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Courage Tip of the Day

Find or print out a favorite photo of a relative who doesn’t live nearby or who has died.  Give the photo a seat at the dinner table tonight and include that person in the conversation!  Say a few words about what you appreciate/appreciated about this relative.  Practice an attitude of gratitude

(Living in Japan and other parts of Asia for many years, Lisa had the honor of visiting many homes with small shrines in family living rooms where each family member practiced daily devotional meditation or sent prayers of thanks to their ancestors.  Complete with food, drink, candles, and/or incense offerings.)


Into the Enchanted Woods!

Today I’d like to offer a couple of passages from the introduction to Bruno Bettelheim’s landmark book, The Uses of Enchantment: The Meaning and Importance of Fairy Tales , originally published in 1975. This has been a supremely influential book over the years, although from here, in 2011, the heavy Freudian perspective feels somewhat dated. Nevertheless, there is much to be gleaned from these pages, even if you must take some of the analysis of individual tales with a grain or two of salt. Again, these passages are from the introduction, and so speak about fairy tales in general.  For Einstein’s advice about fairy tales, be sure to read “Relativity.”
“This is exactly the message that fairy tales get across to the child in manifold form: that a struggle against severe difficulties in life is unavoidable, is an intrinsic part of human existence – but if one does not shy away, but steadfastly meets unexpected and often unjust hardships, one masters all obstacles and at the end emerges victorious.”

“The more I tried to understand why these stories are so successful at enriching the inner life of the child, the more I realized that these tales in a much deeper sense than any other reading material, start where the child really is in his psychological and emotional being. They speak about his severe inner pressures in a way that the child unconsciously understands, and – without belittling the most serious inner struggles which growing up entails – offer examples of both temporary and permanent solutions to pressing difficulties.”

Both of these passages speak, if indirectly, to the question of courage. Do these words not evoke the challenges for which children need courage: unexpected, unjust hardship, pressing difficulties? For children, everything is new. They don’t have decades of experience to compare their encounters with – many things are unexpected, many things affront their developing ideas of what is just. Many things are pressing difficulties for a child.
Bettelheim himself, an Austrian Jew, had some experience of unexpected and unjust hardship in the concentration camps of Dachau and Buchenwald. As an eminent child psychologist after World War II, he observed the sort of attention that children paid to fairy tales; in particular, he noted that children often ask for the same story again and again with real urgency while they are struggling with new concepts. He proposed that the stories help children understand the mystifying experience of life in symbolic terms.

Some experiences are too big to grapple with directly, and can only be approached by using stand-ins. Metaphors, in my opinion, are a great achievement of humanity and a really great tool for parents. Children need not go unarmed and unarmored into the world, not if they have stories as both sword and shield, and as flag of truce.




Never can say “Good-Bye”?

I remember feeling instantly protective of my son E. when he was born.  We were a symbiotic unit during those early days.  I was reticent to hand him over and he was reticent to be put down.  I will, however, be forever grateful for every time his father offered me a much-needed reprieve and walked those endless blocks in the middle of the night to help E. fall asleep. 

During the first three months of his life, like most other mother-infant (or primary caregiver-infant) pairs, we were tuning ourselves into each other’s verbal and non-verbal cues and especially our feelings.  Best known in attachment theory literature as attunement.  E.’s signals of distress, crying, grimacing, stiffening of his muscles, clenching his fists, or arching of his back, were often associated with tiredness, hunger, and especially with E., proximity-seeking.  By six or nine months an infant’s primary attachment(s) are well-established and secure—as was ours. 

During the course of our first three years together, we began the first of our most important courage challenges:  to learn how to say goodbye whilst ensuring psychoneurobiological homeostasis (which is fancy talk for “not melting down during every little separation!”)

As a new mom and trained child/family therapist, I was aware how adaptive E.’s startle response and protests against separation were for his survival.  As a student of psychology, I remembered that most child development research shows that it isn’t until seven to ten months that infants begin to show fear and stranger anxiety.  It takes that many months for this more complex defensive or inhibitive behavior to develop in the autonomic nervous system due to the maturational time-line of the brain’s cingulate cortex (the area of the brain which is primarily involved via the limbic system with emotion formation and processing, learning and memory). 

