CUCK Child psychologist: The No. 1 skill that sets mentally strong kids apart from ‘those who give up’—and how parents can teach it

Blacknarwhal

Let's Go Brandon!
Here's a bit of fun for you folks this morning: find out from modern media how to raise your kids. Or perhaps, find out how to ensure your children will believe you're dolts at an early age.

All that's missing from the list is "ignore reality when it makes you unhappy."

Fair use cited so on and so forth.


Child psychologist: The No. 1 skill that sets mentally strong kids apart from ‘those who give up’—and how parents can teach it

Published Mon, Jul 4 202210:31 AM EDT
Updated Mon, Jul 4 20221:07 PM EDT

Michele Borba, Contributor

A raging pandemic, gun violence, climate change — as an educational psychologist, I’ve seen firsthand how the troubling events of today are taking a toll on our children.
“It’s hard to stop thinking about bad stuff,” an 11-year-old told me recently. “Sometimes I worry about waking up.”

Without the right tools to handle adversity, hopelessness can set in and kids’ overall well-being can decline. Hope is what energizes them to stay mentally strong during tough times, and it’s what sets them apart from those who give up easily.
Mentally strong kids understand the value of hope

Research shows that hopefulness can dramatically reduce childhood anxiety and depression. Hopeful kids have an inner sense of control. They view challenges and obstacles as temporary and able to be overcome, so they are more likely to thrive and help others.

Yet despite its immense power, hope is largely excluded from our parenting agendas. The good news? Hope is teachable. One of the best ways to increase this strength is by equipping children with skills to handle life’s inevitable bumps.

Here are nine science-backed ways to help kids maintain hope — especially during tough times:

1. Stop negativity in the moment.
Ungrounded pessimism eats away at hope, which is why it’s important to help kids catch negativity before it becomes a habit. Develop a private code to signal “that’s a negative comment,” like pulling on your ear. Then encourage them to interrupt negative thoughts.

Creating a nickname for their pessimistic voice (“Mr. Negative Nelly”) can help kids control it. When your kid utters even an ounce of optimism (“I’m getting better at this.”), salute it (“Yes, I can tell you’ve been practicing!”).

2. Use hopeful mantras.
Words have great power. Help your child develop an upbeat mantra (“I got this!,” “There’s always tomorrow,” or “I’ll be okay”) to use during tough times. Then teach them to use the phrase to reduce pessimism.

You can also have your kid set their positive mantra as a phone screensaver by using quote creation platforms like Canva. Don’t forget to adopt one for yourself. Say it until your voice becomes your child’s inner voice.

I always said, “I have what it takes!” to my kids, and now they still say it as adults.

3. Teach brainstorming.
Hopeful kids don’t avoid problems. They take it head on because they’ve learned problems can be solved.
Explain to your child: “The trick to getting unstuck is to ‘spark your brain’ for solutions.” Then teach brainstorming. One trick is to use the S.T.A.N.D. acronym to help kids recall the steps:
  • Slow down so you can think.
  • Tell your problem.
  • Ask: “What else can I do?”
  • Name everything you could do to solve it without judgements.
  • Decide the best choice and do it.

4. Share hopeful news.
Hopeful kids hear hopeful stories. Violent media can create a view of the world as completely mean, scary dangerous. Uplifting news keeps children’s hope alive.

Look for inspiring news stories to share with your kids from time to time. Institute a bedtime review of the good parts about each person’s day to help your kids find the bright side of life.

And remind them of their own triumphs over struggles: “Remember when you had trouble making friends? Now you have great buddies!”

5. Ask ‘what if?’
Pessimistic kids often think of “gloomy probabilities,” which dims hope. But hopeful kids learn to assess accurately. When your child shares a doubt, pose “what-if” type of questions to think through possible outcomes more realistically.

You might ask: “What might happen if you tried — or didn’t try — that? What is the worst thing that could happen? How likely is that to happen? What’s the most likely outcome?”

