As parents, we want our children to learn gratitude. Raising our children to be appreciative is a lifelong skill that nurtures their minds, bodies and the spirits. Instilling grateful feelings now will benefit our children later in life.
Teaching them about gratitude and learn to appreciate when they are young can have a long-lasting effect for them on maintaining a positive outlook on life.
Research on gratitude has discovered that being grateful has a positive impact on a person's life. What if we could teach our children to be grateful, as a way to help them be more positive in life while nurturing their spirit?
In the early years, our children grow and learn rapidly. The learning process begins at home. Each experience with the home environment offers opportunities to increase our children’s understanding of the world.
As parents, we play a very important role. Raising appreciative children start at birth and continue throughout their lives as they observe the way we deal with people and situations.
We are our children’s first teachers. When we talk, our children learn to speak. What we do, our children imitate. Our children’s first classroom is, in fact, in our own house.
The environment we provide has a profound effect on virtually every facet of our children's early growth. From early childhood through adolescence, our children are most open to parental teaching.
Parents who do not pay attention to this crucial stage in the development of their children are missing the essential ingredients in raising grateful, appreciative and successful individuals.
Gratitude is one of the trickiest concepts to teach our children who are by nature self-centered but one of the most important. By learning gratitude, they become sensitive to the feelings of others.
Home is a place where we engage with those who are closest to us. We live here with a certainty that we will be loved regardless of our mistakes and faults. It is where our children’s souls are nurtured.
Sure, grateful children are more polite and pleasant to be around, but there's more to it than that. By learning gratitude, they develop empathy and other life skills along the way. Empathy is one of the greatest gifts we can give to our children, because it helps them see the good in those around them.
Ways to Cultivate Gratitude in our Children
There are many ways that we can cultivate gratitude in our children. Gratitude is a virtue that is learned, and strengthened through practice.
Here are some suggestions.
1. Teach our children to be thankful for what they have, even the little things like health and togetherness.
2. Encourage generosity, donate toys and clothes to less fortunate children. Our children can see the good that donations are doing by seeing the old items in use.
3. Encourage our children to say 'thank you' or send thank you notes as a way of expressing gratitude.
4. Show by example, help those who need help, along with our children, so they realize how fortunate they are.
5. Praise our children when they act in grateful ways. Make sure they know you appreciate them.
6. Remind our children to practice gratitude at every opportunity in our daily life.
To your parenting success
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