Conscious parenting is not a mindset shift — it is a healing practice. Every non-parent swears they'll never lose it on the plane with a toddler; every new parent discovers their parents living through them within months.
Dr. Shefali Tsabary warns that by age 8, strangers in your child's algorithm are doing more parenting than you are — and most parents have no idea it's happening.
The School of Greatness
Dr. Shefali Tsabary warns that by age 8, strangers in your child's algorithm are doing more parenting than you are — and most parents have no idea it's happening.
TL;DR
Dr. Shefali Tsabary, pioneer of the conscious parenting movement, joins Lewis Howes for a wide-ranging conversation on raising emotionally healthy children in an era of digital hijacking, the manosphere, and the youth mental health crisis. She presents seven pillars for raising girls (voice, embodiment, enoughness, boundaries, antifragility, sovereignty, sisterhood) and argues boys are being lost to video games and porn while going uninitiated into manhood [1] — Dr. Shefali Tsabary "Girls find their sense of self through relationships — which makes them uniquely vulnerable to digital comparison culture. Dr. Shefali's se…" 1:10:59 . The single most actionable takeaway: you cannot think your way into good parenting — you have to heal your way into it [2] — Dr. Shefali Tsabary "You can't think your way into good parenting. You have to heal your way into good parenting. And healing happens in relationship." 03:57 .
Dr. Shefali Tsabary returns for her third School of Greatness appearance to discuss her books Raising Conscious Daughters and Raising Conscious Sons, covering conscious parenting, parental emotional regulation, the seven pillars for raising girls, male initiation, the manosphere, the youth mental health crisis, and digital hijacking of childhood.
The episode opens with a stack of pre-roll sponsor reads covering Fidelity retirement planning, the Tempur-Pedic Luxe Breeze mattress, and Lowe's July 4th deals. Before the interview formally begins, a short cold-open clip of Dr. Shefali Tsabary sounds the alarm: the children's mental health crisis has reached an abysmal level, with suicidality, loneliness, anxiety, and body dysmorphia at rates never seen before. The framing immediately establishes the urgency that will drive the next two hours.
Lewis Howes opens by noting that Oprah has called Dr. Shefali Tsabary revolutionary and the pioneer of the conscious parenting movement, setting up her third appearance on the podcast. He introduces her two new books and anchors the conversation in his own life: he has 6-month-old twin daughters and is acutely aware of what is coming at them. Dr. Shefali immediately dismantles the most common parenting trap — the belief that intellectual resolve alone can break generational cycles. You cannot think your way into good parenting, she says; you have to heal your way into it. The parent-child relationship is the most intense mirror in any person's life precisely because, unlike a romantic partner, a child cannot be divorced, returned, or escaped.
Dr. Shefali lays out a layered framework for understanding why we have children and what the relationship asks of us. At the biological level, procreation is the primal urge — life calling to life. At the psychological level, the parent-child dynamic exposes unhealed patterns and invites therapeutic work. At the transcendent level — the level of conscious parenting — the parent releases the identity of 'mother' or 'father' and instead sees the child as a being they are privileged to usher toward their own destiny. Dr. Shefali illustrates this with a personal example: her daughter becoming a chef, and how easy it would have been to damage that choice from a place of misplaced ego. The conversation pivots to whether souls choose their parents, and Dr. Shefali gently deflects the metaphysical while landing the key point: each child arrives with a unique neurobiological symphony, and 'biology loads the gun, but culture pulls the trigger.'
When Dr. Shefali first wrote Conscious Parenting 16 years ago, she was worried about parental distraction. Now, she warns, the stakes are categorically higher: technology is no longer just competing for attention — it is supplanting the attachment bond itself. People are forming relationships with ChatGPT bots and AI agents; robots will soon live in the home. In this context, she delivers her most quotable image of the episode: you wouldn't let your daughter travel the world alone at 8, but the world is already in her algorithm at 8. The void left by a distracted or emotionally unavailable parent is filled not by innocent boredom but by strangers shaping a child's psyche. Lewis connects this to his own experience as a new father of twin girls, and Dr. Shefali underscores that today's parent must be 'otherworldly' in their presence to have any chance.
Lewis asks the direct question every parent wants answered: what is the number one skill? Dr. Shefali's answer is presence — but she immediately deconstructs what that word actually demands. True presence requires a here-and-now mindfulness that can only be sustained if the parent has done healing work on their past, cultivated a simple and unchaotic life, and let go of dogma and fundamentalism that would otherwise poison their attention. She runs through concrete scenarios: a 12-year-old who wants to be an artist and drop out of high school, a teenager questioning their identity. In every case, the conscious response is only available to the parent who has cultivated the practice. The takeaway is practical: parenting is not a philosophy you adopt — it is a skill you build, one present moment at a time.