These questions help kids weigh if potential outcomes really are as bad as they imagined. That knowledge can be the path forward.

6. Celebrate small gains.
Repeated failure increases hopelessness, but recognizing even a small success boosts hope. Redefine “success” as a gain: a small improvement over past performance due to effort. Then help your child identify personal gains.

For example, “Last time, you got nine words correct. Today you got 10! That’s a gain!” Or, “Yesterday you hit one run; today you got two. That’s a gain!”

7. Boost assertiveness.
Kids who feel hopeless find it difficult to self-advocate. Learning assertiveness, which is the mid-point between passivity and aggression, increases hopefulness and agency.

Body language matters, too. Teach the basics of confident body language: “Holding your head high helps you appear confident. Always look the person in the eye.”

Brainstorm comebacks your child can use to stand up for herself: “Not cool.” “That’s not right.” “I don’t want to do that.” Practice these skills until your child can defend themselves.

8. Create gratitude rituals.
Hopeful kids are grateful. One study found that people who keep gratitude journals feel more hopeful about their lives in just 10 weeks.
Hold a meal-time tradition in which each family member reveals one thing they grateful for that happened that day. Institute a bedtime ritual where everyone names someone they’re grateful for and why. Or log your children’s appreciations in a family journal to recall the good parts of their lives.

9. Embrace service.
As misfortunes increase, hopelessness can set in. Showing children that they have power to make differences in other’s lives inspires hope and builds self-efficacy.

Hopeful kids have caring adults who model hopefulness. Start a family charity box where kids add gently-used toys, clothes and games.

Deliver it to a needy family so they see the impact of kindness.

Find causes tailored to your children’s passion and support their efforts. Projects should be driven by their own concerns, not designed to look good on resumes. Follow their lead!
 

WalknTrot

Veteran Member
Kids learn best by example. If parents are fragile drama queens who can't cope with everyday hiccups and function in daily chaos, the kid will learn to be that way.

If parents take life in stride, lead an ordered, intentional life, and can generally solve routine problems without a major fuss, the kid will learn that's the normal, adult way to react to things that come up.
 

raven

TB Fanatic
Less talk - more do.
Unsupervised doing.

What? Are you a moron? Must you be supervised every moment of the day?
Is that why you believe your child is a low IQ moron? And must be hoovered over every moment?

The people I grew up - at age 13 - were baby sitters, paper boys, farm workers. We took care of other peoples children, unsupervised. We rode bicycles up and down streets throwing papers, unsupervised. We operated heavy equipment, unsupervised.
And no one gave two shits about it.

Imagine a 13 year old, driving a farm tractor, loading bins on a trailer, delivering bins out to orchards full of "not english speaking" people, for 10 hours a day - without an adult hoovering over them.

Imagine a team of three 15 year olds running a Baskin Robbins Ice Cream store located next door to a Penticostal Church on a Sunday night. It was madness - my god! Those Penticostals were hostile about their ice cream especially if you just happened to roll up a moth in someone's scoop. And we had no adult supervision - we had to solve the problem.

It used to be normal.

Is your kid a moron? or is he/she competent and capable?
 

willowlady

Veteran Member
IMO, it really helps if there are two problem-solver, engaged adults rearing kids. We had all kinds of major stresses as kids (AF Brat, never stayed anywhere longer than 2.5 years until I was 15), but our folks coped beautifully, with humor, optimism, and lots of Carpe Diem, so we grew up capable and strong. No TV until I was about 13, and highly limited access even after that. Further, moving so often taught me an important life lesson; I mostly don't give a crap about what other people think of me. I can always make new friends but I cannot/will not make a new me just to please others.
 

33dInd

Veteran Member
well this Op is written for the parents who actually care or notice that little jonnie or Jane are having issues and are searching for a solution.
 

Marthanoir

TB Fanatic
Nah I'm going with the shield wall methodology.

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West

Senior
Well, if the frigging government schools and the frigging MSM and frigging hollweird would stop programing our kids to be afraid of most everything. And discouraging from capitalism while drugging the brightest kids to sit tight to get brain washed, instead of challenging the most brightest.

