Resilience has become a bit of a buzz word around the world of parenting in recent years, but its importance shouldn’t be underestimated as it is a skill essential for living a successful life as a child and as an adult.
According to Parenting Ideas founder and resilience expert, Michael Grose, “resilience refers to children’s ability to cope and bounce back from hardships, frustration and difficulties that they face on a regular basis.”
Michael says that building resilience within a child is definitely a “group based thing” that “is not just about the individual child but it is about building it within families.” He said that a “resilient kid = a resilient family”.
Naturally a child will look to their parents, the way a parent models behaviour, so the way adults in their life overcome obstacles or problems and how they face adversity play a part in how children learn to do these things themselves.
“The seemingly small disappointments that kids experience – not being invited to a party, missing being picked in a sports team, not achieving success in a school project the first time – help them learn to cope with hardship and frustration. Coping with minor development issues such as change, sibling conflict and even failure, build up a psychological hardiness that will help them when they face some of life’s big challenges in adolescence and beyond,” Michael said.
He says there are three key ways parents can help teach the skill of resilience within their children: