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When Love Feels Like Judgment: Navigating Connection with our Adult Children

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Manage episode 510322111 series 3341245
Content provided by Bite Your Tongue. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Bite Your Tongue or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Send us a text

What if the words you use to show love are the very ones your adult child hears as judgment? That tension—care that lands as critique—drives so many family conflicts, and Deborah Tannen gives us the language map to change it.
We sit down with the Georgetown linguist and bestselling author to explore conversational style, meta-messages, and the subtle ways timing, tone, and turn‑taking shape intimacy at home.

Tannen shares vivid stories—from “Do you like your hair that long?” to car‑ride silences—that reveal how message and meta‑message diverge, why “helpful” advice stings, and how indirect questions can be invitations to co‑decide rather than games to decode. We trace the fault lines of gendered talk, where solutions collide with “troubles talk,” and show practical scripts to ask consent before giving feedback, translate intent across styles, and keep curiosity alive without sounding intrusive.
We also dig into complementary schismogenesis—the spiral where differences push each other to extremes—and how to stop the chase/withdraw dance by adjusting cadence and expectations. Birth order roles resurface in adulthood, turning firstborn competence into control and younger resistance into reflex; naming those roles loosens their grip. Tannen’s take on apologies is both moving and actionable: why impact matters more than defense, how a simple acknowledgment can heal years of hurt, and why late‑life apologies carry disproportionate power. Along the way we address the “big three” hot zones—hair, clothes, weight—plus social media’s sting of exclusion, and we offer boundary phrases that preserve both bond and autonomy.
If you’ve ever thought, “I was just caring,” while someone heard, “You’re not enough,” this conversation offers clear tools to bridge the gap. Listen, share with your family, and try one shift this week: ask before advising, label your intent, or offer a four‑part apology.

This conversation is filled with insights that can help you strengthen your most important relationships. You may also enjoy this Youtube video of a talk Dr. Tannen gave in Amsterdam highlighting the conversational differences between men and women. We found it fascinating.

🎧 Listen now and join us in exploring the power of language, connection, and understanding.

Share your feedback about the episode by emailing us at [email protected].

Follow us on social media and visit biteyourtonguepodcast.com.

Thank you to Connie Gorant Fisher, our audio engineer.

Support the show

The site and podcast do not contain any medical/health information or advice. The medical/health information is for general information and educational purposes only and is not suitable for professional device. Accordingly, before taking any actions based upon such information, we encourage you to consult with the appropriate professionals. We do not provide any kind of medical/health advice. THE USE OF OR RELIANCE OF ANY INFORMATION CONTAINED ON THE SITE OR PODCAST IS SOLELY AT YOUR OWN RISK.

  continue reading

Chapters

1. Caring Or Criticism? (00:00:00)

2. Welcome And Guest Introduction (00:00:29)

3. Conversational Style Foundations (00:01:11)

4. Getting The Floor And “Interruptions” (00:03:20)

5. Gendered Talk And Indirectness (00:06:17)

6. Mothers, Daughters, And The “Big Three” (00:10:43)

7. Meta-Messages Explained (00:14:16)

8. Complementary Schismogenesis (00:16:30)

9. Closeness Versus Independence (00:18:15)

10. Birth Order And Family Roles (00:20:30)

11. The Power And Price Of Apology (00:22:00)

12. Two Takeaways And Closing (00:25:20)

112 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 510322111 series 3341245
Content provided by Bite Your Tongue. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Bite Your Tongue or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Send us a text

What if the words you use to show love are the very ones your adult child hears as judgment? That tension—care that lands as critique—drives so many family conflicts, and Deborah Tannen gives us the language map to change it.
We sit down with the Georgetown linguist and bestselling author to explore conversational style, meta-messages, and the subtle ways timing, tone, and turn‑taking shape intimacy at home.

Tannen shares vivid stories—from “Do you like your hair that long?” to car‑ride silences—that reveal how message and meta‑message diverge, why “helpful” advice stings, and how indirect questions can be invitations to co‑decide rather than games to decode. We trace the fault lines of gendered talk, where solutions collide with “troubles talk,” and show practical scripts to ask consent before giving feedback, translate intent across styles, and keep curiosity alive without sounding intrusive.
We also dig into complementary schismogenesis—the spiral where differences push each other to extremes—and how to stop the chase/withdraw dance by adjusting cadence and expectations. Birth order roles resurface in adulthood, turning firstborn competence into control and younger resistance into reflex; naming those roles loosens their grip. Tannen’s take on apologies is both moving and actionable: why impact matters more than defense, how a simple acknowledgment can heal years of hurt, and why late‑life apologies carry disproportionate power. Along the way we address the “big three” hot zones—hair, clothes, weight—plus social media’s sting of exclusion, and we offer boundary phrases that preserve both bond and autonomy.
If you’ve ever thought, “I was just caring,” while someone heard, “You’re not enough,” this conversation offers clear tools to bridge the gap. Listen, share with your family, and try one shift this week: ask before advising, label your intent, or offer a four‑part apology.

This conversation is filled with insights that can help you strengthen your most important relationships. You may also enjoy this Youtube video of a talk Dr. Tannen gave in Amsterdam highlighting the conversational differences between men and women. We found it fascinating.

🎧 Listen now and join us in exploring the power of language, connection, and understanding.

Share your feedback about the episode by emailing us at [email protected].

Follow us on social media and visit biteyourtonguepodcast.com.

Thank you to Connie Gorant Fisher, our audio engineer.

Support the show

The site and podcast do not contain any medical/health information or advice. The medical/health information is for general information and educational purposes only and is not suitable for professional device. Accordingly, before taking any actions based upon such information, we encourage you to consult with the appropriate professionals. We do not provide any kind of medical/health advice. THE USE OF OR RELIANCE OF ANY INFORMATION CONTAINED ON THE SITE OR PODCAST IS SOLELY AT YOUR OWN RISK.

  continue reading

Chapters

1. Caring Or Criticism? (00:00:00)

2. Welcome And Guest Introduction (00:00:29)

3. Conversational Style Foundations (00:01:11)

4. Getting The Floor And “Interruptions” (00:03:20)

5. Gendered Talk And Indirectness (00:06:17)

6. Mothers, Daughters, And The “Big Three” (00:10:43)

7. Meta-Messages Explained (00:14:16)

8. Complementary Schismogenesis (00:16:30)

9. Closeness Versus Independence (00:18:15)

10. Birth Order And Family Roles (00:20:30)

11. The Power And Price Of Apology (00:22:00)

12. Two Takeaways And Closing (00:25:20)

112 episodes

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