Episode 6: Re-Educating the Educators — You Can’t Teach What You Don’t Know
Teachers have our kids seven to eight hours a day—so emotional regulation isn’t “extra,” it’s the foundation.
In this episode, I’m sitting in my apartment in New York, on a Sunday when everything hit at once. After a call from my best friend about a recent suicide, I tell the truth about what I’ve seen from inside the classroom—and what I’ve lived through as a woman who spent years masking, surviving trauma, and trying to “hold it together.”
This is a conversation for parents, educators, and anyone who feels the system keeps pointing fingers while kids are quietly drowning.
Because here’s what I believe: schools can’t keep pretending their only job is math, reading, and writing. Teachers have children seven to eight hours a day—most of their awake time—and emotional regulation isn’t “extra.” It’s the foundation. And the hard truth is this: you can’t teach what you don’t know how to do yourself.
Content note: This episode includes discussion of suicide, trauma, and student mental health. Please take care of yourself while listening.
Timestamps
00:00 — Opening: Sunday in New York City + what triggered this episode
01:08 — Why I’m sharing this now (the call that hit me)
02:18 — Content note: suicide, trauma, and student mental health
03:10 — The lie we keep telling: school isn’t only academics
03:33 — “Seven to eight hours a day”: why emotional regulation is the foundation
05:30 — The voice in our heads: shame, masking, and learned self-talk
07:21 — Stop blaming families: behavior is communication
08:48 — What I did differently: connection-first classroom culture
10:54 — The third-grade story: counseling minutes that never happened
15:20 — What has to change: re-educating educators + real support
18:11 — Closing + teaser: next episode (my mom)
Next episode: I’m going to share the story of when my life first cracked open—my mom, my grief, and the moment my brain became a different place to live.