How to Recover from a Challenging Childhood | Being Well

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  • Опубліковано 10 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 131

  • @AromaticWisdomInstitute
    @AromaticWisdomInstitute 10 днів тому +1

    Im 67 and just learned about attachment styles from this podcast and suddenly much of my life choices make sense! I feel so late to the “getting to know myself” game at my age so when Rick opened with “I’m still learning…” I was filled with gratitude. Thanks so much to Dr Rick and Forrest for the incredible amount of work you put into these episodes. I also have a podcast and know the hours of unseen work that goes into making such valuable content. ❤ Liz

  • @alexsandramunro
    @alexsandramunro 8 місяців тому +92

    at 58 I feel like I've only just started prioritising myself. It feels so clumsy and the pushback seems massive. I'm not a religious person, but since standing up for myself, circumstances have felt almost supernaturally hard. It's difficult not to feel disheartened or like I'm somehow attracting the hardship. I feel a calling to reframe my childhood years for my own sake...to see and carry with me something apart the betrayal and abuse. The sheer weight of early traumatic experiences seems self perpetuating and *in my face* STILL. I truly hope I get to have a few good years, win the day and show my now grown boys that their Mum never gave up and that anything is possible 💚

    • @fireworks4037
      @fireworks4037 8 місяців тому +11

      Same. All of it. Even the age. Thank you for sharing. You've validated my experience.

    • @earthpearl3790
      @earthpearl3790 8 місяців тому +8

      Thank you for sharing your experience and aspirations! I'm in a similar boat and have benefited from a modality of trauma work called Internal Family
      Systems (IFS), also called Parts Work. Best wishes!!

    • @newmoon54
      @newmoon54 8 місяців тому +5

      You're certainly NOT alone! The scriptures say it best, "each day is sufficient for its badness"! Basically,, EVERYONE is subject to
      time and unforeseen occurrence,, which Christ himself mentioned in a discussion he had with his disciples, who didn't know
      that GOD isn't behind our difficult, tenuous times! It's so easy to fall into the negative self-condemnation(s) dilemma!
      It takes some genuine effort to face down negative self-talk,, or wrong thinking,, as well as the wrong advice from others! A place
      to start/begin is for all of us to truly embrace our own lives. We have been trained basically to think so very little about our lives, and
      the really super-incredible world we live on/on! The earth, (or as the astronauts affectionately call it, the ~blue marble~) and us upon
      it along with all animate & inanimate life as well, is so super-incredible that no scientist has ever been able to understand who we actually are,, let alone how we came into existence in outer space!
      In fact, no scientist, physicist, biologist, or any learned man or woman, has ANY IDEA about the "who, what, when, where, why and
      how" life came into being, especially because earth moves in a vacuum at ~66,600 mph~ which further confounds these scientific
      experts COMPLETELY!! Man has yet to figure out what our life force is, and how each person acquires his or her own soul!!
      My reason for bringing this up is to help you to always remember how "truly incredible and truly supernatural you are"!
      This is an actual fact!!! Everything about us is so beyond incredible! Try and reject the sadness of the past,, the past is just that,,
      it's PAST!!!! Life can be hard to deal with, as we see now in the middle east, where senseless killing by both sides seems to mean
      NOTHING,,, and women and children on both sides are brutally destroyed,,, and for what?!?!?! And the fact that they're blood relatives of each other,, FACT,, also means nothing?!?!?! So, we need to thank GOD the Creator of life, and love one another and console one
      another so that we can all heal from our past wounds, and finally realize that we are the most incredible beings on earth
      and in space,, as far as we know at this time!!!!! God bless and take a good look at who and what you are!!!! The most intelligent
      being in our universe!!!!!!!!! Cheers!!!!!!!

    • @babycakes8434
      @babycakes8434 8 місяців тому +8

      Good for you for fighting for yourself, and putting yourself first.

    • @alexsandramunro
      @alexsandramunro 8 місяців тому

      @@fireworks4037 solidarity :) 🧡

  • @soumyajoseph7429
    @soumyajoseph7429 8 місяців тому +19

    I'm so jealous of Forrest's relationship with his Dad. Please bring more healthy family relationships on your show, so your audience can see and model for themselves who and how and what we (the dysfunctional) could be! 34 minutes: "OMG" like half the problem is that we're filling the car with gas to fix a flat tire, because were' really good at earning praise for accomplishments for emotional fulfilment.