Lewis asks the question that haunts most reflective parents: is the only path forward healing yourself before you have children? Dr. Shefali says no — healing happens simultaneously with parenting, not before it. The key is willingness: when your father's behaviour shows up through you, lean into it with curiosity rather than shame. She makes the empowering and counterintuitive case that parents who obsessively try to avoid screwing up their children are driven by narcissism, not love. She then delivers one of the episode's most memorable anecdotes: her own daughter weaponising her professional identity against her — 'I cannot believe Dr. Shefali is saying this to me' — forcing her to say aloud: 'I am not here to be perfect. I am here to grow.' The message lands with force: baggage is not the enemy; pretending you have none is.
Lewis raises one of parenting's most universal tensions: why do parents push children toward specific careers? Dr. Shefali's answer is deliberately uncomfortable. At a subconscious level, many parents have children in order to curate and puppeteer a version of themselves that achieved what they could not. The child becomes a canvas for unmet ambition. Lewis is unusually candid in response — he acknowledges he can already see himself wanting to maximise his daughters' talents, even as he says it aloud — and Dr. Shefali uses this as an entry point into a broader argument about achievement culture: a hustle culture built on external validation and comparison anxiety is now collapsing on children who can no longer handle its weight. The statistics, she says, are clear: they are drowning.
Dr. Shefali pulls no punches in painting the scale of the crisis. She rattles through the data points: 8-year-olds on diets, 11-year-olds already addicted to pornography, massive numbers of girls self-harming, body dysmorphia and suicidal ideation becoming commonplace, and — the number that lands hardest — boys and males completing suicide at four times the rate of girls and women. She frames the loneliness epidemic as the invisible thread running through all of it. We are not paying attention, she says, as a culture: we leap from social media to AI to super AI without pausing to ask what each new escalation is doing to the children inside these systems. Writing two books — one for sons and one for daughters — was her way of forcing that pause.
Girls are neurobiologically predisposed to seek connection and belonging — they scan every room for approval, build their sense of self through relationship, and are exquisitely attuned to the subtlest social cues, including the number of exclamation marks in a text message. Dr. Shefali describes teenage girls who bring her their phones to decode the hidden meaning of an emoji because the digital channel cannot carry the body language and eye contact they are biologically wired to read. Into this vulnerability, the algorithm drops an endless feed of AI-filtered faces, curated bodies, and impossible standards. The result is a girl who is always falling short of a standard that does not exist. And so she reframes what parents and clinicians often pathologise: girls' anxiety is not irrational — it is the only sane response to a genuinely insane cultural environment.
Boys are designed for physical risk, competitive hierarchy, and outdoor brotherhood. Dr. Shefali cites the collapse in outdoor time — from more than 13 hours per week to fewer than 5 — as the structural cause of the boy crisis. That coiled physical and competitive energy has nowhere to go, so it gets channelled into the artificial dopamine loops of video games, where the difficulty is calibrated to keep boys winning just enough to stay hooked. Then comes the second stage: the manosphere, architected to explain a boy's every real-world failure as someone else's fault. The boy who has never built real social skills, never dealt with genuine rejection, and never been initiated into manhood by conscious older men, is told that women are the problem. The pipeline, Dr. Shefali argues, is not accidental — it is brilliantly designed.
The conversation turns personal as Lewis asks what he, as a new father of twin girls, can do to protect their sense of self. Dr. Shefali does not start with daughter-facing advice — she starts with the father's shadow work. An unintegrated adult male, she argues, especially one carrying privilege and unexamined misogyny, has enormous capacity to harm without knowing it: through how he looks at women, comments on bodies, talks about his wife's appearance. The antidote is not absence but conscious modelling — how a man reveres the mother of his children becomes the template his daughter uses to evaluate every male relationship for the rest of her life. She extends this to sons: boys need conscious men in front of them who can show them what respectful masculinity looks like — what restraint means, what waiting for a yes means, what it means to share rather than dominate power.
Dr. Shefali raises a topic she knows will be unpopular: the framing of platforms like OnlyFans as feminist empowerment. Her argument is precise and deliberately non-moralistic — she does not tell women what to do, but she insists on naming what is actually happening. When money is the condition for sexual display, the act is transactional, not autonomous. Sexual liberation, she says, is doing it in the park because it is your authentic truth; OnlyFans is doing it because someone is paying $50 a month. The distinction matters because the daughters watching their mothers — or the young women seeing influencers glamorise it as a path to generational wealth — are absorbing a narrative about female power that is, at its core, patriarchy in a new costume. She goes further: the psychological cost of dissociation required to sustain repeated self-objectification is real and bound to come at the price of genuine intimacy.
