About Sean Platt

Sean Platt is author of Syllable Soup and Penny to a Million, plus co-founder of Children Write the Future. Follow him on Twitter (and make your life better with the right words!).

Ho-Ho-Ho And Happy Holly

Ho-ho-ho and happy holly
Kris Kringle’s jingle bells are jolly
Cards and cookies, candy canes
Twice checked lists and lots of names

Hanging stockings, flocking trees
The inside warms the outside freeze
Christmas music crisps the air
And lights the smiles everywhere

December days, they inch on by
Going slow while flying by
For children waiting till the Eve
Close their eyes as they believe

The morning comes with stockings FAT
Santa’s footprints on the mat
Carrots gone, milk is drained
The mantle has been candy-caned

Presents piled, giftwrap glowing
Mom and dad, their smiles knowing
Shredded paper; torn and tattered
Happy, gleeful, minds are scattered

Morning fades, like tide receding
Dinner’s coming, time is bleeding
Until the next year’s Christmas morn
More magic memories will be born

Her Biggest Emotion Was Relief

My daughter, Haley, is writing a book.

Her book, “Mia Maria and Two Times The Kindergarten” is a wonderful little project, though Haley is slightly devastated she missed her first deadline.

Yes, she’s only nine, and yes, I did give her a deadline.

We’ve been working on Mia since early this year, starting back in late April. Every Wednesday night we would sit in my office for an hour or two, starting with our outline and working through the chapters one by one.

The finished outline was 3,000 words and provided a thick skeleton for her full story. Haley diligently added pages over the last several months. I promised her that as soon as she finished the rough draft, we would work together to get it finalized and published by the end of the year.

Haley’s voice is especially strong, the book is semi-autobiographical, and we were working from a solid outline, so the plan seemed sound at the time.

But the months faded too fast, and the end of the school year seemed to arrive ahead of schedule, even though it was on the exact day the calendar had promised. We drove to California, stayed for five weeks, then hurried back to catch the tail end of summer and school at the end of August.

Mia was stalled at the end of chapter 11, where it remained a chapter from finished for approximately forever.

David and I have published a couple dozen titles this year, but had to schedule a publishing pause in December so we could streamline our catalog, tie a few loose ends, and write the second of Yesterday’s Gone before the start of the new year and our next 90 day quarter. Our final publishing date was November 30, so Haley’s deadline for the Mia draft was November 15, at the absolute latest.

I told Haley it was no big deal either way, yet as her deadline loomed I could see the stress starting to simmer. I hated it, and myself a little for giving my daughter the deadline the first place. Yes, deadlines are important and must be honored, but you don’t need them (or the canker sores) when you’re nine years old and working on your first book with daddy. When she missed the deadline, her biggest emotion was relief.

Haley is a lot like her father. She loves to work on 1,000,001 projects at once. Missing the deadline gave her a short reprieve to finish up a few things on her plate and hit the new deadline, which is December 20, for a publishing date of her birthday, January 14.

This last weekend, Haley finished her rough draft.

I’m so excited to be working on this project with my little girl. I’m blessed with many amazing co-writers, but this is the first one to share my gene pool.

I love Haley, I love this project, and I’ve never been more excited for my first baby’s birthday!

Not Doing My Best

I’m tired, I’m hungry, I didn’t rest
I’m grumpy, I’m grouchy, not doing my best
I wish I felt better, I should’ve heard what she said
When mom tried to feed me and send me to bed

I said I wasn’t hungry, and disagreed with my tummy
Even though the spaghetti smelled wonderfully yummy
I yelled, “I’m not tired!” though I woke before dawn
And all my insistence was deep in a yawn

It’s time to surrender, I can’t take anymore
My pillow is waiting for my face and a snore
Next time I’ll listen, my mommy was right
Right now I’m so tired – YAAAAAWWWWWN… good night…

Is Santa Real?

“Do you think she still believes?” I whispered.

“Hard to say,” Cindy scrunched her nose. “I’d like to think yes, but it’s probably wishful thinking. If so, we have one year left, max.”

That was last year.

This year, it feels like we’re on hanging to belief by our fingernails (and denial). Our daughter Haley is nine years old, a few weeks shy of 10. Much to our delight, she still believes in Santa Clause. Or at least she’s smart enough to not allow her remaining faith to fade to nothing so close to the morning of truth.

Yes, of course we know Santa is silly tradition. But it’s one of the most lovable traditions there is. I loved believing in Santa as a child, so did my sister. And I longed to share the magic with my own children. Cindy, who had a zombie apocalypse childhood compared to my relative Disneyland, longed to do the same.

Now the façade is crumbling.

Whether or not Haley still believes in Santa Claus neither of us can say for sure.

But we agree the writing is on the wall. There aren’t too many 10-year-olds who truly believe.

Cindy has spent 20 some odd years as an elementary school teacher, the majority as a 4th grade teacher – the same grade Haley’s in right now. She said 4th graders who really believed were about as common as snow in fall.

Whenever she asked her 4th graders questions like, “Was Santa good to you?” she was most often answered with a rolling eye or quiet smirk.

I don’t remember exactly when I lost my own belief in jolly ole’ Nick, but I think it was around 8. And while I can’t recall the when, I do remember what happened immediately before.

I’d just called bollocks on the Easter Bunny. And as soon as I knew the Easter Bunny was a sham, Santa and his eight tiny reindeer ho-ho-hoaxed right behind. Ethan lost a tooth last week, I watched Haley’s reaction like a hawk.

Haley has a beautifully analytical mind, and it’s difficult for me to believe she hasn’t toyed with the idea that Santa’s a sham. She sometimes sees the wires and seams which split the magic of a movie’s special effects. I find it impossible to believe she hasn’t tried to unravel the mystery of Santa. Once she started, how could she arrive at any other conclusion?

