AI transcript
0:00:06 No, because they’re not developing the skills they need to do it themselves.
0:00:11 So what you need to do is be able to step back and let them fall.
0:00:18 You have to trust in the wisdom that growth happens through quote-unquote failure, that
0:00:22 when you try and protect your kids from failure, you’re ultimately protecting them from growth.
0:00:27 I’m Guy Kawasaki.
0:00:31 This is the Remarkable People Podcast, and today is a special edition.
0:00:34 We’re coming to you from Honolulu, Hawaii.
0:00:38 So what you see behind me is not a virtual background.
0:00:39 That’s a real background.
0:00:41 That is Waikiki.
0:00:43 I’m near Diamond Head.
0:00:46 I’m looking towards Waikiki the other way.
0:00:48 Usually Diamond Head is that way.
0:00:50 Queen Surf is that way.
0:00:54 So I’m not here to be the Hawaii Visitors Bureau.
0:01:00 I’m here to help you be remarkable, and we have found a very remarkable person.
0:01:02 She is in California right now.
0:01:09 If I were in California right now, we’d be only about 20 miles apart, but now we’re 2,500 miles apart.
0:01:12 So our guest is Caroline Fleck.
0:01:17 And I got to tell you, her book is the most interesting.
0:01:22 And I have to tell you, Caroline, I felt convicted in your book many, many times.
0:01:27 And yeah, I feel like I’m a bad parent, bad spouse, bad everything.
0:01:28 So anyway.
0:01:28 No, no.
0:01:38 So Caroline is a clinical psychologist, and her practice is really focused on emotional resilience and communication.
0:01:43 And she kind of bridges psychology and real-world challenges.
0:01:47 And she’s very famous for this concept called validation.
0:01:49 So that’s what we’re going to talk about.
0:01:50 Okay, Caroline?
0:01:52 Yeah, I got to tell you.
0:01:59 So, you know, first of all, I often go off the rails when I start a podcast, and that’s going to be true today.
0:02:03 So I have to tell you, there’s one sentence in your book.
0:02:07 When I read it, I stopped.
0:02:09 I was reading the PDF.
0:02:11 I selected it.
0:02:12 I quoted it.
0:02:13 I put it in my notes.
0:02:18 And you will not guess what quote I took, but I love this sentence.
0:02:23 I’ve never read a sentence like this in a business book, and I have to read 52 books a year.
0:02:24 Oh, my God.
0:02:31 The quote is, an anecdote isn’t a substitute for scientific evidence.
0:02:32 Oh, my God.
0:02:33 Oh, my gosh.
0:02:37 Basically, you just indicted every nonfiction writer.
0:02:39 My God, especially business book.
0:02:43 Malcolm Gladwell is turning over in his grave right now.
0:02:45 Oh, I love that.
0:02:46 I appreciate it.
0:02:50 And then we’re just going to fanboy out a little bit for a while.
0:02:50 Let’s do it.
0:03:00 So then I come to the end of your book, and I have to say that I think your epilogue is the best epilogue I have ever written a book.
0:03:02 Oh, my gosh.
0:03:05 I hope I don’t get in trouble with Madison for saying this.
0:03:10 And it starts with the sentence, I have no boobs.
0:03:11 And I read that.
0:03:15 I said, you know, that is not a typical epilogue start.
0:03:18 And then you go in to discuss cancer and all.
0:03:20 I’m like, wow, what a powerful epilogue.
0:03:21 Anyway.
0:03:23 Oh, my gosh.
0:03:24 You are so kind.
0:03:25 Thank you.
0:03:28 And thank you for reading the epilogue, actually.
0:03:32 Because a lot of people, they don’t even finish the book, much less read epilogues these days.
0:03:33 So I appreciate it.
0:03:39 I loved in the middle of the book where you said something like, well, if you’ve gone this far, I really thank you.
0:03:44 And you don’t have to read the rest of the book because you probably read more than most people ever read in a book.
0:03:47 I looked at that and said, that’s probably true.
0:03:53 I’m going to put that line in my next book because one of the key skills you talk about is copying.
0:03:56 And I know how to copy people.
0:03:57 I work for Steve Jobs.
0:03:59 If anything, I learned what to steal.
0:04:02 And that is a concept worth stealing.
0:04:04 Oh, I love that.
0:04:05 I love that.
0:04:06 What to steal.
0:04:09 I hadn’t thought about copying in those terms, but you’re exactly right.
0:04:10 It is.
0:04:18 Well, I think there’s a very famous Picasso quote, something along the lines that real artists steal or something like that.
0:04:18 Yes, yes, yes.
0:04:19 I know what you’re saying.
0:04:19 I know.
0:04:21 And it rang true to me as well.
0:04:25 Thank God for Xerox Park is all I can say.
0:04:29 So listen, let’s just start off really basically.
0:04:33 Could you just explain what is validation?
0:04:36 And I don’t mean for your parking ticket at the restaurant or the hotel.
0:04:40 What is validation to a clinical psychologist like you?
0:04:52 Validation is simply a way of communicating that you’re there, you get it, and you care, and that you accept the other person non-judgmentally.
0:04:57 It’s the feeling of feeling seen or feeling heard.
0:05:04 When we have that experience, what we are experiencing, according to clinical psychologists like myself, is validation.
0:05:06 We feel validated.
0:05:09 We feel like somebody sees us.
0:05:11 They understand us.
0:05:16 They see the rationality not just in our thoughts, but also in our emotions.
0:05:23 And it’s probably that latter part, seeing the rationality in our emotions, that really does something for us.
0:05:28 Now, are you telling me that everybody’s feelings are valid?
0:05:32 Are there not cases that you shouldn’t validate them?
0:05:35 Leave that to the psychologists.
0:05:47 And I mean that so seriously because, and this is serious, the effects of invalidation on children, on adults, on everybody, it’s devastating.
0:05:59 So coming from an environment in which a child, for instance, was exposed to pervasive invalidation, meaning when they said they felt sad, the parents said, walk it off, right?
0:06:02 If they were frustrated, it’s your being a baby.
0:06:06 Basically, whatever emotion they expressed was dismissed or criticized.
0:06:15 That type of invalidation leads to some of the most serious types of psychopathology or psychological disorders that we know of.
0:06:17 So it’s not small stuff.
0:06:22 And so if you don’t understand where someone’s coming from, you can disagree with their thoughts.
0:06:24 You can argue with their reasoning.
0:06:29 Just don’t be in the business of telling people that they don’t feel what they’re telling you they feel.
0:06:31 A psychologist can unpack that.
0:06:32 You just focus on something else.
0:06:37 You haven’t been talking to my children, have you?
