Another read from facebook ...
Raising a Kind Daughter | This post originally appeared on KariKampakis.com.
"When my daughter Ella was in fourth grade, she got in the car one day
after school and announced her plan to run for student council.
At
her school each class has a representative, and I was thrilled she
planned to put her name in the hat. Even if she didn't win, it would be a
good experience.
She told me almost every girl in her class was
running, as well as one or two boys. As kindly as possible, I mentioned
the boys might have an advantage since the girl votes could be split, as
that can happen in elections. I told Ella I was proud of her for
putting herself out there, and that she'd make a great representative if
elected.
The next day after school, Ella mentioned a dilemma she
and her friend Annie had "figured out." On Friday all candidates had to
give a speech. Since our family was going to the beach Friday, Ella
wouldn't be there to give hers.
"But Annie had a great idea," Ella
said, referencing one of her best friends, who was in Ella's class that
year. "She suggested that I do a video speech, and she'll play it for
everyone."
I was very touched by this suggestion from Annie. Why?
Because Annie was running against Ella for student council. Yet instead
of treating Ella like a competitor, she treated her like a friend.
Ella's
teacher agreed to the video speech, so we made it and sent it on. I
didn't think much more about the election until Friday afternoon around 3
p.m., when I was soaking up an ocean view of the Gulf Coast and
received an email from Ella's teacher. She had great news: Ella had won
the election! Her classmates had voted her onto student council.
Our
family hugged and congratulated Ella. I could tell by the shy smile on
her face what her peers' vote of confidence meant to her. About ten
minutes later, my cell phone rang. It was Annie's mom (one of my close
friends) calling us from her cell.
"We are so thrilled about
Ella!" she said, her voice joyful and triumphant. "It was the first
thing Annie told me when she got in the car! She's sooooo excited! We
couldn't be happier if it happened to her!"
The phone call didn't surprise me, because that was typical for this family. What caught me off-guard was the timing
of the call. These were 10-year-olds, after all, and 10-year-old
emotions can be fragile. Their automatic instinct isn't always happiness
for a friend who got something they wanted, too. Had the tables been
turned, I'm not sure the call would have happened so fast. We may have
had to work through a little disappointment -- if even for a minute --
before focusing on our friend.
But to Annie and her mom, a victory
for Annie's best friend was a victory for Annie. A win for one was a
win for both. If you ask me, that's the perfect illustration of true
friendship. It's how it should work at every level.
All four of my
girls have found friends similar to Annie. While no friendship is
perfect, I've been surprised by some of the kindness I've seen at young
ages. They know how to look out for a friend. They get it. And can I
tell you what their kind friends all have in common? Kind mothers. Time
and time again, I've become friends with the moms I meet through my
children's beloved friends because they're good souls. I don't think
it's a coincidence their children are, too.
We all want to raise
kind daughters. We want them to be good friends and have good friends.
While I give Annie full credit for supporting Ella -- she suggested the
video, after all, and was quick to celebrate her win -- I know she
didn't pull that mindset out of thin air. She picked it up from her
family because that's how they think.
A win for a friend is a win for both.
Kindness among young girls doesn't start on the playground or in the locker room -- it starts at home.
Most notably, it starts with kind mothers raising kind daughters. Our
girls see how we treat our friends. They also notice how we treat their friends.
If
we treat their friends as competitors, our daughters will, too. If we
love their friends like we love our own children, they're more likely to
see them as sisters and part of the family.
Keep in mind it
wasn't just Annie cheering when Ella won student council. It was Annie's
mom, too. She was just as enthusiastic. Can I tell you what that meant
to me? Can you imagine the trust that added to our relationship?
Quite honestly, I think it's rare for both a mother and daughter to instinctively rejoice as these two did. Then again, maybe it just proves the point.
We
moms rub off on our girls. Over time our way of thinking becomes their
way of thinking. If we want to raise kind daughters, we need to start by
being kind mothers."
No comments:
Post a Comment