Episode summary:
Researchers call summer the "skill-installation window" — and Dr. Ya-Ling makes the case for what's worth installing in it. In this episode, she introduces the Five S's of Better Pain Coping™ as emotional intelligence for your body, walks through See It (the foundational first S) for kids and adults alike, and explains why each pain personality type — Achiever, Protector, and Critic — comes at noticing differently. She also introduces sportscasting as a practical technique for parents and names why generic advice like "just listen to your body" tends to miss the mark entirely.
In this episode:
· The skill-installation window — what researchers at UVA found about summer and skill formation, and why that window is open right now
· The Five S's of Better Pain Coping™ as EQ for the body: how the same principles that gave us a language for our emotions in the 1990s can now be applied to physical sensations
· See It — the first of the Five S's: five minutes of noticing without analyzing, stressing, or asking Dr. Google
· Why "just listen to your body" doesn't work — and what the culture of pain denial has to do with it
· Sportscasting as a parenting technique for pain moments: what it is, where it comes from, and how to use it for yourself too
· How the Achiever, Protector, and Critic pain personalities each experience See It differently — and why the Protector needs reassurance and objective information, not less noticing
· Why See It is not generic mindfulness — what it actually is, and why it matters before pain hijacks your life
Resources mentioned:
· What's Your Pain Personality? Why some people push through while others pull back — and the Five S's that can prevent persistent pain — e-book + quiz — ya-ling.com/quiz
· Fix the Fire Damage: Your go-to guide when pain first strikes — Vol. 2, The Everyday Pain Guide series — Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Indiebound
· Frontiers in Psychology (2026) — coping skills acquired during lower-pressure periods and executive function
· University of Virginia — research on the summer skill-installation window
· Janet Lansbury — childhood educator, author, and host of the podcast Unruffled (sportscasting technique, originally developed by infant specialist Magda Gerber)
Connect:
Find Dr. Ya-Ling at ya-ling.com. Subscribe, share, or leave a rating or review — it genuinely helps more people find the show.