The Brenton Peck Podcast

Raising Kids Who Are Easy to Love | Teri Peck | Ep. 35

1 h 24 min · 24 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Raising Kids Who Are Easy to Love | Teri Peck | Ep. 35

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As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. Some links below are affiliate links. Brenton and Teri are back for their third conversation on Jordan Peterson's 12 Rules for Life — this time covering Rules 5 and 6. Rule 5 is the one that makes parents uncomfortable: "Do not let your children do anything that makes you dislike them." Rule 6 is the one most people skip: "Set your house in perfect order before you criticize the world." The conversation goes places you don't expect. Peterson's argument isn't really about what annoys you as a parent — it's about the fact that your kids will face a world that has no patience for what you let slide at home. Society doesn't give warnings. It just punishes. Brenton and Teri work through what that actually means in practice: what discipline is for, why gentle parenting falls short, how punishment should end the moment it ends, and why consistency matters more than intensity. Midway through, Teri shares something personal. She's three weeks out from a hysterectomy — miserable, exhausted, not herself — and she talks about what she's been reaching for to get through it: gratitude. Not as a feeling, but as a discipline. Making lists. Finding the dogs. The warm house. The people who brought meals. It's one of the most grounded and honest things she's said on the show. They close with Rule 6 and Peterson's core point: don't tear down a fence before you understand why it's there. That applies to traditions, to institutions, to the structure of your own life. Clean up what you can control before you blame the world for what you can't. Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BrentonPeckPodcast/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/brentonpeckpodcast/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@brentonpeckpodcast Website: https://www.brentonpeckpodcast.com Teri Peck, co-host and creator of Peck's Nest Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pecksnest Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/pecksnest TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@pecksnest YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@PecksNest Books & Resources Mentioned As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. 12 Rules for Life: An Antidote to Chaos — Jordan Peterson: https://amzn.to/48b1fFC Happiness Is a Serious Problem — Dennis Prager: https://amzn.to/4dN2c95

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38 episodios

episode Jordan Peterson Changed How We Fight | Teri Peck | Ep. 37 artwork

Jordan Peterson Changed How We Fight | Teri Peck | Ep. 37

As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. Some links below are affiliate links.Teri is back for Rules 9 and 10 of Jordan Peterson's 12 Rules for Life, and these two chapters land harder than anything in the series so far. Rule 9 asks you to assume the person you're listening to might know something you don't. Rule 10 tells you to be precise in your speech. Together, they trace what actually breaks communication down and what it costs when you let it go too long.Rule 9 opens with a simple observation: most of us listen to confirm what we already believe. Brenton and Teri follow that thread from disagreements about how to clean a kitchen in early marriage to the tribal fracture in politics, and land on something Brenton's grandfather used to say about offense and personal responsibility. The conversation goes further from there, into therapy, false memories, and a question worth sitting with: when you walk into a therapist's office believing something is wrong with you and that they can fix it, what have you already agreed to accept?Rule 10 is where it gets pointed. Peterson walks through a man who says "I hate my wife" out loud for the first time, and how those words create a reality that wasn't there before. Brenton and Teri dig into why words spoken in anger don't disappear, why venting to friends about your spouse costs more than it relieves, and the children's book Peterson references about a dragon that fills an entire house because nobody would acknowledge it. They also get personal: a bag of jalapeno chips, two and a half months of bed rest, 19 credits of upper division math, and what a family actually does to the direction a man chooses to go.Subscribe on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@BrentonPeckPodcastClips Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@BrentonPeckPodcastClipsSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/0agab3nx2RVMbALWG4Lvr4Substack: https://brentonpeckpodcast.substack.comFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/BrentonPeckPodcast/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/brentonpeckpodcast/TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@brentonpeckpodcastWebsite: https://www.brentonpeckpodcast.comTeri Peck, co-host and creator of Peck's NestFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/pecksnestInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/pecksnestTikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@pecksnestYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@PecksNestBooks MentionedAs an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.12 Rules for Life — Jordan Peterson: https://amzn.to/48b1fFCThe Righteous Mind — Jonathan Haidt: https://amzn.to/41KJ2LrThere's No Such Thing as a Dragon — Jack Kent: https://amzn.to/43U7Ql6Mikey and the Dragons — Jocko Willlink: https://amzn.to/43lWIgF[00:00] Introduction[01:40] Rule 9 — Assume the person you're listening to might know something you don't[02:23] Two people, two ways to clean a kitchen — what early marriage reveals[05:54] Tribalism and why we stop listening across groups[10:47] The salvation issue — why Brenton doesn't argue about everything[16:45] "Only I can choose to be offended" — grandpa's saying[23:01] Can therapists plant things in your mind?[31:04] Memory isn't objective — tools and obstacles[38:33] The communication skill that changed their marriage[43:02] When a man said "I hate my wife" — why spoken words become real[46:02] Who you vent to matters more than you think[50:54] Rule 10 — Be precise in your speech[56:32] The dragon that fills the house — what ignoring problems actually does[58:29] Don't let small things become massive dragons[1:03:28] Do men actually sacrifice for their families?[1:06:37] What having a family did to Brenton's trajectory[1:09:10] 19 credits of upper division math and teaching himself to code[1:15:05] Men need respect like women need love[1:20:12] Parenting as a team — the unified front[1:22:41] Roughhousing and what fathers actually build in their kids[1:25:57] When marriages fall apart slowly — and what to do before they do