Dr. Shefali walks through each of the seven pillars with practical specificity. Voice: teach daughters from age 2 to tune into their inner knowing — ask 'what does your body say?' rather than prescribing answers. Embodiment: her body belongs to her — grandma's kiss, daddy's tickle, all of it conditional on her consent. Enoughness: detach parental warmth from performance, so the child never learns that love is conditional on achievement. Boundaries: when a daughter rebels against a father and he receives it with curiosity rather than punishment, she learns that she can tell a male to back off — the prototype she will use for every male boss and partner for the rest of her life. Antifragility: resist the urge to rescue; let children struggle within safe limits and build competence from friction. Sovereignty: greatness is self-defined — a cobbler, a chef, a superstar, all valid. Sisterhood: women compete because a system that stripped female power created scarcity; teaching daughters to be pro-female rather than anti-male is the antidote.
The episode takes a wide-angle view of the cultural systems preying on parents and daughters. Dr. Shefali argues that calling a girl a 'good girl' is one of the most damaging things a parent can do — it trains her to suppress authentic wants and needs in exchange for approval, creating the parentified daughter who becomes the family's emotional janitor. She pivots to beauty: the cosmetics industry is a 'bazillion-dollar' operation built on making women feel permanently insufficient, and a father's words carry enormous power to counter it — telling his wife in front of his daughters that she looks better without makeup is worth more than any media literacy class. She then zooms out to the parenting-industrial complex: the entire system from AP courses to competitive dance, from volunteer trips to Sephora birthday parties, is designed to exploit parental fear that a child will be left behind. The ego is the vulnerability; the industry is the predator.
Lewis puts a direct hypothetical to Dr. Shefali: if you had kids born today, what would you do? Her answer is clear and counter-cultural. She would try to homeschool, live in community with other conscious parents, refuse a phone until the child is at least a teenager (ideally until they are old enough to physically bully her into it), and create deliberate simplicity in her own life to sustain presence. She would not be afraid to create friction, allow struggle, or stand against the matrix. The most striking moment is her confession: she gave her daughter a phone at 13 believing it was candy — she now knows it was crack. The first generation of smartphone parents were innocent guinea pigs; the current generation of parents have access to that knowledge and no excuse for repeating it. She closes with a pointed critique: parenthood is the only major life role that requires no qualification, no license, and no oversight — less scrutiny than a dog groomer.
Dr. Shefali makes her most systemic argument: a dog groomer is required to hold a 6-month license to cut nails, yet anyone can legally bring one, two, or three children into the world with no psychological screening, no parenting course, no check-in visits, and no accountability whatsoever. She calls for a mandatory parenting education course — at minimum, no hospital should discharge a newborn to parents who have not completed some form of training. Lewis pushes back on the practical implications, and Dr. Shefali acknowledges the complications (the state is not necessarily a better caregiver) while holding her main point: the absence of any standard is a systemic indictment. We no longer live in tribes where elders could fill the gap. Without institutional support, the 35-year-old with twins and no skills is simply left alone and digitally overwhelmed.
Lewis raises a challenge particularly relevant to parents who have built significant wealth: how do you teach your children to value what they have without knowing scarcity? Dr. Shefali argues that overcorrecting from a difficult childhood by giving children everything creates a different but equally dangerous problem. Children who have never experienced delayed gratification, who have Uber Eats and Amazon same-day delivery as their baseline reality, develop no resilience for things going wrong. Her prescriptions are concrete: let siblings fight over clothes and sit in the discomfort; deliberately travel to places of contrast; create small moments of friction — the AC goes out, they sweat, they cope. Exposure to contrast builds the muscle that abundance dissolves. She closes the segment by noting that a 24-year-old who has sent her résumé to 75 places but has never walked into a business in person represents the failure mode at scale.
A group of mothers came to Dr. Shefali alarmed that their 12- to 14-year-old sons were sneaking out at night to roam the subway tunnels together and form their own underground brotherhood. Her reaction was not alarm but recognition: boys who are not initiated by conscious older men will initiate themselves, and the results range from underground clubs to gangs to cults. Single mothers, she observes with compassion and directness, often carry their own deep trauma at the hands of male anger — and that unprocessed trauma can cause them to project onto their boys' natural wildness, clamping their energy and shaming impulses that simply need channelling. The prescription is clear: seek out Big Brothers Big Sisters, find a wise uncle, get him a mentor who can talk to him about his body and his impulses. She cites Scott Galloway's argument that elder men should deliberately adopt uninitiated boys — because the alternative is the manosphere stepping in to do the job.