Probably the same way we all do.

How many times have you lied to yourself, focusing on the 5, 10, maybe 20% of you that truly believed something, completely ignoring the 80% that didn’t?

For me, more times than I admit.

While that isn’t always the healthiest thing to do, right now and for the remainder of this year, I’m glad that’s what my daughter is doing. And once the kitty’s out of the bag and purring, I hope she can keep a secret.

Writer Dad

When Parent-Teacher Conferences Work

You know who your children are.

It’s a rare parent-teacher conference that shines new light on your child’s character, at least if you spend a reasonable amount of time with them, and are mildly observant.

There are two types of parent-teacher conferences: honest and eggshells. Honest conferences leave you with tools to improve your role as your child’s first teacher, eggshells rob you of the opportunity.

I know who my children are, so do the teachers who are with them through the majority of their weekday daylight. I need those teachers to confirm what I know and illuminate what I don’t.

A conference should help parents nurture their children to become better learners. A teacher’s professional perspective – how they see your child interpreting their responsibilities as a student – will help you effectively navigate the best possible path to get them where you want them to go.

We work hard, so do our children. But all four of us would rather work smart than hard. A potent parent-teacher conference gives us an opportunity to work smarter together.

Haley and Ethan’s parent-teacher conferences were yesterday. Haley is in 4th grade and sees four different instructors throughout her school day. Cindy and I were able to meet with each of her teachers, plus Ethan’s.

Haley is a tornado of ideas with a bottomless well of creativity. She loves to be the boss, loathes to be wrong, at least publicly, and is nowhere near as confident with math as she is with art or language.

Ethan is an earnest, honest, and endlessly enthusiastic learner, eager to please and keep pace with his sister, but needs help understanding, no, believing, that slow and steady most often wins the race.

There’s wasn’t a single observation Cindy and I didn’t already know and wholeheartedly agree with. What made our conferences so wonderful was that all five teachers used direct language to praise our children for all we know they’re good at, and equally frank words to tell us what they could do better, then take the ball and keep charging, developing strategies we could all use to move forward together.

We know Haley needs help with her confidence in math, but to hear her math teacher say, “When Haley doesn’t want feel confident in a subject, she’ll try to avoid it entirely. WE can do better.

We agree, she can, and we’re thankful for a teacher who will say so. Haley’s teachers agree she’s a wonderful communicator, and that while they don’t want to dim her enthusiasm, we all need to collectively work toward her understanding that there is a time and a place for everything. Which we are.

We know Ethan has been racing through his reading, blazing through Harry Potter and The Prisoner of Azkaban in days rather than the weeks it took him to read Chamber of Secrets, simply because he’s trying to keep pace with his sister. And yeah, I’m sure he read every word, but that’s like saying you read every sign you passed, speeding by on your way to work. Ethan’s teacher told us he needs to slow down on his reading so he can get more out of it, same thing we’ve been saying since he started Book III.

I love honesty, more than most things. And despite my tendency to go on and on (and on), I greatly appreciate direct language.

I want to help my children be the best that they can be, and am thankful for teachers who make it possible.

Writer Dad

Happy Thanksgiving (What I’m Thankful For In 2011)

I love Thanksgiving. It’s a beautiful holiday, filled with time to sit, relax, break bread and reflect on all the last year has given.

I have wonderful memories of Thanksgiving as a child. The holiday always fell the week of my father’s birthday, making it one of his favorites. His unusually buoyant mood kept the rest of the house happy, despite my mother always over-buying on the Turkey (it’s mostly bones and carcass, you know!)

Thanksgiving meant a happy dad, a busy mom, and a constant stream of old Twilight Zone episodes, and of course, plenty of food. Though I never really cared too much for the typical Thanksgiving spread, shocking as that may be. Traditional turkey, potatoes, etc., are nothing compared to the way I’ve celebrated Thanksgiving for the last 14 years.

I love pasta so much that I don’t even care how much it makes me fat, which is why Cindy prepares a trio of my favorite pastas for Thanksgiving and Christmas each year.

This year I’m especially grateful for the year itself, and while I won’t waste your time listing everything I feel fortunate for right now, here are the 10 things I’m most thankful for this Thanksgiving

My immediate family. Cindy, Haley and Ethan do more for me between sunrise and sunset than I will ever be able to truly articulate. They are the reason I rise each morning, the fuel that keeps me running so fast, and the reason my eyes never stray from our future’s horizon. My family has given me endless faith and tireless support. It’s appropriate that the thing in this world which gives me the most purpose is also what I am most thankful for

My friends and family in California. Surprisingly, I don’t miss living in California nearly as much as I thought I would. And I don’t mind the weather in Ohio at all. Sure, the four seasons might lose their novelty in another few years, but right now I’m still awed by their beauty. This fall has been the most beautiful three months of nature I’ve ever seen, and watching summer fade then fall to winter has been amazing for my writer’s soul. Yes, I still miss great Mexican food, but the only thing I truly miss about California are my family and friends – mostly my mom, dad, and sister, Megan. I’m grateful for the tools that make it easy to stay in touch, and a little mad at myself for not doing a better job, but thankful I have the self-awareness to know I must do better in the coming year.

My truly amazing partners. I don’t have a single regret about building my business online. It is, no doubt, the single best thing I’ve ever done that didn’t involve having children or marrying Cindy. But the biggest benefit isn’t the unlimited freedom or bright future nesting at the edge of our horizon – it’s the amazing partners I’ve been lucky enough to meet and bond with: David Wright, my creative collaborator for the last three years, Lori Taylor, the woman who shifted my family’s life for the better and brought us here to Ohio, Tracy O’Connor, a remarkably hard-working mother of five with a passionate voice, and Danny Cooper, a brilliant young man with an impossibly bright future. I’m lucky enough to call these people my friends, but am immeasurably grateful they are also partners and collaborators who I get to build amazing things with.