7 de jun de 20261 h 29 min
episode Meaning Demands Sacrifice. Truth Demands Courage. | Teri Peck | Ep. 36 artwork

Meaning Demands Sacrifice. Truth Demands Courage. | Teri Peck | Ep. 36

As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. Some links below are affiliate links.Jordan Peterson's 12 Rules for Life has a way of turning simple-sounding rules into two-hour conversations. Teri and I worked through Rules 7 and 8, and both of them went further than expected.Rule 7 is pursue what is meaningful, not what is expedient. That sounds simple until you try to define meaningful. We got into whether meaning can ever be purely personal or whether it has to account for the individual, the family, the community, and humanity as a whole. Teri pushed back on constraints, we disagreed about whether too many choices paralyze people, and worked through a real debate about whether Christians are still under the Old Testament law. We also talked about a season early in our marriage when I was hauling boxes off a truck at Shopco on Christmas break while Teri was pregnant, and why that wasn't expedient, it was meaningful.Rule 8 is tell the truth, or at least don't lie. A lie doesn't just mislead. It rewires the person telling it. We worked through narcissism and self-loathing as two versions of the same deception, how small lies get encoded into habit, and what that does to a marriage over time. Then into the heaviest ground in the book: Peterson's argument that every human being is capable of great evil. The Auschwitz guards were ordinary people shaped by incremental corruption. The Holocaust started with a lie. And the closing argument: it is not good to be a weak man. You cannot protect against monsters if you are not capable of being a monster yourself.Part of an ongoing read-through of 12 Rules for Life with my wife Teri. Rules 9 and 10 are next.Subscribe on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@BrentonPeckPodcastClips Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@BrentonPeckPodcastClipsSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/0agab3nx2RVMbALWG4Lvr4Substack: https://brentonpeckpodcast.substack.comFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/BrentonPeckPodcast/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/brentonpeckpodcast/TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@brentonpeckpodcastWebsite: https://www.brentonpeckpodcast.comTeri Peck, co-host and creator of Peck's NestFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/pecksnestInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/pecksnestTikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@pecksnestYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@PecksNestBooks MentionedAs an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.12 Rules for Life: An Antidote to Chaos — Jordan B. Peterson: https://amzn.to/48b1fFC[00:00] Introduction[0:01:58] Rule 7: Pursue What Is Meaningful, Not What Is Expedient[0:05:44] Does Vacuuming the Carpet Count as Meaningful?[0:09:21] Why Meaning Can't Stop at the Individual[0:13:25] The Paralysis of Too Many Choices[0:22:00] Meaning Over Comfort: Working Temp Jobs While Teri Was Pregnant[0:26:14] Cain and Abel: What Makes One Sacrifice Better Than Another?[0:28:58] Are Christians Still Under the Old Testament Law?[0:43:09] The Future Is a Judgmental Father[0:45:11] Rule 8: Tell the Truth, or at Least Don't Lie[0:51:19] Narcissism and Self-Loathing Are the Same Lie[1:06:28] Getting Out of the Basement: Starting With the Smallest Possible Win[1:10:37] How Lying Gets Encoded in a Marriage[1:12:02] When Truth Becomes a Weapon[1:19:00] Peterson's Foundation: Suffering Is the One Thing You Can't Argue Away[1:20:22] The Holocaust Started With a Lie[1:39:36] Normal People Doing Terrible Things: The Auschwitz Guards[1:42:18] Andrew Tate, Capability, and the Danger of Being a Weak Man[1:45:06] You Can't Protect Against Monsters If You're Not Capable of Being One[1:46:10] Coming Up: Rules 9 and 10