As it is now kids think our world is messed up because of their parents and or the private sectors (capitalism) is what's wrong with the world and kills the planet.

I think all kids in the USA should be proficient at cleaning, loading and shooting at least a 22 rifle. And teach each kid before they become a teenager, if they like to eat meat, they must raise or hunt and kill a animal, gut, skin and butcher it. Then cook it and eat it. After giving thanks.

Each and every kid. Maybe also take them to a sausage/hotdog factory.

Bet there be less accidental shootings and gun violence over all.

We also got to get rid of child labor laws.
 

Old Gray Mare

TB Fanatic
What my kids heard:
It's good to want.
Your father and I work too hard to spend money on that.
You want that? Save up.

The kids got paid for doing chores. No allowance. Mentioned that at a PTO meeting. Other parents looked at me like I'd just stepped on a kitten.
 

raven

TB Fanatic
Well, if the frigging government schools and the frigging MSM and frigging hollweird would stop programing our kids to be afraid of most everything. And discouraging from capitalism while drugging the brightest kids to sit tight to get brain washed, instead of challenging the most brightest.

As it is now kids think our world is messed up because of their parents and or the private sectors (capitalism) is what's wrong with the world and kills the planet.

I think all kids in the USA should be proficient at cleaning, loading and shooting at least a 22 rifle. And teach each kid before they become a teenager, if they like to eat meat, they must raise or hunt and kill a animal, gut, skin and butcher it. Then cook it and eat it. After giving thanks.

Each and every kid. Maybe also take them to a sausage/hotdog factory.

Bet there be less accidental shootings and gun violence over all.

We also got to get rid of child labor laws.
you know, it does not have to be all about manly guy stuff.

I think they should be proficient at clean, loading and shooting the washing machine.
can your boys wash a load of cothes? and by that I mean can they collect the clothes, sort the colors, separate the jeans from the shirts (you know why you get those little pills on your shirts? it is because you washed your jeans with em and left the zipper unzipped), add the right amount of detergent, use the right setting, start it, load the dryer and fold em?
do they wash their clothes because if they don't they wear dirty clothes to school?
 

Elza

Veteran Member
First you have to have parents.

....welfare alone is making a one parent deal......

......and the rest of the social Marxist will make the state lord over children.

No parents needed to raise children anymore.
You have just described the infamous "it takes a village to raise a child" BS. To hell with the village. It take two parents that aren't hopelessly retarded liberals.
 

PghPanther

Has No Life - Lives on TB
You have just described the infamous "it takes a village to raise a child" BS. To hell with the village. It take two parents that aren't hopelessly retarded liberals.

That is actually the culture of African tribes............since private property and marriage is unknown to a hunter/gatherer stone age culture.......adapted of course by cultural socialist liberals like Hillary Conjob.
 

raven

TB Fanatic
How do you teach a kid to swim?
Really consider this. No one actually teaches a kid to swim. The first couple of times in the water, they flail about until they get their arms and legs legs doing the right things.
You do not actually teach it.
(until you get into competitive swimming)
 

Magdalen

Veteran Member
There are two kinds of hope - one virtuous, the other a fool's paradise. Thomas Aquinas points out that to hope is to reach for some future good that is arduous and difficult, but not impossible, to achieve. This sort of hope requires reason, action, courage, and perseverance in the face of the hardships that one must endure or overcome to achieve the goal. Although I have quibbles (some minor, some major) with most of them (I think the writer is a little glib!) many of the 9 methods described in the OP can be useful tools if what one hopes for is an actual good. But, if the objective is twisted to begin with, then you get the kind of hope Blacknarwhal describes in post #1, the kind of hope that really means "ignore reality when it makes you unhappy."

Regards,

magdalen
 

ShadowMan

Designated Grumpy Old Fart
you know, it does not have to be all about manly guy stuff.

