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Curiosity is fragile, and families can lose it without meaning to. Kim Lee from the Children’s Consultancy unpacks the quiet patterns that shut down a child’s inner world: stress that makes everyone reactive, certainty that turns into labels, and shame that teaches kids they are “too much” or “not enough.” When curiosity disappears, mentalization fades too, and children stop asking “what am I feeling?” and start asking “what’s wrong with me?”
We talk through real-life family dynamics that often look normal on the surface: emotions getting dismissed, criticism becoming the default language, and unpredictability that keeps kids walking on eggshells. Kim explains how homes shaped by conflict, emotional neglect, or substance misuse can push children into survival mode, where hypervigilance replaces trust. You’ll hear how children may become expert mood-readers while still struggling to understand feelings, and why some end up people pleasing, withdrawing, acting angry, or taking on the emotional caretaker role known as parentification.
The heart of the episode is a hopeful reframe. Instead of hunting for someone to blame, we ask better questions: what happened to us, what hurts are we carrying, and what might we be missing? We end with the idea that mentalization is not perfection, it is relationship and relationship can offer a new beginning. If this resonates, subscribe, share with a parent or caregiver, and leave a review with the one question you think every family should ask more often.
By Kim LeeSend us Fan Mail
Curiosity is fragile, and families can lose it without meaning to. Kim Lee from the Children’s Consultancy unpacks the quiet patterns that shut down a child’s inner world: stress that makes everyone reactive, certainty that turns into labels, and shame that teaches kids they are “too much” or “not enough.” When curiosity disappears, mentalization fades too, and children stop asking “what am I feeling?” and start asking “what’s wrong with me?”
We talk through real-life family dynamics that often look normal on the surface: emotions getting dismissed, criticism becoming the default language, and unpredictability that keeps kids walking on eggshells. Kim explains how homes shaped by conflict, emotional neglect, or substance misuse can push children into survival mode, where hypervigilance replaces trust. You’ll hear how children may become expert mood-readers while still struggling to understand feelings, and why some end up people pleasing, withdrawing, acting angry, or taking on the emotional caretaker role known as parentification.
The heart of the episode is a hopeful reframe. Instead of hunting for someone to blame, we ask better questions: what happened to us, what hurts are we carrying, and what might we be missing? We end with the idea that mentalization is not perfection, it is relationship and relationship can offer a new beginning. If this resonates, subscribe, share with a parent or caregiver, and leave a review with the one question you think every family should ask more often.