Who Let Us Adult?
We’re Jaz & Ian!
Still figuring life out and laughing through it. Real talk with our younger selves about marriage, kids, money, and chaos with a splash of ADHD. New episodes every Sunday.
Who Let Us Adult?
Parenting: No Manual, Just Vibes
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If you’ve ever Googled “parenting manual” only to realize… yeah, there isn’t one — welcome. 😂
In this episode, we dive into the beautiful chaos of raising kids without a rulebook. From the moments we’re nailing it to the ones we hope no one saw, we’re talking real-time parenting. The wins, the fails, the “did you seriously just say that?” moments — and how we’re learning to trust God, trust each other, and trust that we’re doing better than we think.
It’s imperfect, unfiltered, and totally us — trying to raise tiny humans with patience, grace, and a whole lot of prayer.
🎙️ No perfect manual. Just vibes, love, and figuring it out as we go.
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Bubu,
Speaker 6did you do that last time too? Yep.
Speaker 8And I'm doing it again. Mm-hmm. Bu fully selling bubu and
Speaker 6leaning into the johnna.
Speaker 8Something. Something. My time is now something. Something.
Speaker 6You can't see me. My time is now.
Speaker 8What comes X?
Speaker 6You can't see me. My time is now. What comes X? Rapping?
Speaker 8Rapping. I knew there was a something, something in there. Jeez. Yeah. That's funny. WWE for the win. Anyway,
Speaker 6you. I had a mini episode last week. Tell
Speaker 8us about that. Well, first off, welcome back to Who Let Us Adult. We forgot to do our intro. Hey, I mean that was our intro. The dog. I know, but we gotta say like, welcome back to Let us Adult Welcome. This is the Who Let Us Adult Pod. Welcome back. We're learning. We're learning forever. Learning. Anyway, lock in. Okay. Last week I had a mini episode and it was a lot of fun. I was tired.
Speaker 6I was like, did you listen to it? You do it. Yeah.
Speaker 9Yes. While I was editing it.
Speaker 8Yeah, because
Speaker 6you played it 9,000 times as I heard you that Yeah.'cause that's
Speaker 8what editing is.
Speaker 6Yes. A thousand percent. Would you like to edit? No. Okay. Yes. I listened to your episode.
Speaker 8No lip from you. It's on my, my guy. It's what?
Speaker 6It's on my phone.
Speaker 8Do you, did you actually watch it? Yeah. I mean, look, look cute. What? Your biggest takeaway,
Speaker 6how cute you are.
Speaker 8What was your biggest takeaway? What was the nugget?
Speaker 6God put you in my life for a reason.
Speaker 8Okay, give me a nugget.
Speaker 6The nugget was, I don't like to edit and I have you being the nice person in our relationship. Can I put you there as my a's point? You
Speaker 8don't know anything I said. What'd I talk about? What's my topic? You
Speaker 6talked about all the craziness that was going on.'cause you know, Zuri had her birthday. I was out on a bunch of different work. That was the first
Speaker 8three seconds
Speaker 6I had shows. You came to that Saturday. Let's talk about that for a minute. Hold on. Saturday was a wild day because. I had a really, really big show here locally, here in Columbus. Mm-hmm. And Zuri had her kind
Speaker 8of birthday party, but not really birthday party. Yeah. We just got together with some friends. Yeah. And their kiddos. Yeah. And
Speaker 6I, for some, like, I don't do this often, but I left stuff here. Like I left the mic to record content at home. I left the price gun at home. I left some other stuff at home that I need, I needed, and I just had to text you like, Hey honey, can you. Yeah. Yeah, I got you. And then when you got there, I don't think you expected it to be as busy as it was.
Speaker 8No, it was very busy
Speaker 6and I kind of moderately expected. I mean, there were like 3000 tickets sold pre-sold to the, to the show. And I was like, yeah, it's gonna be big. But it was kind of crazy'cause so much was happening. I mean, for four and a half straight hours. I didn't really, you brought me chicken nuggets that I, I at, at 12 o'clock that I ate at five.
Speaker 7Yeah,
Speaker 6which is disgusting. But also, thank you. I really appreciate the fact that you were like, you need to eat. You're welcome.
