My Top 45 Things I Want My Kids To Learn
We haven't taught until they have learned... and knowing that we are never gonna get it right.
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These posts are meant to be what Lewis Hyde describes as a “Gift.” What this “Gift” concept means for me is that
Nothing is expected out of you.
I hope you receive it.
I hope this animates and transforms you.
I hope you spread the love to others.
The Amateur Sport of Parenting
It is neither useful nor surprising to state the following (but I'd say it anyway): Parenting is hard!
Parenting is hard because
We have explicit and implicit expectations,
We have the ability to influence, and yet, paradoxically, we ultimately have no control, and
It is an amateur sport. The moment you think you’ve turned pro, the rules changed.
Put it another way. Parenting would be ‘easy’ if
We have ZERO expectations,
We disavow our ability to influence and nurture.
You focus on being the “great parent,” as opposed to tending to their nature and their needs.
Two years ago, while I was putting kids to bed combined with a semi-conscious and loose associative state of mind, I ended up pondering about what were the great subjects of my life. What have I gravitated towards trying to comprehend, understand, and make sense?
I looked through my notes1 over the last decade. Then I listed down all of the main themes of my pursuit. The 'Great Subjects of My Life' encompassed a seemingly non-coherent thread, spanning from science and spirituality to relationships, healing, expertise development, learning, morality, therapy, emotions, and cognitive sciences.
This got me thinking.
If I was to be a good ancestor to my kids, what do I want to pass on to them, or at least attempt to kindle a consideration of? I started to brainstorm. I was 43 back then, so I thought I would keep to no more than 43 items.
I started listing them down, but never quite saw the value of doing so at that point in time. Now, as I re-look at the incomplete list, I thought to myself that this might be a worthy exercise to engage in.
I’m 45 now, so I’ve taken the liberty to add two more.
My suspicion is that the list might slightly increase in the coming years, and then likely decrease later on as I’d recalibrate my expectations (or get more jaded).
45 things is a lot of things. But the idea is to map out what matters most.
In no particular order of virtues, values or skills, here it goes.
45 Things I Want My Kids To Learn
How Things Grow
Fierce Kindness
Learning to Listen to Your Own Voice
Dignity of The Person
Equality
Friendship
Forgiveness
Courage
Morality
Means vs. Ends
The Creative Process
Mistakes and the Dangers of Perfection
Embracing constraints
Play
Improvisation
Love of Music
Know the Beatles Catalogue
Love of Reading
Love of Learning (not Performing) via the Hard Way on Purpose
Conversations
Becoming a Good Ancestor
Tending to Your Gifts
Tending to the Gifts of Others
Community
The Power of Words
The Power of Your Voice
Poetry
Writing
Servant leadership
Empathy
Prayer and Contemplation
Paradox
Don't jump to conclusions
Draw
See the math behind the world, and mystery behind the math.
Wonderment via Deep Noticing, leading to involuntary gratitude
Know Your Roots
Struggle is not a Failure
Taking Care of Their Inner Life
Graceful Self-Forgetting
The Difference between competence and confidence
Self-Efficacy
Allowing Beauty to Move You
Love
The Rationale
Here’s my attempt to provide a reason for why each of these exists. The list is long, but I’d keep the explanations short.
1. How Things Grow
To be sensitive to the natural world, and notice how nature works.
In turn, how we can model and ‘biomimic’ nature in all that we create.
See #14. Play, and #15. Improvisation.
2. Fierce Kindness
Kindness requires a kind of tenacity, an act of resistance from our reactivity.
This requires us to take pause, stand firm, and approach with gentleness.
For more, see Tenderness is Not Weakness What I’ve Learned from Jean Vanier
3. Learning to Listen to Your Own Voice
The world is a noisy place.
Learning to listen to the smaller, quieter voice within will take practice.
When we attune ourselves to listen within, that’s where God is found.
4. Dignity of The Person
Dignity is given, not earned. human value of a person.
Treat people not as a means to an end, by an end of itself (see #9. Means vs. Ends)
A person in power can rob a person's dignity. Our task is not so much as to empower, but to encourage.
5. Equality
From the words of Joshua Wooden, father of legendary coach John Wooden,
No one is better than you and you are not better than anyone else.
6. Friendship
At every age, friendship is a diagnosis of our lives.
7. Forgiveness
It's much easier for anger and resentment to fester, than for the disarming act of forgiveness.
Holocaust survival and author of The Choice, Edith Eger says,
To forgive is to grieve—for what happened, for what didn’t happen—and to give up the need for a different past.
