Photo: Photo by Juliane Liebermann on Unsplash

Last year I wrote an article, Start with Who, that challenged the concepts presented in the best selling book of author, thinker, and famous Ted Talker, Simon Sinek. I wish I could say that the world took notice, Sinek reached out to me to concede that his mounds of research were incorrect, and that I’ve since gone on to become a famous author, thinker, and Ted Talker. Sadly, that was not the outcome. I have published a book. But nobody is paying me to think, or talk on stage. Yet. 

But that’s okay. 

I won’t rehash the entire argument, you can check out the article if you are interested in some more depth. Essentially, Sinek argues that a powerful why is the fuel that drives us, personally and professionally. John Gordon, another famous author, leader, and speaker, says, 

“We don’t get burned out because of what you do, we get burned out because we forget why we do it.” 

My argument was not and is not that why is bad, unimportant, or undeserving of our consideration. The focus, rather, is our who is a more powerful and important indicator of our success, ability to lead, and personal and professional happiness. Our who should be the foundational consideration for us to build upon, rather than our why. 

There has been a lot of discussion about how “kids these days” need to know why more than previous generations. Coaches, teachers, and employers, some in frustration and some with a statement of fact, have noted the difference in today’s players, students, and employees, and those of past generations. Some sort of explanation of why is expected and in extreme cases, demanded. They want to know why. To be fair, I want to know why too, so I don’t know if this is really a generational issue or an “older people trying to place labels on younger people because they are different” issue. It doesn’t really matter I suppose. Many people want to know why. 

Children, especially, want to know why. You can get yourself in a predicament quickly in trying to explain why to children. Recently, my wife fell down the slippery slope of why, which led to her telling our children that babies come out when the doctors cut open the mother’s stomach and then just take them out. Then they wanted to know why they did that, and asked if it left a scar, and asked her to show them her scar. I don’t really know if that visual is much better than a gentle explanation of the truth, but that’s where we are right now as a family, and it feels like it might be too late to right the ship. 

Why is relevant, and important, for sure, particularly when it comes to our conversations with our children. But let’s examine how why and who can work together to help us build strong, independent, and caring children. 

Great Explanations

Martin Hoffman, a developmental psychologist, found that “from ages two to ten, children are urged by their parents to change their behavior once every six to nine minutes. This translates roughly into 50 discipline encounters a day or over 15,000 a year.” 

In his book, Originals, Adam Grant referenced a study conducted by Pearl Oliner that examined a group of non-Jews during the Holocaust. The study compared two groups of non-Jews from the same area. One group risked their lives to help their Jewish neighbors and one group did not. There were many commonalities between the two groups, including geographic location, personal beliefs and values, and education. The primary difference, as found by the research, was how they were disciplined by their parents growing up. 

The group that elected to help had, as children, received their discipline from their parents, for both bad and good behavior, with an explanation attached. As quoted from Grant’s book: 

“It is in their reliance on reasoning, explanations, suggestions of ways to remedy the harm done, persuasion, and advice that the parents of rescuers differed most…Reasoning communicates a message of respect…It implies that had children but known better, or understood more, they would not have acted in an inappropriate way. It is a mark of esteem for the listener; an indication of faith in his or her ability to comprehend, develop, and improve.”

Man, this struck a chord with me when I read it because this is what I want to communicate with my children. Admittedly, I am often tired, frustrated, or lazy to the point of offering something that amounts to because I said so or offering no explanation other than to just stop. Other studies have found that children who are raised with fewer rules, and instead, receive discipline and instruction centered around lessons based on values and morals, grow to be more creative than those who are raised in homes with strict and/or specific rules. Regardless of how you feel about order or rules, there is one thing that is evident:

One of the best things we can do with our children is to offer quality explanations, that help them to understand why they are in trouble, why they can’t, why they must stop, or why you are proud of their actions or decisions. 

One of the most significant long-term benefits of this for our children (and for us as parents), is that it helps our children develop a moral compass of their own. Children have the opportunity to take ownership over their own values, and then create their own compass (with parental guidance), they are able to make challenging decisions based on what guides them internally, rather than all of the external noise generated by the weight of outside expectations.

It’s not the rules that are important, it’s the why. 

Great Expectations

I think it is a fair assumption if you are reading this, and you have children, you want them to grow into something special. Great expectations are probably not entirely accurate, regarding how I feel about my children, though it may be for you. I think “great hope” would probably best describe how I think about the future of my kids. I have great hope that they will grow into something special, learn to lead and love well, and make a great impact on the world around them. This is where who comes in. This, I believe, is the most important thing we can give to and do for our children, to help them create an honest and powerful understanding of who they are and what they are capable of. 