1 de jun de 20261 h 46 min
episode Raising Kids Who Are Easy to Love | Teri Peck | Ep. 35 artwork

Raising Kids Who Are Easy to Love | Teri Peck | Ep. 35

As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. Some links below are affiliate links. Brenton and Teri are back for their third conversation on Jordan Peterson's 12 Rules for Life — this time covering Rules 5 and 6. Rule 5 is the one that makes parents uncomfortable: "Do not let your children do anything that makes you dislike them." Rule 6 is the one most people skip: "Set your house in perfect order before you criticize the world." The conversation goes places you don't expect. Peterson's argument isn't really about what annoys you as a parent — it's about the fact that your kids will face a world that has no patience for what you let slide at home. Society doesn't give warnings. It just punishes. Brenton and Teri work through what that actually means in practice: what discipline is for, why gentle parenting falls short, how punishment should end the moment it ends, and why consistency matters more than intensity. Midway through, Teri shares something personal. She's three weeks out from a hysterectomy — miserable, exhausted, not herself — and she talks about what she's been reaching for to get through it: gratitude. Not as a feeling, but as a discipline. Making lists. Finding the dogs. The warm house. The people who brought meals. It's one of the most grounded and honest things she's said on the show. They close with Rule 6 and Peterson's core point: don't tear down a fence before you understand why it's there. That applies to traditions, to institutions, to the structure of your own life. Clean up what you can control before you blame the world for what you can't. Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BrentonPeckPodcast/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/brentonpeckpodcast/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@brentonpeckpodcast Website: https://www.brentonpeckpodcast.com Teri Peck, co-host and creator of Peck's Nest Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pecksnest Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/pecksnest TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@pecksnest YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@PecksNest Books & Resources Mentioned As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. 12 Rules for Life: An Antidote to Chaos — Jordan Peterson: https://amzn.to/48b1fFC Happiness Is a Serious Problem — Dennis Prager: https://amzn.to/4dN2c95

24 de may de 20261 h 24 min
episode Failure Needs No Explanation. Success Does. | Teri Peck | Ep. 34 artwork

Failure Needs No Explanation. Success Does. | Teri Peck | Ep. 34

As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. Some links below are affiliate links.Brenton's wife Teri is back, and this time they're working through chapters three and four of Jordan Peterson's 12 Rules for Life — Rule 3: Make Friends With People Who Want the Best for You, and Rule 4: Compare Yourself to Who You Were Yesterday, Not to Who Someone Else Is Today.This one gets personal fast. Teri admits she's been comparing herself to other stay-at-home moms and feeling like she's falling short. Brenton unpacks why vices need no explanation but success always does. They get into the metagame of marriage — why being right and keeping the connection alive are often mutually exclusive — and why silence, when you have something to say, is its own form of deception.They also work through Peterson's idea of treating yourself like a stranger you're responsible for helping: how do you actually negotiate with yourself, motivate yourself, and take the next right step when you're overwhelmed? The vacuum-in-the-doorway story says more about human nature and meaningful personal transformation than most self-help books do in three hundred pages.This is a husband and wife thinking out loud together — not performing, not lecturing — just working through ideas that matter and letting it be honest.Subscribe on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@BrentonPeckPodcastClips Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@BrentonPeckPodcastClipsSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/0agab3nx2RVMbALWG4Lvr4Substack: https://brentonpeckpodcast.substack.comFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/BrentonPeckPodcast/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/brentonpeckpodcast/TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@brentonpeckpodcastX: https://x.com/BPeckPodcastWebsite: https://www.brentonpeckpodcast.comTeri Peck, co-host and Brenton's wifeFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/pecksnestInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/pecksnestTikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@pecksnestYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@PecksNestBooks / Resources MentionedAs an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.12 Rules for Life — Jordan Peterson: https://amzn.to/48b1fFC

