Quotes
Good Inside
6 memorable lines from Good Inside by Becky Kennedy, each with the idea behind it.
“There is a good kid underneath every hard behavior.”
Kennedy's foundational reframe separates identity from behavior. The behavior can need a firm limit while the child still receives the message: you are not bad.
“Connection is not a reward for cooperation. It is the path that makes cooperation possible.”
Good Inside reverses the usual sequence. A child who feels alone in a big feeling has less access to flexibility, listening, and problem-solving.
“Two things are true: my child's feeling is real, and my boundary can stay firm.”
The book's sturdy middle path avoids both harsh control and anxious permissiveness. Warmth and limits are partners, not opposites.
“Regulation is contagious before instruction is useful.”
A parent's nervous system becomes part of the intervention. A calm adult gives the child a borrowed pathway back to safety.
“Rupture is inevitable. Repair is the skill that builds security.”
Kennedy makes imperfection survivable. The parent who returns, owns their part, and reconnects teaches a child that relationships can recover.
“The goal is not to win the moment. The goal is to become the sturdy leader your child can borrow from.”
Good Inside is less about perfect scripts than a parental posture: grounded, kind, boundaried, and unwilling to shame the child into compliance.