0:06:41 Well, yeah.
0:06:41 Okay.
0:06:47 So just give me like a definition of what are the qualities of what’s valid.
0:06:50 You raise a good point, which is, is everything valid?
0:06:57 As psychologists, when I’m working with patients, I need to form a relationship and I need to do that quickly.
0:07:02 And the quickest, swiftest way to form a relationship is through validation.
0:07:03 Okay.
0:07:04 It’s by validating them in some way.
0:07:07 And I’ve got three things I could validate.
0:07:11 I could validate their thoughts, their emotions, or their behavior.
0:07:12 Okay.
0:07:14 Thoughts are valid if they’re logical.
0:07:16 Behavior is valid if it’s effective.
0:07:19 Emotions are valid if they fit the situation.
0:07:20 All right.
0:07:23 But you only need to focus on one of those.
0:07:24 Does that make sense?
0:07:25 It does.
0:07:28 But let’s hypothetically say…
0:07:28 Do it.
0:07:28 Do it.
0:07:29 Yeah.
0:07:34 Let’s hypothetically say a politician shows up in your office and says,
0:07:39 I believe it’s Jewish space lasers that’s controlling the weather.
0:07:41 Are you going to validate that?
0:07:42 No, I’m not.
0:07:43 Those thoughts are not valid.
0:07:51 However, if they say to me, and I am terrified about the implications of that, I want to get
0:07:57 out and raise as much money and get as much support as I can to protect us from this manipulation,
0:08:02 that emotion, I understand that emotion based on what they’re thinking.
0:08:09 The thoughts are not valid, but the emotion makes sense in light of what they’re thinking.
0:08:14 That is my whole job, both as a clinical psychologist, working with folks who have
0:08:19 thought disorders and all sorts of things, and frankly, as a parent to a young kid, a lot
0:08:21 of what they’re saying, I’m like, that’s not rational.
0:08:22 That does not quite make sense.
0:08:25 And yet her emotion is real, right?
0:08:28 I don’t need to validate the thought to speak to the emotion.
0:08:30 And this is the critical thing.
0:08:38 You stand no chance of changing someone’s opinion, of getting through to them, of challenging
0:08:42 their assumptions if they don’t feel accepted by you.
0:08:52 So, are you telling me that validation is not at all the same thing as agreement?
0:08:54 It is not.
0:08:57 I’m so glad you flagged this because this is where folks get stuck.
0:08:58 We’re afraid.
0:09:00 Well, I don’t want to say that I agree, right?
0:09:01 I don’t agree.
0:09:02 I’ll give you an example.
0:09:07 I’m a vegetarian for animal, ethical, and environmental reasons.
0:09:13 That said, I see a lot of valid reasons why somebody would choose to eat meat, okay?
0:09:14 I don’t agree with them.
0:09:16 I make a different decision.
0:09:22 But if I just wanted to validate what’s logical there, there’s tons that I could focus on.
0:09:26 Now, if I wanted to try and change their opinion or change their position, I could come at that a
0:09:33 different way, but I don’t have to agree with someone to see the facts that they’re building
0:09:37 off of and to see the logic in what they’re saying, presuming it’s there.
0:09:42 In the case of the politician that you described, the logic wasn’t there, and so I couldn’t validate
0:09:42 that.
0:09:44 But this is the game.
0:09:46 It’s trying to find the kernel of truth.
0:09:52 What’s valid in this person’s perspective and zoning in on that first, rather than what
0:09:57 do I disagree with and let me hammer that over and over again until I get through to them.
0:10:04 So I’m going to ask you to tell the story, which was my favorite story of the whole book,
0:10:06 because I felt convicted.
0:10:10 I’ve done things like this, of Havana and the tick.
0:10:11 Can you please tell that?
0:10:13 That is a great story.
0:10:16 Every parent will be able to relate to Havana and the tick.
0:10:19 Havana is my daughter.
0:10:22 She’s 11 now, but I think she was maybe seven.
0:10:24 And we were going on a hike, all right?
0:10:27 And I was very excited going down to one of my favorite places to hike.
0:10:29 And it’s a drive.
0:10:31 It’s like 30, 40 minutes.
0:10:35 And we get there and Havana is in a mood, right?
0:10:39 Like, you know that feeling when you open, like one of your kids is off and it’s just like
0:10:43 the entire afternoon hangs in the balance, like which way is this going to go?
0:10:46 And she was feeling a little carsick and she was crabby.
0:10:50 And so we start hiking and she’s kind of dragging, but she’s doing it.
0:10:51 We’re not even five minutes in.
0:10:54 And she screams like she has been shot.
0:10:55 Okay.
0:11:00 And she says, oh my gosh, this tree, mom, it stabbed me.
0:11:02 And I kind of, I’m like, where?
0:11:03 She lifts up her shirt.
0:11:04 I don’t see anything.
0:11:05 I’m like, let’s keep going.
0:11:07 You know, come on, come on.
0:11:09 And that’s it.
0:11:11 Like the trip is over from that point for her, right?
0:11:14 Every five minutes she needs to stop to rest her back.
0:11:16 And she wants us to carry her.
0:11:19 And I find myself being like, we got to keep going.
0:11:20 Come on, come on.
0:11:21 I don’t want to reinforce this.
0:11:24 I don’t want to just give into this.
0:11:25 I’m a behaviorist.
0:11:26 I understand how this works.
0:11:28 And then, oh golly.
0:11:29 Oh boy.
0:11:33 We get home and she’s still complaining about her back.
0:11:35 So she goes to get in the shower.
0:11:36 I’m helping her get in the shower.
0:11:38 She says, it hurts too much to lift my arm.
0:11:40 And I’m like, oh my golly.
0:11:47 I lift off her shirt and I see she has this huge tick lodged in her back.
0:11:51 I actually had a picture of it that I was going to include in the book, but it was too grainy
0:11:54 because it looks so gnarly.
0:11:55 Okay.
0:12:02 And all of a sudden I realized that the emotion, the frustration, the pain that she
0:12:04 was describing was valid.
0:12:11 And I had spent the last however many hours invalidating her with, we can’t be overdramatic.
0:12:15 If you’re upset, you can use your words, but like all the traditional parenting stuff.
0:12:19 And I just had this moment of like, well, I stepped in that one.
0:12:27 Well, in a sense, I’m glad to hear that even a clinical psychologist, an expert like you
0:12:28 blows it.
0:12:30 Oh, that’s, that’s the whole name of the game, right?
0:12:35 I mean, it, but it really is about, as you describe in your book, that growth mindset that
0:12:37 I can do better.
