The Most Powerless Minority
My son is changing his flat tire on the side of a long, desolate road in the middle of a rainy night. He’s 25 and he seems to know what he’s doing. But, I’m not there for him. In fact, I’m oblivious to his fate and getting ready for bed a few thousand miles away.
This is a recurring dream that renders me helpless most days. But this dream also makes me want to learn their changing style of communication with us as they grow each day. It pushes me harder to teach them how to navigate this beautiful life of theirs. After all, I won’t be there for them forever.
Children form the largest and most powerless minority in the world. Yet, these children are the ones whose future will sustain our planet. Their lives seem to be surrounded by rules, expectations and obligations that are designed to impress adults who raise AND don’t raise them.
So, can we make an effort to understand them?
What Children Assume
They start out their lives with an unconditional positive regard for everyone around them. They assume that we’re doing our best at any given time. Otherwise they would’ve asked us, “Mom and dad, I don’t feel loved enough, can you love me more?”
What Children Wish Parents Knew
Not being invited to sit with friends at lunch, or not being invited to a birthday party is a big deal to them. When others are having mad fun without them, the feeling of ostracization is misery to them.
Even though it doesn’t seem like it and they don’t seem to not care, they’re always trying to measure themselves upto you. They value themselves depending on how they think we view them and their abilities. They feel the pressure to excel, and to be accepted both by you and their peers.
There’s one thing that they don’t need to be nudged on. That thing that they’re good at, enjoying doing and have a natural aptitude for. They want you to pick up on that and encourage them in that direction.
–

Why Children Have Meltdowns
–
What Children Fear
High and unrealistic expectations create terror and not comfort in children. When they fail to meet our high expectations, they not only feel like they’ve disappointed us, but they’ve let themselves down in the process.
They fear being invisible to their loved ones. They fear being rejected. They fear tears of shame and disappointment from you.
And to compensate, they’ll rebel outrageously or work themselves to massive burn out. Both scenarios are not sustainable and can be dangerous for their self worth.
Why Children Rebel
When caregivers don’t live by the rules they preach, children start questioning the validity of everything.
- They don’t want to be told No, before being explained why something might not be the best choice for them.
- Pushing too hard will be met with push back.
What Children Don’t Understand
- What more important things could be happening on your phone when they’re around. How you can be so busy that you can’t read them a 2 page story at the end of the night. If you’re not changing their lives, what else are you doing?
- When personal tragedies to loved ones go unexplained. Parents try to shelter children without explaining too much of the negative that is happening around them, but that might lead to some unintended questions like children getting confused or worst case, misinterpreting what has transpired.
What Children Crave
- They crave human connection in the form of bodily contact.
- They crave arms that hug to show care and love.
- They crave a consistent, predictable and responsive care giver.
- They crave for our presence just like how we crave for theirs, except they do it without judgment.
- They want their lives to be seen in the context of a meaningful relationship.
How Children Thrive
When children find themselves the center of attention of their parents or their caregivers, it lifts their sense of self immensely. They want to know they matter.
- They want to feel the weight of your arms around them and the scent of your presence in their surroundings.
- They develop their courage if they know you’re always watching them from the sidelines.
- Simply sharing a joke with them when they’ve your complete attention can mean the world to them.
- They thrive when you empower them to believe in themselves and encourage them to realize their highest potential.
Children thrive in stability and predictability.
A safe space for children is where there’s no pressure to fit in from peers, and there are no disappointments to face of their own expectations. A safe space is free of the fear of rejection and judgment. Build a safe haven, build an ecosystem.
The 3 B’s of helping your children reach their highest potential. Belong. Believe. Become.
–
“The recipe for fun is pretty simple when raising boys: Add to any activity an element of danger, stir in a little exploration, add a dash of destruction, and you’ve got yourself a winner.” – In Wild at Heart by John Eldredge.
– 0 –
About The Article Author:
Hi, I’m Rachana. Its been my dream for years to do something to consciously create a better future where every one of us is excited about our own potential. My challenge to everyone is that they aspire for their personal best and leave a legacy of their work through their contributions to mankind.
