![]() ![]() The internet, the iPads, the ease of everything. What might that say about the limits of parental influence? Well, our kids live in a world of immediate gratification. But at the same time there’s evidence suggesting that kids are increasingly unhappy. I assume that consequently they’re spending more time thinking about how to be a good parent. There’s evidence to suggest that parents are now spending more time doing things like playing with and reading to their kids than previous generations of parents did. “These are parents dedicated to raising kids who feel solid and confident while also trying to heal themselves.” “Millennial parents are more aware of things within themselves that don’t feel good, places that feel empty that they want to feel sturdier,” says Kennedy, who is currently working on a book, also called “Good Inside,” set to be published by Harper Wave next year. Via her popular Good Inside podcast and her more-than-800,000-follower Instagram account, her newsletter and online workshops, Kennedy, who is 38 and a mother of three, offers advice aimed - and this is what she believes distinguishes her approach - at managing the thoughts and feelings of parents as much as children. ![]() Becky, is the person whom they trust to deliver those ideas. For many millennials, the clinical psychologist Becky Kennedy, a.k.a. Every generation, sometimes building on and sometimes rejecting what came before, develops its own ideas about parenting. ![]()
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