0:12:43 I think it’s critical to look at skills like validation as skills.
0:12:45 You develop them over time.
0:12:50 You grow into them through practice, through exposure and through understanding.
0:12:53 And so, yes, please go screw it up.
0:12:55 That’s the whole point.
0:12:56 That’s the only way you learn.
0:13:04 Now you draw a very clear dichotomy between validation and problem solving.
0:13:05 Yeah.
0:13:09 So let’s explore the relationship between those two things.
0:13:11 We’ve talked about validation.
0:13:17 Is validation now a precursor to problem solving, or is it a substitute for problem solving?
0:13:20 Or is it a foundation for problem solving?
0:13:22 Oh my gosh.
0:13:26 The relationship between the two is almost like a, a Zen cone.
0:13:30 If you try and validate someone, a Zen cone, like a riddle.
0:13:33 I know what a, I know what a shave ice cone is.
0:13:35 I don’t know what is a Zen cone.
0:13:36 It’s like a riddle.
0:13:43 And it seems like two things don’t go together, but to figure out the riddle, you have to understand
0:13:46 how they can coexist, but it doesn’t make sense because they seem kind of diametrically
0:13:47 opposed.
0:13:55 And at the core of this is the idea that acceptance, accepting someone is actually critical to helping
0:13:56 them change.
0:13:58 And so how is that?
0:14:01 I mean, if you accept someone, you can’t also want them to change.
0:14:02 That doesn’t work.
0:14:04 And yet it, it does.
0:14:12 So problem solving, problem solving is an attempt to change how someone feels, how they’re reacting,
0:14:14 whatever outcome they had.
0:14:16 It comes from a good place.
0:14:17 Our kid comes home.
0:14:18 They didn’t do well on their quiz.
0:14:20 They’re so upset.
0:14:22 We jump in with, it’s okay, right?
0:14:23 It’s not that big a deal.
0:14:28 Which is a subtle attempt to change how they feel.
0:14:32 I’m challenging their thoughts in that moment.
0:14:33 I’m trying to reframe it.
0:14:38 I could then come at it and say, next time, let’s just review your words on the drive into
0:14:38 school.
0:14:44 There I am trying to problem solve or change their behavior so that we get a different outcome
0:14:45 next time.
0:14:48 That is all change focused.
0:14:52 It’s very different from saying, ah, you must be devastated.
0:14:58 When I was your age, I failed a math quiz and I remember crying in the bathroom at school.
0:14:59 I was so upset.
0:15:01 And my mom had to come pick me up.
0:15:03 And right, really just leaning into that.
0:15:06 That is a very different response.
0:15:13 And usually, and I can say this with some authority, as someone who speaks to people day in and day
0:15:14 out about their problems.
0:15:20 When folks come to us with an issue, they are seeking validation and not problem solving.
0:15:22 At least initially.
0:15:28 They need to trust that we understand if they’re going to listen to us down the line anyway.
0:15:29 Right?
0:15:33 Like, I don’t take the advice of people if I don’t think they understand the situation or can
0:15:34 relate to where I’m at.
0:15:36 So where do you draw the line?
0:15:37 Okay.
0:15:39 So I understand the validation part.
0:15:40 You had a bad quiz.
0:15:41 I understand.
0:15:42 I had the same thing.
0:15:45 You know, you’re attending, you’re copying.
0:15:46 Yes.
0:15:47 I got the whole acronym.
0:15:50 I got all eight stages right.
0:15:51 Okay.
0:15:54 So you attend, you copy, you do all that.
0:16:01 But then after you do all that, then do you suggest ways to study for the next quiz or you
0:16:03 just lay off that completely?
0:16:04 It depends.
0:16:06 It’s the most frustrating answer in the world.
0:16:08 It depends for several reasons.
0:16:16 The first of which is that if you do this well, you will be surprised by the other person’s
0:16:20 ability, oftentimes, to come up with solutions themselves.
0:16:21 All right.
0:16:25 So you’re all ready with your arsenal of things that you think they should do.
0:16:31 But just in feeling accepted or understood, as they start to talk it out, they often, not
0:16:33 always, but there are times when they get there themselves.
0:16:39 If not, then I have to decide, is this the right moment?
0:16:42 So we’re really eager to get that problem solving in there.
0:16:49 But sometimes, in the example with the spelling test, it’s fine to just let that sit.
0:16:53 I can circle back the next day and talk about study strategies.
0:16:55 I don’t need to do it right then.
0:16:59 So it’s just, I know I need to get there.
0:17:04 It’s about being intentional and focusing on being effective rather than just getting it
0:17:05 out there.
0:17:08 There’s no point in getting out your great ideas if they’re not going to be received.
0:17:10 It’s just, it doesn’t matter.
0:17:14 Did you just put every tutor out of business?
0:17:18 No, because tutors are hired for problem solving, right?
0:17:20 That’s what they’re asked to do.
0:17:21 It’s very clear.
0:17:26 But when someone comes to you for support, they’re not necessarily asking for you to solve
0:17:29 whatever it is they’re dealing with.
0:17:33 They might just want to hear, yeah, it’s really hard raising teenagers, right?
0:17:36 Not, you need to validate your kids more if you want them to, right?
0:17:44 If you were a high school tutor and you started off with validation, you would become a better
0:17:46 tutor in general, wouldn’t you?
0:17:47 I think so, yeah, I do.
0:17:54 I think, this is a weird language perhaps to use in the context of tutoring, but validation
0:17:56 is really at the core of relationships.
0:18:02 It is what it means to feel loved in a sense, right?
0:18:03 Because it communicates acceptance.
0:18:08 And if we don’t feel accepted, it’s hard to feel loved.
0:18:14 And I think that’s a really, really critical point that we confuse or lose in the shuffle.
0:18:18 That acceptance is critical in that sense.
0:18:23 As soon as this recording ends, I’m going to start validating Madison.
0:18:25 I’m going to practice on Madison.
0:18:26 So I get good at validating.
0:18:29 Then I’m going to go to my kids and my family.
0:18:31 Oh, just do it all.
0:18:32 Do it all at once.
0:18:33 Don’t hold back.
0:18:34 Don’t hold back at all.
0:18:54 So have you noticed a difference in validation skills by gender?
0:18:54 Wow.
0:18:56 What a great question.
0:19:02 So in my book, I talk, there’s, you know, about eight different validation skills that
0:19:03 we as therapists are trained in.
0:19:04 We learn these skills.
0:19:09 We have to master them so that we can go out and validate our clients and
0:19:14 establish a therapeutic alliance and trust and everything else.
0:19:18 Of these eight skills, one of them is called taking action.