Amazon. As a buyer, I love Amazon. As a writer, I love them even more. As a publisher, I don’t know what I would do without them. My entire business shifted over the last ten months, and after three long years I’m now doing almost exactly what I set out to do. Amazon has made that possible. David and I have published a couple dozen titles to Kindle this year, and have our publishing calendar for the first quarter of 2012 fully mapped. Being able to publish this quantity of content at this level of quality would be impossible without Amazon’s Create A Space, their Kindle and its installed user base, or their A-B-C easy to use publishing pages. No single online entity has made it more possible for me to build the publishing company I see in my head. Dave and I inch closer to those ideals each day, and have Amazon to thank for every one.

Courage. Not just mine, but Cindy’s. It took tremendous courage to do what we did these last three years. It was hard to take the risk, absorb the debt, and keep on marching no matter what. Courage doesn’t mean you’re not afraid, it means you keep walking no matter how much your knees may shake. I was afraid, but willing to walk because Cindy was always willing to walk beside me. Courage isn’t easy, but it’s essential if you expect to make your dreams come true. I am thankful for my courage, as well as my partners and Cindy, who have the courage to never stop believing in me.

Ohio. I love this state even more than I thought I would. I love the seasons – the deep greens in summer, the every color of the fall, and the thousand fingered trees that mark December’s slow death of the year. I love the quiet, calm, and manners. I love the schools and the long, winding drives. I love that people wave when I go running. I love the ice cream. I love that deer frolick in back of my house. I love that I feel like my children are safe when they’re playing outside, and not just because I’m telling myself so. It was risky to leave everything I’ve known for three and a half decades, and I really, truly hoped we’d be okay with the move. But we love Ohio, are happy we moved, and I couldn’t be more thankful that we did.

Ethan and Haley’s school. Probably the number one reason we moved to Ohio in the first place. It might seem silly to move 2,300 miles for a school, but our school was worth it. One look and we knew it wouldn’t be possible to get something comparable in California, not without moving to a different city and having immediate, and drastically different means. I love how much the school expects from Ethan and Haley, and love how eager they are to meet those expectations. Our children are growing up in the most wonderful ways, and a lot of that has to do with their school. I am grateful every morning on the drive to the bus stop, and every day when the bus drops them at our front door, where they run squealing up the drive and into the house, excited to tell us about their day.

My voice. I always knew I was a talker, but never had a clue it meant I could be a writer. Every day I’m grateful that Cindy never gave up, and did everything she could to hammer the truth into my head until I believed it almost as much as she did. Nearly 14 years later I’m proud of my voice, and grateful I can use it to make a living for my family, a living that could take us anywhere in the world. From making readers laugh to making them cry, finding and developing my voice has made me a stronger writer, sure, but it’s also made me a better person, husband and father. And I’m thankful for that every day.

An awesome future. Each month this year has been better than the one before, this last the best of all. From having the #1 free horror download on Kindle, to having several best-selling children’s poetry and online writing titles, to proving a fiction funnel that will allow me and Dave to build a remarkable publishing company in 2012, the future could’t look brighter. Sure, I’m going to have to work my face off next year, but I’m used to that. And I love it. But now I’m immeasurably grateful that the years of hard work have a light at the end of the tunnel and that that light is bright enough to illuminate the remainder of the way.

Readers. I can never forget the readers who make this life possible. It’s been a beautiful thing, getting e-mails when people finish my books, read something I wrote online, or saw me say something which touched them in some way. I write to leave a legacy for me and my family, and to make a good living, but I also write to touch the hearts and minds of readers like you. I couldn’t do what I do without YOU. Without readers, I am only yelling down an empty hallway. Thank YOU for reading, I’m grateful for YOU every day.

Thanksgiving is a beautiful holiday, a time to sit, break bread, and reflect on everything the year has given. The year has been good to me, I hope it has been good to you, too. Take one minute to acknowledge the one thing you’re most grateful for with a comment below.

The Land of Stinkmucky

In the land of Stinkmucky, where everything smells
From the food on the tables to the water in the wells
There lived a young man (maybe you’ve heard)
Who went by the name, Finnius McFilthy, The Third

Finnius smelled ripe, he was fetid and funky
His odor was rotten and seriously skunky
If you’re thinking EEEWWW! – that’s disgusting and vile
I would have to say you’re wrong, and by about a mile

Things in Stinkmucky ran backwards, you see
Let me explain and I’m sure you’ll agree
Their trash was delivered when it was garbage day
And when things grew too spotless, they gave them away

All their songs were about garbage and their books about trash
They even used diapers that were dirty for cash
The world of Stinkmucky was a world upside down
Because the people in Stinkmucky lived under our ground

The Stinkmucky subjects were pleasant and nice
Even with scalps always itchy from lice
They had faces and bodies all slathered in slime
And sixteen sickening species of grime

One of the foremost of all the Stinkmucky
Was our fine friend, Finnius, persevering and plucky
Mr. McFilthy was a Stinkmucky self-made
With a BIG booming business in the trash traffic trade

He owned the largest of the barges in Bilious Bay
And if you wanted fresh garbage, it was Finnius you’d pay
Yet after too much of his life filled with too much debris
Finnius wondered what else he could see

So he emptied his coffers and gave garbage for free
To every Stinkmucky, in a grand jubilee.
Finnius did what had not been done before
He wondered what lay beyond, there had to be more!

He then tried something else that was oddly unique
Scrubbed himself squeaky, and started to speak
“Stinkmuckies,” he said, in a voice that was clear
“I’ve decided to climb to the tall side of here.”