Speaker 8But yeah, anyway, just crazy weeks because you would've gone all day without eating crazy. Your mini episode would,
Speaker 6your mini episode was awesome. If you have not heard Jasmine's mini episode, please go back and, and listen to it and or watch it wherever you listen to your podcast. It was fantastic. So, yes, honey, I did listen to it. I just still dunno what I said. I, it's, I have a hard memory. It's fine. It's happy hours. Sweet. It's
Speaker 8okay. I know you love me, but that still hurts my feelings. Go back and watch it. Ian. Take your own advice
Speaker 6anyway, honey, what are we talking about today?
Speaker 8We're talking about parenting. Parenting in real time and going with the
Speaker 6flow.
Speaker 8Yeah.
Speaker 6And the punches and rocking with it. Yeah. So, and how
Speaker 8navigating that has been.
Speaker 6We have these moments where, um, you know, where maybe down a kid or two. If it, if they're staying, you know, with my brother or my mom or, or anything along those lines, we're like your parents and we are just left with, with the one, and we look at each other and go, man, why did we ever think having one kid was hard?
Speaker 8Man. I mean, because I get why, but I, I say it with you too because I'm like, man, one kid like this is, this is cake is
Speaker 10cake. Heck compared to three,
Speaker 8right? Two compared to the three. Definitely cake. Um, three has been a challenge for sure. Uh,
Speaker 6but much easier than two was in my opinion. And that's coming saying a lot for me, but like, I think it's only gonna get easier. With three.
Speaker 8Okay. I was like, until they hit a not, we're gonna have four. So no. Yeah. No more. Yeah. No, no, no, no.
Speaker 6You know what's really funny? I, I meant to tell you this. When, when you came, wait, wait, what? So, um, you know, I picked the kids up from the gym today. Mm-hmm. And we came home and in the car, um, you know, the goal was let's make sure that NA stays awake.'cause it was close to her bedtime and I didn't want her falling asleep in the car and then just being awake all night. Um,
Speaker 8na is our. Eight month old baby. Yes.
Speaker 6So we're, we're blaring music, having a blast, singing out loud, and she's just wide awake, not crying, just watching all of us in the car. Um, so we get home, I back into the, the, uh, driveway and as I'm getting outta the car, I hear a, a statement come out of our eight year old's mouth. And I'm like, there's no way he said that. And I was like, wait, what? So I go to, to get, you know, RA Carsi, and I said, Kyle, what did you say? She, he goes, yeah, we should have a fourth kid. And I said, what
Speaker 8I begged your finest part in?
Speaker 6I said, what? Why? He goes, we need another boy in here. He goes, he goes, it'd be cool if we just had two boys and two girls. And I said, boy, if you don't get outta the car,
Speaker 8go to bed.
Speaker 6Go to go to bed. Go to bed.
Speaker 8Hey, first off, not possible.
Speaker 6No more kids from us. You wanna say like, you want a little brother? Yes. I said, no.
Speaker 8He probably wants to adopt because we did talk about adopting at one point. Yeah. I don't know that it's 100% off the table,
Speaker 6but four kids is a lot. Four kids.
Speaker 8It's a lot. Yes. But he was like, so what? You just like look in a magazine and pick out a kid? Basically,
Speaker 6that's what you guys said. That is kind of true. I guess that's also kind of messed up now he's say it out loud. It's like
Speaker 8a catalog. I think he said a catalog. Like a catalog of kids. I was like, I don't know how to answer this. And that's been, man, that's parenting. Yeah. In a nutshell, it's like your kids say something or they ask a question and I'm like, I think this is why we created who let us adult. Because that makes me be like, who let me have children? Because what? What? Because what do you mean? Why am I laughing this? Like you look at catalog and you pick out children.
Speaker 6And why am I laughing really hard at it? Like I, I'm not supposed to be serious. This is a serious moment and I'm crying
Speaker 8if I have to like Google the answer. Like
Speaker 6it's a seriously unserious.
Speaker 8Oh seriously, unserious for sure. Yeah.
Speaker 6Um, yeah. So, you know, we've been parents now for almost nine years. Oh yeah. Eight years. I've been parents for eight years. Tell me what you've learned the most. Shocking thing you learned. I've learned
Speaker 8nothing. John Snow. John, you know nothing. Yeah. That's what it says. But I've learned nothing. Um, I've learned that if you pray for patience, God will give you toddlers.
Speaker 6Very true. I actually heard an interesting phrase about patience. Yeah. Um,'cause we hear this a lot amongst friends, and we've even said this, and it's a, it's a running joke on social media, but, um. You hear about how your grandparents, the kids are grandparents. So your parents watch the kids and they're so patient with them. Mm-hmm. They're so, you know, they give them candy. They, they, uh, they just kinda love bomb them in a way that makes you almost feel like slighted. Like, come on, you're supposed to show'em how crazy you're, come on,
Speaker 7come on grandma. Show them mom. Right. Show them who mom is.
