IANS LIVE-KALKI KOECHLIN TALKS PARENTING, THERAPY, AND ‘PILLOW FIGHTS’
April 29, 2025
Fixtures
Result29 April 2025
Match 48
DC
DC
190/9 (20 ov)
KKR
KKR
204/9 (20 ov)
KKR won by 14 runs
Result28 April 2025
Match 47
RR
RR
212/2 (15.5 ov)
GT
GT
209/4 (20 ov)
RR won by 8 wickets
Result27 April 2025
Match 46
DC
DC
162/8 (20 ov)
RCB
RCB
165/4 (18.3 ov)
RCB won by 6 wickets
Result27 April 2025
Match 45
MI
MI
215/7 (20 ov)
LSG
LSG
161/10 (20 ov)
MI won by 54 runs
Result26 April 2025
Match 44
KKR
KKR
7/0 (1 ov)
PBKS
PBKS
201/4 (20 ov)
No result
Result25 April 2025
Match 43
CSK
CSK
154/10 (19.5 ov)
SRH
SRH
155/5 (18.4 ov)
SRH won by 5 wickets
Result24 April 2025
Match 42
RCB
RCB
205/5 (20 ov)
RR
RR
194/9 (20 ov)
RCB won by 11 runs
Result23 April 2025
Match 41
SRH
SRH
143/8 (20 ov)
MI
MI
146/3 (15.4 ov)
MI won by 7 wickets
Result22 April 2025
Match 40
LSG
LSG
159/6 (20 ov)
DC
DC
161/2 (17.5 ov)
DC won by 8 wickets
Result21 April 2025
Match 39
KKR
KKR
159/8 (20 ov)
GT
GT
198/3 (20 ov)
GT won by 39 runs
Result20 April 2025
Match 38
MI
MI
177/1 (15.4 ov)
CSK
CSK
176/5 (20 ov)
MI won by 9 wickets
Result20 April 2025
Match 37
PBKS
PBKS
157/6 (20 ov)
RCB
RCB
159/3 (18.5 ov)
RCB won by 7 wickets
Result19 April 2025
Match 36
RR
RR
178/5 (20 ov)
LSG
LSG
180/5 (20 ov)
LSG won by 2 runs
Result19 April 2025
Match 35
GT
GT
204/3 (19.2 ov)
DC
DC
203/8 (20 ov)
GT won by 7 wickets
Result18 April 2025
Match 34
RCB
RCB
95/9 (14 ov)
PBKS
PBKS
98/5 (12.1 ov)
PBKS won by 5 wickets
Result17 April 2025
Match 33
MI
MI
166/6 (18.1 ov)
SRH
SRH
162/5 (20 ov)
MI won by 4 wickets
Result16 April 2025
Match 32
DC
DC
188/5 (20) & 13/0 (0.4)
RR
RR
188/4 (20) & 11/2 (0.5)
DC won by superover
Result15 April 2025
Match 31
PBKS
PBKS
111/10 (15.3 ov)
KKR
KKR
95/10 (15.1 ov)
PBKS won by 16 runs
Result14 April 2025
Match 30
LSG
LSG
166/7 (20 ov)
CSK
CSK
168/5 (19.3 ov)
CSK won by 5 wickets
Result13 April 2025
Match 29
DC
DC
193/10 (19 ov)
MI
MI
205/5 (20 ov)
MI won by 12 runs

Kalki Koechlin talks parenting, therapy, and ‘pillow fights’

Kalki Koechlin talks parenting, therapy, and ‘pillow fights’

Mumbai, April 17 (IANS) Actress Kalki Koechlin has stressed the importance of seeking support in parenting, sharing how therapy helped her and her partner navigate disagreements and better understand their child's needs.

Asked how her relationship with her partner Guy Hershberg evolved since becoming a parent, Kalki told IANS: “It's evolving all the time; it's still evolving. I think people don't emphasize enough how much parents need help and how parents should have access to that help. We're lucky enough, privileged enough, that we can afford a therapist or a psychologist.”

“There were times when we disagreed on how to raise our daughter, and we'd argue whether she needed to be punished in a certain way or face a specific consequence for a tantrum or whatever.”

“We disagreed vehemently. Then, we went to see a child psychologist, and the child psychologist became the voice of our child, able to articulate what our child couldn't. It changed everything for us, especially during COVID, when we had to be teachers, parents, and everything else,” said the actress, who gave birth to her daughter Sappho in February 2020.

She talked about teaching children healthy emotional expression, such as channeling anger through activities like pillow fights, to foster early emotional regulation. Kalki went on to recall how her teenage brother was “really struggling.”

“I mean, at that time, my daughter had just been born, but I had my teenage brother staying with us, and we realized he was really struggling. One of the big tools our therapist gave us was a very simple one: the pillow fight,” added the actress.

“She said, 'If your kid is angry or frustrated—normally, a kid might come back from school with those feelings—and they want to throw something, or be rude, or hit, or bite, or be nasty to a sibling, you can say, ‘Okay, I see you have big feelings. Let's have it out with a pillow fight.’ And you set rules, like don't hit the face, or whatever. It just gets that energy out of them'.”

Kalki said they need self-regulation; they need to learn self-regulation.

“Most of the time, we just tell them, 'It's not nice. Don't be angry. Don't be aggressive. These are bad behaviors.' But actually, if they suppress it, they're still feeling that anger inside, and then it comes out in a random, unpredictable way,” said the actress, who has been an active supporter of the P&G Shiksha campaign.

She added, “So, allowing them to feel those big feelings, letting them be angry, but letting them channel it in a good way—like today, as an adult, you might go on a jog if you're feeling angry, thinking, 'I need to let the steam out,' right? You literally have to let the steam out and go on a jog. That self-regulation needs to be taught early on.”