Every parent wants their child to live a fulfilling and accomplished life. But unlike a Christmas present, this isn’t something we can gift them; they have to create it for themselves. So how do we help our children believe in themselves and pursue something they want to accomplish? It all begins with goal-setting.
Inside each child is a passion waiting to be discovered and supported. If your child seems unmotivated, it could be because your goals for her are supercedeing their own. If a child is being pushed to play soccer, for instance, but her heart is more into art, it’s unlikely that child will seem motivated. I am stealing this for instance from my very own life.
My child showed no interest in sports. I wanted her to stay active and play baseball, soccer or volleyball. I offered to sign her up for dance lessons, gymnastics even. Tennis anyone? Though I championed the sports I thought might give her a shot at free college tuition (truth be told), she wasn’t interested in any of them. While most kids might acquiesce at that young age, her strong-willed nature showed no bending or compromise. She whined through soccer practice. She whined after practice. She whined enough to exhaust me from signing her up again, not just from soccer, but from anything she didn’t show interest in.
Then I asked her to create goals of her own and it opened up a window into her soul. In so doing, I discovered what she truly loved: art. She even came up with her own goals on how to become a better artist: complete at least one drawing or painting a day, take up art lessons, stop asking her older sister to draw for her, stop comparing her drawings with her older sister’s drawings, say only positive things about her drawings and never say, ‘I can’t do it.’
The problem with kids and goals is that parents often get in the way of them, admittedly. While I would much rather spend money on sports than art lessons, I have decided that for a 7-year-old, the most important thing I could teach her is how to set goals for herself, pursue her venture through failures and success, and achieve the goals she set out for herself.
I used to complain she never showed any interest in anything besides playing with her toys. But that wasn’t true. She loved to draw. I just never took her hobby seriously. When I asked her what kind of class she would like to enroll in after school, she said art class. I chose not to listen.
But if there’s one costly lesson parents can sidestep, it’s that motivation can’t be manufactured. Maybe you can dangle carrots in front of your child long enough to get them into college, though one college interviewer from a top ten U.S. university once told me she weeds out applicants who obviously only did things their parents told them to. The reality, however, is that you can’t dangle carrots forever.
The people who find the most satisfaction and success in life are those who discover their own goals, build the confidence and grit to pursue their goals and see them through. As parents we can play a huge role in helping our kids take the first step towards creating a fulfilling and accomplished life: we can ask them what they want to achieve. And we can listen and support them.
Goals are the precursor to every achievement or accomplishment. And the reason goals are so important in a young child’s life is because it helps her identify what she wants. She then learns to be decisive and channel her energy. Furthermore, rather than letting her day pass by unremarkably, goals help a child measure progress towards the things she cares most about. In short, goals keep you motivated and accountable.