Finnius pointed high, then picked up his pack
And started to walk, Stinkmucky to back
He climbed and he climbed, and then on day seven
Finnius stumbled upon Stinkmucky Heaven

He found 37 mountains, all bulging with junk
Heaps upon mounds, over piles of gunk
His eyes could hardly believe what they’d found
These billions of treasures just lying around

Finnius wasn’t the type to be reckless or rash
But this garbage was certainly not any old stash
He found knolls under hills under mountains of cash
Just lying around in that unguarded trash

So Finnius sat down and he started to think
On top of a pile of impossible stink
McFilthy stayed rooted right there on his dune
Until the next day, some time around noon

The ground shuddered and shook with a rumbling sound
As big metal monsters clamored over the ground
The beasts bellowed and boomed and rumbled and roared
Each spitting trash through an open back door

Then the beasts rolled away with a deafening chatter
As though the trash on the ground did not even matter!
Well, reason said one thing and said it quite clear:
These monsters were trying to make trash disappear

That left only one answer which made any sense
I’ll explain it right now, so you’re not in suspense
If this heavenly world, so reeking and rotten
Was only a landfill, best soon forgotten

Then the land of Stinkmucky, that world just below
Was the world where they must want for all trash to go
And if garbage was something they didn’t care for a bit
And they built this big place just to get rid of it

That could only mean one thing – the thought made him collapse
The people of Stinkmucky had been living on scraps
This Nirvana of garbage could set Finnius for life
And even his great-great-great grandson’s young wife

But Finnius thought bigger – in terms of because
And he wanted to know why all of this was
Finnius marched to a monster (a large garbage truck)
And yelled to the driver, “Stop moving the muck!

I hope you have answers for these questions I’ve got
Like what is the deal here with all of this rot?”
“There’s so much putrescence penned up in one place
Don’t you enjoy it in your own living space?”

The garbage man sighed as he dropped from his truck
He was covered all over in yellowing yuck
“Why would anyone live near this horrible smell?
Whenever I’m here, I never feel well

I just do my job, I unload my load
Then I hurry back home before I explode.”
“What are your homes like?” Finnius flushed
“Well, mine’s really quite clean,” the garbage man blushed

“My wife keeps it tidy while I’m here in the muck
The last thing I want is a house full of yuck.”
“I am not understanding, so please let us be clear.
Why do these behemoths bring all the trash here?”

“It’s really quite simple,” he started to say.
“We come out on trash day and take it away
People have cans, plastic and strong
Which keep getting fuller as the week rolls along.”

Finnius stared with his eyes open wide
His confounded expression he did not try to hide
“So diapers, and bottles, and broken toy cars,
Boxes, apparel, and old VCR’s?”

“Yes it is true,” the man looked ashamed
“People throw out all of that stuff that you named
Plus all kinds of things, you would not believe
And I haul it all year, with a two week reprieve.”

Finnius could not believe what he’d heard
There must be mistakes in the garbage man’s word
How could any one culture be so distasteful
So impossibly, imprudently, lavishly wasteful?

Finnius stood straight, finger to sky
He could not allow this to simply pass by
He sucked in some air and he made his voice grand
“I demand to speak to the one in command!

I fear that your leader must be replaced
For allowing such a reprehensible waste.”
The garbage man shifted, looked anywhere but straight
“Now I’m not trying to avoid you or make you irate,

But hundreds of millions of people did this
In fact most of our world has been awfully remiss
The problem it stretches as far as we see
It involves just about everyone… including me.”

Finnius was stunned, shocked, and aghast
These people knew how to build problems to last
“Listen.” he said, “I beg you to hear
This is not a small problem which will just disappear.

You are digging yourselves an awfully big hole
If you do not get all this under control
I’m a Stinkmucky, and don’t care to shout
But this is not something we can do much about.

You produce far more garbage than we’ll ever need
We’re quite happy down there, not victims of greed –”
“I’ll stop you right there,” said the garbage man, grave
“I agree with all the advice that you gave

But I am only one man, what can I do?”
Finnius just stared. “It can all start with you.
Just think of this answer: we all do our share
Each of us worry and all of us care

Alone we stand stunted, and really quite small
Yet added together, we’re able and tall.
Just do your best, that’s the best you can do
Hopefully, your neighbor will do the same, too

I’m going back home now, to return to Stinkmucky
Where even though things are all slimy and yucky,
We are never wasteful and always are sparing
Treating our world with compassion and caring

I wish you all well, and I wish you all luck
Deciding what you should do with all your junk.
I imagine you’d consider it fairly unlucky
If your world started to look like our world of Stinkmucky.”

Get the Land of Stinkmucky on Kindle for just .99!

When Reality Becomes Too Much

Sometimes when I close my eyes
My head gets filled with lots of lies
Like dragons beating leathered wings
Magic rings and evil kings

Then I open pupils wide
Inviting in the world outside
And though to some that may be drab
I see it as our vision’s scab

As a sword slides in a sheath
All fantasy lies just beneath
That world we make inside our mind
Easy to make, easy to find

When reality becomes too much
With chores and bills and life and such
Just close your eyes and rock your head
And invent a brand new world instead

Buy Syllable Soup here for just $2.99

Syllable Soup is the #1 Children’s Humorous Poetry Book on Kindle!

How To Raise A Happy Child

The below article is for anyone involved in the life of a child.

Parents, guardians, grandparents; teachers, coaches. You.

Our children are our future, and it’s our responsibility to invest in the best possible tomorrow by giving them the tools they need to nurture the world we expect them to inherit.

This article will help you reflect on your current practices, habits and attitudes so you can massage them toward a better future for you and your family.

Children are eager to please and accepting of your influence. Your opportunity comes early and it isn’t a dress rehearsal. Each day is a new opportunity to build a stronger mind, heart, soul, and environment to practice being the best person possible.

