5 EVERYDAY HABITS TO HELP RAISE KINDER KIDS

In today’s society, raising kids that are kind is just as important as raising smart children. Per the experts from Parents.com, here are five everyday habits to help raise kinder kids.

Mother/daughter. Photo Credit: Freepik.com

Per Joseph Laino, PsyD, a psychologist at NYU Langone’s Sunset Terrace Family Health Center, “soft skills” are a priority worth investing in. “Soft skills like empathy, compassion, and generosity aren’t mutually exclusive with academic skills,” he told the outlet. “In fact, they strengthen one another.”

Here are the five everyday habits that you should add to your parenting toolbox that will make a big difference for your children in the long run. 

Teach Kids Compassion and Empathy

Caring for others with a sense of compassion and empathy shapes how children understand how they understand themselves, others, and the world. Ultimately, this will help them build strong relationships and straighten their emotional intelligence. 

“If they get along more cooperatively with teachers, authority figures, and peers,” Dr. Laino says, “that can help them get the most out of their academics and have a more fulfilling and less frustrating experience overall.”

Teach Your Kid To Act Like a Humanitarian

Teaching children to act like a humanitarian fosters global awareness, leadership, and responsibility. In a digital age, where children spend the majority of their time watching screens, it is important for them to overcome the “danger of disconnection and isolation.” Modeling Humanitarian behavior for children, creates a lasting positive impact that will shape lifelong habits of service and generosity. 

“From little acorns grow giant oaks,” Dr. Laino says. “Our children take out into the world what we give them at home.”

Young boy volunteering. Photo Credit: Freepik.com

 

Teach Gratitude Daily 

Teaching children to practice daily gratitude goes hand-in-hand with building their empathy. When children appreciate what others do for them, they are more likely to treat people with respect and compassion. Plus, regular gratitude is linked to lower anxiety and greater happiness. 

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Talk Openly About World Events 

Information, good or bad, is at our fingertips 24-7. Parents should talk openly about world events without scaring children because they are absorbing what is going on around them. By teaching them to understand what is happening in the world around them, parents are taking a roll in helping their children not get lost in and swallowed by misinformation. 

“Children often understand more than we realize,” Andrea Mucino-Sanchez, the public information and communications officer of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) told Parents. “Take the lead and explain, in age-appropriate ways, what is happening in places like Ukraine, Sudan, and other crisis zones.”

Father and daughter talking. Photo Credit: Freepik.com

Create Space for Regular Conversations

Teaching and guiding a child to become more kinder isn’t a one and done moment. It takes time, regular conversations, patience, and check-ins. Creating a space is very important for ensuring that your child becomes a kinder adult. 

“Prioritize time together, like family dinners, to talk about what’s happening in the world,” Mucino-Sanchez said. 

This is the ideal moment for parents to just have a simple conversation with their children, allowing them to learn, listen, and critically develop skills and ways that they can positively contribute to society for a lifetime. 

Tiffany Silva

Tiffany Silva

Writer and Editor

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