  • @darkcrystalmagik3369
    @darkcrystalmagik3369 7 місяців тому +9

    I was the older of 2 girls, my childhood was profoundly damaging, my sister got all the love my parents had to give- with her they were nurturing, devoted,& protective, proud, and joyful.
    I was the family scapegoat for
    my mother's inability to cope w/ life & even basic household responsibilities, & her worsening mental illness ; she was disdainful of the role of stay at home mother as if it were beneath her (of course, she didn't want to work outside the home either. My "difficult" nature was always the distraction from any conversation
    of her inadequacies... her selfishness, emotional immaturity, & mental illness (eventually diagnosed bipolar, but also checks the boxes for had both Borderline & Avoidant Personality Disorder)
    My father (himself the son of a vulnerable narcissistic mother who abandoned him) was my mother's "protector" & enabler, with seemingly infinite patience for her, til he suddenly stoppped & left her after 25 yrs marriage.
    I am 43 and reluctantly childfree.
    I am only now beginning to heal, & experience real love & be safe with one person, my partner.

  • @parisaforpeace
    @parisaforpeace 8 місяців тому +25

    I also think developing a stronger, more solid sense of self helps fill that void. You reach a point where what others think about you becomes irrelevant as you feel more anchored and at peace with your self. So, connection with self is a big player in this. It's difficult to connect to others when connection to self is lacking.

    • @JamieR
      @JamieR 7 місяців тому

      I needed this reminder. Easy for it to slip between the slits while in the depths trying to climb back up. Thank you.

  • @SpottedTiger89
    @SpottedTiger89 8 місяців тому +21

    I'm a therapist and struggle with this very subject for myself. I brought this up in my own therapy session just last week. Thank you for this amazing resource. I wish it were talked about more.

  • @matthanley3799
    @matthanley3799 8 місяців тому +10

    I really needed to hear this episode right now. I'm going through the process of unpacking my childhood trauma and looking at it from an adult perspective. It's been difficult but very positive.

  • @irektaflinski5449
    @irektaflinski5449 8 місяців тому +41

    I grew up feeling like I wasn’t enough, was doomed to a horrible future and no one would love because I wasn’t deserving!!! I felt lonely and unloved by the actions of many relatives 😢

    • @earthpearl3790
      @earthpearl3790 8 місяців тому +11

      I an sorry you had to go through that. I've had similar traumatic experiences. Tara Brach Ph.D is a colleague of Rick Hanson's and has a podcast. Last week she gave a talk titled Spiritual Re-parenting. I found it very helpful. Warm wishes

    • @staleyexplores
      @staleyexplores 8 місяців тому +1

      Same

  • @insertcheesypunhere
    @insertcheesypunhere 7 місяців тому +3

    im still adjusting to the idea that my childhood was bad. it wasn't the worst; i only once experienced physical abuse in the form of corporal punishment, but i did experience emotional abuse and emotional neglect. my parents do love me deeply, but ive struggled to feel loved by them, and they've hurt me in ways they don't comprehend. im still living with my dad and stepmom as an adult, and healing feels like trying to grow a tree in a cage.

  • @denisekleiner7767
    @denisekleiner7767 8 місяців тому +9

    To witness the respectful relationship you both have is a gift of a wonderful example.❤

  • @movewithmike
    @movewithmike 8 місяців тому +11

    I've listened to this podcast on Spotify twice and am now enjoying the UA-cam version! Thank you both for the INCREDIBLY valuable episodes you've been putting out lately. These are gold! Is there room in your family to adopt me?

    • @vilmasumaydeng7922
      @vilmasumaydeng7922 7 місяців тому

      I’ll be a good sister, Forrest, promise!! Love u both, “Dad Rick😍!”