Speaker 6I saw a post. Today that said, you know, why, why aren't you as strict with them as you were with me? And the post was like, I'm showing it says because, you know, in my older age, I'm able to give them the the grace and patience that I wish I would've been able to give you.
Speaker 10Hmm.
Speaker 6I was like, stop it. I can't cry at two o'clock in the afternoon. I need to chill.
Speaker 8I'm not gonna cry. It's gonna make me mad. I just kidding. I'm just kidding. I'm just kidding. I am gonna cry because that's really sweet. I am, yeah. Like that's a hundred percent a joke. Like, but also
Speaker 7like, you mean show me No
Speaker 8patience, but
Speaker 6it kinda like hit me. I was like, man, do I need to show more patients? Like Yes. Do I need to sit like Yeah. I mean, I know. Yes, I know I do. That's my learning. You mean. Yeah, but like how, how, thinking of different ways that I could show patience and grace. Like, I mean, earlier this week, you know, Kai had, was not himself and I didn't necessarily know how to appropriately handle it to. You did a phenomenal job, phenomenal job coming in and, and you know, it's just, once again, the roles of a mother, like being gentle and having that, that, that soft touch with him and in a time where I, at the time only knew really to be hard with him and, and that situation required a soft touch. Right? And so that's one of the things that I'm learning is there are times where. You know, a soft touch is needed. Mm-hmm. And a hard, and, you know, a harder to touch and or tone is needed.
Speaker 8Yeah. Yeah. And from both of us, like I, I have learned over the years that I want them all to know that they can always come to me and it's like, I'm mom, like I'm a safe place for them. But also, it's not gentle parenting. Like it's the, it is this di like there is discipline, there is authority, there is like, no, you submit to our authority as your parents, like when we tell you to do something. You're going to listen, and even if it doesn't make sense to you, not every time can we sit down and have a conversation and explain what's going on and how we've navigated that. I don't know if you remember this, but how we've navigated that has been, um, telling him in those moments, like this is a conversation that as you get older, we will go deeper. We will talk to you about the why, but right now it's just no.
Speaker 6Right?
Speaker 8Like you're not watching this movie. Why not? It's just No, it's
Speaker 6just No, you don't, we don't need to explain ourselves to you at that. Yeah. You know, and at some point you will know. And, and maybe the, the answer to that question is it's just not appropriate for you right now. Another time.
Speaker 8Yeah. There, it's a, like, having a very simple answer. Mm-hmm. But it's, it may not, it may not be sufficient because as a, as at their age, at his age, especially, like, he's still wondering why. So it may not be sufficient enough per se, but that's why we include the, like as you get older, we're going, we're going to tell you, not. You're gonna just understand. Yeah. Like we're gonna have that conversation with you.'cause there's gonna be more opportunities. You're gonna see something, you're gonna watch something, something's gonna come out and we're gonna veto it. But we're gonna, because you're older now, we can have a real conversation and tell you why. Because you're ready for it. So,
Speaker 6and one of the things you know about that, I mean, we've seen the rise of like gentle parenting, in my opinion, raised a bunch of just soft kids or entitled kids, or kids don't know how to handle the word no.
Speaker 10Mm-hmm.
Speaker 6Um, but it, it, it, it's interesting. I saw a video, another video today where someone said, sometimes the answer is to your, to my kids' question is. Because I said so, and that is an okay answer. Mm-hmm. And that's something that I know some parents struggle with is, is we heard that a lot growing up of, oh, because I said so. Well, I wanted a sufficient answer, not just a, because I said so. Mm-hmm.
Speaker 8And
Speaker 6then you become a parent, you realize, no, sometimes that is the, there are
Speaker 8sometimes. Yeah. Mm-hmm.
Speaker 6Where that's the answer. No, it's because I said, so you're you. You know, this is a godly household here. You are here to abide by what? The rules that us as the parents mm-hmm. Set for you. Mm-hmm. So, um,
Speaker 8but I think there's that balance. Yeah. Because I hear what you're saying and from a parenting, from our parenting perspective together, we have had a lot of conversations around that. And yeah, we both heard that a lot growing up. I think most millennials. Are if your parents, both parents in general, if your parents didn't say, because I said so, you know, I dunno what to tell you, but they lying. I think people went so far on the other side, the extreme on the other side to be like, well, I'm never gonna tell my kids because I said so and I'm always gonna give them an answer for every single thing. And that's when we ran into gentle parenting. Yep. Where I prefer. Like a respectful parenting. Mm-hmm. And a, I see my child as an individual, as a human, as an image bearer, as uniquely and wonderfully made that who did not have a choice to come into this world. We brought them into this world. Yeah. And it is my responsibility. To guide them, to help them process their emotions, to help them understand things, to help them, um, think and use the, their, the, you know, their logic.
