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How to Raise a Super Hardy,
Resilient Child

by Amber Mae.
(This article is part of the Strong Kids series. Get free article updates here.)

Resilient Child - Main PicYou are really good at failing.

No, really. Do you remember the first time you fell off your bike? Failure.

What about that time you got that D on a test? Failure.

Your first kiss? Oh man, big time failure, or maybe that was just me.

See, really good at failing. Except, what makes a person good at failing isn’t the actual failure part, it’s the resiliency that comes after: picking the bike back up, studying harder for that next test, practicing on the pillow at home… oh wait, just me again.

Obviously not everyone is good at failing, but I’m willing to bet that you are. After all, you’re reading a parenting article to become a better parent. I could probably go so far as to say that failing, figuring out how to bounce back and emerging a better person for it are a part of your DNA.

So, here’s the question then: How can you pass this on to your child? How can you teach your child to be good at failure? How can you raise a hardy, resilient child who can face pretty much anything and come out the other end a heck of a lot stronger?

Raising a Resilient Child: The Epiphany

I remember my first experience with it very well. My oldest was two. I was watching her from the park bench and nursing her newborn brother when she fell and scraped her knee. I could see there was no blood, and she wasn’t going to need any first-aid, but I still felt torn as her little eyes welled up with tears.

“Mommy come kiss!” she pleaded.

I didn’t respond. How do you kiss a knee and breastfeed at the same time?

“Mommy kiss!” she repeated.

Necessity is the mother of all invention.

“Can you give it a kiss better?” I asked. That was her first lesson in resiliency.

Her little head cocked to the side as she pondered my question. The tears stopped. In a flash, she had kissed her own knee and was back on the playground as if nothing had happened.

At first, I felt guilty for my inability to be in two places at once, but after thinking about it I started to feel pretty good about myself and the inadvertent resiliency training I was doing. Of course, as I would quickly learn, there’s a lot more to teaching resiliency than simply kissing your own knee.

Here are some of the other things I’ve learnt along the way about raising a resilient child-

[Read more…]

How to Reduce Stress (And Protect Your Family From it For Good)

by Elizabeth Blake.
(This article is part of the Strong Kids series. Get free article updates here.)

How to Reduce Stress - Main ImageHave you ever noticed your kids reacting to stress in ways similar to yours? Have you taught them how to reduce stress?

For many of us, we resort to acting out our own unique version of the ‘fight or flight’ stress response. We might internally ‘argue’ with what is happening. Or we might shut down and resist dealing with it altogether.

For me, my subconscious response is to force my will upon the situation — not the best way to respond when you are trying to be a positive parent.

My 4-year-old son, who has a flair for delay, one day decided he simply must find his ‘very-special-one-of-a-kind’ blue button. I was trying not to be late to teach yoga class and with everything else that had been going on in my life at that time, I was in no mood to search the house to find a button. So, I put my foot down.

“No, we don’t have time to look for it now. We’ll find it when we get back.” I said.

“But, mommy, I need it!” He said in truth.

“It’s not that important. Come here please.”

“NO!” he yelled and stormed away in a desperate search.

“Get over here right now! I’m going to count! 1….2….”

You can see where this is going. A perfect storm of circumstances culminating in a power struggle of epic proportions. Never underestimate the will of a 4-year-old.

Stress is without a doubt one of the biggest banes of modern life. It lurks silently below the surface and sabotages the best of our intentions when we least expect it.

Luckily, there’s hope for all of us.

Stress is NOT Inevitable

[Read more…]

When Things Go Wrong: How to Stay Strong and Get Your Family Through

by Stephanie Gates.
(This article is part of the Strong Kids series. Get free article updates here.)

When Things Go Wrong - Main PosterIt was 5 pm on a Sunday when my phone buzzed. I did not recognize the number or the voice. “I’m sitting here beside your son at the bike park. Your husband has had an accident. Paramedics are on their way. He’s not okay.”

I looked around the living room. My infant was asleep, while my toddler and preschooler were playing around me. My 6-yr-old was with his semi-conscious father at a bike park an hour from home. We’d lived in Denver exactly eight weeks.

In that moment, life changed irrevocably for my family.

My husband survived the accident but had life-altering injuries. In the months that followed, I realized our lives were not going to go according to our plan.

Before becoming parents, we dreamed of the kind of childhood we would give our kids. We were certain we would never repeat our parents’ mistakes. We would never lose our temper or forget important days. They would never experience any of the hardships we did. No matter what, we would insulate them from suffering.

Unfortunately, life just doesn’t work that way.

Accidents, illnesses, pandemic, sudden job loss, divorce, financial strain, addictions.

At some point, all of us have to face the fact that our kids don’t get to live the fairy tale childhood we dreamed for them. Instead, many of them must deal with circumstances that are difficult for even adults to navigate.

Not only that, but we now have to learn to parent them through their hard seasons while also walking through the toughest times in our own lives.

When the life we planned for our children falls apart, when things go wrong in horrible, unexpected ways, how do we move forward as parents? How do we help our children move out of a crisis and toward a healthy life?

[Read more…]

How to Raise Kids With Virtually Indestructible Inner Strength

by Sunita Ramkumar.
(This article is part of the Strong Kids series. Get free article updates here.)

Inner Strength - MainDid you know that Oprah Winfrey had an abused and neglected childhood followed by troubled adolescence peppered with drugs, teenage pregnancy, depression and even attempted suicide?

Today though, we know her as a larger-than-life figure with more success than most of us can imagine.

And yet, for every Oprah, there are thousands of kids, if not more, who didn’t make it. Oprah’s own half-sister for instance, died of reasons related to cocaine addiction.

Why is this? Why is it that some people have virtually indestructible inner strength that pulls them out of the direst circumstances while others crumble under far less complicated circumstances?

Is this inner strength something we can nurture in our kids?

Maybe our goal isn’t to raise the next Oprah, but can we make sure that no matter what life throws at them our kids will face it like champs and come out stronger for it?

[Read more…]

How to Motivate Your Kids to Be Both Independent And Eat Healthy

by Leslie Tralli.
(This article is part of the Healthy Families series. Get free article updates here.)

How to Motivate Your Kids to Be Both Independent And Eat Healthy - Main PosterDo you often spend your days rushing to find your son’s soccer shoes just before his carpool arrives?

Or picking your daughter’s clothes off the floor after you’ve asked her three times and just-can’t-face-another-argument-right-now?

Do you sometimes get that horrible sinking feeling that you’ll be doing everything for your kids until they’re full-fledged adults, and possibly beyond?

Some days it feels like, without you, they’ll end up living in a pigsty eating McDonald’s for breakfast, Taco Bell for lunch and Domino’s for dinner. Every. Single. Day.

Sigh!

Raising responsible, independent kids is tough. It’s so important to let them do things on their own, from making a snack to walking to school by themselves, right from the time they’re little. But it’s so hard to let go, whether it’s accepting a messy kitchen or acknowledging that you can’t hold your child’s hand forever.

Our ultimate goal as parents is to send our kids off into the world armed with some basic life skills and the ability to make healthy choices. At the very least I want my kids to be able to do a load of laundry, run the vacuum, and prepare a meal.

And by meal, I mean a healthy balance of all the food groups, not reheated nuggets and frozen pizza. (And yes, they need to be financially literate, socially responsible, and culturally aware… but baby steps people, baby steps.)

So, where to begin?

I started with Lunch!

Let me explain.

[Read more…]

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Disclaimers and Such:
Fair Warning: While none of this is professional advice, it is powerful stuff and could potentially change your life!
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