I was careful to listen to E.’s need for mama-time.  I also continually, gently, encouraged his time to bond, during those first seven months, in the arms of other loved ones—those aunties, uncles, siblings, grandparents, close friends, and eventual babysitters who would become the important secondary attachments in his life.  In those instances, I handed over E. with confidence and trust in his other caregivers whilst also paying close attention to his reactions.  We taught each other a great deal about interpersonal trust and emotional and social courage during those early days of building family connections. 

Though exhausted new parents, we continually held E., and walked, sang to, read to, fed on demand not always on schedule, and didn’t let him cry himself to sleep (though we tried a few times with heart-breaking results instead of the success and sleep other friends enjoyed).  We practiced the 7 Baby B’s of Bonding. We weren’t coddling or spoiling him, we were teaching him to feel safe in the world.  We were calming his nervous system so his neurons could wire and fire in the direction of survival and maintain or restore homeostatic and emotional balance—whatever the case may be.  

Despite what some of the baby books said about letting him ‘cry it out’, I paid close attention to what his cries conveyed to me and made sure he knew I was both sensitive and responsive to those specific cries.  In that sense, I was teaching him that his voice mattered, that he was safe, that I was his secure base, and with those assurances he could learn to separate and be well in another’s arms. 

We were privileged to be able to have this time with our infant son, and careful to live simply so that we could afford to support this critical period of his development.  We also got some good advice early:  it’s not stuff that your child needs, it’s YOU! 

We often said to one another, my husband and I, “These early years with our kids are not our money-saving years.”  We didn’t have fancy new strollers or cars, we sacrificed some career-advancing opportunities in favor of time at home with our kids, and our savings account dwindled.  But, it turns out we were wrong: they were our money-saving years!  The investment of time, patience, love, and attuned attention for our children turns out to be priceless in terms of ensuring their physical, cognitive, social, and emotional well-being.  The costs are astronomical when we don’t ensure our children’s well-being and thus their capacity for courage.

These days when economics require that most of us are dual-income families (my family included), taking the time to support a new caregiver’s relationship with your young child, pacing their introduction, tag-teaming with trust, is vital to the attachment process a child needs to transfer attention and then affection from parent to a new caregiver.  Here’s some helpful advice about introducing a new caregiver.

Little did I know then, that those first three years together lay the foundation for how my son and I now adapt and listen to one another, let go of one another, and relax trusting in our return to the safety and security available in our relationship.   Bigger separations were to come:  my return to work, starting preschool and then kindergarten.  

E’s separation protests were strong at times.  The first day of preschool, he screamed at the top of his lungs to make sure that his new teacher, all the other new parents and myself knew all about his separation anxiety, “If you leave me here, I’m going to be not okay and someone is going to have to call Dr. X (our family doctor)!”   It took everything I had to leave him.  Before I did, I leaned down to meet his eyes and hold his precious little hands in mine (removing them from around my neck), and said reassuringly “I know it is a big change to come here.  That’s why we’ve practiced a few times and now I know you are ready.  You need to know I would never leave you with anyone or in any place that I didn’t think was safe and good for you.”  Then, I walked away with tears in my eyes remembering how much courage it took me to leave my own mom on my first day of school.  I was filled with compassion for my son.  Somehow I knew, though, that I had to be the strong one in that moment and bid my good-bye.  I had to believe in him first, before he experienced the confidence boost that is associated with being brave enough to try something new, something scary, something that you have to do all on your own!