Speaker 10Right.
Speaker 8In situations.'cause that stuff is not formed. Yeah. That is forming. And like you said, not everything requires
Speaker 6an elaborate answer, justification
Speaker 8and elaborate answer. But that goes back to what I was saying, like, I do agree with that. Not like sometimes it is like, no. And we'll talk about it as you get older because they're not ready to hear all of that. But whenever we just say like, just that, just because I said so, it's because I said so. Sometimes that comes because like what I was saying about Googling everything, it's like sometimes,'cause we don't know, who won't know the answer, the words to, to say, to
Speaker 6formulate.
Speaker 8So then that's more of an us Yeah. Problem than it is our children.
Speaker 6And one of the things too is, is, I mean we've talked about this when we first started dating of like, Hey listen, we love our parents and the way that. Their parenting styles were. Mm-hmm. But there were some things that we mess maybe necessarily not, didn't wanna replicate in how we
Speaker 10mm-hmm. Parent
Speaker 6our kids. Mm-hmm. Um, now, and one of the things that's funny is as we continue to get, um, as our kids continue to get older, we start to understand or emulate some of the things that maybe we thought that weren't, oh, we probably should. Don't wanna go about this, this direction. Then we were like, oh, now we understand why our parents went this direction. Mm-hmm. Absolutely. We ended up breeding off kids that are knuckleheads like us. So, um, that's Speak
Speaker 8for yourself, not a knucklehead.
Speaker 6Speak for yourself. It's funny, when we talk about our kids, of the three kids, the, I mean, the two, we are glaring, like, you know, Kai looks like me and it's Jasmine
Speaker 7to a
Speaker 6t to a t.
Speaker 8But, but, but, but he's emotionally me and he's humorously you.
Speaker 6Yeah.'cause I'm funny. I'm funny. Okay,
Speaker 8let's talk about our daughter because she's humorously like me and she's hilarious. So
Speaker 6she is,
Speaker 8no, I'm just kidding. You are actually very, very funny. Very
Speaker 6funny. She kind of looks like you. She's
Speaker 8your mom.
Speaker 6She's me.
Speaker 8She's like a mixture of like your mom and I think my sister, my biological sister,
Speaker 6and then she acts like me.
Speaker 8She's so stubborn.
Speaker 6That's me. She's so stubborn. It's my mom too.
Speaker 8So opinionated, so stubborn. So just I'm like, sleeps in. Just does not Goodnight
Speaker 6Al like me. Yeah.
Speaker 8Does not like she knows what she wants. Mm-hmm. She will not give in when it comes to eating. When it comes to that girl will starve watching. This girl's obsessed with Disney princesses. She will not sit through, not one of those movies. No. I think she just watched Frozen at my parents' house and she kind of watched the hair and it was probably because she had to, because she's not allowed to watch YouTube anymore. Mm-hmm. So it's like your options are limited and they're not gonna sit there and watch Diana,
Speaker 10Diana
Speaker 8on Disney, you know, over and over again. So they're like, let's put on a movie.
Speaker 6Watch something. Forced you to
Speaker 8watch Frozen, watched it,
Speaker 6loves it. Kind of. She hasn't
Speaker 8watched it with me.
Speaker 6She's watched it like before bed.
Speaker 8Okay. But that's because she doesn't wanna go to bed.
Speaker 6That's fair, fair point. So there's that. Yeah, there's that.
Speaker 8And then there's our baby who we
Speaker 6have no idea yet. We will see. I now, I
Speaker 8think she's just like her sister. She is, uh, she
Speaker 6reminds me a lot. She, yeah. I'm seeing Kai. A lot of Kai. So I think she's gonna be like Kai. Make sure both. Oh man.
Speaker 8She'd be getting mad, bro.
Speaker 6So you did. That's fair. She'd be getting mad. So of the, you know, eight years we've been parents, what has surprised you about just our parenting style? Some of the things that we talked about in the past about, hey, this is how we want to parent versus how we actually parent? Um, I mean, I, I go first on this one. We, I forever thought we would be the no screen time parent. Yeah, we failed that one.
