Episode 19 - Unlocking Emotional Safety in Parenting: Three Conversations You Need
A parent once told me something that has stayed with me.
She said,
“I feel like I only talk to my child when I’m correcting them or asking them questions.”
And honestly?
That is more common than you think.
In the middle of busy days, most parents naturally default to logistics.
Did you brush your teeth?
Where are your shoes?
Did you finish your homework?
Please stop touching your brother.
We’re going to be late.
None of those things are wrong. They are part of parenting.
But when most conversations become reminders, corrections, and questions, something subtle can happen over time.
Your child may start to experience your voice as pressure.
In this episode of Raise Strong, we explore three small, repeatable conversations that help your child feel safe, seen, and emotionally connected at any age.
Because emotional safety is not built in one big dramatic moment.
It is built in small, steady moments your child learns to trust.
WHAT YOU’LL LEARN IN THIS EPISODE
In this episode, you’ll discover:
* Why emotional safety is built through repeated conversations
* How daily logistics can unintentionally crowd out connection
* What to ask instead of “How was your day?”
* How repair strengthens trust after hard parenting moments
* Why support conversations help children name what they need
* How to build openness without forcing deep talks
This episode gives you three practical conversations you can start using this week to strengthen trust, connection, and emotional safety in your home.
THE CORE SHIFT
Most parents are talking to their children all day.
But not every conversation builds connection.
Some conversations manage behavior.
Some move the routine forward.
Some keep the day from falling apart.
Those conversations matter.
But children also need conversations that communicate:
“I want to know you.”
“We can come back together after hard moments.”
“You do not have to carry hard things alone.”
That is where emotional safety begins.
THE THREE CONVERSATIONS
1. THE INNER WORLD CONVERSATION
This conversation helps your child feel known beyond their behavior, tasks, and responsibilities.
Instead of asking, “How was your day?” try:
“Tell me one thing from today I wouldn’t know unless you told me.”
This opens the door to your child’s thoughts, feelings, worries, and small moments.
It tells them:
“I am interested in your inner world.”
2. THE REPAIR CONVERSATION
Every family has hard moments.
You lose your patience.
Your child yells.
A boundary turns into a power struggle.
Someone says something they wish they hadn’t said.
Repair teaches your child that connection can survive conflict.
You might say:
“I want to come back to what happened earlier. I didn’t handle that the way I wanted to.”
Repair does not mean removing boundaries.
It means reconnecting before reteaching.
3. THE SUPPORT CONVERSATION
This conversation teaches your child how to name what they need.
You might ask:
“What is one thing coming up this week that you want support with?”
Or:
“Do you want me to listen, help solve it, or just be nearby?”
This helps your child learn that support can look different in different moments.
Sometimes they need advice.
Sometimes they need space.
Sometimes they need comfort.
Sometimes they just need you to stay close without fixing anything.
YOUR ONE ACTION STEP THIS WEEK
Choose one of the three conversations and try it once this week.
You do not need to do all three perfectly.
Start small.
One conversation.
One moment.
One opening.
Try saying:
“Tell me one thing from today I wouldn’t know unless you told me.”
Or:
“I want to come back to what happened earlier.”
Or:
“What is one thing coming up this week that you want support with?”
Emotional safety is not built through perfect parenting.
It is built through small, steady moments your child learns to trust.
WHY THIS MATTERS
Your child does not need every conversation to be deep.
They just need to know there are safe places to be honest.
When you create those places consistently, you teach your child:
“You can come to me.”
“We can repair hard moments.”
“You do not have to carry everything alone.”
That is the foundation of trust.
And trust is what helps children open up over time.
RESOURES:
* 3 Mistakes That Make Sibling Fights Worse... (And What to Do Instead) [https://alexandersonkahl.com/3-mistakes/] - https://alexandersonkahl.com/3-mistakes/
* Stop Saying “Hurry Up.”Say This Instead. [https://alexandersonkahl.com/hurry-up/] - https://alexandersonkahl.com/hurry-up/
* Calm Down Corner Essentials [https://bit.ly/48WbUUh] - https://bit.ly/48WbUUh
* 7 Simple Phrases to Help Your Child Calm Down Without Power Struggles [https://alexandersonkahl.com/7-simple-phrases/] - Download your FREE guide now! - AlexAndersonKahl.com/7-simple-phrases
* Visit Our Website [https://alexandersonkahl.com/] - AlexAndersonKahl.com
* The Meltdown Map: 5 Steps to Handle your Child's Big Emotions [https://alexandersonkahl.com/meltdown-map/] - AlexAndersonKahl.com/meltdown-map
NEXT WEEK ON RAISE STRONG
Episode 20 – Stop Threatening. Start Teaching: What Actually Builds Self-Control
Next week, we’re talking about a pattern many parents fall into when they feel overwhelmed:
Threats.
We’ll explore why threats may stop behavior in the moment, but often backfire over time.
You’ll learn how to shift from pressure and punishment toward teaching real self-regulation.
If you’ve ever said, “If you don’t stop right now…” and then wondered why it didn’t actually help, this next episode is for you.
If this episode helped you, make sure you’re subscribed to Raise Strong so you don’t miss what’s coming next.
And if you know a parent who wants more trust, openness, and emotional safety at home, share this episode with them.
Raising strong kids doesn’t start with perfect parenting.
It starts with steady connection.
You’ve got this.