The researchers from the Holocaust study found that not only did the parents of the responders offer an explanation surrounding their correction and discipline, but they also tied it into how it affected others. These children were encouraged to think about the impact that their decisions and actions had on those around them. Because of the two, the children were guided down a path of both understanding the consequences of their own actions and empathy in knowing how those actions might also impact others. Eventually, we can build up to a scenario that allows our children to see their decisions through a lens of great perspective, that combines both the why and the who lessons they have learned, and allows them to ask the powerful question, 

What should a person like me do in a situation like this? 

I think this is brilliant in both form and function. The question is not, “What should I do?” This can be difficult to answer, and there may very well be no right answer. But, “What should a person like me (someone who has developed their moral compass, who has been taught that actions have consequences, and who understands that our behavior can and does impact those around us) do in a situation like this?” takes away much of that stress. It essentially allows our children, when they are mature enough to do so, to say, “I know that I am (smart, caring, considerate, respectful, kind, intelligent, courageous, loving, patient,…), so what would someone like that, like me, do in a situation like this?”

This is my great hope, that my children will develop into the type of people who are willing and able to ask this question and answer it with courage and conviction. And then, use their answers and the values behind them to take action. 

But how do we get there? 

I wish I could give you a step by step plan. You know, 

How to Change Your Child in 3 Easy Steps…or…How to 10X Your Parenting

But I think those are a sham, and I don’t do sham. I may get some things wrong, but I don’t mess around with sham. 

Here’s something to consider.

1. Make an effort to explain the why to your children from a young age. 

Try to get away from the tired, frustrated, or lazy responses that often plague us as parents. Take a few extra moments to attach a why to your “Stop”, “Quiet”, or “No”. 

“John, you can’t run out in the road without looking. There are many cars that go up and down this street, and it is difficult for them to see you because you are so small. I don’t want you to get hurt, so you need to stay out of the road.” 

The next time you have an opportunity to correct, or discipline, see if you can attach an explanation, where appropriate. 

2. Work on building in an understanding of how your child’s actions might affect those around them. Bit by bit, our children need to learn that their life is not a movie in which they are the main character and everyone around them is part of the supporting cast. 

“When you run up and down the stairs with your friends during your brother’s nap time, you might wake him up. He needs to get his full nap so he gets plenty of rest and is in a good mood when he wakes up. When you are loud, it makes it hard for him to get the rest that he needs.” 

3. Allow them to begin to develop a set of values and a moral compass that they can claim as their own, as they grow and mature. More rules may feel safer for you, but once they are outside of our direct care, we need our children to be able to make decisions on their own, outside of strict adherence to a set of rules. At some point, the rules will be gone, and they will need to make decisions based on who they are, what they believe, and what they want their life to become. Give them some space to continue to figure that out, while they continue to develop both knowledge and empathy. 

4) Speak truth and hope into the lives of your children. I really love this one, and I don’t know that this should really be number four, as much as it should permeate all of our conversations with our kids. This helps lead our children into understanding who they are, and also, in helping them have some type of framework for the question, “What should a person like me do in a situation like this?”

In another study, conducted by psychologist Joan Grusec, behavior praise was compared with character praise. So some children were told things like, “It was nice of you to share your chips with your friend” while other children received the praise that highlighted their character, or WHO they were (or who they were becoming). “You must be the kind of person who cares about the needs of others. I can see that you are a very kind and giving person.” 

The children who received character praise began to live into that specific praise. Of the children who were praised for being helpful 45 percent were more helpful two weeks later. Just 10 percent of the children who were praised for their helpful behavior, were shown to be helpful two weeks later. 

So rather than treating our praise as if it was one, isolated act, “That was a kind thing to do”, we can focus on speaking to our children as if they were a kind child. Maybe they aren’t, just yet, all the way there. But in that moment, they were. And we have great hope that they will be in the future. 

Truth. And hope. 

We need to begin to have great explanations. Certainly, our children can’t always get a why, in every situation, but I think we can do a better job of giving them a few more, to help them understand things, and to begin to develop their own sense of reasoning in this world, both for themselves and for the people around them. One day our children will be off on their own, making their own decisions, based on their own moral compass, carrying their own great expectations into the wide, wide, world.

And we’ll be glad we took the time to offer these great explanations. 

I’m pulling for you. 

 

This post originally appeared on www.bryanhendley.com.

When it comes to picky eaters, parents will try almost anything to get some sustenance into their little ones. Whether it’s getting sneaky with veggies or all out-bribery, mom of one and actress Melissa Rauch has been there.

That’s why she’s partnered with House Foods on her very first book, “The Tales of Tofu.” The e-book is a combination of soy-based and kid-friendly recipes combined with a sweet story about a shy tube of tofu, and your kids are going to love it!