I think they should be proficient at clean, loading and shooting the washing machine.
can your boys wash a load of clothes? and by that I mean can they collect the clothes, sort the colors, separate the jeans from the shirts (you know why you get those little pills on your shirts? it is because you washed your jeans with em and left the zipper unzipped), add the right amount of detergent, use the right setting, start it, load the dryer and fold em?
do they wash their clothes because if they don't they wear dirty clothes to school?

Mom put my younger brother and I though what she called "Bachelor Survival Training". Her thought was no man should get married because they need a women to take care of them. We had to learn how to "PROPERLY" clean a house, especially the bathroom. How to plan, shop, prepare, serve and clean up after a meal. How to do laundry, sew, mend, darn, knit. iron and fold clothes. How to bake cakes, cookies, pies, bread as well as can and freeze. Just about any and all "domestic" chores you could think of....including how to change diapers, treat diaper rash, give a baby a bath and feed them. We practiced that on our baby sister. Yes...even the poopy ones. Euuuuuuuuuuuu!
 

raven

TB Fanatic
Mom put my younger brother and I though what she called "Bachelor Survival Training". Her thought was no man should get married because they need a women to take care of them. We had to learn how to "PROPERLY" clean a house, especially the bathroom. How to plan, shop, prepare, serve and clean up after a meal. How to do laundry, sew, mend, darn, knit. iron and fold clothes. How to bake cakes, cookies, pies, bread as well as can and freeze. Just about any and all "domestic" chores you could think of....including how to change diapers, treat diaper rash, give a baby a bath and feed them. We practiced that on our baby sister. Yes...even the poopy ones. Euuuuuuuuuuuu!
I don't think my mom had a plan.
She simply was not going to clean up the mess of a bunch of wild animals.
Apparently today, parents like living with wild animals.
 

Hfcomms

EN66iq
Unfortunately most children today are born to parents whom they themselves can't cope with life and have lived a very sheltered existence with everything given to them by their parents. Hard for today's crop of parents to pass on to their progeny what they themselves don't have. There is a solution to that but it's a painful one and the pain is not only on the way but has already started.

The children of today that survive what is about to happen to us will at least be able to pass on to their children coping skills and will know all about hardship and trials. Just like the children of the Great Depression were able to raise the adults of the 1950's that knew all about life and the value of hard work.
 

Signwatcher

Has No Life - Lives on TB
My Brother was a confrontational brawler. He was 2 years younger than me.

He fought almost every day of our childhood into young adulthood.

I learned how to defend myself early and well. Where's the hope in that? I KNEW it would be coming at me on a regular basis so I learned to be ready at almost any moment and at the drop of a hat.

I learned to project defensive body language. That, alone, has helped me through life. Nobody except my Brother picked fights with me. That I was ADHD and leaned towards the ditzy blonde side didn't hurt (I'm MUCH better now) either.

Hope in childhood?! I was 5 and didn't see myself living through high school...it seemed too far away. Here I am still sucking air and on the green side of the sod.

I will say that I don't recall being upset about things on the news like the racial riots of 1968 or the Vietnam War even though I had friends with older brothers fighting in it. It was a simpler time.

Kids today have access to too much information. Too much mental computer stimulation. They are treated like small adults instead of the children they are. Maybe I was sheltered too much, but I don't recall having the anxiety my Grandsons seem to have.
 

anna43

Veteran Member
Back in the dark ages when I was a kid, I lived in a small town most of the time. We pretty much ran free outside of school. The noon whistle and you better be home pdq for lunch. Six o'clock whistle, supper and you'd better be at the table. After supper until dark you played outside until called for bath and bed. Everyone knew who your parents were, so they found out if you did something wrong before you got home. Did it teach us to do no wrong, no, it taught us to be sneaky. We weren't influenced by the news because we never paid attention to the radio and TV didn't come along until we were 10 or so and then it was mostly test patterns and a few programs and the news wasn't interesting to us.