0:19:22 And it’s weird because it sounds a little bit like problem solving in that it has you
0:19:25 intervene, go in there and do something, right?
0:19:29 If somebody got a flat tire and they call you and they say, I’m on the side of the road.
0:19:33 And you say, oh my gosh, you must be so upset and worried, right?
0:19:34 They can validate all day long.
0:19:39 But if they don’t take action and come and get you, you’re not going to feel like they really
0:19:40 appreciate the situation.
0:19:46 And my hypothesis, I don’t know if I ever formulated it in this way, but I always assumed
0:19:51 that men would be more receptive to taking action.
0:19:56 In other words, that they would be seeking taking action more from their partners, perhaps,
0:20:00 as opposed to like emotional or verbal types of validation.
0:20:03 And that has not proven to be true.
0:20:09 On the contrary, I’ve just, and this is just, again, anecdotal from my clinical work.
0:20:10 I’ve observed.
0:20:16 Wait, you said anecdotes is not a substitute for scientific.
0:20:18 It’s true.
0:20:21 And if we had data on it, I would refer to that data.
0:20:24 In the absence of it, I will just give my anecdotes.
0:20:27 And that did surprise me.
0:20:33 And so in my work with couples, it’s often about helping them figure out what it is they’re
0:20:39 actually seeking, what actually helps them feel seen and heard, because it’s not often what
0:20:40 the other person would expect.
0:20:46 And have you also noticed differences for validation by culture?
0:20:50 Are there different cultures that validate more or validate less?
0:20:54 There’s huge differences in the extent to which we validate emotions.
0:20:59 And even within American culture, there’s been somewhat of a revolution, right?
0:21:04 We didn’t talk about emotions forever, much less validate them, or make an effort to really
0:21:06 go out of our way to validate them.
0:21:09 So I think there are differences.
0:21:16 The most meaningful thing, however, is within your culture, is if you are receiving
0:21:23 more or less validation than is typical of, say, a child in that culture, if that makes sense.
0:21:30 In the same way that we see punishment, different types of punishment may be perceived as more
0:21:37 damaging, more abusive to a child who is being raised outside of a culture or raised in a country
0:21:41 where the cultural practices do not apply in the same way.
0:21:45 And so they feel more targeted, if that makes sense.
0:21:46 Yes, it does.
0:21:49 Okay, so the last variable is age.
0:21:54 As you get older, do you get more able to validate people?
0:21:56 Oh, do you get better at it?
0:21:57 That’s interesting.
0:22:00 I thought you were going to ask, do different ages require different types of validation?
0:22:02 Well, that’s a good question too, yeah.
0:22:04 Just to validate your question.
0:22:11 That one, I think you know the answer to, because you have four kids.
0:22:13 Depends how you define adolescence.
0:22:15 Out of adolescence or in adolescence?
0:22:18 Depends how you define adolescence.
0:22:19 Adolescence, that’s right.
0:22:27 Well, I’m sure you notice that when your kids are younger, they just want all sorts of, I see how hard you tried.
0:22:30 All of that type of like warm, fuzzy, right?
0:22:32 You really worked hard on that.
0:22:39 If you try that with a 15-year-old, right, they are going to just squirm inside.
0:22:41 They are not feeling validated.
0:22:43 They are feeling annoyed.
0:22:51 And so as they get older, they need much less in the form of that like, I see you type of stuff.
0:22:53 Because they don’t really want to be seen.
0:22:55 They want to be respected, right?
0:23:05 And so validating their thoughts or their rationale goes a lot further than going in with the like, I see your effort there.
0:23:06 I see what you did.
0:23:11 And then they kind of move back out of that into adulthood a little bit and become more balanced.
0:23:15 Do we get better at validation as we get older?
0:23:17 It really depends.
0:23:19 It depends on what is modeled for you.
0:23:30 And I say this because we know, as I said, with folks who are exposed to chronic invalidation and then have different disorders where they end up in treatment,
0:23:39 one of my jobs as a psychologist is to teach them how to validate themselves and others because it was not modeled for them.
0:23:44 And validation is very much like a language.
0:23:51 It is a language we should be teaching kids at a young age because they pick it up so fast.
0:23:59 It is fascinating to me trying to teach a 10-year-old versus a 20-year-old how to validate themselves or another person.
0:24:02 The 10-year-old picks it up.
0:24:05 The 20-year-old, it takes two, three times as long.
0:24:09 They don’t develop that language capacity in the same way.
0:24:12 Your practice is in Silicon Valley.
0:24:17 And we can edit this answer out.
0:24:27 But do you look at these, what has been labeled the nerd Reich, do you look at these nerd Rikers, these tech bro billionaires?
0:24:30 They are the richest people in the world.
0:24:31 They have everything.
0:24:32 They have wealth.
0:24:33 They have power.
0:24:34 They have visibility.
0:24:35 They have everything.
0:24:44 And yet they seem to be primarily concerned with long-term capital gains rates and, you know, making crypto successful.
0:24:50 Why aren’t they taking the high road and helping society instead of just trying to make more money?
0:24:57 Do you think it’s because they weren’t validated when they’re young or, you know, am I just trying to criticize these shitbags?
0:25:02 Yeah, yeah, yeah, and there are so many shitbags, let’s just be clear, in Silicon Valley.
0:25:06 I think, again, we search for validation in different ways.
0:25:13 And I think that money is a sense that we are valued and that we are valuable.
0:25:20 And once you’ve had that hit, right, that little dopamine hit of, ooh, I’m valuable.
0:25:21 People see my worth.
0:25:23 You continue to seek it out in those ways.
0:25:30 But as you will see, it’s an insatiable thirst because you’re not actually giving yourself water.
0:25:32 It’s like coffee, right?
0:25:33 It dehydrates you more.
0:25:42 And so they’re actually seeking validation, acceptance through the wrong sources.
0:25:48 And therefore, they consume more and try and get more and more because it just keeps dehydrating them.
0:25:55 So is there a fine line between too much and too little seeking external validation?
0:25:59 I mean, I would think it’s healthy to seek external validation.
0:26:02 It’s kind of reinforcing its feedback.
0:26:08 On the other hand, I would say that maybe our current president is just obsessed with external validation.
0:26:12 So where’s the fine line between too much and too little?
0:26:15 How can you tell if you’re trying to get it too much?
0:26:16 Good question.
0:26:19 We talked about the difference between validation and agreeing, right?
0:26:21 I said it’s not the same as agreeing.
0:26:24 It’s also not the same as praise.
0:26:27 Praise is a positive judgment.
0:26:29 It’s positive, but it’s a judgment nonetheless.
0:26:31 It says, good job.
