About this episode
This one’s for every parent staring at their older teen or college-age kid thinking, “Why aren’t you moving? Why aren’t you launching?” You did the “right” things: good schools, good neighborhood, bank accounts, maybe even a car and a debit card. One kid takes off. The other is stuck on the couch, overdrafting their account and dodging responsibility. And you’re wondering if you screwed this up.In this 12 Days of Giving episode (running daily from 12/12–12/23), I sit down with financial therapist Ashley Quamme to talk about the emotional gut-punch of raising very different kids in the same house. She walks us through the story of Mike and Michelle – two daughters, same parents, same environment… wildly different motivation and money behavior. One kid is the “easy” high-achiever. The other? “Bless her heart” energy all day. And it’s slowly grinding these parents down with guilt and resentment. ? Watch the full episode on YouTube: https://youtu.be/8UWFhj5jFzcWe get into a hard truth: you cannot parent every kid the same way and expect the same outcome. Ashley breaks down the difference between equal and equitable – why giving both kids the exact same gas money, expectations, and rope isn’t actually fair if they don’t have the same skills, wiring, or executive function. And we talk about how to stop trying to “copy/paste” your oldest onto your youngest.Then we move into the practical side: how to help your “Sarah” get a job without just yelling “go apply somewhere” and walking away. Ashley shows how to break “get a job” into micro steps, map them out on a calendar, and do some of it with them without turning them into a permanent dependent. We dig into why teens freeze, how overwhelm looks like laziness, and why your kid might not be avoiding work—they might just be terrified and stuck.Finally, we flip the mirror back on us as parents. Our generation was told to figure it out alone. Nobody held our hand. We were kicked out of the house and told to come back when the streetlights came on. That story is baked into how we judge our kids. Ashley and I talk about letting them fail on purpose in safe ways, how to stop rescuing every time they forget something, and how to forgive yourself for not hitting some imaginary parenting scoreboard by age 18.If you’re tired, worried, and quietly ashamed that your teen “isn’t where they should be,” this episode is your permission to stop beating yourself up and start parenting the kid you actually have—not the one in your head.As always we ask you to comment, DM, whatever it takes to have a conversation to help you take the next step in your journey, reach out on any platform!Twitter, FaceBook, Instagram, Tiktok