Speaker 8I, that was a you thing. I, I tried it. I never, I never said that. I'll tell you what I, I'll tell you mine.'cause I'm not gonna sit here and say that I didn't have one of those moments. It just wasn't with screen dying.
Speaker 6Mm. You tell me.
Speaker 8Well, mine, I think I was talking with your sister about this. It's cell phones. It's cell phones? Yeah.
Speaker 6No, having your cell phone.
Speaker 8No cell phone. Like no cell phone. Like you're not gonna have a cell phone until you're like 18. Ah, okay. You don't
Speaker 6need a cell phone. Knowing that we, well, I guess. I had one at like 13,
Speaker 8right? And I'm like, absolutely not. Like you're not getting a cell phone at 10, you're not getting a cell phone at two. And it's just like the older he gets and the more I'm like, man, I wish you had a phone. You know, like I'm like, it'd be so convenient for you to have a phone. But I'm like, no. Yeah, get him. He's eight years old. Get him
Speaker 9a jitter bud. He's eight.
Speaker 8Maybe something I don't know. But. Yeah, I just wait. I need, I was vehemently against like no cell phones. He doesn't need one. He's never, like, if he asks like he's not getting one, he doesn't, and like now that he's eight years old, which is crazy
Speaker 10that
Speaker 8he's eight, like we're not far from double digits and then we're not far from teenage years and he's gonna want what his friends have. He already does. You know, he's starting to do that and. Yeah, so that's my, that was my, I caved real fast.
Speaker 613 is my number, by the way. Oh,
Speaker 8I, I don't know. I don't know.
Speaker 6And that's like me giving you an old school flip phone that you can't get on the internet or it has
Speaker 8no, you have no access to anything. Like, you can just call us,
Speaker 6call, maybe text
Speaker 8us us.
Speaker 6No, no, no. I would, honestly, I'd be okay with calling text with no, with no camera on it.
Speaker 8We know YT nine, we know y. Boy, these little kids
Speaker 6crazy, bro. I mean, that's also how we kind of work. That's what I'm saying. You know why
Speaker 8you wanna call, take no camera on that, bro.
Speaker 6So talk to me a little bit about moments where, um, so talk to me about moments that showed that you're, you know, doing better than you think you are or moment. Yeah. Moments of victory. I mean, for me personally, it, it goes back to. Um, when he was playing soccer, this was years ago, this is when I kind of like settled in. We didn't even have Zoe at the time. It was just Kai and we put him in soccer for the first time and we, I remember us looking at each other going, we have zero idea of how this is going to go. I. I thought he was gonna be one of those kids that was gonna like, you know, play with dandelions and chase bugs around on the field and have no interest in soccer.
Speaker 10Mm-hmm.
Speaker 6Um, and he turned out to be a rock star.
Speaker 8Mm-hmm.
Speaker 6Like, just absolute. He's
Speaker 8a natural,
Speaker 6natural. I mean, we were, we both being the athletes that we were, why are we surprised that our kid came out athletic?
Speaker 10Right.
Speaker 6You know, so, um. That was probably one of those like size of relief of like, you're doing fine. Like, because I didn't see here's, and now rock with me for a minute here.
Speaker 8Okay. Okay. Okay.
Speaker 6I grew up in a very sports, heavily heavy related family.
Speaker 8Okay.
Speaker 6And I could put on name, you know, insert whatever sport you want. On TV and our son is going to have zero interest in watching that sport with me on tv.
Speaker 8Okay. He's eight. I understand.
Speaker 6But I had those interest as a kid at
Speaker 8eight. Yeah. I was interested in sports until I was, I, I'd love to watch probably 11, 12,
Speaker 6some kind of sports. No, I
Speaker 8had no interest in sports and watching sports on TV until I was older, middle school,
Speaker 6and so. I kind, you know, after those, those soccer moments, it made me realize it's okay to like, let him kind of go at his own pace and like eventually he will, will have the interest. Okay. You brought that back. Okay. Yeah, because I was
Speaker 8like, he might, you thought you, I was like, you thought because he could kick a ball. You were like, I'm doing good as a parent. Listen, I
Speaker 6got, I got friends that their kids. Their kids watch all kinds of sports with them.
Speaker 8Okay. Okay. I, I would
Speaker 6love to like turn the Ohio State and one and Kai get lit, like I'm lit on watching the game, but that's not the case right now. It will happen. I'm hoping you're hurt. I am. I'm not gonna lie you. Okay. Just be afraid. You need a hug? Yeah.
