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Blog, In the News

Four vital questions to teach your kids

April 29, 2016

In a recent post, Chris Brown, president of the National Fatherhood Initiative, reflects on more than 20 years as a parent, and his view that one of the greatest gifts a parent can impart to his or her child is self-awareness.

4_Vital_QuestionsIn the post, 4 Vital Questions to Teach Your Kids, he posits that we tend to focus on blaming others before we learn, if we ever do, to focus on our own actions. According to Brown, we avoid asking the tough questions because it’s usually easier to blame and move on without ever really learning from the conflict.

In the post he shares what he has learned over the years by teaching his own kids to ask themselves the four questions as the navigate conflict. He is confident the four questions helped his kids and believes that all parents would benefit by sharing them with their own children.

Here’s the post:

4 vital questions to teach your kids

As I reflect on more than two decades of parenting my own children, I continue to believe that the greatest gift any parent can give is to help their child develop self-awareness.

The famous psychiatrist Carl Jung said:
Your visions will become clear only when you can look into your own heart. Who looks outside, dreams; who looks inside, awakes.

One of the best opportunities for clarity about who we are and want to become presents itself when we have conflict with others. Whenever my children have had conflict with their mom, sister, best friend, teacher, teammate, coach, or a stranger, I have done my best to focus them on questions that help them become more self-aware. That’s because humans have a tendency to focus on the actions, attitudes, and beliefs of “the other” in the conflict. We want to avoid asking the tough questions about our own role in bringing about conflict. It’s simply easier and more convenient to blame the other person for creating and sustaining conflict.

I’ve found that teaching my children to ask the following four questions has helped them navigate conflict and come out the other side more self-aware:

  • What was my role in creating this conflict?
  • Does the way I’ve acted during this conflict represent the kind of person I want to be?
  • Are the decisions I’ve made during this conflict in line with the kind of person I want to be?
  • If I saw someone else behave in the way I’ve behaved during this conflict, what would I think?

It’s amazing how these questions have helped my children gain insight into who they are and want to become.

These questions have helped them step back and take an objective view of the situation and realize that, regardless of what the other person says or does, they have the power to end the conflict or walk away from it.

Teach your children to use these questions to help them grow into self-aware youngsters and adults. You’ll be glad you did.