Lewis gives Dr. Shefali the floor to deliver her three core truths. First: your children are not your canvas, puppet, trinket, or trophy — they are sovereign beings whose destiny is their own, and your role is to usher rather than direct. Second: the best parenting you can do is parenting yourself — conscious parenting is fundamentally an act of self-transformation, not child management. Third: do not use your children to fulfil your own unrealised ideals of greatness — that work belongs to you. From there, Dr. Shefali pivots to the psychology beneath the parenting: the inner child is in the driver's seat 90% of unscripted adult time, with the ego constructing elaborate strategies — peacocking, pleasing, fixing, withdrawing — to protect the frightened child underneath. The real healing work is not dismantling the ego but addressing the original wound that created it.
Lewis turns the conversation outward — to all the listeners who still have living parents from whom they feel they never received what they needed. Dr. Shefali validates the pain completely, then delivers the harder message: after 18 — and she generously extends this to 32 — you must take accountability for your own life and stop waiting for a parent to heal or apologise. Physical separation is only the first step; if resentment is still bubbling, the real work has not been done. The ultimate goal is not reconciliation but re-parenting yourself — internalising the nurturing you did not receive so you can take back the power you have given your past. And with perspective, she says, something unexpected happens: genuine compassion for the perpetrator, because they too came from pain. The episode closes with Lewis thanking her, a book-plug for both titles, and an invitation to visit DrShefali.com for the free masterclasses accompanying the presale.
Chapter 2 · 02:19
Lewis Howes opens by noting that Oprah has called Dr. Shefali Tsabary revolutionary and the pioneer of the conscious parenting movement, setting up her third appearance on the podcast. He introduces her two new books and anchors the conversation in his own life: he has 6-month-old twin daughters and is acutely aware of what is coming at them. Dr. Shefali immediately dismantles the most common parenting trap — the belief that intellectual resolve alone can break generational cycles. You cannot think your way into good parenting, she says; you have to heal your way into it. The parent-child relationship is the most intense mirror in any person's life precisely because, unlike a romantic partner, a child cannot be divorced, returned, or escaped.
Conscious parenting is not a mindset shift — it is a healing practice. Every non-parent swears they'll never lose it on the plane with a toddler; every new parent discovers their parents living through them within months.
You cannot think your way into good parenting; you have to heal your way into it, because healing happens in relationship and requires ongoing practice rather than intellectual resolve.
Unlike a romantic partner, children offer the most intense mirror for parental growth because there is no exit ramp, no expiration date, and no possibility of return — making it the most transformative relationship.
Chapter 3 · 06:40
Dr. Shefali lays out a layered framework for understanding why we have children and what the relationship asks of us. At the biological level, procreation is the primal urge — life calling to life. At the psychological level, the parent-child dynamic exposes unhealed patterns and invites therapeutic work. At the transcendent level — the level of conscious parenting — the parent releases the identity of 'mother' or 'father' and instead sees the child as a being they are privileged to usher toward their own destiny. Dr. Shefali illustrates this with a personal example: her daughter becoming a chef, and how easy it would have been to damage that choice from a place of misplaced ego. The conversation pivots to whether souls choose their parents, and Dr. Shefali gently deflects the metaphysical while landing the key point: each child arrives with a unique neurobiological symphony, and 'biology loads the gun, but culture pulls the trigger.'
Claims made here
Boys and girls are growing up in the same world but are treated differently by the algorithm because it knows how to hijack each one's neurobiology differently.
Children's mental health is at the worst level in history, with astronomical rates of suicidality, loneliness, anxiety, body dysmorphia, and identity fragmentation.
8-year-olds on diets. 11-year-olds addicted to porn. Boys four times more likely than girls to complete suicide. Dr. Shefali lays out the full statistical horror of the youth mental health crisis and argues we are not paying attention.
Dr. Shefali describes the children's mental health crisis as unprecedented, citing astronomical rates of suicidality, loneliness, anxiety, body dysmorphia, and identity fragmentation.
You wouldn't let your daughter travel the world alone at 8 — but the world is already in her algorithm at 8. The void left by a distracted parent is filled not by boredom but by strangers shaping her psyche.
Chapter 4 · 13:40
When Dr. Shefali first wrote Conscious Parenting 16 years ago, she was worried about parental distraction. Now, she warns, the stakes are categorically higher: technology is no longer just competing for attention — it is supplanting the attachment bond itself. People are forming relationships with ChatGPT bots and AI agents; robots will soon live in the home. In this context, she delivers her most quotable image of the episode: you wouldn't let your daughter travel the world alone at 8, but the world is already in her algorithm at 8. The void left by a distracted or emotionally unavailable parent is filled not by innocent boredom but by strangers shaping a child's psyche. Lewis connects this to his own experience as a new father of twin girls, and Dr. Shefali underscores that today's parent must be 'otherworldly' in their presence to have any chance.
