Gratitude When Others Are “Winning”…and We Aren’t
As adults, we know how bad it can feel when it seems like everyone else is winning or thriving, and we just…arenโt. This is hard for our kids, too. They might see other kids get awards and recognition, when they donโt; they might try hard at a sport but still not be very good; or they might have a general feeling that things just seem to go better or easier for other people. Weโve probably all experienced times like this, and we know how discouraging it can feel.
So, parents, how do we help our kids through this, and how can we possibly find gratitude through it? As I wrote in another post, I think it is so important for us to help our kids find what their natural talents are. They can get easily discouraged if they keep trying things that just arenโt in their skill set. If they still enjoy and want to keep participating in that thing, thatโs a different story. But they need to know that itโs okay to move on to something else if they arenโt doing very well in it.
As for gratitude during these times of discouragement or frustration, I think we can help our kids with some of these reminders:
1. โPeople are good at different things. Letโs name some of the things that youโre good at.โ
2. โIsnโt it great that we have opportunities to try different things until we find something we really enjoy? Is there something else youโd like to try?โ
3. โEven though this has been difficult, I bet we can name a few good things that have come from it. What have you learned, seen, or experienced that has been good?โ
4. โDid you give it your best? Then you can be very proud of that!โ
We donโt have to pretend that everything is fine for our kids when it actually isnโt, but we CAN help them look for the good and still find gratitude in their circumstances. And itโs a discipline they can carry with them into adulthood. (Hopefully, weโve done the same.)