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Friendships are one of the first places our children meet the raw edges of relationship: loyalty, exclusion, conflict, repair and belonging. And if you’re a parent watching from the sidelines, it can stir up everything. In this conversation, Julie and Bridget unpack the emotional complexity of children’s friendships, particularly through the tween and teenage years, where identity, social power and belonging start to take shape.
They explore the difference between protecting our children and rescuing them, the courage required to teach accountability, and why sometimes the most powerful thing we can do as parents is step back and allow our children to learn how relationships actually work.
In this episode we discuss:
• Why our children’s friendships can trigger such a deep emotional response in parents…especially mothers
• The different ways boys and girls often develop socially and how this shapes their friendship dynamics
• Why the tween years are a “trying on” period for identity, belonging and social power
• The challenge of holding the reality that our child can sometimes be both the hurt one and the one who hurts others
• The temptation to rescue our children socially - and why stepping back is often the more powerful parenting move
• Teaching children accountability and helping them understand the impact of their behaviour on others
• The difference between true bullying and the messy, normal friction of childhood friendships
• How parents can guide children through conflict without taking sides or becoming the referee
• Why going directly to other parents about friendship issues often escalates problems rather than resolving them
• The importance of partnering with teachers and schools when social issues arise
• Navigating the complicated world of group chats, devices and digital friendships
• Helping children recognise who their friends really are and what healthy friendship actually looks like
• Allowing our children to learn resilience, communication and repair through real-life friendship experiences
• Why parenting through friendship struggles is less about fixing the problem, and more about raising relationally aware humans
Want support on this journey? Come join us inside Honey Club - where we melt these blocks together, one breath, one practice, one deep remembering at a time. Find out more at julietenner.love or visit: https://julie-tenner.newzenler.com/courses/honeyclub
Reach out to Bridget for 1:1 coaching - bridgetwood.life
By Bridget Wood & Julie Tenner4.3
2323 ratings
Friendships are one of the first places our children meet the raw edges of relationship: loyalty, exclusion, conflict, repair and belonging. And if you’re a parent watching from the sidelines, it can stir up everything. In this conversation, Julie and Bridget unpack the emotional complexity of children’s friendships, particularly through the tween and teenage years, where identity, social power and belonging start to take shape.
They explore the difference between protecting our children and rescuing them, the courage required to teach accountability, and why sometimes the most powerful thing we can do as parents is step back and allow our children to learn how relationships actually work.
In this episode we discuss:
• Why our children’s friendships can trigger such a deep emotional response in parents…especially mothers
• The different ways boys and girls often develop socially and how this shapes their friendship dynamics
• Why the tween years are a “trying on” period for identity, belonging and social power
• The challenge of holding the reality that our child can sometimes be both the hurt one and the one who hurts others
• The temptation to rescue our children socially - and why stepping back is often the more powerful parenting move
• Teaching children accountability and helping them understand the impact of their behaviour on others
• The difference between true bullying and the messy, normal friction of childhood friendships
• How parents can guide children through conflict without taking sides or becoming the referee
• Why going directly to other parents about friendship issues often escalates problems rather than resolving them
• The importance of partnering with teachers and schools when social issues arise
• Navigating the complicated world of group chats, devices and digital friendships
• Helping children recognise who their friends really are and what healthy friendship actually looks like
• Allowing our children to learn resilience, communication and repair through real-life friendship experiences
• Why parenting through friendship struggles is less about fixing the problem, and more about raising relationally aware humans
Want support on this journey? Come join us inside Honey Club - where we melt these blocks together, one breath, one practice, one deep remembering at a time. Find out more at julietenner.love or visit: https://julie-tenner.newzenler.com/courses/honeyclub
Reach out to Bridget for 1:1 coaching - bridgetwood.life

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