Chapter 5 · 18:20
Lewis asks the direct question every parent wants answered: what is the number one skill? Dr. Shefali's answer is presence — but she immediately deconstructs what that word actually demands. True presence requires a here-and-now mindfulness that can only be sustained if the parent has done healing work on their past, cultivated a simple and unchaotic life, and let go of dogma and fundamentalism that would otherwise poison their attention. She runs through concrete scenarios: a 12-year-old who wants to be an artist and drop out of high school, a teenager questioning their identity. In every case, the conscious response is only available to the parent who has cultivated the practice. The takeaway is practical: parenting is not a philosophy you adopt — it is a skill you build, one present moment at a time.
Chapter 6 · 21:40
Lewis asks the question that haunts most reflective parents: is the only path forward healing yourself before you have children? Dr. Shefali says no — healing happens simultaneously with parenting, not before it. The key is willingness: when your father's behaviour shows up through you, lean into it with curiosity rather than shame. She makes the empowering and counterintuitive case that parents who obsessively try to avoid screwing up their children are driven by narcissism, not love. She then delivers one of the episode's most memorable anecdotes: her own daughter weaponising her professional identity against her — 'I cannot believe Dr. Shefali is saying this to me' — forcing her to say aloud: 'I am not here to be perfect. I am here to grow.' The message lands with force: baggage is not the enemy; pretending you have none is.
Chapter 7 · 28:20
Lewis raises one of parenting's most universal tensions: why do parents push children toward specific careers? Dr. Shefali's answer is deliberately uncomfortable. At a subconscious level, many parents have children in order to curate and puppeteer a version of themselves that achieved what they could not. The child becomes a canvas for unmet ambition. Lewis is unusually candid in response — he acknowledges he can already see himself wanting to maximise his daughters' talents, even as he says it aloud — and Dr. Shefali uses this as an entry point into a broader argument about achievement culture: a hustle culture built on external validation and comparison anxiety is now collapsing on children who can no longer handle its weight. The statistics, she says, are clear: they are drowning.
Chapter 8 · 32:40
Dr. Shefali pulls no punches in painting the scale of the crisis. She rattles through the data points: 8-year-olds on diets, 11-year-olds already addicted to pornography, massive numbers of girls self-harming, body dysmorphia and suicidal ideation becoming commonplace, and — the number that lands hardest — boys and males completing suicide at four times the rate of girls and women. She frames the loneliness epidemic as the invisible thread running through all of it. We are not paying attention, she says, as a culture: we leap from social media to AI to super AI without pausing to ask what each new escalation is doing to the children inside these systems. Writing two books — one for sons and one for daughters — was her way of forcing that pause.
Claims made here
Males are four times more likely than females to complete suicide.
Males are four times more likely than females to complete suicide, according to Dr. Shefali Tsabary's presentation of the youth mental health data.
Dr. Shefali cited alarming statistics: 8-year-olds on diets, 11-year-olds addicted to porn, and infinite numbers of girls self-harming and experiencing body dysmorphia and suicidal ideation.
Chapter 9 · 34:50
Girls are neurobiologically predisposed to seek connection and belonging — they scan every room for approval, build their sense of self through relationship, and are exquisitely attuned to the subtlest social cues, including the number of exclamation marks in a text message. Dr. Shefali describes teenage girls who bring her their phones to decode the hidden meaning of an emoji because the digital channel cannot carry the body language and eye contact they are biologically wired to read. Into this vulnerability, the algorithm drops an endless feed of AI-filtered faces, curated bodies, and impossible standards. The result is a girl who is always falling short of a standard that does not exist. And so she reframes what parents and clinicians often pathologise: girls' anxiety is not irrational — it is the only sane response to a genuinely insane cultural environment.
Claims made here
Girls build their sense of self through connection and are extremely sensitive to emotional rejection, scanning environments for belonging and approval.
Girls are neurobiologically fine-tuned to eye contact and bonding due to the oxytocin produced by estrogen, making them uniquely vulnerable to misreading digital communication like emojis.
Children used to spend more than 13 hours outside with friends per week; now it is less than 5 hours per week.
Dr. Shefali argues that girls' anxiety today is not a disorder but an appropriate response to an insane culture of impossible beauty standards, digital perfection, and lack of genuine connection.
Boys used to spend 13+ hours outside per week; now it's under 5. That coiled physical energy has nowhere to go — so video games hijack it with synthetic dopamine, and the manosphere sweeps in to explain female rejection. The pipeline is architected, not accidental.
On average, children used to spend more than 13 hours outside with friends per week; now it is less than 5, depriving boys especially of the physical and social development they need.