Cindy’s decades of experience working with children across the entire spectrum of socioeconomic backgrounds, ethnicities, cultures and age groups. Her ability to connect with children from birth to adolescence has provided her with many adventures and countless anecdotes which illustrate the patterns and power of being positive.

We have worked side-by-side in a preschool they ran together, and hand-in-hand while raising our two children, Haley and Ethan. We are not perfect parents, but we do fall to sleep nearly every night knowing we gave our personal best. Some days we fall short, but we don’t waste time ruminating about what ifs that accomplish nothing.

Our children are normal. They work hard, consistently aim for their personal best, and handle school and social settings with compassion and responsibility. They stay true to the core values we have established in our household because that is all they know and it feels right to them.

Haley and Ethan understand the difference between right and wrong, and feel confident asking when they are unsure. They know they are not judged by the number of their achievements, but on the effort and joy that stems from an accomplishment. Our children never equate achievement with love. Our love is unconditional.

We hope you enjoy reading The 7 Secrets to Raising a Happy Child. Please share this post on Facebook, Twitter, email, or however you most like to share!

7 Secrets To Raising A Happy Child

Nature and nurture are in a never ending battle to claim your child’s disposition.

It’s true, the apple rarely tumbles too far from the tree. Yet, there are countless things you can do to safeguard the quickly fading springtime of your child’s youth, limit their exposure to the more damaging elements our world will surely see fit to introduce soon enough, and do the many small things that coalesce to help you raise a happy, healthy child.

As a parent, you’re in constant search of what’s best for your child. Yet sometimes, even with your best intentions, it’s all too easy to occasionally overlook the simplicities of life which slowly shape the nature of a happy child.

Establishing healthy boundaries, offering your child plenty of choices, allowing them to make mistakes beneath the benefit of a safety net, encouraging their always expanding autonomy, and being a good person your child can be proud of – these are the  hallmarks of a happy childhood.

These responsibilities will fall primarily on your shoulders, but in an ideal world they are further nurtured by family, teachers and mentors. But not every world is ideal. Your job is to tend to everything within your borders to the best of your ability.

Forms of happiness such as gratitude, appreciation, pride, optimism, satisfaction, competency, wonder and passion all naturally sprout from positive daily routines and family rituals. That natural happiness is amplified when parents serve as positive role models in their actions, words, and thoughts.

Best of all, that type of organic joy is the type that sticks, meaning as your child moves from toddler to adolescence and onward, their core contentment will remain strong. And that’s an emotional armor that will help them resist much of what the outside world might otherwise bleach away.

You might not be able to change the branches on your family tree, but you control the nutrients in your child’s soil, the sunlight in their sky, and ultimately, the smile that widens their face.

In addition to the obvious essentials such as making sure your child is consuming the right nutrients, staying hydrated, and getting the needed sleep and exercise required for a quickly growing body, here are seven “secrets” that can help you raise a happier child.

If You Want Your Child To Be Happy, Be Happy Yourself

Your child wants to feel important in your world, not like an afterthought or accessory.

Let them know you’re excited to see and be with them when they enter the room. Let them see a genuine light dance in your eyes when their gaze drifts into yours.

Acknowledge their presence with an honest smile and warmth in your greeting. Say their name out loud. Be affectionate and sincere. Children love to hear the sound of their name, but more than that, they long to feel validation from their loved ones.

Think about it from your adult perspective – how would you feel if the face of the person you loved most lit like a holiday parade whenever you entered the room?

Of course, you’re human. It isn’t natural to buzz about each second of every day, but you can probably show your child genuine enthusiasm more often than you do. Your child loves you MOST. Imagine the returns after a childhood invested with such affection.

Parenting is rarely easy, but with persistent protection, unceasing support, continuous guidance and a loving parenting style, the chances of fostering a healthy relationship with an authentically happy child can only grow greater.

Be optimistic, so your child can witness the positive power of hope first hand. Through daily words and actions you will gradually pass forward priceless principles of gratitude and forgiveness, while fostering a clear self-confidence and awareness of the world around them. The sort of understanding that can only be shaped through frequent action and positive reinforcement.

Every family is different, and you will have to navigate yours through the realities of your everyday life. In ours, we promote a playful approach to life that encourages curiosity and emotional intelligence.

We strive to have fun as parents and model a consistent desire to live, learn and grow. We are by no means right all the time, and are always willing to take full ownership when we’re wrong, which is something our children greatly appreciate.

We don’t take ourselves too seriously. Above all, we are excited by our children, who they are right now and who they are blossoming into. And we do everything we can to make sure they know it.

By being happy ourselves and appreciating the excitement and wonder of the world, it’s natural for our children to want to follow our lead. That’s KEY.

When your child wants to do something, everything else is easy.

If you’re not excited by life, chances are your child won’t be either. The human mind is malleable, especially when young, and passion for positive thinking is contagious. It’s unreasonable to believe you will find joy in every waking hour, but you can remain aware of your engagement with the world around you enough to make it easy for your children to see your natural delight.

Your child is a “work in progress.” You can move them closer to their ideal with your kind words, cheerful disposition and regular smiles.

Your child will be a part of your life forever. Require a higher standard from yourself. Stay strong, positive, consistent and vibrant. Lead by example and you will amplify your ability to model excitement for the littler version of you who is observing much of what you do.

Invest your time, energy and enthusiasm into the relationship you have with your child or children, and nurture natural states of empathy, compassion, along with a zest for life and the sort of steady disposition that can lead to a healthy balance for the whole family.

The Cure For Boredom Is Curiosity 

Teach your child that it’s okay to be bored.