0:26:32 You’re great.
0:26:35 It’s a heart emoji on Instagram, right?
0:26:38 And it reinforces facades.
0:26:45 It reinforces us for exceeding expectations and tweaking ourselves and filtering ourselves, right?
0:26:49 To be seen as better than, to get that positive.
0:26:51 Validation is about acceptance.
0:26:56 It says, I accept you independent of how you look or perform.
0:27:03 So when people say we shouldn’t rely too much on external validation, they’re really talking about praise.
0:27:05 Praise can be good, right?
0:27:08 You need that feedback as you were describing in some ways.
0:27:12 But if you build your life around it, it’s hollow, right?
0:27:17 Because you will have to distort yourself to continue to get it, right?
0:27:21 You have to just keep putting yourself out there and pushing and pushing and pushing.
0:27:24 There is no sense that you’re accepted just as you are.
0:27:34 So radically, I would say, no, there is no amount of external acceptance that is too much.
0:27:37 That has not been my observation.
0:27:45 The more accepted we feel, the greater the sense of belonging, the more we flourish.
0:27:52 That has been consistently my observation, and it is what the evidence supports.
0:27:54 Again, I can’t say that for praise.
0:27:58 If you go around chasing praise your whole life, it’s going to get Trumpy and very quickly.
0:27:59 Okay.
0:28:00 Yeah.
0:28:08 Now, what happens if validation doesn’t necessarily address the underlying causes of issues?
0:28:14 Are you saying that validation puts you on the path to address the underlying causes?
0:28:15 That is right.
0:28:16 That is right.
0:28:22 So in my line of work, I work with folks who have severe behavioral issues, folks who
0:28:25 are suicidal, folks who are hurting other people.
0:28:30 I need to change that quickly, right?
0:28:33 It’s not like, oh, I just hope I go in there and I accept them and everything.
0:28:36 Like, I need to make sure that that behavior changes.
0:28:39 And so acceptance is a piece.
0:28:40 It is a piece of that puzzle.
0:28:42 It puts me on the right track.
0:28:49 It opens the door for collaboration and feedback so that when I do give advice or skills training
0:28:53 or whatever it may be, the other person listens to me.
0:28:57 That is, at least in a therapeutic sense, that’s kind of the name of the game.
0:29:05 But is there no role for friction and conflict and struggle and, you know, shame and healthy
0:29:05 development?
0:29:11 To put it in parental term, what if you’re a helicopter parent or a lawnmower parent?
0:29:12 I’m a lawnmower parent.
0:29:13 Are we defeating ourselves?
0:29:14 How so?
0:29:21 Well, I mean, if we are helicopter parents or lawnmower parents and we always are in problem
0:29:22 solving mode.
0:29:25 how does a person become their own problem solver?
0:29:27 How do you become your own problem solver?
0:29:28 No.
0:29:33 How does my kids or, you know, people who work for me solve their own problems?
0:29:34 Yeah.
0:29:36 You need to back off of the problem solving.
0:29:40 That’s 100%.
0:29:40 It’s problematic.
0:29:42 Absolutely.
0:29:43 I would subscribe to that.
0:29:47 Now, the question is, the question, do you need feedback on that in order to get there?
0:29:53 I think your whole book was feedback, to tell you the truth.
0:30:00 I bet a lot of people listening to this podcast can relate to this concept of helicopter or lawnmower
0:30:01 parenting, right?
0:30:05 So, like, where’s the line?
0:30:05 Yeah.
0:30:09 I think, again, the emphasis is on effectiveness.
0:30:14 You had someone on your podcast recently that was talking about neurologically what happens
0:30:18 in a young person’s brain when they hear nagging.
0:30:24 And the short of it was that the parts of their brain that would actually be needed to take in that
0:30:28 feedback and do something with it shut down.
0:30:31 And just hearing that nagging, they shut down.
0:30:37 And that’s the point with the helicoptering is that at some point, your background noise, right?
0:30:39 You’re always in their face telling them what to do.
0:30:45 And they listen to you less over time, and they don’t develop the capacity to do it themselves.
0:30:46 So those are the costs.
0:30:48 We have to call them what they are.
0:30:52 Now, there are valid reasons you’re helicoptering.
0:30:54 And it’s important to see that as well.
0:31:00 You’re trying to keep your kids safe in a world that has become incredibly dangerous psychologically.
0:31:06 I think as parents, the world feels dangerous for our kids with social media and the internet
0:31:07 and all of these things.
0:31:10 The question is, what’s going to be most effective?
0:31:14 And the answer is that helicoptering is not it.
0:31:15 Okay.
0:31:17 Helicoptering is not it, but what is it?
0:31:20 How would you define helicoptering?
0:31:21 Let’s break it down.
0:31:28 I would define helicoptering as always hovering over your kid and making sure that it’s like
0:31:32 the golden dome of parenting that no missiles get through.
0:31:34 Okay.
0:31:38 Does it include lecturing, in your opinion?
0:31:39 Lecturing the kids?
0:31:40 Or is that separate?
0:31:49 I would say it unavoidable because every time you fire an anti-missile missile, it’s a lecture.
0:31:49 Okay.
0:31:51 Again, I will reiterate.
0:31:53 It’s valid that you want to protect them.
0:31:55 But is helicoptering protecting them?
0:31:58 No, because they’re not developing the skills they need to do it themselves.
0:32:03 So what you need to do is be able to step back and let them fall.
0:32:09 You have to trust in the wisdom that growth happens through, quote unquote, failure.
0:32:14 That when you try and protect your kids from failure, you’re ultimately protecting them
0:32:14 from growth.
0:32:22 Once you accept that, that is the mantra you have to return to again and again to come out
0:32:23 of that helicoptering mode.
0:32:26 Now, does that mean no oversight whatsoever?
0:32:27 No, of course not.
0:32:31 But it means challenging yourself because when we get into a mode like helicoptering, it’s become
0:32:32 default.
0:32:34 We’re not thinking, is this effective?
0:32:35 It’s just what we do.
0:32:36 They ask, can I go out?
0:32:37 No, no, no.
0:32:40 Not unless so-and-so goes with you and like all these other things.
0:32:41 Just stop.
0:32:43 Is this a moment where I could loosen up?
0:32:45 What’s the worst that could happen here?
0:32:54 Okay, now that we solved all the parenting issues, let’s move on to self-validation.
0:32:56 How does one self-validate?
0:32:58 Yeah, such a great question.
0:33:00 We don’t learn this, do we?
0:33:04 This is something that really, really strikes me.
0:33:09 Working with folks as an executive coach, you’ve got these, like you said, tech billionaires,
0:33:10 right?