Chapter 10 · 38:10
Boys are designed for physical risk, competitive hierarchy, and outdoor brotherhood. Dr. Shefali cites the collapse in outdoor time — from more than 13 hours per week to fewer than 5 — as the structural cause of the boy crisis. That coiled physical and competitive energy has nowhere to go, so it gets channelled into the artificial dopamine loops of video games, where the difficulty is calibrated to keep boys winning just enough to stay hooked. Then comes the second stage: the manosphere, architected to explain a boy's every real-world failure as someone else's fault. The boy who has never built real social skills, never dealt with genuine rejection, and never been initiated into manhood by conscious older men, is told that women are the problem. The pipeline, Dr. Shefali argues, is not accidental — it is brilliantly designed.
Claims made here
The manosphere algorithmically targets boys as young as 11, without the boy realising, delivering content about square jaws, big biceps, and displacing male frustration onto women.
Chapter 11 · 44:00
The conversation turns personal as Lewis asks what he, as a new father of twin girls, can do to protect their sense of self. Dr. Shefali does not start with daughter-facing advice — she starts with the father's shadow work. An unintegrated adult male, she argues, especially one carrying privilege and unexamined misogyny, has enormous capacity to harm without knowing it: through how he looks at women, comments on bodies, talks about his wife's appearance. The antidote is not absence but conscious modelling — how a man reveres the mother of his children becomes the template his daughter uses to evaluate every male relationship for the rest of her life. She extends this to sons: boys need conscious men in front of them who can show them what respectful masculinity looks like — what restraint means, what waiting for a yes means, what it means to share rather than dominate power.
Claims made here
Drip Drop contains 3 times the electrolytes of leading sports drinks and is trusted by over 90% of top college and pro sports teams.
The father is the primary architect of a daughter's self-esteem. How he looks at women, comments on bodies, and treats the mother creates the lens through which his daughter sees herself. The male gaze at home is the antidote — or the accelerant — for every cultural message his daughter will face.
Chapter 12 · 49:30
Dr. Shefali raises a topic she knows will be unpopular: the framing of platforms like OnlyFans as feminist empowerment. Her argument is precise and deliberately non-moralistic — she does not tell women what to do, but she insists on naming what is actually happening. When money is the condition for sexual display, the act is transactional, not autonomous. Sexual liberation, she says, is doing it in the park because it is your authentic truth; OnlyFans is doing it because someone is paying $50 a month. The distinction matters because the daughters watching their mothers — or the young women seeing influencers glamorise it as a path to generational wealth — are absorbing a narrative about female power that is, at its core, patriarchy in a new costume. She goes further: the psychological cost of dissociation required to sustain repeated self-objectification is real and bound to come at the price of genuine intimacy.
OnlyFans is framed as sexual empowerment, but Dr. Shefali argues it is patriarchy wearing a new costume. When the transaction requires objectifying your own body for male dollars, calling it liberation obscures what is actually happening — and the women doing it should at least own that truth.
Chapter 13 · 55:50
Dr. Shefali walks through each of the seven pillars with practical specificity. Voice: teach daughters from age 2 to tune into their inner knowing — ask 'what does your body say?' rather than prescribing answers. Embodiment: her body belongs to her — grandma's kiss, daddy's tickle, all of it conditional on her consent. Enoughness: detach parental warmth from performance, so the child never learns that love is conditional on achievement. Boundaries: when a daughter rebels against a father and he receives it with curiosity rather than punishment, she learns that she can tell a male to back off — the prototype she will use for every male boss and partner for the rest of her life. Antifragility: resist the urge to rescue; let children struggle within safe limits and build competence from friction. Sovereignty: greatness is self-defined — a cobbler, a chef, a superstar, all valid. Sisterhood: women compete because a system that stripped female power created scarcity; teaching daughters to be pro-female rather than anti-male is the antidote.
Claims made here
Approximately 1 in 5 boys is diagnosed with ADHD.
Children's education system is anti-male neurochemistry because boys are bottom-up learners who learn through their bodies, not by sitting still for hours.
The moment you pull a child from play and put them in a coached performance environment, you have short-circuited their natural development. Dr. Shefali argues parents should resist enrolling young children in structured activities for at least the first 7 to 8 years — a nearly impossible ask in today's hyper-competitive parenting culture.
Approximately 1 in 5 boys is diagnosed with ADHD, feeding a pipeline to medication and a persistent sense of being lesser-than, driven partly by an education system anti-aligned with male neurochemistry.
Girls find their sense of self through relationships — which makes them uniquely vulnerable to digital comparison culture. Dr. Shefali's seven pillars give fathers a concrete blueprint: teach your daughter that her inner voice matters, her body is hers, she is enough without performing, she can say no, she can struggle, she authors her own greatness, and her sisters are her greatest allies.