  • @SatyrAzazel
    @SatyrAzazel 8 місяців тому +16

    I loved Rick’s story of getting unstuck from an old view after experiencing a new more surreal view of things at his HS reunion.
    This actually sounds close to what’s done in coherence therapy, which used something called memory reconsolidation to bring moments like these to the forefront in a therapy session in order to emotionally activate the issue at hand while also bringing it’s cognitive purpose into view so that it can be worked through and changed in a meaningful way.
    If you guys haven’t gotten into this yet, it would be great if you checked into Tori Olds, who’s here on UA-cam, or Bruce Ecker, who created the therapy, and maybe have one of them on.
    I love your work you guys, thank you for everything 🙏🏽😁

    • @earthpearl3790
      @earthpearl3790 8 місяців тому +4

      For real, Tori Olds! I loved her talks on Internal Family Systems (IFS)! She has a wonderful capacity for explaining in depth processes in ways that make them relatable and easy to understand

    • @crybaby871
      @crybaby871 6 місяців тому

  • @mjparent222
    @mjparent222 8 місяців тому +5

    i love that !
    All of it. Shared with my daughter.
    I was a good enough mother, but hey what can we do, imperfectly done. But still lots of love.
    I am still learning many things and you are very helping me get clearer in my mind about how enough I am and I was regarding all the situation and circumstances of life.
    the rich life, full of surprise.
    Thank you for everything.

  • @michellebee7258
    @michellebee7258 8 місяців тому +4

    It's really touching to experience the wonderful relationship between you and your dad. I have learned so much from many of the episodes you create, I love how you do such a fine job of recapping all the information at the end of the episode. I entered into counseling in my twenties and worked through some things from the past, I am in counseling again 30 years later, but what has helped me alongside the counseling experience is listening to how your dad articulates and brings logic, sense and closure to issues. I love how he precisely puts forward what to reflect on. I wish I could see your dad as a counselor. I will take the suggestion and write a letter to my deceased mom as your dad suggested. I have experienced loss; my dad, mom, my grandma before the age of 18 also quite recently my partner of 17 years. Maybe you could do an episode about loneliness, fear, death. Anyway, thanks for what you do and provide to people.

  • @timk7073
    @timk7073 8 місяців тому +17

    Listening to Rick and Forrest talk about these topics calms me down. Thanks for the great content!

    • @janadominika
      @janadominika 8 місяців тому +2

      same here, iI teally appreciate the energy and the dialogue between the son and the father figure in such a smooth and pleasant synergy. Love it.

    • @Spacehealing
      @Spacehealing 8 місяців тому +2

      Agreeed

  • @CreativeArtandEnergy
    @CreativeArtandEnergy 8 місяців тому +7

    *wakes up at 5 AM for no reason* I’m thinking about this right now, I love popping in when you just posted.

  • @NavaSDMB
    @NavaSDMB 7 місяців тому +1

    Watching you two has really brought home one of the markers which differentiate my healthy and unhealthy relationships: in the healthy ones, we can poke fun at each other or at other people and things but we're never mean about it, and if any of us were mean the others would call them on it and be listened.
    In the unhealthy ones, any joke feels more like a bullet, and anybody calling out meannes is told off ("don't lie", "oh, you are being so nasty to me! How dare you call me mean!", etc.).

  • @kerscherdon2531
    @kerscherdon2531 8 місяців тому +8

    This was such an insightful discussion. Thanks so much for how such difficult topics is discussed with so much empathy, clarity and sensitivity. Well done on yet another great podcast!

  • @roxanneeastman6823
    @roxanneeastman6823 8 місяців тому +2

    This is really helpful. I suffer from Trauma from my childhood and on in life. I actually found out that some so called friends 4 men just told somebody that I was unstable. This hurt and it made me realize that they never listen to me when I talked and do not GET ME!!!!! SAD that some people think they have all the answers but don't even get the whole situation. Any extra help a person can get along the way always helps. Thanks for letting me vent.

  • @Unnusualnotice
    @Unnusualnotice 8 місяців тому +9

    Such an awesome episode. Probably one of my favorite you’ve ever done (other than the self abandonment one maybe). Those two alone have the power to change the way people relate to others and their selves in my opinion. Thank you Forrest and Rick for another awesome episode!!

    • @ForrestHanson
      @ForrestHanson  8 місяців тому +4

      Thank you! I was really happy with this one.

  • @christinaward161
    @christinaward161 8 місяців тому +3

    This has been a great podcast. I was particuary pleased to hear you speak of 'the childhood i wanted to have' ,as i have a tricky teen going through this . As a parent, who has done their best, knowing your child feels that way is hard. So this section of the podcast was really helpful to me. Thankyou both .