Told with beautiful colors and amazing artistry, main character Tofu and his fruit buddies are on a mission to gain confidence after being cast in the school play. Tasty and healthy recipes are interspersed through the story and reinforce the tale at every turn.

source: House Foods

Rauch tells Romper that she loves to introduce her own daughter to new things by storytelling and books, and wanted to share the magic with other families as well. It’s her hope that The Tales of Tofu will help reinforce the importance of family mealtime while encouraging a healthy lifestyle.

You can download the e-book for free by visiting House Foods.

––Karly Wood

 

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With a limitless imagination and endless enthusiasm, there is no better author than a small child. Put their natural storytelling skills to paper with these three easy ways to write a story together today. Scroll down to get scribing.

1. Story Jar
Fill a jar up with small pieces of paper and big ideas. You can list three things, as in: dragon, fireplace, child, or put a starter sentence, i.e., “This is the story of how I lost my hat.”  Have each person in the family create a short story from their draw. Parents, you might want to write it down for future reference (awwww).

2. Mad Libs
You can write your own version of these for the kiddos to fill out or print out our fairy-tale themed ones (find them here). Younger kids may need reminding what a noun, adjective and verb are (teachable moment!) but older kids can fill in the blanks on their own. Print more than one and have everyone do theirs at once, then have a storytelling session after to share your creations.

3. Shared Tales
All you need for this one is a pen and a piece of paper. Each person will write one sentence in sequence. You can limit it to a specific number of pages (like 2 or 3) if you want to make sure it doesn’t become the neverending story. Simply kick off this creative session with a sentence such as “Once upon a time there was a” and unleash their imagination. Pass the paper around and have every family member write their one sentence, or if your kids aren’t writing yet just have them tell you and you can be the scribe. You can designate number of sentences per person to keep it fair and square with multiples. This one is great in a group and at family gatherings, because it becomes even funnier if you don’t see every sentence as it builds. 

Alternate: Do the above but fold the paper each time so that each person can only see the sentence before them.

4. Reinvent an Old Favorite
Take a classic that the kid’s love and have memorized down off the shelf and read the first page (or paragraph if it’s a chapter book). Instead of finishing the story as it is written, invent a new plot or ending to the tale.

5. Section It Out
Take your time creating a story in stages. Start by choosing a setting: where will the story take place? What does it look like there? Have the kids write 2-3 sentences minimum about their setting. Now work on your character or characters: who is you main character? What are they (boy, girl, robot, dog). Who else is in the book? What do they wear, eat, smell like? Now tackle plot! What will happen in the story? You’ll want an intro, some kind of conflict (i.e. a problem to solve—what will Bear do when he finds out he is out of jam?) and then resolution (Bear’s buddy Snake shows up with marmalade! They dance the night away in The Happy Woods!). You can even work on these one day at a time.

6. Dictionary Draft
Using a dictionary (a real one, the kind that looks like a book!) to randomly select 3-5 words that each kid has to work into their story. Let siblings choose the words for each other. This one has the added bonus of getting learn new words.

Need more lit-inspired fun? Check out our ideas for acting out your favorite story with the kiddos.

What is your favorite way to write a story with your kiddos? Share it with us in the comments below. 

words and photo by Amber Guetebier

Last week, Entertainment Weekly gave fans an exclusive preview into the upcoming Wreck-It Ralph sequel, Ralph Breaks the Internet—and while the movie continues the saga of Wreck-It Ralph, we’re really just obsessed with the photos of Disney Princesses in loungewear!

A whopping 14 of your fave princesses are seen in full slumber party regalia, surrounding main character Vanellope von Schweetz who has recently discovered that she’s a princess, too. Vanellope first encounters the leading ladies on a fan site, where they are all dressed to-the-nines in their iconic princess garb. But they soon take a page from her book and the ensuing photograph shows the princesses in a far more laid-back style.

There are SO many things we want to dissect about this photo! First, it completely matches up with our dreams of how all princesses surely hang out together when not going on their adventures. What little girl wouldn’t due for a slumber party surrounded by all that flowing hair and magical powers?

Fans had lots of reactions and thoughts to the big reveal on social media.

And can we talk about the custom loungewear that is so obviously made for each princess? From Elsa’s “Just Let It Go” to Snow White’s poison apple shirt, the details perfectly match the personality of all the gal pals.

And THE HAIR. We get a snapshot of Tiana’s natural hair as well as some trademark styles, like Anna’s double braids and Ariel’s fire red locks.

We’ll have to wait until November to see the new film, but in the meantime, we’re really hoping Disney makes some of these stylish PJ’s––in adult sizes.