0:33:12 To folks struggling with severe psychopathology.
0:33:17 And what I see across the spectrum, honestly, I have yet to have someone come into my office
0:33:24 who was really good at validating their own emotions, be it tech billionaire or person struggling
0:33:26 with bipolar disorder, right?
0:33:35 What we do instead is we tend to criticize ourselves and lash ourselves into doing better.
0:33:42 And this is incredibly problematic because we don’t trust our emotions.
0:33:55 We see shame or sadness as indications of failure, again, failure, rather than opportunities for compassion.
0:33:58 The belief that we should treat others the way we would want to be treated.
0:34:02 And I think actually the reverse is true.
0:34:07 We should treat ourselves the way we would treat somebody else who was struggling.
0:34:10 Wow, that’s interesting.
0:34:10 Right, though?
0:34:15 Because if someone was to come to you feeling deeply ashamed, you wouldn’t, like, twist the
0:34:20 knife and say a bunch of other things that they did that proved how worthless they were, right?
0:34:22 But that’s often what we do to ourselves.
0:34:28 We go through our history and collect all the supporting evidence as to why we suck and we’re
0:34:29 never going to X, Y, or Z.
0:34:31 But you would never do that to a friend.
0:34:33 That would seem cruel.
0:34:39 So one of the reasons, back to children, one of the reasons I am so adamant about validating
0:34:45 children is because I want them to develop the capacity to validate themselves.
0:34:51 That doesn’t mean that everything they think or do is correct, but it means that they should
0:34:53 be able to see the validity in what they’re feeling.
0:34:57 So I’ll often say it’s not okay to yell or scream or whatever.
0:34:58 It’s okay to be upset.
0:35:00 It’s okay to be angry.
0:35:01 It’s okay to be frustrated.
0:35:03 All right.
0:35:05 The behavioral expression is different from the emotion.
0:35:10 So being able to validate your own emotions, being able to see, why does it make sense
0:35:11 that I feel this way?
0:35:14 Up next on Remarkable People.
0:35:16 There’s some of this in what you do as well.
0:35:23 You’re trying to help the guest message, get that message across as effectively as possible.
0:35:26 And it’s reflected in how you listen and the questions you ask.
0:35:28 And that’s what we’re going for here.
0:35:31 It’s not about like, haha, I’m so much smarter than them.
0:35:34 These idiots, let me come in and do this better than they’re doing it.
0:35:39 No, it’s more just, you would ask questions differently if you were trying to flesh out
0:35:41 your understanding or their point.
0:35:51 Do you want to be more remarkable?
0:35:57 One way to do it is to spend three days with the boldest builders in business.
0:36:02 I’m Jeff Berman, host of Masters of Scale, inviting you to join us at this year’s Masters
0:36:05 of Scale Summit, October 7th to 9th in San Francisco.
0:36:12 You’ll hear from visionaries like Chobani’s Hamdi Ulukaya, celebrity chef David Chang, Patagonia’s
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0:36:24 That’s mastersofscale.com slash remarkable.
0:36:27 And Guy Kawasaki will be there too.
0:36:32 Become a little more remarkable with each episode of Remarkable People.
0:36:37 It’s found on Apple Podcasts or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
0:36:42 Welcome back to Remarkable People with Guy Kawasaki.
0:36:47 Let us get to the validation ladder.
0:36:53 I would like you to explain the validation ladder so that people have a sort of a framework to
0:36:55 understand your work.
0:36:56 So please explain the ladder.
0:36:57 Yeah.
0:37:00 So this is a collection of skills.
0:37:04 We’ve got eight different skills that you can use to validate someone.
0:37:07 These are basically just little communication tactics.
0:37:11 If you use this skill, it will convey some degree of validation.
0:37:15 And to understand this, it helps to break down validation.
0:37:21 I said it really quick at the beginning, but the key components are mindfulness, understanding,
0:37:22 and empathy.
0:37:23 All right.
0:37:28 You’re trying to convey those qualities in such a way that the person feels accepted.
0:37:30 And you’re like, how do you do that?
0:37:31 How do you do it in such a way that they feel?
0:37:33 This is how with these skills.
0:37:39 So the first set are just what we call mindfulness skills.
0:37:42 They’re just helping you project that mindful awareness.
0:37:43 All right.
0:37:56 If I am sitting across from, let’s say, Donald Trump, and he is, let’s just say, and he is, I’m just trying to picture myself debating this guy.
0:37:56 It would just be so.
0:37:58 I would honestly love it.
0:38:02 I feel like it would be the ultimate test of my validation skills here.
0:38:07 But he’s going to be saying, inevitably, a lot of stuff that I do not understand.
0:38:10 Not just don’t agree with, but logically do not understand.
0:38:14 And when that is the case, all I can do is be mindful.
0:38:15 Okay.
0:38:18 All I can do is attend or copy.
0:38:23 These are the two skills we have to be mindful and to show that we’re mindful.
0:38:26 And that’s a pretty low level of validation, you might think, right?
0:38:27 It’s just awareness.
0:38:29 But a couple of things there.
0:38:33 One, awareness is incredibly powerful.
0:38:38 Attention is one of the most reinforcing experiences that we can provide.
0:38:49 If we want to torture somebody in this country, the method we use is to deprive them of attention by putting them in solitary confinement, right?
0:38:56 When we remove attention, people struggle, and they struggle deeply, all right?
0:39:00 But now, like, negative attention doesn’t necessarily feel good, right?
0:39:04 The task is just to be just non-judgmentally aware.
0:39:08 And that’s what these two skills help us do, attending and copying.
0:39:15 I got the basics of attending about it’s contact, it’s proximity, it’s gesturing, and it’s nodding.
0:39:19 So I love all those things.
0:39:23 But what do you do in a virtual world where it’s Zoom?
0:39:26 This is such a great question.
0:39:36 Again, as a psychologist, someone who’s working with emotion and people every day, the pandemic was such an immediate and visceral.
0:39:39 It created this visceral sense of disconnection.
0:39:43 And I think we all experienced it over time.
0:39:46 As a psychologist, I got to tell you, it hit me right away.
0:39:50 Because these tools that I rely on to connect were taken away.
0:39:57 And if you’re Zooming or whatever the case may be, you have to just be more intentional about those cues.
0:40:04 For instance, I will make a point of leaning in and make it clear that I’m leaning in.
0:40:13 I will adjust my monitor so that my eyes are as close to the camera as possible, so that it’s as close to eye contact as possible.
0:40:17 You can see it in this interview, in the recording.
0:40:18 I do a lot of gesturing.