The words I’m bored falling from your child’s mouth are probably a little like fingernails on a chalkboard; two words that can instantly make most parents cringe. Yet, boredom is often a facade. Your child is actually feeling frustrated, fueled by his or her inability to structure their time with independent activities.

Is your child “bored” because they’ve been asked to do something they don’t want to do? This happens often, and with most children, but that doesn’t make it okay. Life isn’t perfect and it’s unhealthy for your child to expect that they will love every task at hand.

Teach your child to endure those things in life they don’t necessarily want to do. Learning to leap life’s hurdles with a smile is a lesson best learned early.

If your child’s boredom is because they’re not being entertained, specifically by you, that’s an even larger problem, though it’s also easier to fix, so long as you’re willing to do a little work.

You’re not supposed to entertain your child every waking hour. This unreasonable yet pervasive instinct is often fueled by guilt from working parents who aren’t nearly as present as they would like to be, or stay-at-home moms and dads who feel like it’s their “job” to be the in-house entertainer, along with chauffeur, cook and maid.

This is impossible to sustain; a hamster wheel that keeps well-meaning parents running in needless circles. And because you don’t possess the time or energy required to engage with your child every moment, it becomes easy to allow that glowing blue babysitter in the living room to do the heavy lifting for you.

Unfortunately, this is one of the worst things you could possibly do.

We’re not in any way condemning television. We have our favorite shows, as do our children. But we strive for moderation. Become reliant on television, or any other form of autopilot attention, and you succeed in limiting your child’s best possible personal development.

Modern society is built around instants: instant food, instant entertainment, instant gratification. Television, technology and video games are all contributing factors, of course, but parents are ultimately responsible for the habits and lifestyles modeled for their children.

Children demand constant attention. And many parents indulge their whims, even if it means surrendering endless hours to mind-numbing, development-destroying television.

Boredom is a part of life, and much of the difference between creative entrepreneurs shaping the world and workers who remain trapped in rote activity is how each group responds to boredom.

Help your child not only deal with their boredom, but persevere beneath its sky of latent possibility.

Create a “go to” list of activities for those times when your child is circling tedium. When he or she knows how to beat boredom by themselves, without whining cries of, “I’m bored!” they will feel empowered, and that will promote the independence needed to breed genuine confidence and autonomy.

In our family we make up lists of personal activities for those times when we’re bored. The lists between our children are different, but each child has a personal list of interests that won’t disturb the other.

Refining this list as a family helps us avoid the omnipresent temptation of overprotecting our children, and encourages us to structure their free time with intelligent activities, inspiration and emotional support instead.

Our children’s innate ability to entertain themselves was nurtured early in their life. Cindy’s decades in the classroom helped us see the need early, but it’s a responsibility we placed in their hands as soon as they were old enough to wrap their fingers around the torch.

Children have vivid imaginations that flourish with nurturing. But it’s your job to lead them toward the go-to lists that will give them quality quiet to nurture their natural inventiveness. Without ample opportunity to coax their creativity, it will only whither on the vine.

Allow your child idle minutes to develop their creativity with hands-on activities that will stimulate their thought and imagination. Listen to their needs then encourage their growth by suggesting resources that will help them crack the nut on their own without pulling the lever for them.

You can also plan ahead and prevent further problems my making a family agenda for afternoons or weekends so your children have simple adventures to look forward to, along with moments of free time when they can choose from a personal suite of hobbies and activities that aren’t dependent on passive inactivity.

It is always amazing when we look at our children and find a few sheets of paper and an open box of crayons promoting more imagination and engagement than a week’s worth of battery operated fun.

Model simplicity and teach your children that life’s greatest joys were possible for thousands of years before their favorite shows or video games.That simple skill will serve them, and you, forever.

Media Is Chewing Gum For Your Child’s Mind

Limit your child’s media. Related, but not limited to number two.

Curbing your child’s exposure to media isn’t only a positive move to promote creativity, it’s also an excellent means to broaden their attention span and groom their ability to stay calm.

Your child will have plenty of exposure to media that’s beyond your control, and probably sooner than you’d like. During those scant years when you are still the designer of their decisions, you can ensure they’re learning to live free from the broadcast overexposure that becomes all too easy to rely on.

Yes, it is difficult, and seems to grow more so by the year. Yet we owe it to the next generation to choose the right road over the easy one. The older your children grow, the more they’ll want to see.

This is okay, wonderful even, as long as you don’t do it on autopilot.

Media provides children with an opportunity to see life from different angles. People learn through stories, which is one of the things that gives media its value. But rather than allowing your child to zone out to its hypnotic glow, you can teach him or her to become an active, critical viewer.

By asking questions about what your child sees and hears, you gain an opportunity to discuss the decisions the people or characters are making. A tremendous advantage of the digital age is the ability to pause what we’re watching. Don’t be afraid to season your media with intelligent “hows” and “whys.”

Why do you think the writer had the character say that?
Did you notice how the music changed when there was conflict?
What would you have done if you were in the same situation? Why?

Taking time to discuss what you’re watching will help you understand exactly what and how much your child is internalizing as well as how they’re seeing the world around them.

Context is key to understanding. Media offers role models, and positives and negative life lessons can be pulled from any developmentally appropriate programing.

Discovering the author’s message, or discovering why your child thinks a character is appealing, will give you keen insight into their mind. Conversation can help confirm whether or not your child understands character traits such as courage and dishonesty, or whether they’re mechanically watching without comprehension.

One of the more effective strategies we’ve implemented with our own children is encouraging them to choose their media in advance. That way they’re always watching with purpose rather than randomly flipping through channels.

Explain anything they don’t understand or that the programs or cartoons they are watching glossed over. If your child is curious, they will ask questions. If they can’t trust you for the answers, they will go elsewhere to get them.

