"What is the most important thing a parent needs to teach their child so s/he will live a happy life?" - ecoTrain Question Of The Week
As I ponder this deep question, I am struck by the realisation that whatever answer I have to this weeks' Question Of The Week, it is advice that I had better take myself! Sometimes the best advice we give to others, is also the best advice we can give ourselves, and today that is certainly the case!
We aren't given a parenting Bible when we have children, and in the western world these days, most of us are pretty unprepared for the entire journey! In times past, and still today in less developed areas, we had a very strong family unit and community support. Back in the day, it would be absolutely natural that the mother of the parent would be very present to support, advise, and help in any way needed. These days our family unit has been eroded to the extent that it is not easy for many mothers and daughters to share time and space without conflict and stress. Even if they do have a good relationship, people are very busy and ofter far apart from each other which makes daily support impossible.
Therefore, I think today's QOTW is more important than ever, and is a question that we probably don't actually ask ourselves. Whilst we are so busy with day to day living, we rarely take a step back and ask the big questions. I am happy to have this opportunity to do so today, because thinking about it has already helped me to know something really important for the time that I may be blessed with a Child.
The key word in this question is happy. The search for happiness can be elusive for some, and a natural state for others. Whilst I could write pages on what happiness is, I would like to just share with you my opinion on what brings real happiness, and how we can bestow that gift onto our children. There are two things that I would make sure I teach my child, as well as demonstrate through example. The best way to teach is through example and direct experience. I don't think verbal teaching is enough in most cases, and especially with a child in resistance.
So how can I teach my child to be happy? The most important of the two keys is very simply being in the moment, present and fully engaged with each other and our immediate environment. I would teach my child to be in the moment, which is the only place we can really live and be alive and truly happy. This would mean spending a lot of time being in the moment with them, with a lot of play time and creativity. I would have to be in the moment myself in order to teach this to anyone, and so that is a challenge as a parent. I would also encourage my child to take up a hobby such as arts, music, or sports and adventure. I would teach the importance of play and having fun. I would even teach my child to meditate, as there is no better to learn how to be happy and in the moment. If you can find happiness and inner peace when doing nothing at all, then you have found real happiness. I would also not allow my child to own a smart phone or computer until they were at least 12-14 years old, or more. They could use one, but they could not own one. I think that is Very important. I want my child to spend most of his/her time with friends and family learning important social skills.
This brings in the second point. I would teach my child, through experience as well as verbally, the important of family and community. I would hope to be able to be living in some kind of community, and if not would do my best to have good friends and family. Parents need support and cannot give a child their attention all the time. It is VERy draining and without good support and can lead to a very superficial relationship because it is relentless, and at some point a parent just gives up engaging properly. Therefore, when we have community we can be relieved from the stress of parenting every day, and have some time off. Then when we do come back to be with our children, we can be with them in the present moment.
The happiest people I have met come from or live in a strong community. In these places I have always been struck by the gentle pace of life, the light and joyous mood of the people, and the overall ease of living. I have seen this in Africa, India, and even rural England. It matters not where you look in the world, this answer seems to be ubiquitous! We must live in a connected, communal way, so that we have the emotional space to be in the moment, so that we can indeed be happy! Children are like sponges, and most of the teaching we do is none verbal. The way we are in ourselves, the way we carry ourselves, the way we react and interact, our tone of voice, and the love that we can give define what we are really teaching our kids. If we don't create an environent and the circumstances which are conducive to our own fullfillment and happiness, I don't see how we can ever hope for that for our children.
I'd like to leave you with a short poem.
Thank you!
Happiness is Being Home Again,
Hapiness is walking in the rain
Happiness is walking with no pain.
Happiness is to see my humble home,
Happiness at not being alone,
Happiness to sit, and not to roam.
Happiness is family to me,
Happiness in the faces, I longed to see,
Happiness is once more being free
(Juan Olivarez)
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Alex, this was just so beautiful that I couldn't help but be in awe of your viewpoint. I don't know why this didn't occurred to me especially since I'm always focusing on being in the moment. This is now going to be the number 1 thing I teach my child because the rest will naturally follow if I teach him to be mindful of the moment. Loved every word of it and the sweet poem in the end.
thank you for this beautiful comment.. im so glad it helped you !!! this post just flowed once i realised this simple gift we can give our children..
much love!