0:40:22 And I’m making a point of doing it up here, right?
0:40:25 I’m showing that I am engaged through those nonverbals.
0:40:27 But you have to be more intentional about them.
0:40:28 That’s the key.
0:40:31 The worst is to do the camera off.
0:40:33 You’re just listening or something and people can’t see.
0:40:34 That is like the absolute worst.
0:40:37 And yet, that is where many of us reside.
0:40:41 So with the nonverbals over virtual, you just have to be more intentional about it.
0:40:42 That’s all you can do.
0:40:51 You made a point, and I cannot remember which one of the eight skills it was affiliated with.
0:41:02 But I love this point, which is that you should find a way to help the other person make their point.
0:41:02 Oh, yeah.
0:41:06 So first of all, refresh my senile mind.
0:41:13 What is this concept of helping people be a better communicator by suggesting things?
0:41:15 What is that associated with?
0:41:17 So there’s two things at play there.
0:41:18 One of them is attending, okay?
0:41:20 So that’s that we were talking about.
0:41:21 You can use these nonverbals.
0:41:25 And then the other way to attend is in how you listen.
0:41:33 And it’s a little game that you play with yourself where you’re thinking as you’re listening, what’s this person’s point?
0:41:35 And like, why does it matter to them?
0:41:37 You’re streaming information, trying to figure that out.
0:41:43 And then, and this is critical, how could I do a better job of making this person’s point?
0:41:46 Again, not do I agree with it?
0:41:48 Not how could I defeat it or argue it?
0:41:49 What’s my rebuttal?
0:41:49 No.
0:41:53 It’s how could I articulate this better than they’re doing right now?
0:41:59 But isn’t that going to create hostility?
0:42:03 Who the hell is this person to tell me, you know, how to do this better?
0:42:04 Sure, sure.
0:42:05 At this point, you don’t tell them.
0:42:08 This just informs how you are listening.
0:42:16 And if you watch great late night show hosts, you will see that they are all playing some version of this game.
0:42:19 They are trying to get the best interview they can.
0:42:23 As a podcast host, I imagine you, there’s some of this in what you do as well.
0:42:30 You’re trying to help the guest message, get that message across as effectively as possible.
0:42:33 And it’s reflected in how you listen and the questions you ask.
0:42:35 And that’s what we’re going for here.
0:42:38 It’s not about like, haha, I’m so much smarter than them, these idiots.
0:42:41 Let me come in and do this better than they’re doing it.
0:42:47 No, it’s more just you would ask questions differently if you were trying to flesh out your understanding or their point.
0:42:54 I have to admit that I slightly misinterpreted this thought.
0:42:57 And then I said, okay, so this is a great thought.
0:43:03 What can I constructively offer Caroline about her book?
0:43:06 So I came up with some ideas.
0:43:09 But now that you tell me that, maybe I should just keep them to myself.
0:43:11 Oh, no, no, I want to hear them.
0:43:14 Okay.
0:43:19 Okay, so take this in a spirit of one author to another.
0:43:20 Oh, please.
0:43:23 Some slight changes that I would do.
0:43:24 Yeah.
0:43:25 Okay.
0:43:27 Positively.
0:43:29 I want to validate your great book.
0:43:29 I love you.
0:43:32 You wouldn’t be on this podcast if I didn’t like what you did.
0:43:37 So I have one idea.
0:43:40 In the back of your book, you have this appendix.
0:43:43 And this appendix lists like, you know, these are the eight skills.
0:43:44 This is a summation.
0:43:46 This is an example, right?
0:43:47 There’s a one-page appendix.
0:43:53 I think you should move that up into the first time you discuss the latter.
0:43:59 Because when I read about your latter, I have to admit, I had some mental fog.
0:44:04 I had to go back several times because it was like, she just said there’s eight things.
0:44:07 But then she’s talking about three things, mindfulness.
0:44:08 Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
0:44:11 So I said, so is it the three or is it the eight?
0:44:12 The eight, right.
0:44:18 And it took me quite a while to figure out the three contain the eight.
0:44:23 The eight is divided into three sections of mindfulness, understanding, and empathy.
0:44:27 And those eight things add up to those three things.
0:44:28 So that took me a while to figure it out.
0:44:33 But your appendix, when I saw that appendix, I said, aha, now I get it.
0:44:39 This is such frustrating feedback because between you and me, this was such a fight.
0:44:41 Like, I agree.
0:44:44 I wanted that earlier in the book.
0:44:48 And the concern was that it would be too much content too soon.
0:44:51 I have to invalidate your editor or publisher.
0:44:53 They’re wrong about that.
0:44:55 Right, because you need to see it all.
0:45:00 Yeah, I mean, you need to understand the big picture that, you know, these three subsections
0:45:03 are made out of eight skills, add up to the latter.
0:45:05 I have one more comment.
0:45:11 I got to tell you, when I read this, I thought, this is the most interesting story.
0:45:13 This cannot possibly be true.
0:45:17 So I went to chat, GPT, and I asked this question.
0:45:19 And of course, it is true.
0:45:24 You say in your book that there’s a golden rule.
0:45:32 And the golden rule is that in a court case, a lawyer cannot suggest to the jury, put yourself
0:45:33 in this person’s place.
0:45:35 Isn’t that how you would react?
0:45:38 You cannot appeal to empathy.
0:45:40 It is illegal to do that.
0:45:41 And I read that.
0:45:43 I said, that cannot be true.
0:45:44 And it is true.
0:45:44 It’s true.
0:45:47 It is really, really true.
0:45:48 I had no idea.
0:45:49 So can you explain that?
0:45:51 Because that was shocking to me.
0:45:51 Yeah.
0:45:55 So this is getting at some of those understanding skills.
0:45:59 Like, how do you understand and connect with someone else’s experience?
0:46:02 And one of the things we’re always told is to put yourself in the other person’s shoes.
0:46:06 But really, that is quite effective.
0:46:11 It is a skill to be able to say, how would this feel to me?
0:46:14 Like, in that same way that we were talking about, do they need acceptance or problem solving?
0:46:15 Put yourself in the kid’s shoes.
0:46:18 What do they want to hear after getting a bad grade?
0:46:19 Do they want to hear how to study better?
0:46:23 Or do they want to hear, that sucks, right?
0:46:25 How awful, X, Y, or Z.
0:46:32 So when you do that, it immediately changes your perception of the experience.
0:46:38 And interestingly, it’s so effective in doing so that, yeah, you’re not allowed to do that
0:46:42 as a lawyer in appealing to the court.
0:46:48 You can’t ask jurors to think from that angle because it could make them empathize.
0:46:52 And that could influence their decision, right?