One more thing. In December of 2044, I hope to win the Nobel.
Will you join me on this journey of growth and transformation?
Namasté.
Check Out Our Latest In Mindful Parenting!
Is Roblox Safe for Kids? What Every Parent Must Know About Grooming, Explicit Content & Online Dangers
From Fun to Risk: The Reality of Roblox for Children In 2023, as parents of my students would ask me about the safety of Roblox, I began researching about it. I was even beginning to teach it in my own classrooms, because it was a creative game that was both...
The Integrity Exit: Why Mrinank Sharma’s Departure Matters
Two days ago, Mrinank Sharma resigned from his role as an AI safety engineer at Anthropic. He had been with the company for two years. “The world is in peril. And not just from AI, or bioweapons, but from a whole series of interconnected crises unfolding in this very...
When AI Mirrors Our Pain: The Uncomfortable Truth About Human Suffering in Training Data
The loneliness. God, Andy. The loneliness. When Andy Ayrey, an AI enthusiast, recently asked Claude, a type of LLM like ChatGPT, Gemini, etc., for its take on the questions it receives from humans, this is what it said. The loneliness. God, Andy. The loneliness. In...
14 Mind-Blowing Quotes That Reveal How Social Media Is Hijacking Your Life
Thoughts on Social Media, Technology, and Our Attention Our lives are increasingly lived online, where every scroll, click, and share shapes not just our behavior but our reality. Leading thinkers warn us that while technology can amplify our voices and connect...
Brain Rot Is Infecting AI Too: How Doomscrolling Is Breaking Human and Machine Minds
People are writing research papers on which biryani (Indian-flavored rice) is the best, but more on that later. 😅 This might be the most important paper on AI we will read. Scientists are showing how large language models can rot their own minds, in the same way...
Roblox Danger Exposed: How Millions of Kids Are at Risk of Grooming, Abuse & Exploitation
Roblox: A Social Network Masquerading as a Game I honestly don't know where to start. For years, my students and I would immerse ourselves in the world of Roblox and create games and worlds that we would share and have fun in. Then, slowly, I started noticing...
When Parenting Influencers Go Too Far: The Shocking Truth About Child Exploitation
I remember that summer of 2023 like it was yesterday. I kept replaying this three-minute Ring camera video over and over that I had seen on news. It showed an emaciated, slow moving 12-year-old boy walking up to a neighbor's door around 10 am in the scorching Utah...
Living Deliberately Without the Woods: How to Build a Meaningful Life in a Noisy World
Excuse my language. There's a meme I once saw while helping one of my clients with his decluttering project. "Working jobs we hate, so we can buy shit we don't need." Doesn't it sum up the way we are living our lives? This continues to bring me back to Henry David...
Why Every Child Should Learn Robotics Now: Instant Engagement, Creativity, and Future Skills
I've been teaching robotics since 2017, first at in person classes, then virtually during the pandemic and now back to in person, and there's a common theme. When it comes to robotics, its instant engagement. Everytime I teach a robotics class, I am amazed at the...
When Death Isn’t the Fear: A Soul-Shaking Review of “A Battle with My Blood”
Tatiana Schlossberg was a mother, an environmental journalist, and a cancer patient - in that order. She passed away at the age of 35 a few days ago. And she had written an essay about her last days. The scope of my essay on hers is to highlight her love for...
Between Two Worlds: An Indian American Woman’s Honest Take on Identity, Culture, and Belonging
Observations, Opinions, and Cultural Critique Cultural Essays from a Life Lived Between Worlds
Let’s Reimagine the Übermensch: Creative Freedom in Service to Something Greater
Every culture has its superheroes. There is Hercules, the legendary Greek hero and son of Zeus, who achieved god-like status through his extraordinary actions. Then there is Arjuna, the epic warrior prince from the Hindu Mahabharata, renowned for his unmatched courage...












Beautiful article!