step.
Sarah: You just look at the ice water?
Jesse: No, you submerge your face. And something happensâitâs magical. Thereâs actually a profound physiological effect: lowering blood pressure, calming the sympathetic nervous system.
I highlight for parents: do this with your child, not didactically. Make it collaborative.
And then: validate, validate, validate. Validation is not approval. Itâs not saying the reaction is right. Itâs simply communicating that their distress makes sense. Validation is incredibly regulating.
Then you check in: âDo you feel like we can access Wise Mind?â If yes: âGreat. Letâs bring out a problem-solving worksheetâmaybe from Real Skills for Real Life or the DBT manual. Letâs walk through it step by step.â
Sarah: And if you have a kid screaming, âGet that ice water away from me, that has nothing to do with the boots!ââis there anything to add beyond taking a break?
Shireen: Iâd say this probably comes up a lot for you, Sarah. As parentsâespecially high-functioning, maybe perfectionistic types (I put myself in that category)âif my kid is upset, I feel so many urges to fix it right away. Sometimes thatâs helpful, but often itâs not. They either donât want to be fixed, or theyâre too dysregulated, or fixing isnât actually their goalâthey just want to tell you how upset they are.
I have to practice acceptance: âMy kid is upset right now. Thatâs it.â I remind myself: kids being upset is part of life. Itâs important for them to learn they can be upset and the world doesnât fall apart.
If theyâre willing to do skills alongside you, great. But there will be times where you say, âI accept that youâre upset. Iâm sorry you feel this way. It sounds terrible. Letâs reconnect in an hour.â And wait for the storm to pass.
Sarah: Wait for the storm to pass.
Jesse: Iâll sayâI havenât been a therapist that long, and Iâve been having this conversation with my own parents. Yesterday I called my mom about something stressful, and she said, âJesse, do you want validation or problem solving right now?â
Shireen: Love it.
Jesse: I thought, âYou taught her well.â I was like: okay, therapy works. And even having that promptââWhat would you like right now? Problem solving? Validation? Do you want me to just sit with you?ââthatâs so useful.
Sarah: Yeah. I have to remind myself of that with my daughter, especially when the solution seems obvious to me but sheâs too upset to take it in. Just sitting there is the hardest thing in the world.
And youâve both anticipated my next question. A big part of your book is distress toleranceâone of the four areas. Can you talk about what distress tolerance is specifically? And as you mentioned, Shireen, it is excruciating when your kid is in pain or upset.
I learned from my friend Ned Johnsonâhis wonderful book The Self-Driven Childâthat thereâs something called the ârighting instinct.â When your child falls over, you have the instinct to right themâpick them up, dust them off, stand them up. That instinct kicks in whenever theyâre distressed. And I think itâs important for them to learn skills so we donât do that every time.
Give us some thoughts about that.
Shireen: Well, again, I think distress tolerance is so important for parents and for kids. The way we define it in DBT is: distress tolerance is learning how to tolerate stressful, difficult, complicated situations without doing anything to make it worse. Thatâs the critical part, because distress tolerance is not about solving problems. Itâs about getting through without making things worse.
So in the context of an interaction with your kid, ânot making it worseâ might mean biting your tongue and not lashing out, not arguing, not rolling your eyes, or whatever it is. And then tolerating the stress of the moment.
As parents, we absolutely need this probably a thousand times a day. âHow do I tolerate the distress of this moment with my kid?â And then kids, as humans, need to learn distress tolerance tooâhow to tolerate a difficult situation without doing anything to make it worse.
If we swoop in too quickly to solve the problem for themâas you said, if we move in too quickly to right themâthey donât learn that they can get through it themselves. They donât learn that they can right themselves.
And I think thereâs been a lot written about generations and how parenting has affected different generations. We want our kids to learn how to problem solve, but also how to manage stress and difficulty in effective ways.
Sarah: I think youâre probably referring to the âhelicopter parents,â how people are always talking about helicopter parents who are trying to remove any obstacles or remove the distress, basically.
I think the answer isnât that we just say, âOkay, well, youâre distressed, deal with it,â but that weâre there with them emotionally while theyâre learning. Weâre next to them, right? With that co-regulation piece, while theyâre learning that they can handle those big feelings.
Shireen: Yes. Yeah. Yeah.
Sarah: I thought it might be fun, before we close out, to do a deep dive on maybe one or two of the skills you have in the book. I was thinking about maybe âCheck the Facts.â It would be a cool one to do a deep dive on. You have so many awesome skills and I encourage anyone to pick up your book. âCheck the Factsâ is one of the emotion regulation skills.
Do you mind going over when you would use Check the Facts, what it is, and how to use it?