We made forts, fought cowboys and Indians battles, played baseball, roller skated at a special rink that the men of the community built for us, played croquet in good weather and monopoly on rainy days. Winter was for snow forts, snowball fights and fox and geese. Alone time was for books. Movies were 15¢ and popcorn 10¢ and we walked alone (a gang of neighborhood kids) on Saturday afternoons to see the latest Roy Rogers, Gene Autry or other stars fighting off the bad guys.

Our parents were always there, but our lives were lived with our friends without close supervision. We learned to get along with everyone or to fight our own battles. We did not run home to mommy over ever little slight. I believe this taught us independence. We did not get an "award" for participating and we had to suffer the humiliation of being the last chosen. If you got an A or B you got praised, a C you can do better and anything below that did not have a happy result. My second grade teacher did not like me and made her scapegoat which my parents knew and never interfered. A friend from my neighborhood gang stood up for me in one particularly nasty episode which led most of the class to follow suit.

As for crime against kids, the only I was aware of was the parents' abusive punishments and at the time no one batted an eye about it. I bruise easily so I know I had to have had visible bruises on many occasions, yet I do not recall anyone commenting. I was a snoop and I recall overhearing my dad and his brothers discussing a woman in the community being raped (I didn't know what that meant!) and how they would handle it if it happened to any of their wives. Let's just say it's unlikely the body would ever have been found and to this day I do not doubt they would have done it. Fortunately, the need never arose!!

I also raised my kids in a small community and allowed them to go by themselves even at a young age. They walked to school by themselves, to the swimming pool, to school events (we drove at night), to the library and even to the dentist as they got older. I was expected to be told where they were going and set a time for them to be back. I'm sure they weren't always where they said they would be, but that's life. All were independent at 18 and two of the three have stayed out of trouble and managed their lives in a good fashion.
 

Shadow

Swift, Silent,...Sleepy
Mom put my younger brother and I though what she called "Bachelor Survival Training". Her thought was no man should get married because they need a women to take care of them. We had to learn how to "PROPERLY" clean a house, especially the bathroom. How to plan, shop, prepare, serve and clean up after a meal. How to do laundry, sew, mend, darn, knit. iron and fold clothes. How to bake cakes, cookies, pies, bread as well as can and freeze. Just about any and all "domestic" chores you could think of....including how to change diapers, treat diaper rash, give a baby a bath and feed them. We practiced that on our baby sister. Yes...even the poopy ones. Euuuuuuuuuuuu!
Outstanding! What a wise woman!

My alcoholic parents did none of that, despite college degrees and mid 140 IQs. I have learned much of what you describe from other people. I realized early that I would have to closely observe other people to learn what I needed.

My first reaction to your post was something along the lines of "what planet were you on?"

Good for you!

Shadow
 

West

Senior
Mom put my younger brother and I though what she called "Bachelor Survival Training". Her thought was no man should get married because they need a women to take care of them. We had to learn how to "PROPERLY" clean a house, especially the bathroom. How to plan, shop, prepare, serve and clean up after a meal. How to do laundry, sew, mend, darn, knit. iron and fold clothes. How to bake cakes, cookies, pies, bread as well as can and freeze. Just about any and all "domestic" chores you could think of....including how to change diapers, treat diaper rash, give a baby a bath and feed them. We practiced that on our baby sister. Yes...even the poopy ones. Euuuuuuuuuuuu!

My mother raised me really close to those standards.
 

West

Senior
Just showed my grandson how to dispatch and butcher a old hen. She was mean and eat eggs. Took five minutes maybe a bit more. We had a nice south wind so the guts didn't even smell foul.

Dog food for tomorrow morning, they will love it, cause I will lightly brown them in salt and bacon grease. Let they will for the most part be raw so the bones will not be the least bit cooked and be soft and pliable, so than can eat them whole.

My grandson was good with it. At first when I tore its head off he stood back 15 yards. But as I skined it and gutted it he got with in yards. Then when I quartered it up he was right there to take the guts to the bone pile in the upper 40!
 
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