I now live with a confident, funny, loving thirteen year-old who has no trouble forming friendships, reaching out to his relatives, trying new things which require getting outside his comfort zone, completing his homework and guitar practice without being reminded, letting me know when he’s not feeling well or just needs some space, even changing schools and countries.   E. is not prone to fear or anxiety—instead he is the prototypical surfer dude who rides life’s waves with joy and ease.  This adolescent is the same infant who hardly ever wanted to be put down during the first nine months of his life, until he stood up one day in his ninth month and walked, then ran, across the living room collapsing into our laps.  And these days, without fail, every morning he leaves the house to catch the school bus, the last words I hear him confidently call out are “Bye, Mom!”  He waits for my response, “Bye, Love!” Then, he closes the front door and he’s off on his own journey. In that moment, I sigh with the subtle heart pangs of another good-bye, trusting in his strength and mustering the courage to love and let go. 

Here’s a quick review of what secure attachment looks like:
 
(Courtesy of Kendra Cherry, http://psychology.about.com/od/loveandattraction/ss/attachmentstyle.html)

You may also enjoy Katrina Kenison reading a poignant 8-mins. passage from her wonderful memoir The Gift of an Ordinary Day: A Mother’s Memoir about the many ways to bond with our children as they grow up, and the bittersweet courage it takes to love and let go:

Sources:

Haft, W. & Slade, A. (1989). Affect attunement and maternal Attachment: A pilot
study. Infant Mental Health Journal, 10, (3), 157-172. doi: 10.1002/1097-
0355(198923)10:3<157
Heima, C. &  Nemeroff, C. (2001). The role of childhood trauma in the neurobiology of mood and anxiety disorders: preclinical and clinical studies. Biological Psychiatry, 49, (12), 1023-1039.

Hofstad-Sethre, L., Stansbury, K., & Rice, M. (2002). Attunement of maternal and child
adrenocortical response to child challenge. Psychoneuroendocrinology, 27, (6),
Main, M. & Cassidy, J. (1988). Categories of response to reunion with the parent at age
6: predictable from infant attachment classifications and stable over a 1-month
period. Developmental Psychology, 24, 415-426.
        Schore, A. (2001). Effects of a secure attachment relationship on right brain development,
affect regulation, and infant mental health. Infant Mental Health Journal, 22, (1-

Warren, S., Huston, L., Egeland, B., & Sroufe, A. (1997). Child and adolescent anxiety

disorders and early attachment. Journal of the American Academy of Child &
Adolescent Psychiatry, 36, (5), 637-644. doi: 10.1097/00004583-199705000-
00014

Blindfold

The best and most beautiful things in the world cannot be seen or even touched – they must be felt with the heart. ~ Helen Keller

One of the stories I have shared with the Lovely K. is that I used to clean my room in the dark when I was a kid. When the mess had become intolerable (to my mother) I was compelled to take action. I would do it at night, with the lights out, feeling my way around my darkened room, picking things up and figuring out by touch and by my visual memory of the things scattered around the floor what they were, and then putting them away. Wondering what it might be like to experience the world without sight was part of the challenge; making a tedious chore interesting was the other part. When I was finished and turned the lights on, it always felt as if I had returned from a journey, and was seeing my world with new eyes.

“Trust walks” have become a popular team-building activity. Leading a person who is blindfolded requires courage, trust, and care in equal measure and from both sides. I had proposed on a day in February to K. that she lead me blind-folded around the neighborhood some time as a courage challenge, showing her that I was willing to put my safety in her hands. The only problem was that at that time  it had become extremely cold, and there was a lot of snow on the ground. So, in a blend of my childhood cleaning technique and blindfold trust walks, K. decided to spend the morning wearing a blindfold in the house – sometimes she needed me to lead her; other times she managed on her own. She was even able to start a load of laundry, since she had long since noticed that the “start” button on our washer has a different shape from all the others.
“Put your clarinet together,” I suggested. “There are lots of blind musicians. See what the experience of making music without eyesight is like.”
She did, feeling her way around the pieces of the instrument with her long fingers, lining everything up and installing the reed. “Okay, done.”
“So practice,” I urged. “Try practicing for ten minutes any of the music you already know without having to read the sheet music.”
K. felt her way to a chair with sunshine streaming onto it from a nearby window. “Warm,” she noticed, turning her face to the light. “Can you time me? Ten minutes?”