Be careful with what you expose them to. Your child can’t “un-see” something once they’ve seen it. And keep in mind, just because something is animated, doesn’t mean it’s developmentally appropriate.

Check parent reviews rather than crossing your fingers and hoping there’s nothing too too salty for your junior audience. When we decide what to watch as a family we give our children ownership of their choice and an opportunity to use discretion within the boundaries of our established values.

Media can be a reliable source for helping your family balance ethical standards by using the situations presented to discuss character development and individual choice.

How children use media depends a lot on who they are and how much freedom you give them. Being fair and telling the truth are essential traits within a joyful family structure. Setting clear rules about media time, sharing the computer, video game systems and TV will all contribute to a healthy and balanced media life.

In our family, Monday-Thursday are mostly media free. We read, play games and work on our hobbies. Computers are used for e-learning, once homework is finished. Fridays are movie nights, complete with popcorn, movie treats, and a kick-off to another weekend of family fun when free play, video games with a time limit, and pre-recorded programs will be sprinkled through the next two days.

Our children are 7 and 9 and this structure works for now. It may not work for you. It wouldn’t have worked for us a few years back and we’re quite sure it won’t last too much longer. As our son and daughter grow we will evolve their viewing time and structure to meet developmental needs.

The key at any stage is the same: teach your child to use media as a tool that will help them see their world in new and creative ways, not as an invitation to pour an icy glaze over their development.

Media offers children access to an unlimited world of possibilities. Maintaining responsible habits which fuel curiosity, imagination and a love for learning requires parental support, guidance and positive modeling.

Eye Contact Is The Best Accessory

Simple eye contact is an easy yet powerful way to connect with your child.

Let your child know they are more important than work or household tasks by making and maintaining eye contact. It’s an easy way of acknowledging your child’s presence, validating their company, and modeling polite behavior.

Greeting your child with a smile and strong eye contact charges your relationship with confidence, while sending them a positive, energetic feeling. It shows your child you are interested in what he or she is saying, and contributes to a strong rapport that will serve you well when adolescence comes knocking.

Your child doesn’t just need you around, they need to feel your presence, too. Don’t just be there. Play with your child, interact with them, find out what’s most important to them by asking questions and listening to their answers.

Your child needs a part of you every day, with uninterrupted time when your mind isn’t wandering to your email or whatever you left scattered across your desk.

We juggle a lot, and sometimes our minds are so cluttered that setting a timer is what we need to stay on task with our children. But the payoff is always huge. Even though we leave them wanting more we also leave them with the promise that we’ll be taking another break and giving them our undivided attention soon.

Letting your child know they are important and that you can’t wait to connect with them later is like giving them an insulin shot of happy rather than a feeling of dismissal.

One of the best gifts you can ever give your child is to truly take the time to get to know them. Every day interaction will feed your understanding of who your child is as an individual. We constantly endeavor to connect beyond a shopping list of general observations, digging deeper to discover who they are through daily conversation.

At dinner each night we discuss the best and worst parts of each of our days. And we never accept the answer: “The whole day was great!” We expect details: good and bad, sweet and sour.

Few days are perfect. It’s the wrinkles that will help them iron life’s flaws. Give your child permission to vent, then hold their eyes while they spill their guts. This will give them the confidence to express themselves, a confidence that could buoy them throughout their life.

Being present with your child is a critical ingredient to who they will become through adolescence and beyond. If this isn’t a natural practice for you, make the adjustments as soon as you can. There are few things in life more important than consistently connecting with your children. The payoff in natural happiness and confidence is truly priceless.

Teach Your Child The Rules So They Can Learn To Make Exceptions

Let your child make a few rules.

Sometimes, all children want is to feel like they’re in charge for a few minutes. Allowing your child to participate in the rule making process will support moral growth, let them feel as though they have a voice, and foster mutual respect within your family structure.

Most of all, letting your child make some of the rules will increase their ownership in the household guidelines, along with their willingness to follow them.

Rules aren’t about compliance, they’re about self-discipline. Appropriate rules and routines will help your family get along, communicate better, and keep peace in the household. It’s important for children to learn expectations and limits, but it is also advantageous to involve them in the exercise.

Meaningful discussions will naturally occur as you create your personal family playbook, and those conversations will go a long way toward your child’s emotional growth, while giving them tools to more easily accept the consequences for breaking them.

Power struggles can stem from their loss of control. You can easily curb such scuffles  by allowing your child to be part of the engine, rather than something that’s simply flattened by it.

Every family’s rules are different. We focus on safety, daily routines, manners and the ways in which we treat one another. Our standards support our values, maturity levels and our family’s individual needs.

Not only has allowing our children to participate in the rule making process helped them be happier with the rules and more willing to follow them, it’s helped them to understand what rules are and why they’re needed.

When our children were younger, rules were simple. Now they are older, and though our rules have evolved, the ideas are the same: crystal clear boundaries, democratically decided, with household chores and responsibilities shared and respected.

Of course we must wade through the occasional conflict or respectfully battle over a rule or two. But that’s okay. Rules change as our children develop and our family evolves.

Our daughter is chasing 10 at the time of this writing, a creeping need for privacy has grown extremely important to her. By listening to her needs and making adjustments we helped the whole family understand and accept her need for change.

The ownership and empowerment your child feels when making rules will give them a clear sense of expectations and boundaries, as well as an honest voice in the midst of conflict. There are few better ways to promote autonomy and a sense of moral and psychological equality.

Teach Your Child And Teach Your Child’s Child

You are your child’s first teacher.

Children are natural learners. You have a remarkable gift as a parent, being the first to greet your child’s inquisitive nature. Your lessons are music to their ears, especially when they’re young. Yet, even as they get older and start to act as though they don’t care what you’re saying, and don’t want to hear it, they do and will. Just keep saying the same things. Repetition is one of a teacher’s best tools after all.

