
Your Parenting Mojo - Respectful, research-based parenting ideas to help kids thrive 260: How the World’s Toxic Systems Live Inside Our Parenting
Mar 9, 2026
44:10
If you've been watching the news and feeling despair because you can’t do anything about it, this episode is for you.
The Epstein files, revealing how powerful men think about, talk about, and treat women.
ICE raids tearing families apart.
Strikes on Iranian cities - and schools full of children!
In this episode, I make a direct connection between these social issues and what happens inside our homes every day.
The patterns playing out on a global scale - where the person with more power decides whose feelings count - show up in our families too, often in moments we don't even notice, and that seem like they’re about discipline. The decisions we make in those moments are quietly teaching our kids lessons we may not intend to pass on.
Questions this episode will answer
What do ICE raids have to do with parenting? When children watch some families live in fear of being separated while others are basically safe by default, they learn that some people's safety matters more than others. That same lesson can show up at home when we use our power as parents to override our kids' feelings and needs. Why is it important to teach kids about consent? Research shows that girls start shifting from seeing their body as something that helps them do things to seeing it as something to be judged - often earlier than we realize. Teaching consent starts long before those conversations about sex. It starts when we stop forcing our children to accept hugs and give kisses they don’t want from well-meaning relatives. How do you explain consent to children? Consent is about whose body, feelings, and needs matter most. When we override our child's no - even in small everyday moments - we teach them that the person with more power wins. This episode explores what it looks like to do things differently. How do the Iran strikes connect to how we raise our kids? When leaders frame bombing cities where children live as "protecting freedom", they're using the same logic many of us heard growing up: that hurting someone with less power is justified when the person with more power decides it's for a good reason. This episode traces that logic from foreign policy all the way back to the family dinner table. What does it mean that we're all part of the system - not just the people doing obvious harm? It's easy to point to the person at the center causing the most visible damage. But around that person are rings of people who actively enable them, then people who know and look away, and then the rest of us - making decisions every day in our families and communities that make it more or less likely that people with power can keep using it. This episode explains what that outermost ring looks like in ordinary family life, and what it means to resist it from there.What you'll learn in this episode
- Why the same power dynamics driving ICE raids, the Epstein files, and the Iran strikes also show up in everyday parenting moments
- How the language our leaders use about migrants, women, and foreign countries shapes what our kids quietly absorb about whose lives matter
- What research tells us about how girls experience the shift from body ownership to body judgment - and what parents can do to slow that shift down
- Why the parents who explode when their kids say no are often people who were never allowed to say no themselves
- How using power to manage our kids' behavior in stressful moments teaches the same lesson as the biggest injustices in the news - just on a smaller scale
- What it looks like to build a home where your child's feelings and needs count - even when you're overwhelmed
