by Julie Bogart, Brave Learning
There’s so much written about discipline and training, character development and education, we can sometimes forget the one ingredient that makes it all work: happiness.
I’m not talking about hedonistic vices either. I’m talking well-being, peace, joy, safety, freedom, contentment; that deep abiding sense of “home.”
We all crave that—adults and kids alike!
As the parents, we get to set that tone every day with the choices we make. Our kids don’t have many choices. They live in the state you picked, the neighborhood you chose, the house you bought or the apartment you rented. They are either in school or not based on your research and decisions. They eat the food you buy, they wear the clothes you provide, they play with the toys you permit.
So our kids are pretty much sidecar riders on our vision of what makes a good, satisfying life. And they know it! They feel it every time you remind them to brush their teeth or finish their scalloped potatoes or stop putting pennies in their noses.
Yet it sometimes feels to you and me that the kids run the show! They throw up thwarting behaviors at every age—pushing back the bedtime, wanting to stay on the computer for another ten minutes, asking for cookies right before dinner, losing their soccer cleats on the day of the big game.
It’s infuriating and tiring and demanding to constantly make judgments about what they can and can’t do. At some point, it appears that the easiest course is to simply set the system and enforce it. I remember a friend of mine said, “I don’t get why my kids won’t just go with the program! We’d all be so much happier if they would simply cooperate.”
I laughed. Apparently they wouldn’t be happier. That’s why they don’t go along! They have their own ideas of what makes them happy. We continue to imagine there’s a specific map that will ensure peace for us while providing structure for them that creates minimal chaos and maximum order.
Let me let you in on a little secret: There’s no clear path.
What is there instead? Minute by minute decisions based on principles that take the child fully into account each step of the way.
Parenting works the same way.
1. Enjoy your child’s quirky, insightful, unique voice.
Notice it, affirm it, cultivate it, mirror it. Share it with others and show it off. In other words, pay attention to the things your children say and fall in love with them every day that you can!
2. Pay attention to pain.
When someone says, “I hate this” or “I’m bored” it means…. “I hate this” and “I’m bored.” It doesn’t mean, “I’m lazy and pretending to be bored.” If your child were bleeding from a scraped knee and said, “I scraped my knee. It hurts,” the conclusion you would draw is that they scraped their knee and it hurts.
In relationships, it’s important to take people seriously. When they communicate pain, when they say they’re unhappy, they mean it. Solutions can be found once we allow our children the full opportunity to explore what’s stopping them from successfully enjoying whatever the experience is.
3. Discipline is not done to a person.
Discipline is cultivated by the individual and supported by external structure. It is governed by internal motivation. Flexible routines make it possible for structure and motivation to play nicely. Schedules rarely last. Punishment doesn’t lead to healthy, self-regulated discipline. Instead, punishment drives opposing impulses underground while fostering resentment. Instead, we want to support a child in finding value in the activity and then the right habit structure to support skill-building.
4. Affection matters.
These are freebies. Our kids are home with us. Hug them often. I had one mom confess to me that her son asked her to rub his shoulders before he started writing and she told him, “No, this is school. I can’t rub your shoulders. Get to work.” Ironically, one of the steps I recommend before freewriting is to rub your child’s shoulders before writing! We are their parents, not teachers working for the state. Your affection during the school hours is just as valuable as outside of them.
5. Create opportunities for fun.
Be willing to tolerate messes, chaos, changed plans, silliness, loud noises, taking too long, going too fast, moving too slowly, spending money, excessive talking, changing the use of an item for the purpose of fun, wasting food, wasting materials, breaking things, losing things, and failure.
So, let’s boil these principles down into five easily retained ideas about your kids:
- Enjoy them.
- Take them seriously.
- Create a flexible routine.
- Be affectionate.
- Have fun.
Remember, joy is the best teacher.
My book, The Brave Learner, shares more ideas for creating joy and effective education in your homeschool. Psst: even some charter schools use it to train their families and teachers!


