Parenting Well Podcast podcast

#56 Raising Brave Kids in an Anxious World: What Parents Need to Know About Anxiety

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Anxiety is everywhere right now. It's in our culture, in our homes, and often in our own nervous systems. So how do we raise brave, resilient children without unintentionally reinforcing the fears we’re trying to protect them from?

I’m Dr. Shelly Mahon, your host, and in this episode of the Parenting Well Podcast, I sit down with Dr. Samantha Grigsby, clinical psychologist and founder of Foothills CBT, to break down what every parent needs to understand about how anxiety works and how to interrupt the cycle that keeps it growing.

We explore how to distinguish normal developmental anxiety from anxiety that needs support, and why avoidance, though well-intended, often strengthens fear over time. Dr. Grigsby explains the anxiety cycle in practical terms and shares why Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) and Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP) are gold-standard treatments for anxiety and OCD.

We also discuss how rescuing, over-accommodating, minimizing stress, or offering constant reassurance can unintentionally perpetuate anxiety, as well as what supportive parenting actually looks like when a child is struggling. Finally, we examine the cultural pressures amplifying stress today and how to keep our own anxiety from shaping the emotional climate of our homes.

Because bravery isn’t the absence of anxiety. It’s feeling it — and moving forward anyway.

Register to hear her talk at the Stress & Anxiety Conference 

In this podcast, we talk about:

  • How to tell when anxiety is normal and when it’s limiting your child

  • The hidden ways loving parents accidentally reinforce anxiety

  • Why avoidance and reassurance make anxiety stronger

  • What actually works (CBT & ERP explained simply)

  • How to stop passing your stress onto your child

Key Takeaway:

  1. Avoidance might be contributing to your child's anxiety. The very things we do to reduce our child’s distress can quietly make it stronger.
  2. Support and accommodation are not the same thing. One builds resilience. The other builds dependence. Do you see this in your family?
  3. Reassurance feels loving but it can train the brain to doubt itself. What happens when children learn to tolerate uncertainty instead
  4. Bravery doesn’t mean calm. It means moving forward while your nervous system is loud.
  5. Your anxiety shapes the emotional climate of your home. Not because you’re failing but because nervous systems are contagious.
  6. We live in an expectation-amplified world. Unrealistic standards, social comparison, and constant input may be fueling more stress than we realize.
  7. Self-criticism keeps the cycle alive. Self-compassion may be one of the most powerful anxiety interventions for both parent and child.
  8. You don’t have to eliminate anxiety all together to raise a confident child. You may need to look at whether you are protecting them from having uncomfortable feelings.

Resources:

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