  • @marilynoverton8142
    @marilynoverton8142 4 місяці тому +1

    Such wonderful content! Thank you! And a beautiful, mutually respectful relationship between father and son.

  • @djszal
    @djszal 4 місяці тому +1

    These conversations and the information presented is sooooo good.

  • @marem1842
    @marem1842 8 місяців тому +4

    Thank you, I learned so much from hearing both perspective’s.

  • @angelakh4147
    @angelakh4147 8 місяців тому +2

    You came along for me at just the right time. I have spent the last three years in therapy coming to terms with what was done to me by the very people who should have loved me the most. I feel like I am at a point where it is time to move on from who they are, why they do what they do, and what it did to me. Now it is time to focus on me and living my life to the fullest. You guys really are helping me with that. Thank you!

  • @mhopwood1
    @mhopwood1 8 місяців тому +5

    I'd say you need an additional letter to parents. Not only the Angry Version, and the Sad Version: also the Bitter / Disgusted Version. Only then can you move on to the regulated one. The wisdom of REM: "WITHDRAWAL IN DISGUST IS NOT THE SAME AS APATHY"

  • @rozneilson8696
    @rozneilson8696 8 місяців тому +6

    Thank you, much food for thought... some stuff that I need to process and put into practice.

  • @LauraHearfield
    @LauraHearfield 8 місяців тому +3

    You two and your offerings are such an extraordinary gift. I can't thank you enough for sharing such compassionate insight and knowledge with us about these life-defining and mind-altering topics.

  • @ingveldurstefansdottir8186
    @ingveldurstefansdottir8186 8 місяців тому +6

    Thank you so much for your wonderful podcast, very helpful and supportive. You guys are wonderful ❤️Tuning in from Iceland 🇮🇸

  • @ritasjourney
    @ritasjourney 8 місяців тому +3

    Glad someone is mentioning peer influence. I’ve always felt this wasn’t given enough attention.

  • @gailparsons6267
    @gailparsons6267 8 місяців тому +3

    Only watched this three times and now onto fourth....fab, So useful it hurts.

  • @earthpearl3790
    @earthpearl3790 8 місяців тому +3

    Thank you, I love this topic, the presentation and the wonderful chemistry between you! As someone whose life has been affected by early trauma, neglect and abuse I had trouble embracing some of the suggestions. I think spending time investigating the longings of one's parts can be very productive. I also appreciated the letter writing and Gestalt processes that were shared. Thank you for your beautiful work, I share it all the time!

  • @irektaflinski5449
    @irektaflinski5449 8 місяців тому +5

    Thank you for this !!! I have lived through the self others told me and for that reason have suffered and almost destroyed my life! But without knowledge spiritual beliefs and using linking and reclaiming my God as my father and mother and hope for a better tomorrow helped me walked through these years in the land of Egypt (slavery). 😢

  • @heathermercer3070
    @heathermercer3070 8 місяців тому +2

    Thank-you to both of you. I loved the three R framework and think its really helpful to see how to move forward and also understand the process that's continually unfolded for me

  • @Venice1917
    @Venice1917 6 місяців тому

    I`ve listened and relistened to many episodes with Rick and Forrest. They´ve taught me so much, they are chock full of wisdom, knowledge, experience, and humanity. But this episode was absolutely amazing! The harmony, respect, and love between Forrest and Rick is just so touching: the comments show how good this is for so many of us to see. And the cringe-o-meter was such a great touch of comic relief as I was noticing my neck shorten at the idea of writing this letter. (And I WILL write this letter). Thanks again, guys, these episodes are such a treat, incredible work here. PS: I came across this one today on my birthday.

  • @vivienlegeisha3425
    @vivienlegeisha3425 8 місяців тому +2

    So much to unpack! I listened to the podcast twice and feel that I could listen to it at least two more times!

  • @ronatege
    @ronatege 8 місяців тому +2

    Great podcast. You and your dad are amazing. I wish I could speak to one of my parents on emotional topics as you do. You are so lucky! It was not accepted at my home. I was always emotional so lonely, and I was not accepted for who I was and am . Till this day, contacting my parents is not by choice

  • @elenamacdonald7571
    @elenamacdonald7571 8 місяців тому +1

    This was truly stunning - one of your best - so incredibly helpful Forrest and Rick - thank you so much for your wisdom, insight, tenderness, capacity to communicate everything in such a coherent and applicable way. Life changing.