0:46:56 Isn’t the whole point to be tried by a jury of your peers?
0:46:58 I know, right, right?
0:47:05 But there seems to be this concern about objectivity being tainted by emotion.
0:47:08 I don’t know if I agree with that per se.
0:47:14 I think that’s part of the reasoning is the emotional logic that goes into it.
0:47:20 I see them as very equally important in making smart judgments and wisdom.
0:47:26 If you were a prosecuting attorney and you said, put yourself in the place, there’s three cops
0:47:27 holding you down.
0:47:29 One has his knee on your neck and you’re choking.
0:47:31 Put yourself in that place.
0:47:31 Yeah.
0:47:38 Or how about if you are an immigrant and you’ve been here 40 years, you’ve raised kids, three
0:47:39 of them are Marines.
0:47:42 And now you get arrested in Home Depot for what?
0:47:43 For what?
0:47:45 I mean, you pay your taxes.
0:47:46 You do everything, right?
0:47:46 Yeah.
0:47:51 Again, another really visceral, I don’t know why I keep coming back to kids on this podcast.
0:47:57 I’m not usually this kid focused, but I think of often tell parents, like, especially a big
0:48:05 guy, you’re 200 pounds yelling at somebody who is three feet tall.
0:48:08 Think about how that would feel.
0:48:13 Do that kind of perception shift and let that inform your reaction.
0:48:18 Because you may not feel like you’re being scary, but that’s terrifying.
0:48:24 We are at the one hour mark.
0:48:26 Oh, I can’t believe it.
0:48:32 Maybe I should change this podcast to the Remarkable Parenting Podcast.
0:48:32 I know.
0:48:35 I don’t know why I went so far in that direction.
0:48:37 No, I took you in that direction.
0:48:39 I wanted to go in that direction.
0:48:41 What else is more important than parenting?
0:48:41 I know.
0:48:42 Yes.
0:48:44 I’ve come to believe that more and more.
0:48:47 I have so much more faith in our children than in us.
0:48:49 I hate to say it.
0:48:52 Maybe I should interview Havana.
0:48:55 Havana, listen, your mom says she validates you all the time.
0:48:56 Is that true?
0:48:59 Does she problem solve for you, Havana?
0:49:01 Or does she let you figure everything out?
0:49:02 You know what Havana says?
0:49:05 She says, I know you’re validating me.
0:49:08 And it feels good, but I know what you’re doing.
0:49:12 She’ll say, it feels good, but I know what you’re doing.
0:49:21 She’s going to read this book someday and say, my God, Ma, couldn’t you have used the pseudonym or something?
0:49:22 Yes, exactly.
0:49:26 Okay, so I have one last question, and it’s about Havana.
0:49:28 Why Havana?
0:49:30 There must be a story.
0:49:36 You know, you didn’t call her Houston or Dallas or Mar-a-Lago or Los Angeles or Portland.
0:49:37 Why Havana?
0:49:39 Are you a socialist?
0:49:43 My mother fled communist Cuba, and she grew up in Havana.
0:49:52 And her middle name is after her grandmother on my husband’s side, and then her first name is after, not after my mom, but speaks to her experience, yeah.
0:49:55 You don’t meet many kids in Havana.
0:49:57 I know, and we’ve found one.
0:50:00 We have found one, and it’s like through Instagram or something.
0:50:04 And I feel just like such a kinship to this young child that I’ve never met.
0:50:08 All righty.
0:50:09 All righty, Caroline Fleck.
0:50:13 As you can tell, I really learned a lot from your book.
0:50:17 Now, we only did attending, really, and copying.
0:50:17 Yes.
0:50:19 And there are six more skills.
0:50:26 I really recommend this book, and I hate to tell you, Caroline, but I recommend that you start with the appendix.
0:50:30 If you start with the appendix, you will really understand.
0:50:31 Yeah.
0:50:32 I agree.
0:50:33 I support that.
0:50:36 So, read this book backwards.
0:50:39 Basically, what we’ve said is the appendix is good and the epilogue is great.
0:50:42 So, just start at the end and go backwards.
0:50:51 I’m all about the recency is more important than primacy or whatever the opposite is.
0:50:51 That is right.
0:50:52 That is right.
0:50:55 All right, Caroline Fleck.
0:51:05 Thank you so much for being on this podcast, and I think people listening to this and reading your book will have a very good tool to be remarkable.
0:51:08 So, thank you for coming on my podcast.
0:51:10 Thank you so much for having me.
0:51:11 This was an absolute blast.
0:51:15 I bet you say that and validate all the podcasters.
0:51:16 No, no.
0:51:18 Just you.
0:51:20 Yeah, I believe you.
0:51:25 Because, you know, I need validation so much.
0:51:27 We all do.
0:51:29 All righty.
0:51:38 So, now I want to validate the rest of the Remarkable People podcast staff, which is Madison Nisner, this ace producer and co-author.
0:51:43 Tessa Nisner, who are a researcher and co-producer, JFC.
0:51:46 And finally, sound designer, Shannon Hernandez.
0:51:49 That’s the Remarkable People team.
0:51:54 So, until next time, be remarkable and go out and validate somebody.
0:51:59 Actually, start by validating yourself and then go out and validate people.
0:52:04 This is Remarkable People.
What if the secret to better relationships isn’t fixing problems but simply making people feel understood? Clinical psychologist Caroline Fleck reveals why validation—not agreement—transforms how we connect with others. In her groundbreaking book Validation, Caroline shares the science behind why feeling seen matters more than being right. Discover the eight-step validation ladder, learn why accepting emotions leads to real change, and find out how this revolutionary approach can improve your parenting, leadership, and relationships. Plus, hear Caroline’s honest confession about missing a literal tick on her daughter’s back and what it taught her about judgment versus understanding.
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Guy Kawasaki is on a mission to make you remarkable. His Remarkable People podcast features interviews with remarkable people such as Jane Goodall, Marc Benioff, Woz, Kristi Yamaguchi, and Bob Cialdini. Every episode will make you more remarkable.
With his decades of experience in Silicon Valley as a Venture Capitalist and advisor to the top entrepreneurs in the world, Guy’s questions come from a place of curiosity and passion for technology, start-ups, entrepreneurship, and marketing. If you love society and culture, documentaries, and business podcasts, take a second to follow Remarkable People.
Listeners of the Remarkable People podcast will learn from some of the most successful people in the world with practical tips and inspiring stories that will help you be more remarkable.
Episodes of Remarkable People organized by topic: https://bit.ly/rptopology
Listen to Remarkable People here: **https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/guy-kawasakis-remarkable-people/id1483081827**
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