“Okay.”

After five minutes, she was sure the ten minutes were up. “It feels so long!” she moaned.
“Interesting how time can feel longer or shorter, depending on what else is happening, isn’t it?”
She didn’t answer. She was back to playing the clarinet in the sunshine.
Having even such a small experience of living without sight can increase our sensitivity; we become aware of different ways to experience the world.   Our project of raising a guide dog is an extension of that, and I hope will also increase K.’s compassion for people whose challenges are with them all the time.

Once the temperatures have really warmed up (it’s still cold here!) and the sidewalks are finally free of that ice, we’ll take this outside. We’ll test our trust in each other. It’s a courage challenge that can really open our eyes.

Right-Brain Workouts for Kids & Parents

So, what do you do if your child is no longer a babe in arms?  How do you continue to nourish his/her brain’s right hemisphere, not to mention your own, to promote emotional intelligence and overall well-being?  In Western culture, we tend to overvalue and over-emphasize left hemispheric learning.  Therefore, to keep nurturing right hemispheric health and the connection between you and your child, I have adapted Jill Bolte Taylor’s (2006) and Rick Hanson’s (2009) recommendations for right-brain health.  A brain in balance increases the likelihood for physical, emotional, social, and mental health.

Dr. Lisa’s Parenting Tip:
Right-Brain Workouts for Kids & Parents:

v     Be present.  Notice when your mind is elsewhere, bring it back to the present moment.  Easy ways to become more present: sit down and put your feet up for five minutes, look around at your surroundings, gaze into your child’s eyes as he/she is speaking, notice your breath breathing you—in and out, in and out, in and out.  Straighten your posture to wake your body up. Do a few gentle neck or shoulder rolls.  Imagine you have roots growing from the bottom of your feet grounding you in this moment.  Ask your child to imagine strong roots extending through their feet deep into the ground. Now try to lift him/her or ask someone to try and lift you…you might be very surprised by the power of your mind! 

v     Touch.  Offer your child a manicure or pedicure, or ask for one.  Hold your child’s hand on a walk.  Massage each other’s feet at bedtime while telling one another about your day.  Snuggle your child in your left nook.  Offer a kiss!  Touching the lips stimulates the parasympathetic branch, the calming side, of the autonomic nervous system. 

v     Look for Beauty.  Fill your home with art, music, flowers, aroma therapy…anything that your eyes, ears, mouths love to feast on that fills your hearts with joy.

v     Eat, Drink, and Be Merry. Good nutrition is the foundation for brain health.  Try not to skip meals and become over-hungry—a big trigger for mood meltdowns.  Make dinner together.  Cook to your favorite music.  Decorate the table as if it is a special occasion, even if it’s just Meatball Monday or Tofu Tuesday. Make spaghetti and eat it with your hands.  What we eat results in positive or negative feelings and thoughts—it’s up to you.  Under your paediatrician/physician’s guidance, take a good multivitamin (complete with B vitamins) and an Omega-3 Fatty acid supplement. 
v     Play.  Find games or activities that fill you up and that your kids love, too.  The goal is to have fun, laugh…not to raise the bar even higher and feel like you’re not a good enough parent because you don’t play enough.  Scrabble’s not your thing, try bananagrams.  Puzzles make your head hurt, try jumping on the trampoline or bed. Play Pat-a-Cake or make up your own secret family handshake.
v     Be Creative.  Finger paint, draw each other’s body outline, make cookies and handle the dough with your hands, play music, make a collage of pictures and words that represent your goals and visualize your family’s future, dance, do a few yoga moves, knit, sing, hum—you don’t need to be an “artist” to be creative and inspire your kids’ creativity!