Jesse: Not at all. Check the Facts is, in many ways, a foundational skill, because itâs so easy for us to get lost in our interpretation of a situation. So the classic example is: youâre walking down the street and you wave to a friend, and they donât wave back. And I donât know about you, but itâs easy for me to go to, âOh, they must be mad at me.â
Sarah: Right, yeah.
Jesse: And all of a sudden, Iâm spinning out, thinking about all the things I could have done to hurt their feelings, and yada yada yada. Then Iâm feeling lots of upset, and I may have the urge to apologize, etc.
What weâre doing with Check the Facts is returning our attention back to the facts themselvesâthe things we can take in with our senses. Weâre observing and describing, which are two foundational mindfulness skills in DBT. And then from that, we ask ourselves: âDoes the emotion Iâm feelingâthe intensity and duration of that emotionâfit the facts as Iâm experiencing them?â
So in many ways, this is one of those cognitive interventions. DBT rests on all these cognitive-behavioral principles; itâs part of that broader umbrella. Here weâre asking: âDo the facts as I see them align with my emotional experience?â
From there, we ask: if yes, then there are certain options or skills we can practiceâfor instance, we can change the problem. If no, that begs the question: âShould I act opposite to this emotion urge that I have?â
So itâs a very grounding, centering type of skill. Shireen, is there anything Iâm missing?
Shireen: No. I would just give a parenting example that happens for me a lot. My kid has a test the next day. He says he knows everything. He doesnât open the book or want to review the study guide. And I start to think things like, âOh my gosh, he has no grit. Heâs going to fail this test. Heâs not going to do well in high school. Heâs not going to get into a good college. But most importantly, he doesnât care. And what does that say about him? And what does it say about me as a parent?â
I hope people listening can relate to these sorts of thoughts and Iâm not alone.
Sarah: A hundred percent. Iâve heard people say those exact things.
Shireen: And even though I practice these skills all the time, Iâm also human and a mother. So where Check the Facts can be useful there is first just recognizing: âOkay, what thoughts am I having in response to this behavior?â The facts of the situation are: my kid said he doesnât need to study anymore. And then look at all these thoughts that came into my mind.
First, just recognizing: here was the event, and hereâs what my mind did. That, in and of itself, is a useful experience. You can say, âWow, look at what Iâm doing in my mind thatâs creating so much of a problem.â
Then I can also think: âWhat does this make me feel when I have all these thoughts?â I feel fear. I feel sad. I feel shame about not being a good parent. And those all cause me to have more thoughts and urges to do things that arenât super effectiveâlike trying to bully him into studying, all of these things.
Then the skill can be: âOkay, are these thoughts exaggerated? Are they based in fact? Are they useful?â I can analyze each of these thoughts.
I might think, âWell, he has a history of not studying and doing fine,â is one thing. Another thought: âMe trying to push him to study is not going to be effective or helpful.â Another: âThere are natural consequences. If he doesnât do well because he didnât study, thatâs an important lesson for him to learn.â
So I can start to change my interpretations based on the facts of the actual situation as opposed to my exaggerated interpretations. And then see: what does that do to my emotions? And when I have more realistic, fact-based thoughts, does that lead me to have a better response than I would if I followed through on all my exaggerated thinking?
Does that make sense?
Sarah: Yeah, totally makes sense. Are there any DBT skills that are helpful in helping you recognize when you need to use a skillâif that makes sense? Because sometimes I think parents might spiral, like in the example youâre talking about, but they might not even realize theyâre spiraling. Sometimes parents will say, âI donât even know until itâs too late that Iâve had this big moment of emotional dysregulation.â
Jesse: I think thereâs a very strong reason why mindfulness is the foundation of DBTâfor exactly the reason youâve just described. For a lot of us, we end up engaging in behaviors that are ineffective, that are not in line with our values or goals, and it feels like itâs just happening to us.
So having a mindfulness practiceâand I want to highlight that doesnât necessarily mean a formal meditation practiceâbut developing the skill of noticing, of being increasingly conscious of what youâre feeling, your urges, your thoughts, your behaviors. So that when you notice that you are drifting, that youâre engaging in an ineffective behavior, you can then apply a skill. We canât change what weâre not aware of.
Sarah: I love that. Itâs so hard with all the distractions we have and all of the things that are pulling us this way and that, and the busyness. So just slowing down and starting to notice more what weâre feeling and thinking.
Shireen: Thereâs a skill that we teach thatâs in the category of mindfulness called Wise Mind. I donât have to get into all the particulars of that, but Wise Mind is when youâre in a place where you feel wise and centered and perhaps a little bit calmer.