Never assume all their learning is happening outside the home. “Home schooling” is every parent’s job. Whether your child attends school, or receives all their education at home, it is critical to our collective future that parents fill in the blanks.

There are countless skills not taught in school which play a significant role in your child’s whole self. School is a sanctuary where children have the chance to practice what they learn at home.

Everything you do behind your four walls matters.

Reflect on literature you read together so you can help your child make sense of everything from current events to their personal world. Through stories and fluid communication you will have the chance to show your child how we are all intricately connected to other human beings.

Life long lessons such as empathy, compassion, patience and responsibility that happen at home will create a keen awareness in your child that will not only influence who they are, but who they will be, meaning today’s lessons will ripple into future generations. It is your responsibility to lay the foundations that promote moral and emotional growth.

Never forget your child is looking to you for cues to cope with their world. How you tolerate anxiety, anger, sadness, and frustration is as important as making sure he or she knows their math facts.

Children are not raised in tupperware, and when your child finally trades the nest for the real world, miles away from your vigilant eyes, they must have the earned intelligence to be the best they can be.

You Are What You Do

Model appropriate behavior.

This is the most important item on this list, by far. Parents play a major role in what and how their children think and behave. From the beginning, your child emulates and admires you.

Children do as they see, not as they’re told. If you want your child to be mindful of others, be mindful of others yourself. Your child never wants to see you as a hypocrite, and you never want them to see you that way.

Children understand what this word means well before you assign the vocabulary. Be aware of little “white lies,” your language, and how you handle conflict. Teach your child by example: how you tolerate obstacles and the inevitable disappointments of life.

If you can’t figure it out, how can you expect them to?

You are human and you will make mistakes. When parents take ownership, learn from their shortcomings and make better choices, it serves as a powerful example.

Your ability to maintain high standards and consistent moral beliefs will be tested, and your child will be watching closely when it is. By nurturing your own ability to reason and act appropriately, then modeling that behavior in the moment of truth, you will help your child develop their internal compass.

Model how you want your child to behave with intelligent conversations, knowing anecdotes, and appropriate media. Show them how to be real and balance life’s needs and desires against the right decisions.

Model behavior you’re proud of and you’ll be providing your child with tangible examples of a version of them they may one day become.

Conclusion

To genuinely understand and know your child is the greatest gift you could ever receive as a parent. All it takes is a little work.

Cultivate positive emotions, security, and confidence. Practice strong communication, stay active, exercise respect and tolerance, establish clear standards, and create a list of family activities that will help you develop, nurture and engage your interests as a family.

Raising a happy child is hard work, but it is something that can and must be done. Once you focus on the needs of your child and ensure you are doing all you can to meet them, your efforts will be rewarded. You will have a healthy and happy child, fortunate to have been raised in a family where childhood wasn’t permitted to simply fade away.

There is no one more influential to your child than you. Capitalize on this gift as long as you can. Your home is the best playground to practice being good people.

One more thing, and it’s really important.

If you have two parents in the household, you must remain united and speak as one, just like the voice of this book. We’ve written together like we parent, one voice blending into the other with the fluid rhythm of a chord change.

You will probably disagree with your partner. We do. But keep a united front until you can discuss it behind closed doors. Your unity will give your child confidence and a clearer path to follow.

We’re #1 on Amazon!

I am so, so excited I don’t even know where to start.

This has been the most amazing month of my creative and professional life.

I know I’m only supposed to talk about my children’s fiction and parenting work here, but I’ve been working furiously on a passion project for the last few months, and since we hit a big milestone last week, I really wanted to share.

We’ve been working on this since mid-summer, and it’s the most fun I’ve ever had as a “grown up writer,” by far.

You may remember my horror novel, Available Darkness, co-authored by David Wright. I love that book, and am eager to write the next two chapters in the trilogy with Dave, but it’s nothing like Yesterday’s Gone.

Yesterday’s Gone is more than a book, it’s serialized fiction written specifically for the Kindle and other e-readers; EPIC fiction in bite-sized, hundred page chunks, released each week.

We designed the serial from the television templates we both love so much: LOST, Dexter, 24, The Sopranos; shows you can’t stop watching, and can’t wait to gobble up the next time they come on.

I grew up on copious amounts of Stephen King. This project made me feel like I was writing a Stephen King serial. Yesterday’s Gone is definitely not for kids. As funny as some of the sequences are, overall it’s midnight black – post-apocalyptic fiction at its best.

After just one month’s worth of promotion, Yesterday’s Gone is now the #1 free horror download on all Amazon, and #32 for ALL free downloads.

WOW.

Last week we watched the pilot episode (which is FREE!) drop from the high 1,800‘s, all the way down to a high at #31 for all free downloads, and #1 for horror (though it’s not really horror at all).

I would love, love, LOVE it if you could help me keep this fire crackling. There are three ways to help.

Download the free version of Yesterday’s Gone.
Buy the full season of Yesterday’s Gone.
Share this post.

The very best thing you can do, by far, and what will make me smile from ear to ear and remember you forever, is to buy Season One, then leave an honest review on Amazon.

Reviews are hard to come by, yet they mean everything to a budding author. Without all the 5-Star reviews we’ve earned already, our growth would not have been nearly as explosive last week.

Amazon trusts “verified buyers,” more than regular reviews, so if you’re willing to leave a review, please spend the $4.99 to get the full season. It will be much more meaningful to both us and Amazon.

Here are four trailers to give you a good idea of exactly how awesome Yesterday’s Gone actually is.

(The one at the bottom – “What Would Boricio Do?” is probably my favorite!)

Thanks again! I truly appreciate your help!

Click here to buy Episode I
Click here to buy Season I

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