Dr. Shefali outlines seven pillars for raising conscious daughters: voice, embodiment, enoughness, boundaries, antifragility, sovereignty, and sisterhood.
Chapter 15 · 1:24:20
Lewis puts a direct hypothetical to Dr. Shefali: if you had kids born today, what would you do? Her answer is clear and counter-cultural. She would try to homeschool, live in community with other conscious parents, refuse a phone until the child is at least a teenager (ideally until they are old enough to physically bully her into it), and create deliberate simplicity in her own life to sustain presence. She would not be afraid to create friction, allow struggle, or stand against the matrix. The most striking moment is her confession: she gave her daughter a phone at 13 believing it was candy — she now knows it was crack. The first generation of smartphone parents were innocent guinea pigs; the current generation of parents have access to that knowledge and no excuse for repeating it. She closes with a pointed critique: parenthood is the only major life role that requires no qualification, no license, and no oversight — less scrutiny than a dog groomer.
Dr. Shefali gave her daughter a phone at 13 thinking she was giving her candy. She now says she unknowingly gave her crack. The first generation of parents were guinea pigs — and the current generation of parents have no excuse for that ignorance.
Dr. Shefali gave her daughter a smartphone at 13, believing she was giving her access to the world; she now says she unknowingly gave her 'crack,' not candy.
Calling a girl a 'good girl' trains her to abandon her authentic self for parental approval. Girls who learn that extra niceness earns extra praise will suppress their genuine wants and needs for a lifetime — becoming the emotional janitor for everyone around them.
Chapter 16 · 1:36:20
Dr. Shefali makes her most systemic argument: a dog groomer is required to hold a 6-month license to cut nails, yet anyone can legally bring one, two, or three children into the world with no psychological screening, no parenting course, no check-in visits, and no accountability whatsoever. She calls for a mandatory parenting education course — at minimum, no hospital should discharge a newborn to parents who have not completed some form of training. Lewis pushes back on the practical implications, and Dr. Shefali acknowledges the complications (the state is not necessarily a better caregiver) while holding her main point: the absence of any standard is a systemic indictment. We no longer live in tribes where elders could fill the gap. Without institutional support, the 35-year-old with twins and no skills is simply left alone and digitally overwhelmed.
A dog groomer needs a 6-month license to cut nails. Anyone can become a parent to two or three children with zero mental health checks, no parenting course, and no oversight. Dr. Shefali argues this is a systemic failure — children should not leave the hospital until their parents have completed a mandatory course.
Dr. Shefali points out that a dog groomer needs a 6-month license to cut nails, yet anyone can become a parent with zero mental health checks, no parenting course, and no oversight.
Childhood is the biggest money-racketeering business because marketers know parents have enormous egos. AP courses in 8th grade, volunteer trips, Ivy League pipelines, Sephora birthday parties — they all exploit your terror that your child will be left behind.
Chapter 18 · 1:46:40
A group of mothers came to Dr. Shefali alarmed that their 12- to 14-year-old sons were sneaking out at night to roam the subway tunnels together and form their own underground brotherhood. Her reaction was not alarm but recognition: boys who are not initiated by conscious older men will initiate themselves, and the results range from underground clubs to gangs to cults. Single mothers, she observes with compassion and directness, often carry their own deep trauma at the hands of male anger — and that unprocessed trauma can cause them to project onto their boys' natural wildness, clamping their energy and shaming impulses that simply need channelling. The prescription is clear: seek out Big Brothers Big Sisters, find a wise uncle, get him a mentor who can talk to him about his body and his impulses. She cites Scott Galloway's argument that elder men should deliberately adopt uninitiated boys — because the alternative is the manosphere stepping in to do the job.
Claims made here
Dr. Shefali's Conscious Coaching Institute has trained over 1,500 coaches globally who are breaking generational patterns and teaching conscious parenting.
Dr. Shefali's Conscious Coaching Institute has trained over 1,500 conscious parenting coaches across the globe who are breaking generational patterns and spreading the message.
Chapter 19 · 1:52:55
Lewis gives Dr. Shefali the floor to deliver her three core truths. First: your children are not your canvas, puppet, trinket, or trophy — they are sovereign beings whose destiny is their own, and your role is to usher rather than direct. Second: the best parenting you can do is parenting yourself — conscious parenting is fundamentally an act of self-transformation, not child management. Third: do not use your children to fulfil your own unrealised ideals of greatness — that work belongs to you. From there, Dr. Shefali pivots to the psychology beneath the parenting: the inner child is in the driver's seat 90% of unscripted adult time, with the ego constructing elaborate strategies — peacocking, pleasing, fixing, withdrawing — to protect the frightened child underneath. The real healing work is not dismantling the ego but addressing the original wound that created it.
