How to raise calm kids like the Japanese (without punishment)
VOLLSTÄNDIGE ABSCHRIFT
Picture this,
a crowded train in Tokyo.
A toddler starts to melt down
and the mother does nothing.
No yelling, no bribing with snacks, no
desperate whispers of "Stop it right
now."
She just waits.
Calmly.
Like she knows something the rest of the
world doesn't.
And here's the thing, she does. Because
Japanese children are consistently
ranked among the most well-behaved,
self-disciplined kids on the planet.
>> [music]
>> Not because they're punished into
obedience, but because of a parenting
philosophy so simple and so powerful
that once you hear it, you'll never see
your child's behavior the same way
again.
Stay with me because by the end of this
video, you'll have three tools that
Japanese parents have used for centuries
and you can start using them tonight.
Now, I know what you might be thinking.
Japanese culture is completely
different. This won't work for me.
And I get it, but here's what's
fascinating. The core principles behind
Japanese parenting aren't cultural
secrets. They're backed by decades of
developmental psychology.
Researchers at Harvard, Stanford, and
child development institutes around the
world have studied why Japanese children
regulate their emotions so well. And the
answer isn't strict rules. It isn't
fear. It isn't even discipline, at least
not in the way we think of it in the
West.
It all starts [music] with one word.
Shitsuke. In Japanese, this word is
written with two characters. One meaning
body and one meaning beauty.
Literally translated, to attach beauty
to the body.
Not punishment, [music] not control.
Beauty.
Shitsuke is the Japanese art of raising
a child who wants to behave. Not because
they're afraid of consequences, but
because good behavior has become part of
who they are.
Think about that for a second.
>> [music]
>> In Western parenting, we wait for the
bad behavior, then we react. We yell, we
take away the iPad, we send them to
their room. And for [music] a few
minutes, it works. But then, it happens
again
and again. [music]
That's because we're treating the
symptom, not the cause. Japanese parents
do the opposite. They prevent the fire
instead of constantly putting it out.
And the way they do that comes down to
one powerful question they ask
themselves every single time their child
acts out.
What skill is my child missing right
now?
Not how do I stop this behavior, but
what does my child not yet know how to
do?
Because here's the [music] truth.
Children don't misbehave to make your
life difficult. They misbehave because
they lack a skill.
Emotional regulation, patience,
communication.
These aren't things children are born
with. They have to be taught. And the
moment you shift from punishing behavior
you don't want to teaching the skill
that's missing,
everything changes.
Now, let's go back to that mother on the
train.
Why didn't she rush in to stop the
tantrum?
Because she was practicing something
called mimamoru.
Mimamoru means to watch over while
protecting.
It's the Japanese belief that children
grow stronger when adults resist the
urge to intervene at every single moment
of difficulty.
In the West, we're trained to fix things
fast. Child struggles, we step in. Child
cries, we solve it. Child fails, we
rescue. And we do it out of love. But
here's the unintended consequence. Every
time we rush in, we're sending our child
a silent message. You can't handle this
on your own.
Japanese parents do something radically
different. They step back and they
observe. Not coldly, not without care,
but with a deep trust that their child
has the capacity to work through hard
moments.
They let the child sit in the discomfort
just long enough to try.
And when the child manages it, even
partially, that experience becomes the
foundation of genuine confidence. Not
the confidence that comes from being
told "Good job" every 5 minutes. The
confidence that comes from actually
doing something hard.
Studies in developmental psychology call
this productive struggle and it's one of
the strongest predictors of emotional
resilience in children. So the next time
your child is frustrated, upset, or
struggling, before you jump in, pause,
watch, give them 10 seconds. You might
be surprised at what they're capable of.
Here's where Western assumptions about
Japanese parenting usually break down.
People often assume that because
Japanese children are so disciplined and
calm, their upbringing must be strict,
cold, rigid.
The opposite is true.
Japanese parenting is built on a concept
called amae, which loosely translates to
the feeling of being able to depend on
another person's love.
In the earliest years of life, Japanese
mothers are extraordinarily close to
their children.
Co-sleeping is common. Physical
closeness is constant. The child is
never made to feel alone in the world
and this isn't babying. This is the
foundation.
Because here's what neuroscience tells
us.
A child who feels deeply, securely
attached to their caregiver develops a
nervous system that is more capable of
self-regulation.
When a child knows, in their bones, that
love is not conditional, they don't need
to act out to get attention. They don't
need to test limits to feel secure.
The emotional closeness in early
childhood becomes the soil from which
self-discipline naturally grows.
And then, gradually, as the child
develops, independence is gently
encouraged. Responsibility is added
little by little.
Not because the parent has pulled away,
but because the child is ready.
It's a beautiful balance. Warmth first,
structure second. Not the other way
around.
Now, quick question before we get to the
last piece of this.
Have you ever noticed that Japanese
children clean their own classrooms?
Every single day. No janitors, no adults
telling them. They just do it.
That's not an accident and it's not
about cleanliness. It's about something
much deeper.
The third pillar of Japanese parenting
is this. Behavior becomes character
through repetition.
In Japan, children as young as four are
given small daily responsibilities.
Setting the table, packing their own
school bag, cleaning up after lunch.
Not because the parents need the help,
but because these small rituals,
repeated every single day, do something
extraordinary to the child's sense of
self.
They start to see themselves as capable
people, as responsible people, as people
who contribute.
And identity, once formed, drives
behavior far more powerfully than any
rule ever could.
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