2 03, 2015

4 Rituals to Create a “Green Family”

By | March 2nd, 2015|Categories: Environment, Parenting|Tags: , , , , , , , , , , |0 Comments

One of the best ways to communicate any message to your children is through regular rituals that are woven into the fabric of your family’s lives. The consistency of intention and action help ingrain the messages you want your children to get most. The use of rituals is very effective in teaching your children about [...]

10 02, 2015

6 Catchphrases to Connect Your Children to Nature

By | February 10th, 2015|Categories: Parenting|Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , |0 Comments

In my last post exploring children’s relationship with nature, I described 8 ways that parents can nurture their children’s love of nature. Because words send powerful messages to children, you can further help your children connect to nature by associated their wonderful experiences in nature with meaningful catchphrases related to nature. Our catchphrase for sending [...]

12 01, 2015

8 Ways to Nurture Your Children’s Love of Nature

By | January 12th, 2015|Categories: Parenting|Tags: , , , , , , , , |4 Comments

Children love the Earth. They really do hug trees. Kids care in the purest and sweetest way for birds, flowers, plants, and animals. To see children smell a flower, marvel at a bee buzzing around them, and jump with joy at seeing a deer are just a few of the ways that children express their [...]

27 01, 2014

5 Lessons about Youth Sports from an Athletic Prodigy

By | January 27th, 2014|Categories: Sports|Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , |0 Comments

Mikaela Shiffrin is, at only 18 years old, the top slalom ski racer in the world, the Olympic gold medalist in slalom in Sochi, and a veritable fount of lessons that athletes, coaches, and parents can learn from to help athletes achieve their competitive goals. After reading a profile of Mikaela in The New York Times recently (be sure to watch the videos in the article), I felt five more lessons crying out to be told. With all due respect to Dan Coyle (author of The Talent Code) and other recent authors, “10 years 10,000 hours” isn’t enough to achieve athletic greatness (BTW, here’s a great rebuttal to that argument). It is abundantly clear that much of what makes Mikaela exceptional can’t be taught. Early videos of her demonstrate a feel for the snow and a sense of balance that just isn’t trainable. I’m going to argue that Mikaela is just wired differently than us mere mortals. Of course, that inborn hard wiring wouldn’t have been enough to take her to the top of her sport without the drive that enabled her to put in the long hours of training to master the physical, technical, tactical, and mental aspects of ski racing.