  • @jude4247
    @jude4247 6 місяців тому

    I grew up in a family with a very emotionally distant and even emotionally absent father. He was a great provider of food, clothing, housing etc.. but nothing there emotionally. He believed in spanking and I always tried to be the good girl to get out of being spanked so mostly what I got spanked for were grades he felt were inadequate. I remember one Halloween he sent me out trick or treating with my siblings knowing when we got home I would be spanked for some grades that weren't up to his standards. I carry around such horrible feelings about myself for this inadequacy I was made to feel. Through hearing this content I am slowly allowing myself to come to terms so I can heal. Thank you so much!

  • @brokeheartwolf3733
    @brokeheartwolf3733 11 днів тому +1

    Wow. 🦉💡only now at 75 years the light went on…🙀👍🏼🤙🏽

  • @evaeggen6928
    @evaeggen6928 8 місяців тому +2

    I can see your resemblance! Love how you laugh together!!

  • @AmandaKiconco
    @AmandaKiconco 8 місяців тому +1

    Its been so eye opening and you simplified the possibility of healing which we all need at some points in our lives so well

  • @lmansur1000
    @lmansur1000 8 місяців тому +1

    I like this program - father and son...sweet, comforting and so very helpful! Will listen again for sure and did share on Facebook and with a friend. Thank you!

  • @ResearchBasedLanguageTeaching
    @ResearchBasedLanguageTeaching 7 місяців тому

    I started listening to this podcast in the background while i do other stuff like i do with most podcasts but they're so packed with useful stuff thay now i only listen when i have time to sit with a notebook and really take it in and make a plan of how to apply it. Thanks guys. You're doing some really great work here.

  • @rgmartin1040
    @rgmartin1040 8 місяців тому +1

    I really identified with the idea of filling the tank with gas when I really need to change the tire! Great insight for me to take up learning to change tires.

  • @kimedison6677
    @kimedison6677 8 місяців тому +2

    Very helpful content, very thoughtfully delivered. Thank you

  • @diannbarnes7016
    @diannbarnes7016 8 місяців тому +2

    I have enjoyed your podcast. I have been helped in the past with therapy. Good information here.

  • @foratabdulsalamfaris4796
    @foratabdulsalamfaris4796 8 місяців тому +1

    Very interesting and important topic, actually I faced a lot of challenges, obstacles and difficulties in my life in almost all aspects. And despite that I didn't have a good childhood, I really miss my childhood. 👏

  • @kaoutar6921
    @kaoutar6921 8 місяців тому +2

    Thank you so much every word you say make sense keep up ❤

  • @pmukherjee1237
    @pmukherjee1237 8 місяців тому +1

    Thanks!

  • @oleksiisemenchuk9613
    @oleksiisemenchuk9613 8 місяців тому +2

    Thank you, that is really important and helpful!

  • @janetgarske8198
    @janetgarske8198 8 місяців тому +2

    I agree! This was a fabulous podcast!

  • @wildoceanappaloosawomangay2535
    @wildoceanappaloosawomangay2535 8 місяців тому

    You both are the sweetest sweetest humans
    💚
    Must’ve been nice to feel loved

  • @rachele4631
    @rachele4631 7 місяців тому +1

    This was a good episode. I especially like the inclusion of actionable steps.

  • @mistakenmillenial6834
    @mistakenmillenial6834 8 місяців тому +3

    You guys are amazing. Dream team ❤

  • @grahammacgregor3148
    @grahammacgregor3148 6 місяців тому

    Great video! Compassionate Clarity becoming real to me, even at age 77!

  • @joannahediger7820
    @joannahediger7820 8 місяців тому +3

    Let’s not forget that who other people think you are is very heavily skewed through their own perceptions. Since you’re talking about childhood, insecurities and jealousy are huge drivers of childhood interpersonal behavior. It isn’t only you many people react to, it’s mostly themself.

  • @user-rz9pz4qc1b
    @user-rz9pz4qc1b 8 місяців тому

    Thank you so much for such a comprehensive and useful podcast. I'll have to watch it again and take notes!

