{"id":940,"date":"2010-07-11T13:27:21","date_gmt":"2010-07-11T17:27:21","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/parentingsimply.com\/?p=940"},"modified":"2012-09-19T12:40:28","modified_gmt":"2012-09-19T16:40:28","slug":"teaching-children-gratitude","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/parentingsimply.com\/teaching-children-gratitude\/","title":{"rendered":"Gratitude: The Key To Teaching Your Child Appreciation"},"content":{"rendered":"

Jeffrey \u00a0Froh a professer from Hofstra University ran a study on how to increase gratitude and unselfish behavior in junior high and high school students. He based this study on the work of Robert Emmons of the University of California. Emmons had college students write a gratitude journal everyday. Emmon’s study was a success. \u00a0Most college students reported an increase in happiness and overall gratefulness.<\/p>\n

When Froh repeated the study with teenagers he found that the results were less than satisfactory. \u00a0Teens did not seem improve in their ability to appreciate what they had and their happiness did not necessarily increase.<\/p>\n

Although frustrated with the results, the study did shed light on areas of child and teen development:<\/p>\n

Po Bronson in the article “Why Counting Blessings Is So Hard for Teenagers” comments,<\/p>\n

“Parents and teachers need to recognize that being grateful, and being a teenager, are often diametrically opposed. To be a teenager\u2014in the classic sense\u2014means expressing a fundamental desire to individuate from one\u2019s family. This is not unhealthy behavior; it\u2019s completely normal. They are soon to be independent adults, and they need to take themselves for test-drives. Pushing parents away, and wanting things to be none of your business, and exhibiting total ignorance of all you\u2019ve done for them, are all behaviors that conjure independence. Asking them to be grateful\u2014and wishing they\u2019d be more aware of how their success is due to you\u2014is difficult for them to feel at the same time as they\u2019re trying to get out from under your thumb. Thus grateful teenagers are rare, not the norm”.<\/p>\n

In his book, Nurture Shock, he further states:<\/p>\n

\u201cFor kids with a strong need for autonomy and independence, it might be demoralizing to recognize how much they are dependent upon grownups. They might already feel like adults are pulling all the strings in their lives-controlling what they eat, what they study, what they\u2019re allowed to wear, and who they hang out with. And they\u2019d rather feel self-reliant than beholden. Their sense of independence might be an illusion, but it\u2019s necessary illusion for the psychological balance and future growth into genuine independence. Their lack of gratitude might be the way they maintain the illusion that they are in control of their own lives. Froh is considering that his intervention led those children to realize just how much of their lives depended on someone else\u2019s whim or sacrifice. They didn\u2019t feel happy that people were always there doing things for them. Instead it made them feel powerless.\u201d<\/p>\n

There is still hope to teach your children how to be grateful. Michael C. Bradley, in his book, “Yes, Your Teen Is Crazy”, assures parents that your morals, values and ethics become an integral part of your child’s psychological makeup. If you have been imparting good values to your children they will stay with him for the rest of his life. \u00a0During adolescence, “(they) may have put them (your values) in cold storage……..but they’re there and they will reappear in time”.<\/p>\n

To teach our children the value of \u00a0gratefulness we want to be sure to role model grateful behavior:<\/p>\n