Truth one: your children are sovereign beings, not your trophies. Truth two: the best parenting is parenting yourself — don't put your garbage on your kids. Truth three: do not use your children to fulfill your own ideals of greatness; find that within yourself.
Chapter 20 · 1:58:20
Lewis turns the conversation outward — to all the listeners who still have living parents from whom they feel they never received what they needed. Dr. Shefali validates the pain completely, then delivers the harder message: after 18 — and she generously extends this to 32 — you must take accountability for your own life and stop waiting for a parent to heal or apologise. Physical separation is only the first step; if resentment is still bubbling, the real work has not been done. The ultimate goal is not reconciliation but re-parenting yourself — internalising the nurturing you did not receive so you can take back the power you have given your past. And with perspective, she says, something unexpected happens: genuine compassion for the perpetrator, because they too came from pain. The episode closes with Lewis thanking her, a book-plug for both titles, and an invitation to visit DrShefali.com for the free masterclasses accompanying the presale.
Claims made here
The inner child is in the driver's seat 90% of unscripted adult time.
1 in 5 girls are sexually molested by a male by the age of 12.
Scott Galloway has publicly called for older men to 'adopt a boy,' arguing that uninitiated and unmentored boys will be mentored instead by porn and the manosphere.
Dr. Shefali Tsabary argues that the inner child is in the driver's seat 90% of unscripted time, with the ego acting as its protector and strategy-maker in adult life.
Dr. Shefali stated that 1 in 5 girls are sexually molested by a male by the age of 12, citing this as part of the inherited trauma single mothers carry.
Dr. Shefali cited Scott Galloway's call to 'adopt a boy' because boys are growing up uninitiated and unmentored — and unmentored boys will be mentored by porn and the manosphere.
No indexed bits in this chapter.
This episode
Clinical psychologist, pioneer of the conscious parenting movement, and author of Raising Conscious Daughters and Raising Conscious Sons.
Referenced by Dr. Shefali Tsabary for his argument that older men should 'adopt a boy' to address the crisis of uninitiated and unmentored young males.
Mentioned in the show introduction as having called Dr. Shefali Tsabary revolutionary and the best child expert she has ever interviewed.
Cited as an example of the psychological cost paid by child prodigies pushed into elite performance from an early age.
Content subscription platform discussed as a symbol of what Dr. Shefali argues is misidentified female sexual liberation that actually perpetuates objectification.
Dr. Shefali Tsabary's 5-month online training institute that has certified over 1,500 conscious parenting coaches globally.
Cited as an example of the parenting industrial complex, where birthday parties at cosmetics retailers represent how commerce exploits children's peer pressure and FOMO.
Non-profit mentoring organisation recommended by Dr. Shefali as a resource for single mothers seeking positive male role models for their sons.
Cited as an example of AI relationships that are beginning to replace human connection, and as a tool children use to bypass developing their own creativity.
Mentioned as a primary example of the platforms hijacking parental attention and emotional regulation through addictive scrolling.
Dr. Shefali Tsabary's country of origin, referenced in personal stories about growing up, experiencing daily street harassment, and the lack of childhood dance instruction.
Stats
This episode
Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.
Children's mental health is at the worst level in history, with astronomical rates of suicidality, loneliness, anxiety, body dysmorphia, and identity fragmentation.
Males are four times more likely than females to complete suicide.
Children used to spend more than 13 hours outside with friends per week; now it is less than 5 hours per week.
Approximately 1 in 5 boys is diagnosed with ADHD.
1 in 5 girls are sexually molested by a male by the age of 12.
The inner child is in the driver's seat 90% of unscripted adult time.
Dr. Shefali's Conscious Coaching Institute has trained over 1,500 coaches globally who are breaking generational patterns and teaching conscious parenting.
Girls build their sense of self through connection and are extremely sensitive to emotional rejection, scanning environments for belonging and approval.
The manosphere algorithmically targets boys as young as 11, without the boy realising, delivering content about square jaws, big biceps, and displacing male frustration onto women.
Children's education system is anti-male neurochemistry because boys are bottom-up learners who learn through their bodies, not by sitting still for hours.
Scott Galloway has publicly called for older men to 'adopt a boy,' arguing that uninitiated and unmentored boys will be mentored instead by porn and the manosphere.
Drip Drop contains 3 times the electrolytes of leading sports drinks and is trusted by over 90% of top college and pro sports teams.
Girls are neurobiologically fine-tuned to eye contact and bonding due to the oxytocin produced by estrogen, making them uniquely vulnerable to misreading digital communication like emojis.
Boys and girls are growing up in the same world but are treated differently by the algorithm because it knows how to hijack each one's neurobiology differently.
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