––Karly Wood

Feature Photo: ProudDisNerds via Instagram 

 

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Whether she’s offering her kids a hug, a shoulder to cry on, or an important lesson about growing up, there are few characters as compelling as a good movie mom. This list includes some of Common Sense Media‘s favorites — check one out for your next family movie night.

Dumbo
Age: 6

Parents need to know that Disney’s short-and-sweet tale of a shy little circus elephant with supersized ears is considered controversial, because of its depiction of the black crows. On the one hand, critics claim the crows (who were in fact all voiced by African-American actors) are animated minstrels, whereas Disney apologists say the crows are the only likeable characters besides Dumbo, his mom, and Timothy the mouse. If you’re okay with the representation of the crows, there are still a couple of disturbing scenes, particularly when Mrs. Jumbo is captured after defending Dumbo. Plus, Dumbo and Timothy accidentally get drunk and hallucinate the “Pink Elephants on Parade” segment, that’s alternately trippy, creepy, and cute. Overall, the message is that we should celebrate and not mock each other’s differences.

The Princess Diaries
Age: 6

Parents need to know that this movie is rated G because it has no profanity, violence, or sexual material, and there is very little to worry about. But that does not make it a kids-only movie. This is a family movie in the best sense, a movie that the whole family will enjoy. Mia drives without a license and manages to escape a ticket using tactics they might find troubling.

The Sound of Music
Age: 6

Parents need to know that this classic film is rich in character, music, and story, as well as filled with positive messages. In the final 10 minutes there are a number of suspenseful scenes that may be frightening for some children, including the main character being held at gunpoint. Kids might be curious to learn more about Nazis and World War II after watching this movie. There’s some moderate alcohol consumption and one character smokes. The romantic scenes are limited to gentle embraces and brief chaste kisses.

The Incredibles
Age: 7

Parents need to know that this animated Pixar film is considered one of their all-time best for portraying mature themes about families in a way that both kids and adults can enjoy. Because of the movie’s focus on a superhero family, there’s much more violence than is usually featured in comparable PG-rated movies. The family adventure includes all sorts of weapons, explosions, deaths, wide-spread destruction and more. A few characters are shown with drinks in hand, and one character even smokes a long-stemmed cigarette. Despite the intensity of the Bond-level violence, there are plenty of positive themes about family, courage, and identity to make this a must-see for families.

Spy Kids
Age: 7

Parents need to know that this action-packed adventure includes a little bit of potty humor (which most kids will find hilarious) and one almost-swear word. Younger children might be scared by the mutant creatures, but most will find them more silly than frightening. Characters are frequently in peril (though it’s usually played for laughs), and there’s a certain amount of head-bonking violence. But no one even gets a scratch, except for one villain, whose encounter with flames leaves her having a very bad hair day.

 

Brave
Age: 8

Parents need to know that Brave is pretty scary for a “princess movie,” especially for kids under 7 and/or those who are very sensitive to peril. Several intense sequences involve a large angry bear that attacks the main characters — which are even more so when seen in 3-D — and (possible spoiler alert) a possibly disturbing but mostly comical transformation of a mother into a bear. A moment when the mom-turned-bear temporarily forgets she’s human and growls at her daughter could upset younger kids. There’s also a lot of brawling among the Scotsmen, who use both weapons (arrows, swords, etc.) and their bodies (fists, teeth) on each other. The first Pixar movie to revolve around a female main character, Brave does have a strong message about family relationships and open communication between parents and kids (particularly mothers and daughters). There’s no romance for Princess Merida, but you can expect a few jokes about men being naked under their kilts; a couple of scenes even include quick glimpses of naked cartoon bums belonging to men and three young boys. Although there are no product placements in the movie, there’s a ton of Brave merchandise available, particularly aimed at girls.

Freaky Friday
Age: 8

Parents need to know that Freaky Friday is a switched-identities comedy that will appeal to older kids, tweens, and teens alike. It’s a good movie for families to watch together, as it will spark shared laughter and possible lively conversation about parent-child relationships. There is some very mild sexual innuendo as filmmakers skillfully handle the awkward moments when the teen girl in her mom’s body and the mom in her teen’s body are confronted with potentially romantic moments with the two male love interests. Occasional swearing is used to help define the characters as they adapt to their new and unfamiliar roles (“Oh, my God!” “We’re screwed,” “harlot,” “hell,” “fart,” “it sucks”). Two earthquakes shake things up a bit, but no one is hurt.

Tell us who your favorite movie mom is in the Comments below! Then hop over to Common Sense Media for the full list of awesome on-screen moms.

Common Sense Media is a leading independent nonprofit organization offering the largest, most trusted library of independent age-based and educational ratings and reviews for everything kids want to watch, play, read, and learn. The ratings, reviews, and information are unbiased and provided for free to help families and educators make great media and technology choices.