8. Courage
Paraphrasing C.S. Lewis, courage is a prerequisite for all other virtues to be cultivated.
When in doubt, ask yourself, “What is the courageous decision to make?”
9. Morality
Borrowing from the later Rabbi Jonathan Sacks, at its essence, morality is shifting the lens from “I” to “We,”
It is not just what's good for an individual, but what is a common good for all.
10. Means vs. Ends
We must be careful not to treat everything as a means to an end. Some of the most important things in life are an end of itself, like friends, family, play.
Emmanuel Kant wrote in Fundamental Principles of the Metaphysics of Morals:
In the kingdom of ends everything has either value or dignity. Whatever has a value can be replaced by something else which is equivalent; whatever, on the other hand, is above all value, and therefore admits of no equivalent, has a dignity.
11. The Creative Process
The highest expression of our humanity is creativity. (see also #14.Play and #15.The Art of Improvisation).
This is not just relating to “creative” endeavours, like art or music.
Our role and soul requires us to partake in the co-creative process.
12. Mistakes and the Dangers of Perfection
Make new mistakes.
13. Embracing constraints
Constraints are the high antidote to procrastination.
When no constraints are given, make them up for yourself.
14. Play
The highest form or research is me-search.
Stuart Brown argued that the lack of play should be treated as serious as malnutrition.
15. Improvisation
The word improvisation originates from the Latin 'improvisus', meaning 'not seen ahead of time.'
They are many things we do not see ahead of time in an uncertain world.
The posture to take then, is to notice, appreciate, embrace, utilise, and willingness to take the step forward… and believing that you have something to give.
16. Love of Music
Music is the closest thing I know that represents the beyond.
17. Know the Beatles Catalogue
I mean, come-on… it’s a must.
18. Love of Reading
I have many great mentors in my life. Many of them I have not met before.
Thinking is like have a monologue. Reading, on the other hand, is like having a deep dialogue with someone who has thought about a single topic for a long time.
19. Love of Learning (not Performing)
An over-emphasis on performing impedes learning.
For more, listen to this podcast.
see also #14. Play
20. Conversations
Conversations is one of the highest art form that we engage in daily.
Doesn’t matter if you are an introvert or an extrovert.
A litmus test for a good conversation is when we can hear ourselves clearly.
21. Becoming a Good Ancestor
I hope to be a good ancestor, and I want my kids to be a good ancestor to their futurecestors.
22. Tending to Your Gifts
This is the great journey and adventure of our lives, especially at the first half of our lives: To find and cultivate our gifts.
Gifts are meant to be given away.
23. Tending to the Gifts of Others
Especially the second half of our lives, we look beyond ourselves and tease out the gifts in others.
24. Community
We are a human being and a human belonging.
A community calls us out of our doors.
25. The Power of Words
Words have more potency than we give credit.
So engage in the praxis of your words.
26. The Power of Your Voice
Our voice is the one native instrument we have at our disposal.
Learn to use it well.
Allow yourself to sing. You don’t have to be perfect.
27. Poetry
Poetry is truth told slant2
Get closer to the truth.
28. Writing
Not write what you know, but write in order to know.
Writing is a way of clarifying your thinking.
29. Servant leadership
The world is yearning for good leaders.
The Indo-European root of the word “leadership,” you find leith, meaning “to go forth,” “to cross the threshold,”
30. Empathy
Empathy is not perspective-taking, it’s perspective-getting.
Learn to get perspectives beyond your own.
31. Prayer and Contemplation
Pause from the madness of this world.
Prayer emerges from the seed of discontent.
Turn everything into a prayer.
32. Attempts at Doing God's Will
You have a religion that you are born into. That’s meant for your to push back from, and maybe go back to. Either way, it’s a springboard.
You are called to bring life to this life (see #22. Tending to You Gifts), and in order to do so, you’d need to learn to listen (see #3. Learning to Listen to Your Own Voice).
Thomas Merton says about doing God’s will,
…I have no idea where I am going. I do not see the road ahead of me. I cannot know for certain where it will end. Nor do I really know myself, and the fact that I think I am following your will does not mean that I am actually doing so. But I believe that the desire to please you does in fact please you.
33. Paradox
Learn to sit with contradictory ideas.
“The words of truth are always paradoxical,” says Lao Tzu
For example,
The curious paradox is that when I accept myself just as I am, then I can change.
~ Carl Rogers
34. Don’t Jump to Conclusions too Early
We are not frogs. Don’t be too quick to leap for a premature answer.
And, you are allowed to change your mind.