OH. MY. GOD. Is this you Alex? '..being in the moment, present and fully engaged with each other and our immediate environment..'
'I would also not allow my child to own a smart phone or computer until they were at least 12-14 years old, or more.' If we can add 'no circumcision' to that I am ready for children. :-)
Hallelujah! I have made a few 'whoohoo's' reading this. :-) I fully agree, especially the first one is the key.
And I also agree to the fact that what we want to teach children is actually the advise we need to take ourselves because it usually is what we need most ourselves (for me that would be self acceptance as you can read in my article) and probably what we missed in our own youth.
And family and community of likeminded people is indeed very important for our own happiness and that of our children.
i know i said at the start that this was going to be advice for myself too.. i really tried today and was conscious of being in the moment.. i did a few things i wouldnt normally do in town, and didnt look at my phone once whilst having lunch@ ;-)
Oh wow , that's good to hear!
If by some weird miracle I'm ever blessed with kids, like you I'd love to teach them to be present in the moment. There's real beauty in savoring the now & having a grateful heart that senses the beauty in the world deeply.
I'd also like to teach them how to be open-hearted, forgiving, resilient & about the positive selfishness of being good.
I'd like to foster "awake" children that don't go through the motions waiting for real life to begin, blindly lashing out & reacting to the world, but to see they are part of a whole & their actions have lasting consequences & they can influence the outcome of their experiences with their choices.
I guess I'd love to teach them to grok deeply & be joyous & playful.
It's unlikely they'll ever exist, but they sure would have been loved.
u don't sound largelyuseless to me! WOnderful comment, if you do ever have kids it sounds like they will be very lucky....
I think the single most important lesson for any kid is to think for himself/herself and not blindly follow the way others want to dictate his/her way of living.
If you do what you love, happiness will follow.
im guessing you support homeschooling! ;-)
Yes I totally agree on this point too. Only discovered mindfulness and the power of being in the moment this last year and have found it very beneficial to my own life and am now a mindfulness evangelist.
nice! i have a lot to learn. .. !
far from mastering it myself yet.
Alex, I must confess I have issues with this question. Oh, and Hi 👋!
The last thing I would ever actually say to my girls is a sentence along the lines of "Listen up, let me tell you what you need to know in order to be happy." Nope. The very idea sounds ridiculous. I have nothing against happiness or being happy or wanting my girls to be happy. But my true hope is that they learn it is ok NOT TO BE HAPPY. At least not all the time. Some of the deepest moments of life have nothing to do with happiness. I don't want them chasing down an elusive concept and wasting time not experiencing everything else on the way. I don't believe that happiness is a choice. Not in any prolonged way. One may choose to look at the bright side of some situations, but happiness is far from appropriate in many cases. But I do hope I have taught them to be on alert and open to let happiness in when it is there and it's special for them.
Peace :)
hey icm.. nice to see you here after so long! Hi!!! <3
You know, i think you may be taking the Question a bit literally.. I understand what you are saying, but the question is one that i think is a good one. We're not telling anyone to be happy some of the time or all of the time .. but we are looking at the things we can do as parents to have a happy child.
Some kids are just plain miserable. They are rarely happy because they have sadness in their hearts.. for whatever reason.. Other kids are usually happy, and are fulfilled and nurtured children. I would say that they are happy children, even though sometimes they are really sad! And of course it is more than fine for a child to be sad or angry when it is appropriate.
So my answer was one that I think made a lot of sense, because it wasn't about telling or teaching any specific thing.. but more about how to nurture a healthy structure and environment for them to have the best chance of thriving and being a generally happy person.
Did u read my answer? Im curious .. and its ok if you didn't .. but what you commented doesnt seem to match up with the things i said..
much love to you! Xxx
This is precisely the reply I wanted to write but wasn't too sure of whether I should say anything because didn't want to offend him but yes you are right, our replies are not about being happy all the time and not accepting unhappiness. Sadness is a part of life and a natural response too. However, not being able to be happy ever is not something we want for our kids and all the answers here things that can help them feel good in life and naturally, sadness will be there on the appropriate times.
:)
I did read it! And enjoyed reading it, but it brought up contrary thoughts I guess. But I seem to be scoring perfect scores in contrariness lately....
💕💕
Hahaha you do :)