v     Get all the information FIRST.  I often remind myself and my kids to “get all the information first, before freaking out.”  Inevitably, when we are able to do so, we slow down our emotional reactivity significantly enough to be able to respond much more proactively, calmly, and accurately to the situation at hand. Remember, it only takes as little as 90 seconds to change your biochemistry response to any situation.  So, count to 90 and get all the information before making a decision. 
v     Start with “YES”, then move to “NO”.  This suggestion relates to getting all the information.  When stressed, we are apt to shut down our kids’ requests with an abrupt “No!” Instead, respond, “Yes, I hear you.  I need to think about your question.  Please ask me again in 5 mins. when I can give you a thoughtful answer.”  OR “Yes, I hear that you want to visit X, let’s look at the calendar to decide when the best time would be.”

v     Call a friend.  Listen more talk less.  Ask for help.  Feel your feelings.  Be brave and share what makes you feel vulnerable.  
v     Love.  Notice something you love about yourself. Notice something that you love about your child today.  Something that makes you feel especially proud of or appreciative about in him/her.  Heart-to-heart communication strengthens emotional intelligence skills like empathy and compassion.
v     Smell.  Close your eyes and breathe in the sweetness of your child’s smell.  Spritz yourself or your house with your favorite non-synthetic scents like lavender or rose, lemongrass or jasmine. 
v     Take a Bath.  Lie in silence under the water with your ears suspended in sound deprivation.  Or, fill the tub with bubbles and make bubble sculptures.

v     Take a walk in the woods.  There is no better place to feel present, to tune-up your tired senses, or connect with your child, than in nature.
v     Send a prayer. Think of someone you love.  Picture them in your mind’s eye.  Send them this prayer:
May you be safe.
May you be healthy.
May you be happy.
May you live with ease.

Sources:
Bolte Taylor, J. (2006). My stroke of insightA brain scientist’s personal journey. New York: Penguin Group.
Hanson, R. (2009). Buddha’s brain: The practical neuroscience of happiness, love & wisdom. Oakland, CA: New Harbinger Publications, Inc.

I Can’t Do it. Yet.

What is more heart-rending than the child’s lament, “I can’t do it!”? If ever there is a time that requires our encouragement, it is when our child wants to give up. “I can’t do it!” often heralds the start of the downward self-hate spiral of “I’m not smart/fast/good enough!” that pierces the parental heart even deeper. We see a smart, fast, good child who sees nothing of that in the mirror. This is emotional courage at low low tide.
My daughter arrived in this country at age 8 from Ethiopia. In her first year or two here, she dwelled in an almost constant state of frustration, confusion, and self-doubt. Having to function every waking hour in a new language creates all kinds of neurological mayhem for children with “subtractive bilingualism.” This means that when kids lose their first language (it happens very fast when it isn’t spoken in the home or at school), while still acquiring the new one, the act of forming thoughts and ideas becomes maddeningly difficult, like stumbling around in a dark room, groping for a light switch.

Often the only solace I could give her in those “I can’t do it!” moments was the word, “yet.” “You can’t do it yet, honey. But eventually you will be able to. I know it because I believe in you. You just need more time.”
When the tears were over, I would then remind her of how many new things she had already learned, of how well she was keeping up with classmates who had lived all their lives in English. I reminded her of how she had tried and tried and tried to whistle and finally, one day, had whistled. I would remind her how short a time, really, she had been here (although with so many major life changes, it seemed like decades). “Yet,” is a word of hope, of the future, of promise. “Yet” tells us that things will be different, and better, if we just keep going and don’t give up.