So one question people can ask themselves is: âAm I in a place of Wise Mind right now?â And if not, thatâs the cue. Usually, when we answer that weâre not, itâs because weâre in a state of Emotion Mind, where our emotions are in control of us.
First, recognizing what state of mind youâre in can be really helpful. You can use that as a cue: âIâm not in Wise Mind. I need to do something more skillful here to get there,â or, âI need to give myself some time before I act.â
Sarah: I love that. So helpful. Before we wrap up, was there anything you wish Iâd asked you that you think would be really helpful for parents and kids?
Shireen: I just want to reiterate something you said earlier, which is: yes, this treatment was developed for folks with borderline personality disorder. That is often a diagnosis people run screaming from or are very nervous about. People might hesitate to think that these skills could be useful for them if they donât identify as having borderline personality disorder.
But I think what youâre highlighting, Sarahâand we so appreciate you having us on and talking about these skillsâis that we consider these skills universal. Really anybody can benefit.
Iâve done training and teaching in DBT for 25 years, and I teach clinicians in many different places how to do DBT treatment with patients. But inevitably, what happens is that the clinicians themselves say, âOh, I really need these skills in my everyday life.â
So thatâs what we want to highlight, and why we wrote this book: to take these skills from a treatment designed for a really severe population and break it down so anybody can see, âOh, this would be useful for me in my everyday life, and I want to learn more.â
Sarah: Totally. Yeah. I love it. And I think itâs a continuum, right? From feeling like emotions are overwhelming and challenging, and being really emotionally sensitive. There are lots of people who are on that more emotionally sensitive side of things, and these are really helpful skills for them.
Jesse: Yeah. And to add on that, I wouldnât want anyoneâand I donât think any of us here are suggesting thisâitâs such a stigmatized diagnosis. I have yet to meet someone whoâs choosing suffering. Many of us are trying to find relief from a lot of pain, and we may do so through really ineffective means.
So with BPD, in my mind, sometimes itâs an unfortunate name for a diagnosis. Many folks may have the opinion that it means theyâre intrinsically broken, or thereâs something wrong with their personality. Really, itâs a constellation of behaviors that there are treatments for.
So I want anyone listening not to feel helpless or hopeless in having this diagnosis or experience.
Shireen: Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm.
Sarah: Thank you so much. The question I ask all my guestsâIâll ask Shireen first and then Jesseâis: if you could go back in time, if you had a time machine, if you could go back to your younger parent self, what advice would you give yourself?
Shireen: Oof. I think about this a lot, actually, because I feel like I did suffer a lot when my kids were babies. They were super colicky. I didnât sleep at all. I was also trying to work. I was very stressed. I wish that at that time I could have taken in what other people were telling me, which is: âThis will pass.â Right? âThis too shall pass,â which is something we say to ourselves as DBT therapists a lot. Time changes. Change is inevitable. Everything changes.
In those dark parenting moments, you get stuck in thoughts of, âThis is never going to change. Itâs always going to be this way. I canât tolerate this.â Instead, shifting to recognize: âChange is going to happen whether I like it or not. Just hang in there.â
Sarah: I love that. My mother-in-law told me when I had my first child: âWhen things are bad, donât worry, theyâll get better. And also, when things are good, donât worry, theyâll get worse.â
Shireen: Yes, itâs true. And we need both the ups and the downs so we can actually understand, âOh, this is why I like this, and this is why I donât like this.â Itâs part of life.
Sarah: Yeah. Thank you. And Jesse, if you do ever have children, what would you want to remember to tell yourself?
Jesse: I think I would want to remember to tell myselfâand I donât think Iâm going to say anything really new hereâthat perfection is a myth. I think parents often feel like they need to be some kind of superhuman. But we all feel. And when we do feel, and when we feel strongly, the goal isnât to shame ourselves for having that experience. Itâs to simply understand it.
Thatâs what I would want to communicate to myself, and what I hope to communicate to the parents I work with.
Sarah: Love that. Best place to go to find out more about you all and what you do? Weâll put a link to your book in the show notes, but any other socials or websites you want to point people to?
Shireen: My website is shireenrizvi.com, where you can find a number of resources, including a link to the book and a link to our YouTube channel, which has skills videosâanimated skills videos that teach some of these skills in five minutes or less. So thatâs another resource for people.
Sarah: Great. What about you, Jesse?
Jesse: I have a website called axiscbt.com. Iâm also a co-founder of a psychoeducation skills course called Farrah Hive, and we actually have a parenting course based on DBT skillsâthatâs thefarrahhive.com. And on Instagram, @talk_is_good.
Sarah: Great. Thank you so much. Really appreciate your time today.
Jesse: Thank you, Sarah.
Sarah: Thank you.
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