  • @ddieter603
    @ddieter603 8 місяців тому +12

    Compassion and forgiveness are the furthest things from my mind at this point in my life. I am disabled in no small part because of the old folks' shit. My brother died over the old folks' shit. Maybe, if I stay in therapy and talk about it for the rest of my life, I can forgive the old folks for myself. But never, ever for my brother.

    • @rlabarbera
      @rlabarbera 8 місяців тому +8

      Not everything is forgivable and we can't always afford to give compassion or forgiveness, especially to people who aren't sorry! This idea off forgiving everything and everybody is bs imo . There's also a risk of skipping over the anger which is unhealthy.

    • @amberinthemist7912
      @amberinthemist7912 8 місяців тому +5

      Forgiveness is for people who are sorry.

    • @lukefisch9483
      @lukefisch9483 8 місяців тому +1

      I’m so sorry

    • @tnt01
      @tnt01 8 місяців тому +3

      You do not need to forgive in order to heal and be happy.

    • @danieltemelkovski9828
      @danieltemelkovski9828 8 місяців тому +3

      No one here knows the details of your situation, so we can't really tell you what to think. But as time passes, as you yourself change, sometimes it's surprising that previously 'unforgivable' things suddenly become 'forgivable' and even 'easy' to put behind you and leave in the past. No guarantees, but the possibility, I'm willing to assert, does exist.

  • @TruthTeller-ez7ev
    @TruthTeller-ez7ev 8 місяців тому +2

    Great topic.

  • @susandelaney858
    @susandelaney858 6 місяців тому

    Very pithy and useful. Will listen again, with a pen and paper.

  • @LegallyBlondeRae
    @LegallyBlondeRae 7 місяців тому

    Many A-Ha! moments I can use. Wow! Great episode!

  • @Babka113
    @Babka113 3 місяці тому

    59:11: “the last thing I wanna say” … the witnessing layer in our consciousness that is independent of the events that occurred: this struck me as something extremely intuitive. It’s the first time I hear about this concept but somehow I know what it is. Where can I hear more about this topic? Any videos from a Rick?

  • @emilyhosea5999
    @emilyhosea5999 8 місяців тому +2

    Please write a book about this!

  • @donna-leeparkes3635
    @donna-leeparkes3635 8 місяців тому +2

    Great content

  • @patriciacole8773
    @patriciacole8773 8 місяців тому +3

    What I notice is that many people are emotionally immature and don’t know how to communicate by way of conversations. Arguments abound. Hugely people seem unable to share information through conversations.

  • @pmukherjee1237
    @pmukherjee1237 8 місяців тому +2

    Thank you

  • @Natascha-zh9sj
    @Natascha-zh9sj 8 місяців тому +1

    Firstly I am so grateful for your videos, and deeply moved by your enabling of emotional enrichening and nurturing and guidance... What about autism??? I'm an autistic woman, please tell me a video will help me and my partner navigate my new diagnosis

  • @vLovedkate
    @vLovedkate 8 місяців тому +1

    so helpful ❤

  • @lukefisch9483
    @lukefisch9483 8 місяців тому +3

    Holy macaroni y’all, learning about urself is crazy.

  • @MillionaireInCR-V
    @MillionaireInCR-V 3 місяці тому

    “You feel like the kid that’s about to be voted off the island”. Painfully true for me.

  • @patriciacole8773
    @patriciacole8773 8 місяців тому

    Please talk about the 16 character types and how we’re tested. What makes health and what are difficult people like.

  • @nettewilson5926
    @nettewilson5926 8 місяців тому

    My childhood was awesome. My entire adulthood has sucked. I knew it would, too. I often wish I had died as a young. Too late now!

  • @evaeggen6928
    @evaeggen6928 8 місяців тому

    Compassion for yourself and other members of the family is important, I think so too. Even if somebody still alive is still irritating, suppose I am considered irritating too..

  • @Rubylily2509
    @Rubylily2509 20 днів тому

    I like your hair Forrest

  • @estherhirsch4460
    @estherhirsch4460 17 днів тому

    A close family member said a horrible thing to me during Covidvand the hurt lingered. I said I could only move fed of they apologized and the apology was sorry it that it caused u hurt rather than the apology including I.... I looked like the difficult person since I wasn't comfortable.with it but didn't know why
    Now I understand that it wasn't a true apology.