Part of what causes frustration and self-defeating feelings is an expectation of how long it should take to do or learn whatever it is – swimming, or memorizing the six-times-table, or doing a push-up, or tying a knot with a bow in a shoelace. How long it should take is exactly how long it does take. Of course children compare themselves to each other, and since some kids are sprinters, the kids who are long-distance runners question themselves. They fear that because they haven’t learned it yet, they won’t learn it ever.
What I have shared with K. is that I was a sprinter, but that it wasn’t necessarily a blessing. I was quick at everything in school, but because most schoolwork required little effort, I did not learn how to study! When I finally reached academic material that didn’t come easily, I failed. I thought I could hippity-hoppity-hop blithely along, but to my dismay, I found that that technique didn’t always work. I hadn’t acquired any long-distance endurance. Working hard at something that didn’t click right away, and putting in all that effort over time, turned out to be a real challenge for me and caused a lot of grief.
The Tortoise and the Hare is the story that validates the long-distance runners. At any point in the story, the tortoise could have quit, saying, “I’ll never get to the end of this race! What’s the point?” At any point in the story the tortoise could have looked at the hippity-hoppity hare running circles around him and given up, saying, “I’m not fast enough.” But that tortoise’s mom or dad must have used the word “yet” quite often, because I think what the tortoise was saying to himself as he soldiered on hour after hour was, “The race isn’t over yet.”
For myself, the running has mostly been metaphorical. I’ve never been much of an athlete, but a few years ago I decided I would set a goal of running a half-marathon in Lake Placid., New York It felt very incongruous for me to be out on training runs, running two or three, then six or seven or eight miles. This isn’t me, I would think. I don’t run! I kept at it, however, since I had agreed to run for a cause: to raise money for leukemia research. At the time, my sister’s father-in-law was battling leukemia, and on the race day I wrote his name, Alex, on the back of my shirt. Evidently, many people thought Alex was my name; eleven miles into the half-marathon (in Lake Placid? The Adirondack Mountains?) I was barely running, and I wanted more than anything to just give up and walk the rest of the way, but I kept telling myself, ‘not yet.’ Runners were passing me on their second loop (it was a combined marathon/half-marathon course.) “Come on, Alex, you can do it,” they said as they passed me. “Keep going, Alex. Stay strong.” “Looking good, Alex! Almost there!” So I thought about the real Alex, who had a much bigger challenge than this, and I kept running, up the last hill toward the old Olympic stadium. That’s what encouragement feels like.

Building up endurance takes time, and it takes courage to keep going. Next time it will be longer before K. feels like quitting, but I’ll be behind her, saying, “Not yet! You’re almost there!”

5-Minute Courage Workout: Home Alone

Compiled and written by Lisa and Jennifer:

Independence doesn’t just happen overnight. Even if you don’t expect to leave your child home alone, or to be a latch-key kid, emergencies do happen and best-laid plans can go awry! So that you and your child are prepared and don’t feel like prisoners in your own home, you need to be able to leave and your child needs to be able to stay home alone when necessary. Your child needs to know what the ground rules are, how to stay safe and not burn down the house in your absence, and not to use his time alone downloading porn on your computer.

Here’s a 5-Minute Courage Workout by age range and your assessment of your child’s level of maturity. 

It needs to be said that there are only two states in the U.S. that have specific age-based “Home Alone” laws.  Other states have age recommendationsthey vary from eight to twelve years-old—but for the most part U.S. parents are asked to take responsibility in assessing their child’s level of maturity.  Canada, on the other hand, is more specific and has a law that reads: Children under 12 years of age cannot be left at home alone or care for younger children. (That said, please read our reader’s comment below for more information and weblinks to Canada’s guidelines.  It appears that there is some discrepancy between provinces with the home alone age range between 10-12 years of age, please read this link for more information).

We hope that no matter which country you live in, which borough, county or province, that you are aware of the laws or customary practice with regards to leaving children home alone. 