Speaker 8The moment that I realized like everything is fine. Mm-hmm. We are talking to completely different, I guess, paths or scenarios. Yeah. Because. It really, it was recently and it was the situation at school. Mm. Probably going to a new school and there was a lot of prayer and uncertainty about that decision. Yeah. And there was an incident that happened at the school. It was a bullying incident. Like, you know, there's this kid that's just a bully and he ended up physically putting his hands on Kai and keeping the story short because you know, that's a whole lot to unpack. But when that situation happened, and I, I mean, he immediately got in the car and told me. What happened, and I'm trying to figure out, you know, I'm asking a bunch of questions, trying to figure out what's going on, like what happened, you know, just detective mom hat came out and I wanna know who's this kid, like,
Speaker 6who's this kid? What's his name? What's his mama's name? What's his address?
Speaker 8His mama's name. What's his mama's mama's name? What's like go all the way down the line? And everybody get these hands. I'm a lover unless you put your hands on my kid. Um, I'm, I am, I'm, I'm growing. Jesus is still working on me, so, and that's when I knew like, we've got this, like, we're good because of his response.
Speaker 6Yeah, and it also gave us a lot of, I mean, even it gave me a lot of faith that we are doing the right thing because his first thing is, lemme turn to God.
Speaker 8I mean, he said like, that's what I was saying is his response. Yeah. His response to that scenario. It was like, are you mad? Are you angry? Like,'cause I would've been, I mean, I was, I was hot and it didn't even happen to me, but if it had physically happened to me, I was like, I'm never talking to that kid again. Like, he's done, he's out. He's not in my circle. He's not my friend. Anymore. Not saying that that's right, but I just know that that's how I would've reacted. And Kai was like, no, I'm not mad. I'm just sad. I'm like, okay, you're sad. Are
Speaker 10you sure you're not angry? No. You allowed to be angry.
Speaker 8I was like, egging it on. I was like, yeah, you can be bad at it for sure. No. He was like, no, I'm sad. I'm sad. He is like, um. I said, okay, well do you still like wanna be friends with him? Is he still
Speaker 6your best friend? Yeah. I think
Speaker 8I said, is he still your best friend or something? And he was like, yeah. He was like, I forgive him. And I was just like.
Speaker 6I don't forgive him, but um, come on. Jesus,
Speaker 8man. I was like, okay, so, so we got a little disciple sitting back here, like just walking with Jesus. Forgiven kid, put his hands around him
Speaker 6and that, I mean, that's right there. That was God showing, Hey, listen, I gave this kid grace. It's time for you to have grace.
Speaker 8Yeah, absolutely. It was like their reflection, they can be, kids, can really be a mirror into areas in our own life that we need to work on. And I was just like, whew. Like if he can forgive a friend that he's known for five minutes, literally
Speaker 6five minutes,
Speaker 8who. Put his hands around his neck if he can forgive that kid. Okay. Who can I forgive? What?
Speaker 6I can forgive that. Kid, maybe.
Speaker 8Yeah. I mean, I'm gonna get on the side eye you, yeah. Every time he comes home and talks about somebody acting up, I'm like, who was it this kid? Was it so and so this? No, he's still your best friend. Right, right, exactly. You still sitting next to him like, no, but that it was a learning experience for. All of us really. And
Speaker 6I love the next thing that happened after that. Like he told us that, and you know, the situation and whatnot. And our next response was, Hey listen, let's have a talk about who we consider our best friend. Mm-hmm.
Speaker 10And that's
Speaker 6a title. That's a really good title. And, you know, and honor, we should probably pick people who you know are doing their best to, to emulate. The fruits of the spirit. Yep.
Speaker 8That's what we talked about. We talked about the fruits of the spirit and being like, does this person reflect the fruits of the spirit? Right. And is this person the things that they're saying that their actions are all of those lining up and are all of those reflective of the fruits of the spirit? So it was a really good opportunity to have that conversation with him. And he, you know, I think he received it really well. Yes, he did. And. He really thought about it too. Yeah. Um, but you know, his heart is just he for people. Giant, enormous. It's so big. He's so sweet. Bigger than both of us. Huh?
Speaker 6Bigger than both of us. But listen, that was heavy and that was a huge learning experience for, for both of us. Mm-hmm. So, rapid fire. Quick question. How many snacks is too many Snacks?