26 de abr de 20261 h 17 min
episode Chaos, Order, and the Lies We Tell Ourselves | Teri Peck | Ep. 33 artwork

Chaos, Order, and the Lies We Tell Ourselves | Teri Peck | Ep. 33

As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. Some links below are affiliate links.Brenton and Teri sit down to work through the first two rules of Jordan Peterson's 12 Rules for Life — and what starts as a book discussion turns into something much more personal. Rule 1 forces a reckoning with order, chaos, and why most people are terrified to face the unknown. Rule 2 asks a harder question: why do people take better care of their dogs than themselves?Teri comes in with pages of notes and questions Peterson didn't fully answer for her — including why chaos is framed as feminine, what it actually means that every human being carries the potential for the worst evil in history, and whether the double standard around pornography and romance novels is something women want to keep ignoring. The conversation doesn't stay comfortable for long.They also get into self-sabotage as a form of identity preservation, why disagreement feels like a physical threat, the "wine mom misery bonding" culture Teri is done defending, what it means to stand up straight when you're not just talking about your posture, and how you can be your own most capable tormentor — because no one knows your weaknesses better than you do.Follow the show:Website: https://www.brentonpeckpodcast.comTeri PeckFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/pecksnestInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/pecksnestTikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@pecksnestBooks MentionedAs an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.12 Rules for Life — Jordan Peterson: https://amzn.to/48b1fFCThe Righteous Mind: Why Good People Are Divided by Politics and Religion — Jonathan Haidt: https://amzn.to/41KJ2Lr[0:00:00] Intro[0:01:58] First Impressions[0:04:38] Order and Chaos — Peterson's Core Framework[0:05:10] Why Peterson Assigns Gender to Order and Chaos[0:07:26] Chaos Is Not Bad — It's Unclaimed Potential[0:09:26] Chaos as Uncharted Territory — Death, Loss, and the Unknown[0:13:25] People Will Fight to Protect a Lie Rather Than Face Chaos[0:15:55] Why Disagreement Feels Like a Threat to Your Identity[0:17:59] Yin and Yang — One Foot in Order, One Foot in Chaos[0:24:31] Church Splits and the Entropy of Shared Belief[0:29:24] Dreams Shed Light on the Places Reason Hasn't Reached[0:35:28] Lobsters, Hierarchy, and Why Peterson Starts Here[0:37:06] Win Cycles, Loss Cycles, and the Pareto Distribution[0:43:17] Romance Novels and the Double Standard Nobody Names[0:47:27] The Way Society Treats Men[0:48:47] ChatGPT Called Your Husband a Useless Oaf[0:50:11] What Does "Wine Mom Culture" Cost a Marriage?[0:51:04] God Spoke Words to Bring Order to Chaos — Words Have Power[0:54:01] You Need Seven Positives to Balance One Negative[0:58:09] Choosing How You See Your Spouse[0:59:15] Stand Up Straight — But He's Not Just Talking About Posture[1:00:54] Body Language, Predators, and How You Carry Yourself[1:02:09] Facing Chaos Voluntarily vs. Being Forced Into It[1:05:42] Rule 2 — Treat Yourself Like Someone You're Responsible For[1:06:05] Why People Take Better Care of Their Dogs Than Themselves[1:10:45] Depression Cycles and Why People Quit Their Medication[1:16:44] Should Asylums Come Back? The Question Peterson Raises[1:24:58] Men Are the Builders — And "We Don't Need Men"[1:28:15] Good Men, Hard Times, and the Cycle of Civilization[1:31:03] Is America in Good Times or Bad?[1:37:05] Who's Fault Is It? Teri and Brenton Disagree[1:39:03] The Feminization of the Church[1:41:03] The Snake Inhabits Every Soul — Peterson on Adam and Eve[1:43:43] I Can Protect You From Everything Except Yourself[1:47:44] Knowledge of Good and Evil — And How We Use It on Each Other[1:49:08] Self-Sabotage as Identity Preservation[1:51:51] Where Did We Learn to Use Psychological Attacks?[1:58:23] Render Them Competent, Not Just Protected[2:01:05] Should You Let Your Daughter Get Her Heart Broken?[2:04:18] Peterson's Closing to Rule 2 — If We Lived in Truth

19 de abr de 20262 h 6 min