Teen Whisperer Podcast: Understanding Behavioural Messages in Girls
This is THE podcast for mums of girls - tweens, teens and young women - who want to understand what the frigg is really going on beneath the tricky behaviour and big emotions, so you can stop second guessing, feel confident again and truly connect with your daughter.
Too often we're told it's "just" hormones, emotions or that they're too sensitive. But what if I told you there's something else at play? Something no one talks about - the body sending messages through behaviour. These are natural responses to an unnatural world, and when you understand them, you can start responding with insight not frustration.
Shocked, inspired, eyes wide open - that's what I want for you. To realise that so much of what we've been told about parenting is a lie, wrapped up in control, pressure and guilt. The world isn't set up for our girls - yes even in 2025 - but there is a different way. A way that puts understanding, connection and community first. A way that helps you see the root cause, understand what's happening and know exactly what you can do in the moment.
Let's make this a revolution - one episode at a time - so our girls grow up feeling seen, safe and capable... and we can stop trying to parent from fear and start parenting from insight.
Teen Whisperer Podcast: Understanding Behavioural Messages in Girls
The Reset Your Teen Really Needs: Play
This episode of the Teen Whisperer Podcast dives deep into girls' mental health and adolescent behaviour, offering essential parenting support to mothers navigating the complex mother-daughter relationship. Discover how behavioural messages from your teen daughter are not just mood swings or hormones but vital signals from her body and mind that require understanding and insight.
Join me as I explore the power of play as the reset your teen really needs, helping you move beyond frustration to fostering connection and confidence in your parenting. This conversation sheds light on the natural responses of girls in today's challenging world and provides practical approaches to support your daughter's mental and emotional well-being.
Empower yourself with insights that challenge traditional assumptions about parenting adolescent girls and learn how to build a stronger mother-daughter relationship centered on empathy and understanding. Tune in to start your journey from fear-based parenting to insightful, connected parenting today.
Download my free 60 sec reset - for mums and girls - simple tools to use in the moment (yes that moment) - when everything is going to pot and you don't know what the hell to do. It's simple, easy and ready to use right now.
Wanna dive deeper into this and other real-life mum stuff?
Wish your daughter had her own podcast to help understand what's going on? Send her to Girl You've Got This - my podcast just for girls, availabe on all major platforms.
Wanna talk? Book a FREE chat with me - sometimes it helps to say it out loud.
And don't forget to hit subscribe so you're the first to get new episodes as they land - because let's be honest, who's got time to go hunting for a podcast?
See you next time!
Have you ever looked at your daughter... maybe she’s sprawled on the floor building something random out of Blu Tack, doodling on her arm, or bouncing a ball off every surface known to humankind and thought, “Seriously? THIS is what we’re doing today?”
Meanwhile her bedroom or floordrobe as I like to call it, is starting to look like a biohazard, and your brain is doing that frantic mum math: “Where’s the line between letting her be… and completely losing then plot?”
Yeah. You’re not alone. And today we’re going to talk about why play - messy, ridiculous, so-called ‘pointless’ play - is actually the physiology that keeps our girls alive in a world that’s trying to crush them.
Welcome back to The Teen Whisperer - the podcast for mums of girls, tweens, teens, and young women who are trying to figure this whole teenager thing out without completely losing the plot.
I’m your host, Rach Friedli, and I help mums of girls who are seen as too much, too sensitive, or too “difficult” uncover what’s really behind their big emotions and challenging behaviour.
So you can stop second-guessing yourself, feel steady again, and actually connect with your daughter.
And listen… I’m a mum too.
The juggle is real.
Especially when your daughter’s turned into a nocturnal Netflix gremlin and you’re standing in the doorway like,
“WHAT. IS. HAPPENING?!”
Physiology, Play, and Why Our Girls Are Falling Apart**
So today we’re talking about physiology and play and honestly, this is the conversation nobody else seems to dare have, because it challenges the whole “be productive, be polite, be perfect” narrative girls get shoved into from the second they can hold a crayon.
Let’s get something straight:
Play is not childish.
It’s brain science.
It’s how humans regulate their nervous systems.
It’s regulation.
It’s survival.
And girls need it just as much now at 12, 14, 17, 21 - as they did when they were four.
The problem?
The world has told them to grow up before their brains are even remotely ready.
Too often mums tell me, “People keep saying they’re too old for x, y, z,” or “Someone asked me what’s wrong because she’d rather draw than scroll.” Her friends say she’s weird cos she’d rather play outside.:
Nothing is wrong with her.
What’s wrong is the environment she’s trying to survive in.
This world has squeezed play out of our girls and they’re paying the price.
Play is how girls (and boys) work things out safely before it leaks out sideways.
Think of toddlers learning to walk. They don’t overthink it. They wobble, fall, giggle, then try again (and again and again and again).
That curiosity - that trial and error - doesn’t just disappear when they hit secondary school.
It’s part of their wiring.
But we push them into performance, perfection, and comparison so early that there’s hardly any space left to actually develop and have fun.
But you can’t strip play away from a developing brain and expect it to cope.
Especially not now.
Play is the original teacher.
It’s how humans wire their brains.
Let’s Talk About Wild Cherry and Why It Hits Hard
All I can say is Wow.