Speaker 8How many snacks is too many? Snacks?
Speaker 6How many snacks is too many snacks? My answer one. You one snack. At, well, what time is it that's, sorry, let me ask that question. What time is it? Because if it's 1230, why do
Speaker 8kids always want snacks at bedtime? Because
Speaker 6it's snacks. They, we make a full meal. Like tonight I made a full meal. You made it. I wait. I put it in the oven. I put a full meal of yours in the oven and z just, no, I don't like it.
Speaker 8Why would you use tonight as an example?
Speaker 6Because it's a funny example, because
Speaker 8you, I, I slayed over the oven. I did kind that. I prepped for you, you prepped and all you had to do was turn the oven on and put it into the oven
Speaker 6and pay attention to timers. It was hard.
Speaker 8Be so for real. Okay. Okay. That was the example that you used. She had so many other times that she has done that.
Speaker 9You had tofe her, bro, like, I gotta
Speaker 8clock you sometimes, bro.
Speaker 9You had to force feed her. That was just a whole thing.
Speaker 8And then that little girl will not, she'll start gagging. No. Like a legit, I know. I don't. It must be like a texture thing. Yucky. I don't know if anybody else's kid is like that
Speaker 6texture. I don't understand it.
Speaker 8She be like, I don't like that.
Speaker 6I You not like chicken bro. It is chicken. She is a
Speaker 8chicken Ick. And then you're like, no, you're gonna eat it. I'm like, she's literally gonna throw up
Speaker 6protein, get protein in. She is
Speaker 8going to vomit. And I'm like, that's. She's faking it, then you clean it up. Okay.
Speaker 6I think kids ask for a ton of snacks at bedtime because they don't want to go to bed. It also goes into, yeah, into the same line of like, why do kids ask so much of questions at bedtime? It's'cause what way can I prolong going to sleep? I am tired, so.
Speaker 8I agree and disagree with that. Oh,
Speaker 6mm-hmm. Okay. We gotta fight. Let's go.
Speaker 8Because I think the best times like yes they are. They are prolonging going to sleep. Yes. However, I do believe that bedtime and what's another time, but I've just noticed this nap
Speaker 10time.
Speaker 8I mean, anytime they have to go to sleep yeah, they leave in the park. Those are the best conversations, the best conversations that I've had with Kai. Have been in the car ride and, but right before bed.
Speaker 6And what, what capacity? Like
Speaker 8when they're, when you're not talking at them, when they're coming to you and asking questions and they're like in it, it has been in the car or right before bed
Speaker 6and they want to get Kyrie
Speaker 8and I have had a lot of good conversations. They right before he is gone to bed. I think like, maybe like the, like that's just when, I don't know, they feel the most connected and they're just like
Speaker 6brain functions that I, yeah.
Speaker 8Yeah. They, the questions are just going,
Speaker 6yeah,
Speaker 8because he asks so many questions, or he'll tell me like, when he gets in the car from school, he'll be, I'll be like, how was your day? And he'll be like, it was great. I, it's like I have to like, ask all these questions to like get, pull these answers out of him, but at bedtime. He is just like the word vomit. Just talking, talking, talking, talking. He wants to tell me everything. And most of the time, and I know that you don't particularly love this, but most of the time, like I sit there and I'm like
Speaker 6just listening.
Speaker 8Yeah. And I like encourage it. I don't love it because you come upstairs and you'll be like, go to bed. Go to bed.
Speaker 6Because it's like nine o'clock, go to bed. You have to get up at six o'clock in the morning and need to go to bed. I
Speaker 8understand. I understand. We
Speaker 6can talk tomorrow, go to bed.
Speaker 8But then what? He won't talk tomorrow. I'm like, when he's willing and ready to talk, I'm like, let's talk because I don't want him to become a teenager. And then he's like, well, when will you talk to us? He's like a moody teenager or something. I don't know. I'm like, go ahead, talk. Is that
Speaker 6inevitable? It's
Speaker 8not. We're not speaking that over our life. No.
Speaker 6Fair.
Speaker 8No. We're gonna have great teenagers.
Speaker 6So what are your takeaways from tonight's episode when we talk about parenting?
Speaker 8My takeaways as a parent in general? Yeah. That three kids. It's chaotic.
Speaker 6It's fun though. Three
Speaker 8kids is chaotic for sure, and especially the eight, four and eight month old like that, the young children. Wow. I do, I feel like I'm in the thick of it for sure, but the patients that I have learned with them. And just truly surrendering and enjoying the hard that comes with it is so fun. Because I think you said it recently, you were like, Z's turned a corner.
