5 Ways to Toughen Up Your Child

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   It’s a parent’s job to prepare a child for the complexities of life, and the road ahead is a tough one. Olathe mom Jennifer Hamblin Robinson teaches her three children to focus on the solution not the problem. “I try to let them work out their own conflicts. It all starts with tattling. Unless someone is in physical danger, most times I encourage them to go back and try to find a way to resolve the problem on their own,” says Robinson. 

    Being tough is all in a person’s head—literally—and it has nothing to do with a child’s size or strength. It does have everything to do with their mental strength, according to Byron Alexander. He coordinates recreational and volunteer activities for the inmates at the Lansing Correctional Facility in Lansing, KS, and organizes the Salvation Army’s Biddy Basketball League for kids in Kansas City. Alexander says being tough starts with developing character traits like discipline, responsibility and ownership at an early age. He says these traits will help children throughout their lives, no matter what obstacles they face.

     Alexander grew up in the Calliope Projects in New Orleans in the mid 1960s through early 1980s, an area known nationwide at the time for its high crime rate and poverty. Alexander remembers what his grandfather use to tell him: “If a person beats your thinkin’, he beats your livin’.” Alexander says that statement rings true today for children no matter what their socio-economic background or zip code. “The kid that has the mental edge and gets along is truly the one that is strongest,” he says.

 

Try these tips to help give your child that mental edge:

Helping your children build their confidence and be assertive can be a tough job, but it will give them the skills to face whatever obstacles lie ahead.

 

Heather Claybrook is a Northland mother of three.

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