Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Ways to teach children gratitude

- Adapted from a recent online discussion: CAROLYN HAX Email Carolyn at tellme@washpost.com. Washington Post Writers Group

Carolyn: My family is extremely lucky — we have enough to eat, a safe place to live, health, a loving extended family.

I have two small children, and I want them to understand just how lucky we are, and that we should be grateful and give back. How can we encourage small kids (2 and 4) to be appreciati­ve of life’s gifts? Are there ways we can give back to our community as a family — not a money donation, but some sort of volunteeri­ng we can all participat­e in, maybe?

I often tell my family how lucky I feel, and I try to explain why, but I’m not always sure I am doing it in an age-appropriat­e way that helps the kiddos understand in whatever way they can at this stage. —Grateful

Grateful: The most important actions aren’t so much age-appropriat­e as ageless: model empathy yourself; say what you think and then ask your kids what they think; show your feelings, and don’t penalize your kids (or others) for showing theirs; demonstrat­e that it’s important to respect and listen to your and others’ feelings but not be controlled by them.

Also: Say what you’re grateful for and ask your kids, regularly, to do the same; admit your failures; treat those failures as sources of strength and encourage that frame of mind with your children.

Not surprising­ly, ways to foster empathy and gratitude are big topics on the (conscienti­ous) national mind right now. Some recent works:

“Teaching empathy: What kind of parent are you?” ( bit.ly/NiceKid1), and, “Are you raising nice kids?” ( bit.ly/NiceKid2) by Amy Joyce; and two of my columns, “How can I raise a child who doesn’t bully and isn’t bullied?” (

bit.ly/NiceKid3) and “When to start talking to our sons about rape and consent” ( bit.ly/NiceKid4). All of these cite other sources for further reading.

I also recommend reading up on nonviolent communicat­ion ( cnvc.org), which is rooted in acknowledg­ment of and respect for common needs (as opposed to oppressive me me me-ism).

“The Opposite of Spoiled,” by Ron Lieber, gets at your question along the complicate­d path of talking to kids about money.

As you read this material, you may notice much of it isn’t about empathy directly — and that’s because empathy is about everything. It’s not what you see, but how you choose, or are taught, to see it.

In that sense, just raising your kids to be readers is a way to foster empathy. Other worlds, other experience­s, other feelings, other opinions, other possibilit­ies: The more your kids read ( bit.ly/NiceKid5), the more of these they’ll carry within them.

Carolyn: How do you shut up a perpetual joker? Someone who won’t shut up for a second or say a single sincere thing as long as he has a rapt audience? Or is it on me, the annoyed person, to just minimize my exposure? —Philly

Philly: Pretty much. Even if it were universall­y agreed (it obviously isn’t) that his perpetual joking was unwelcome, it wouldn’t be your or anyone’s place to change him or “shut” him “up.” You can register displeasur­e, you can opt not to invite him, you can leave, you can call the usher if he talks in a theater. That’s about it.

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