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The Chirping Moms

Tell Me Something Kind You Did Today

August 10, 2021

Last school year I asked the same question each day on the drive home from school: What did you do today that was kind? It started for a few different reasons, but caught on and turned into more of an important conversation starter than I expected. In the days ahead, we’ll all start to send our kids back to school. If there’s one thing all of our schools could use (and really, the world in general!) it’s more kindness. I decided to share this daily ritual we have and why I hope to continue it for years to come.

Before I lose you, I want to be paint a clear picture of the scene in our car every day when we talked about kindness. I don’t want you to dismiss this because it seems like another post written by a calm, put together mom sharing words on how to make your children behave like her lovely calm children… I tend to dart from those articles too. I am not a calm mother that never yells. My kids are not calm and seem to misbehave far more than they behave. While I swore I’d never drive a minivan, I swore even harder that I would never have one of those “messy” minivans with “stuff” all over the floor. Well, I drive a minivan and it’s a disaster. When the girls would hop into it after school, they’d start tossing everything from school papers to lunch box leftovers. They’d usually start fighting over something and usually one or both of their little brothers is screaming/crying because I woke them from a nap to pick their sisters up from school. I am trying to paint a picture of our car… and my mental state at school pickup….

I’d ask the girls how their day was, usually in a “not so friendly” kind of annoyed tone. I’d get a “good” and not much other info. One day, on a whim, I said, “Tell me something kind you did today.” It changed the tone in the car. I asked again the next day, and then it stuck.

I didn’t remember to ask everyday. Sometimes we skipped it. Sometimes the girls came into the car beaming with excitement because they had something “kind” to share before I even asked. Those were the days I was really proud.

I’ve realized something during the first few years of my kids’ education: not all kids are going to get a perfect report card and not all kids are going to excel in sports, music, etc. Often the picture we want to paint for our kids’ future isn’t necessarily the path they are going to choose. So really, why not spend more time focusing on raising good people.

(School dresses || The Beaufort Bonnet Company) 

How did this daily question change our conversations? Here are 5 reasons I think asking “how were you kind today” is really important and very helpful for school age kids:

1. Made for a positive way to discuss the day

Like I mentioned, we were kind of in an “after school rut”. It felt like a car of grumpy babies, toddlers, kids and mom. This helped us make things feel a lot more happy and positive in the car. For me, as tired as I was, hearing my girls cheerfully tell me simple things like “I gave Sarah my glue stick when I saw hers ran out” made me feel more cheerful too.

2. Helped them comfortably bring up times when people were unkind

This is not why I initially started asking the question. The first time I heard “well let me tell you about who wasn’t kind today mom,” I replied with a “this is about GOOD things; tell me good things that happened”. Then I thought about it: if the question about kindness helps them identify times when people are unkind and helps them talk to me about it, perhaps it’s actually a good thing. It’s not easy to share when people are being unkind to you. It can feel embarrassing. It’s not something you feel proud of. I think kids “tattle” more when they are little but start to keep in these feelings as they grow. So if our daily kindness chat is a place they are comfortable telling me when they felt sad at school, we’ll go with it.

3. Helped me explain how sometimes what we think is the right thing can actually be the wrong thing

This was something I never thought would come from our kindness chats but sure made things more interesting! For example: “Mom I did something really kind today. I told Sarah that if she would JUST start believing in Jesus, then Santa would come to her house. Isn’t that great!” While her intentions were good, that’s not ok to say. It gave me a reason to explain (with a real life example) different religions and how people having different beliefs is ok and not something we try and change. Another example “I was kind today when I screamed at Sarah for being mean to Jane and told her no one is ever going to play with her because she’s mean.” Again, while sticking up for people is really kind, there’s a right and wrong way to do it: this is a great time to explain that.

4. Planned for a better “next day”

There were days that I got a very, very grumpy: “I did nothing kind today.” Which is ok. People aren’t awesome and kind every day. Sometimes we all have bad days. Our daily kindness chat helped me know when they had a “not so great” day as school and helped them prep for a better next day.

5. Raising Kind People

Knowing your kids’ grades and how they are doing academically is important, but I don’t think it needs to be the first thing you ask after school. While it’s tempting to ask “how much homework do you have” or “what did you get on the spelling test” focusing on kindness instead really made a difference for us. I want my kids to think that being a good person is going to make them successful over anything else. By asking them “how they were kind” before asking how well they performed academically, I hope this helps them understand how important I think being a nice person is.

As much as I hope people are kind to my kids, I hope they are kind to others. My kids seem to have very different personalities when it comes to school settings, so I feel that the kindness approach has to come from both a “how were you kind?” to a “how did you feel?”.

As a parent, it seems like there is a lot less kindness and a lot more terrible things in schools today. Perhaps it’s because we read more and hear more about it. I suppose when we were kids, no one was sharing articles on bullying and there were no cyber-bullies because, well, there was no cyber. But I remember school as a really happy place and that’s what I hope for my kids when I send them off to school everyday.

It was a simpler time when we were all growing up. I believe raising kind people is harder today because kids are exposed to a lot more a lot younger. I learned to send a text message in college and now a days I see elementary school kids sending them. When a kid decides to be un-kind or when a kid is in a situation where others are being un-kind to them, it’s harder to escape the situation. Kids can no longer just leave the playground and forget about it – they run the risk of being reminded of it all night long via text and social media. I think this makes it more important than ever to focus on the importance of kindness at school.

When the girls shared about kindness in their school days last year, there were a lot more unkind things happening in kindergarten and 1st grade than I would have expected but also a lot more really wonderful, really kind things going on too. They were able to identify those things and we were able to talk about how important they were – whether they were the ones being kind or people were being kind to them. We started talking about going back to school and what would be the same and what would be different (new classmates, same school, new teacher, same schedule, etc). My daughter going into 1st grade said, “and you’ll still ask us about what we did kind right.” That’s what made me sit down and write this. She remembered and it was important to her. I will ask them again this year and each school year after. I see harder conversations stemming from the question as they get older, but my hope as a parent is that it helps them want to continue to be kind and share those stories with me too.

As parents, let’s join together and help our kids leave school each day talking about kindness.

For more back to school, check out: Why I’ll Cry on the First Day of Kindergarten

 

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Filed Under: Back to School, From the Heart, Holiday, Moms, Parenting, School Age, Uncategorized Tagged With: kindness, Parenting, school

Comments

  1. Kristy / Seven Graces says

    August 15, 2017 at 9:48 pm

    I love the narrative that this one question opens. Such a great ritual that will stick with them forever. 🙂 Good job, mama!

    Reply

Trackbacks

  1. Sarah Tucker - - Sarah Tucker says:
    August 16, 2017 at 2:17 pm

    […] I love this — “tell me something kind you did today” […]

    Reply
  2. About Us: Meet Courtney - The Chirping Moms says:
    August 27, 2017 at 2:35 am

    […] along with our travel adventures on Instagram at @travelwewill.  A few of my favorite posts: Tell Me Something Kind You Did Today // Not Quite What I Expected // Watching My Daughters Grow Into Sisters // A Book Lover’s […]

    Reply

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