Grab Some Lion’s Whiskers Today!
  • Toddler: once your child is mobile and more confident to be left alone for a moment, play a 5-minute game of “Hide and Seek”. Hide yourself in an easily accessible place and call your child to come find you, delight in their ability to find you and the pleasure that comes from being reunited. Then, teach your child to find a safe place to hide nearby and allowing for a few moments of suspense by counting to 10, go find them in their hiding place.  Make sure they know to call out if they want to be found before you actually find them; it’s an exercise in using their voice to be heard, to be powerful, and to be safe.
  • Preschooler: keep playing “Hide and Seek”.  Now you can add flashlights, secret nooks and crannies in the house, and a favorite teddy to join in the fun and offer comfort whilst waiting in secret hiding places for Mommy or Daddy to find them. Pretend to be stumped yourself, call out for hints about whether you are “hot” or “cold”—closer or father—from finding them. They will be reassured and tickled to hear you on a loving quest to reunite yourself with them. See if they can stay hidden for the full 5 minutes?! Now that your child has lots of practice with this game, you can remind them when you are in another room preparing a meal, for example, and they want you to join them in play that having time to play quietly on our own can be special just like “Hide and Seek”.  Make sure they have some activity to while away the time when you are busy.  Try not using TV or a video to distract them during this time.  Let them know that you will call them or find them once you are done doing your chore or done having your own quiet time. Leave them with a timer (start with 5 mins. and work your way up to 15) to know how close the sand is to finishing it’s journey or how soon the bell will ring. 
  • Early elementary student: begin the conversation about “When you are old enough to be on your own at home….” Independence should be something to look forward to, something earned, and to be proud of.  Now is the time to start short periods of separation.  For example, while you go down to the lobby to get the mail from the mail box, when you go downstairs to put on a load of laundry, or when you go down the block to borrow a cup of sugar (do people still do this? We hope so!) This is the stage you begin teaching “home alone ground rules”.  These will be different for every family depending on the context of your home and the personality of your child.  That said, we highly recommend spending 5 minutes reviewing how you want your child to handle phone calls and use the caller ID, knocks on the door, TV or computer access,  dial 911.  Depending on your family circumstances, there may be some specific “What if” scenarios you will want to rehearse with your child (e.g. leaving with another relative and/or non-custodial parent who happens to stop by). Post a list of emergency contacts and discuss approved snacks and activities to occupy themselves with in your absence.
  • Upper elementary student or ‘tween: by this age, children are likely comfortable being left for longer periods on their own when you run a short errand in the neighborhood, can stay on their own with a friend or older sibling, or at least can leave you to do your work, finish a phone call, or soak in the bath.  Hopefully, they are also beginning to ask for more time on their own; and to talk excitedly about when they will be old enough to hang with a friend when you go grocery shopping, to be on their own when you drop their sibling off at rowing practice, and eventually to spend an evening on their own when you go out on a date!  The next time you know you will need to leave your child on their own, time them in advance what day/time/how long you will be gone, remind them several times as the date gets closer.  Ask them to spend 5 minutes making a list of what chores or homework they can do while you are out, what favorite snacks/meal they may want, and what they will do that’s fun/special once they’ve completed the things on their list (e.g. watching a movie, playing a game, reading a book, listening to an audio book, calling/texting a friend).
  • High schooler or teen:  we can safely assume that your teen now has plenty of practice with being alone, but make sure he/she has time to themselves in the house on their own.  There is nothing quite as relaxing, freedom-granting, confidence-building, or trust-boosting as being given the keys to the castle!  Be sure to take 5 minutes to review who is allowed over while you are out, agree on a time you or they may call to check in if you are out late or overnight, what they need to do before they leave to go out in your absence, and how to lock up. 
Learning how to feel comfortable in one’s own company (and not just if you’re an introvert) is an essential life skill.  One day, your child will open the door to his/her own first apartment or basement suite; he will now own the keys to his castle, and you want that to be a moment he feels proud and not a moment he wants to run back home.  For example, asking some children to even imagine being left home alone might require emotional courage and for others social courage if a bunch of their friends want to join him/her as guests in his/her castle.  Review the Six Types of Courage to figure out which types your child needs to complete this workout.

Want more workouts? Here’s our  5-Minute Courage Workout: A Fate Worse Than Death (on public speaking)  How about our 5-Minute Courage Workout: It’s a Dog Eat Dog World! (on how to be safe around dogs.)  Does your child have trouble taking responsibility for accidents?  Try the 5-Minute  Courage Workout: Saying I’m Sorry.  Our most popular workout that gets shared and tweeted is our 5-Minute Courage Workout: Navigating the Neighborhood (teaching your child how to learn to find his or her way around.)  Try the 5-Minute Courage Workout: Talking Dirty if getting a dirty is a problem (for you or your child!)