  • @michaelboulos3272
    @michaelboulos3272 8 місяців тому +2

    ❤❤❤

  • @vivianamartinez1050
    @vivianamartinez1050 8 місяців тому +1

    “Releasing the yearning for something different” harsh stuff, my cringe meter just went up

  • @staleyexplores
    @staleyexplores 8 місяців тому +1

    I wonder if that inner view of yourself Dr. Hansen of being a quote" wimp" is why you sought out rock climbing because it's really hard. It's scary and it's on the edge. Makes you/us seem bold and daring and not a wimp. Now don't get me wrong when I'm climbing. I don't think about anything else and that's why we do it... So don't misunderstand me here. I just know that I wrestled in high school and I was terrible at it but I think I did it to seem more masculine when in reality I am a sensitive guy. Lack of a dad connection I'm sure also. I'm not enough I guess and had to prove how strong I was or prove I was strong physically. Just a random thought

    • @ForrestHanson
      @ForrestHanson  8 місяців тому +1

      Yeah I think this is fairly consistent with what I've heard from Rick in the past. He was definitely looking for ways to connect with his stronger aspects, and to feel physically capable.

  • @missbettyboop2509
    @missbettyboop2509 8 місяців тому +2

    Im so envious of you for having a great parent...but hey ho

  • @Mushroom321-
    @Mushroom321- 8 місяців тому +1

    " reclaim, repair "

  • @moiramahony8319
    @moiramahony8319 8 місяців тому

    Celcius are Non-freedom units! What does that mean, Forrest?

  • @martygarcia4219
    @martygarcia4219 8 місяців тому

    Do you keep referring to tour guest as dad?
    Did I miss something?

  • @Oliver-m9r
    @Oliver-m9r 6 місяців тому

    why is bro always happy? haha

  • @greentree5448
    @greentree5448 8 місяців тому +6

    I admire and adore both you and your father. But childhood trauma is HUGE, and it's frustrating when an hour-long podcast entitled "How to Heal from a Challenging Childhood" purports to have answers. Because you don't have answers, Forrest. The approaches you discuss with your dad, Rick, is all very top down. This develops insight and awareness, yes, but does absolutely nothing to heal Developmental Trauma. And you already know that. And we all know you know that. So please stop. Just stop. All you're doing is luring traumatized folks in with an enticing headline only to deliver to them the same empty bullshit, the same platitudes, that every other "healing" content creator delivers. Listening to two men discuss healing - and how hard your respective journeys were - when neither one of you has ever experienced developmental trauma is just a wee bit galling.

  • @SpottedTiger89
    @SpottedTiger89 8 місяців тому +1

    Lol! Seek out the cringe, embrace the cringe 😊

  • @gymnasticlife1788
    @gymnasticlife1788 8 місяців тому

    Love the cringe meter effect lol

  • @malemaline
    @malemaline 8 місяців тому +1

    Why do you force your laugh at times? Sometimes it's at strange times that don't fit the flow. Helping people heal deep wounds is not cringe. Appreciate your dad for sharing insights.

    • @peacefulisland67
      @peacefulisland67 8 місяців тому +5

      It's so interesting how we read other peoples' expressions in comparison to our own without realizing the bias.
      The more intensely I zero in on others critically, the more it's about me.
      One of the best parts of this podcast for what ails me, is seeing father and (grown) child interact light-heartedly (or dare I say, "normally") while submerged in serious discussions.
      In my house, asking for the salt or pepper at dinner was life threatening.
      Much appreciation to you and these sharers of life.
      🙏😑

    • @malemaline
      @malemaline 8 місяців тому +1

      @@peacefulisland67 I find your response interesting as well. It seemed to trigger something for you. What did I say that was so wrong?

  • @Callitout-kl1uq
    @Callitout-kl1uq 7 місяців тому

    I want to like your content but your smile and tone don’t work when talking about topics like childhood trauma.

  • @wildoceanappaloosawomangay2535
    @wildoceanappaloosawomangay2535 8 місяців тому +1

    You both are the sweetest sweetest humans
    💚
    Must’ve been nice to feel loved

  • @bethra.flowers
    @bethra.flowers 8 місяців тому +1

    ❤❤❤