If you’ve seen it, you know.
If you haven’t, brace yourself.
Sophie Winkelman, who plays Frances, one of the mums, in this BBC1 drama said something that stopped me in my tracks:
The show holds up a mirror to the relentless online pressures shaping modern girlhood.
And honestly?
You can feel that truth in your bones.
Sure, it’s fiction but every parent of a girl knows it barely feels like one.
Our girls are growing up in digital spaces that would flatten most adults.
The scrutiny.
The comparison.
The performance of “perfect girlhood” - curated, filtered, and broadcast.
And I see the fallout in the mums of the girls I work with every single week.
Our girls deserve better.
They deserve:
• safety from constant digital pressure
• friendships built on connection, not group-chat politics
• boundaries that protect their wellbeing
• space to grow without comparison
• time offline to build confidence, resilience, identity
• teenage years that aren’t a performance review
And THIS is why play matters.
Play is the antidote to a world that’s stolen their lives from under them.
And on that note, something really exciting.
After months of hunting, I’ve finally secured a physical space where I can offer sessions for teens and tweens.
I’m starting in January - the first offerings will be for chronic pain (because wow, the number of girls and adults living with stress-related pain is huge).
But the space allows so many possibilities:
group coaching, sessions for girls with ADHD, autism, anxiety…
A place that sits right next to a PT studio and a yoga studio, which feels beautifully aligned with everything I believe about physiology-first support.
This is about giving girls that safe place they’re desperate for, where they can explore who they are, build resilience, and yes… actually PLAY.
Now let’s bring this into real life - your life:
Play looks different for teens.
It might be:
- makeup experimentation
- TikTok dances
- creativity
- sports
- outdoor play
- music
- bouncing a ball for no reason other than “it feels good”
- reorganising their room six hundred times
- baking at midnight
- ridiculous humour
- or fidgeting with anything they can find
It ALL counts.
Play often looks like avoidance but it’s not.
Sometimes your daughter will play instead of talk.
Instead of homework.
Instead of chores.
Before you jump to “lazy” or “defiant,” ask:
Is she regulating?
Because nine times out of ten, yep. She is.
_________
Researchers like Jonathan Haidt have been shouting from the rooftops:
Outdoor play is down.
Risk-taking is down.
Free, unstructured time is down.
And in its place?
Anxiety.
Depression.
Self-harm.
And a whole generation living online instead of in their bodies.
Girls especially are dropping out of physical play and sport because of misogynistic nonsense like, “Ugh, she runs like a girl.”
Well, yes.
She does.
Because she is one.
Play is how girls regulate.
It’s how they process the pressure inside them.
It’s how they figure out who they are without the internet telling them.
__________
As a former play specialist, this isn’t a cute theory, it’s my everyday reality.
When a teen doesn’t want to talk?
I don’t push.
I don’t ask the same question four different ways
I don’t sit there doing that cause thing - you know that seriously uncomfortable silence that makes you feel like you need to run away or fill it.
I play.
Cards.
A ball.
Something tactile.
Something safe.
Breathwork.
Doodles.
Something that lets her body settle before her brain can speak
Within minutes, their physiology shifts.
They soften.
And then the words come.
They always do.
Not because i’m magic ;) - but because physiology comes before psychology.
Because if a teen doesn’t feel safe, seen, or heard…
They can’t open up.
Not won’t, can’t.
Their nervous system literally won’t let them.
So what can you to help? Well I’m so glad you asked…
Here’s what you can put into practice today:
1. When she’s overwhelmed, switch to play mode.
Not talking mode.
Not lecturing mode.
PLAY mode - grab something she loves to do and just do it.
Let her nervous system settle first.
It’s regulation, not distraction.
2. Rewrite the story about “immature.”
When someone says she’s too old for something?
Try this:
“This is her regulation, not regression.” Full stop, no explanation,
3. Add micro-play into daily life.
30 seconds of silly.
A dance while dinner burns.
A paper-aeroplane battle before school.
Her eyes may roll but her nervous system will thank you.
4. And yes… you need play too.
Your nervous system can’t co-regulate if it’s running on fumes.
Give yourself permission to be ridiculous sometimes.
So here’s the real truth, the one nobody else says loud enough:
You’re not failing.
Your daughter isn’t behind.
She’s not immature.
She’s surviving a world that asks too much of her and gives her too little.
Play is not childish.
It’s medicine.
It’s identity.
It’s regulation.
It’s how our girls find themselves again in a world that keeps pulling them apart.
And you, you’re doing waaay better than you think.
If this episode landed with you, hit subscribe so you don’t miss what’s coming next.
And share it with a mum friend who’s in the thick of it too, she needs to know she’s not alone.
Don’t forget to grab my free 60-second Reset for mums and girls - it’s built for those “I might actually scream” moments.
You’ll find it in the show notes.
And if you’re craving deeper support - a space where you can actually breathe and understand your daughter in a way that finally makes sense, come join us inside WTF: What’s The Feeling. It’s where mums like you get ongoing support, grounding, and connection.
And keep an eye out for January when I open the doors to the new space for teens and tweens: a place for safety, movement, confidence, play, and proper support.
Because remember:
It’s physiology before psychology. Always.