35. Draw
Why not? It’s fun (see #14. Play).
Plus, it helps you communicate.
36. See the math behind the world, and mystery behind the math.
Get under the hood.
Go further.
Why? You no only have a deeper appreciation, but you’d start to become moved by mystery.
37. Deep Noticing
Deep noticing of the world around you leads to wonderment, which leads to involuntary gratitude.
See Rob Walker’s book and his Substack, The Art of Noticing.
38. Know Your Roots
I’m trying to do so too.
Without those before us, there would be no us.
39. Struggle is not a Failure
Struggle is a sign of crossing a threshold.
Just like when you were learning to ride your bike, just hang in there for that little bit more.
40. Taking Care of Their Inner Life
This is hidden to mostly everyone around you, but your inner-life is a life-force for your outer-life.
Tend to your inner-life.
“L’essentiel est invisible pour les yeux,” or
“What is essential is invisible to the eyes.”
~ Saint-Exupéry, The Little Prince.
41. Graceful Self-Forgetting
An over-emphasis of the self is a source of suffering.
See It's Not About You, Do Not Focus on The Self, Point Your Camera to the World, and Stumbling Into Self-Forgetting
42. The Difference between Competence and Confidence
In the words of the comedian Steve Martin, get so good that they can’t ignore you.
Doubt is a good servant, and a bad master. Let doubt serve you.
43. Self-Efficacy
Self-efficacy is not self-esteem, it is not self-confidence.
Self-efficacy grows via vicarious experiences (i.e., witnessing others do things) and personal mastery (i.e., you doing things).
For more, see Scott Young’s essay on this topic.
44. Allowing Beauty to Move You.
Our journey consists of moving and being moved.
Let me do my Chinese teacher proud and point out that in Mandarin, "being moved" Gǎn Dòng [感动], literally translates “to feel movement."
Pay attend to the beauty that surrounds you (see #37. Deep Noticing), and allow yourself to be moved.3
45. Love
… The greatest of these is love.
The Great lesson of our lifetime is learn how to love. Many things that we try to achieve requires us to be muscular about it, but to love, requires us to soften.
The Sufi poet, Rumi says,
Your task is not to seek for love, but merely to seek and find all the barriers within yourself that you have built against it.
And from Fred Rogers,
Love and success, always in that order. It’s that simple AND that difficult.
Who is this really for?
I want to nurture the nature of my kids, and not go against it. I worry about pushing my agenda on them (with the exception of needing to know the Beatles catalogue).
As I complete this list, two things strikes me:
First, it’s less about values and more about virtues—a word that is somewhat deflated in our modern life.
Valuing outcomes like success only really make sense when paired with Virtues like integrity. Otherwise we get Enron.4
I’d rather we be virtues-driven than values-driven.
Second, I feel like this is more for me than for my kids. It’s for me to hold these lightly as wishes and not expectations. Perhaps, let this be my prayer. It’s also a reminder for me to co-create conversations with them as they grow, as we grow.
Many of these lessons are eternal teachings and learnings. But let's not forget,
"You haven't taught if until they have learned.”
~ John Wooden.
YOUR TURN: If you have kids, what goes into your list of things you want your children to learn?
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Daryl Chow Ph.D. is the author of The First Kiss, co-author of Better Results, and The Write to Recovery, Creating Impact, and the new book The Field Guide to Better Results .
If you are a helping professional, you might like my other Substack, Frontiers of Psychotherapist Development (FPD).
In my other Substack for psychotherapists, Frontiers of Psychotherapist Development (FPD)…, I talked about the how I use Obsidian to capture learnings, as well as why doing so is such a powerful practice.
Emily Dickinson’s poem (1263),
Tell all the truth but tell it slant —
Success in Circuit lies
Too bright for our infirm Delight
The Truth's superb surprise
As Lightning to the Children eased
With explanation kind
The Truth must dazzle gradually
Or every man be blind—
Researchers in human emotions offers a fascinating insight. A review article by Janis Zickfeld and colleagues (2019) suggested that being ‘moved’ should be treated as a “distinct emotion.”Sensations of being moved include tears, chills, lump in the throat, goosebumps, warmth in the chest. When seen in this light, it’s easy to understand why the experience of being moved is often considered as passive experience, i.e., not something we can actively control. Janis H. Zickfeld, Thomas W. Schubert, Beate Seibt, & Alan P. Fiske. (2019). Moving Through the Literature: What Is the Emotion Often Denoted Being Moved?: Emotion Review, 1–17. https://doi.org/10.1177_1754073918820126