Speaker 10Yeah.
Speaker 8Just with her speech and with um, like her interactions with us conversation, she was a lot. Yeah. And like. She still has some emotional things that we're working through, but she is like a completely different kid, right, who is funny and silly. She says, uh, her personality
Speaker 10is,
Speaker 8what's the word that she says? The new phrase that we have. Oh, snippets. Oh, snippets. When you say, oh, snippets. It's just so cute.
Speaker 6I love when I come into the door for like a meeting and you should be like, daddy, go get this. Okay. You got this? Yeah. Okay.
Speaker 8Okay, okay. We used to have Zoeisms, Missouri is, yeah, man. Oh, I can't even think of all the Zums now. I think I have a running list. I just like saying
Speaker 6Hub.
Speaker 8She used to say, gimme a hub. Yeah.
Speaker 6She used to say her name is Zu. We, I was so sad. Oh, that's
Speaker 8who there is. I'm Zu Zu. We, my name
Speaker 6is Zu. We, my
Speaker 8name is Zu. We, and then she would say, um, is NIAA asleep? Yes or no? Yes or no? Is she, no. No. Is she awake? Is she awake? Is she awake? Awake? Yes. Or is she asleep? Is she awake or is she asleep? And then she would go, are you going to, are you gonna do that? Yes or no? Yes or no? Yes or no? Yes.
Speaker 6My takeaway is and is, um. Think kids are the, are the greatest joy. I, I can never, I, I guess I won't ever understand someone who says that kids aren't, aren't a blessing, uh, because they are absolutely awesome. Um, I love you each and every one of'em that we have. I, I can't imagine life without either, either of them. Um, watching them, their personalities kind of grow each day and. How they interact with each other. I mean, they, they love each other so much and mm-hmm.
Speaker 8And they get on each other's nerves so much. Just so much.
Speaker 6But I wouldn't have it any other way. Um, but really quick honey. Fake sponsor of the week or you want me to hit it?
Speaker 8I want you to hit it. Oh, fake Use our fake sponsor of the week, week. Fake sponsor of
Speaker 6the week since we're talking about kiddos. Is Huggies sponsor not sponsored.
Speaker 8We are not sponsored diapers, man. We are not. Why are diapers
Speaker 6so
Speaker 8expensive? By Huggies.
Speaker 6Yeah. Huggies diapers are the best. Right?
Speaker 8I'm just
Speaker 6saying. Right. Just saying.
Speaker 8I just want Huggies to be listening to this.
Speaker 6Yes. Sponsored. Because we're not sponsored by you guys sponsored. We'd love to be sponsored. That'd be great. But, um,
Speaker 8so y'all wanted to send us Huggies,
Speaker 6Huggies size five
Speaker 8diapers. Yeah.
Speaker 6Cruisers, whatever.
Speaker 8All right. So
Speaker 6anyway,
Speaker 8that is wrapping up.
Speaker 6Wrapping up episode. Who let Us Adult? Is that nine
Speaker 8episode? Eight?
Speaker 6Eight. Eight in,
Speaker 8yeah, episode eight. And I've loved doing this with you. This is fun. Let's keep it rolling. Let's go a few more episodes until we wrap up season one and then we're gonna take a little break.
Speaker 6Thanksgiving it's coming up, so I'm looking forward to eat some Turkey. Have a great
Speaker 8Thanksgiving, great holiday. If we don't
Speaker 6see, if we don't hear from you or see you. Um, thanks
Speaker 8for listening to the podcast. This is who Let us Adult
Speaker 6and who are we? Are we there? What?
Speaker 8Internet besties.
Speaker 6See you guys who let us adult out. Listen
Speaker 8to us every Sunday at noon on Apple Podcasts. Spotify, watch us on YouTube and it would mean the most to us. If you would leave us a review. If you're listening to this, leave us a review,
Speaker 6like, comment, subscribe. Follow us the whole night. You know how social media works. You know how it
Speaker 8goes. You know how it does. So if you want other people to find and hear us and listen to this, share, if you feel encouraged by it, share it.
Speaker 6Or if you hate us, just comment. Tell us you hate us.
Speaker 8Don't do that. I don't like hate comments. I do. Okay, I'll delete them. All right. Anyways. Bye bye. Have a good weekend. Have a good holidays,
Speaker 6everybody. We out.
Speaker 10Who
Speaker 8let us, who let us? Uh.