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Aug 24, 2009

Today, a local high school was shaken when a former student detonated a pipe bomb in the school. Thankfully, no injuries have been reported.  Friday night, another local student committed suicide on the train tracks, near where two others ended their lives weeks apart last spring, and where another suicide was narrowly averted.

These kind of tragedies seem to becoming more common all around the country.  It scares me as a parent, and saddens me as someone who feels everyday is good and we all have so much to look forward to.  As a society, we are failing miserably to protect and nourish our most precious assets:  our children.

We see fingers pointed in all directions.  There’s too much pressure on kids these days.  The family unit has broken down.  There’s less community support.  Parents are working too much to spend quality time with their children.  Mass media is bad influence, etc.     And I’m sure there are many other contributing factors.  But you know what?  The pressures and challenges on our children are only going to get worse.  The world is getting flatter, change is happening faster, and children are going to continue to be exposed to more challenges earlier and earlier.

So what are we going to do about it?  I believe a big part of the answer is something we don’t hear much talk about:  Make “emotional state management” a mandatory part of the K-12 curriculum.  Huh? Our schools are understaffed and overburdened, and I’m talking about some new mind control program? Here’s what I mean:

Have you ever noticed the diversity of responses to a situation?  To take an extreme example, imagine a bomb goes off.   One person’s response may be to want to hunt down and punish the person responsible.  Someone else may just sit and cry or want to hide from society.  Another person sees the fragility of life, and is thankful for their friends and family.  Yet another may organize a non-violent peaceful response to prevent future tragedies.   It doesn’t matter whether we’re talking about a bomb blast, a rainy day, a bad grade or a lost job  - individuals react differently to the same event -  yet some responses are far better for the individual and society than others. 

What determines the response?  State of mind – which is a result of our beliefs, values, focus, and physiology.  As the range of reactions shows, our response is not a reflection of the event, our response is a reflection of ourselves.  And while reptiles have no control over their response, higher minds like humans do.   Most people just don’t realize they have this power.  For the vast majority of us, someone needs to teach us.  I’m not talking about positive thinking or self-discipline –  I’m talking about understanding what makes us happy and learning the simple skills to empower ourselves.  Problem is, most of our parents didn’t exactly know how to make themselves happy or know how to weather storms with grace… and fewer still teach such skills to their children. 

So we spend our time in school learning history, math and theory, but no one teaches us how to stay positive, energized and fulfilled through life.  Thus, the smartest kid in class is seldom the most successful in life – and it’s often that popular kid who wasn’t so good in school who ends up seemingly having everything go their way in life.  After all, math and science can help you get a job, but if you’re not prepared to weather the inevitable rough patches in life, all that education doesn’t matter.

As you can garner from my little rant, this is one of my pet peeves. I’ve been privileged to have attended some of the “best” schools in the country, and I can tell you they did almost nothing to help me deal with adversity, be happy, and feel passionate about life.  I’m grateful for what they taught me, but they left a gaping hole in educating their students – which makes all the difference between success and failure.  In my 20s, I learned personal emotional management techniques through reading and attending seminars (Tony Robbins is the best teacher I ever had) which allowed me to overcome my fears of failure and start Care2. 

My point being, let’s teach our kids what’s most important.  Tough times are a guarantee.  So let’s arm our kids with the skills and knowhow to live happy, productive, fulfilling lives.   The tragedies we’ve seen here in recent days are preventable, but only if kids are taught how to channel their frustrations to produce good outcomes.  And in so doing, we’ll have created the most empowered and optimistic generation we’ve ever seen.


If anyone knows of any school systems that are teaching students how to manage their emotional state, I’d love to hear about them!

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Posted: Monday August 24, 2009, 5:39 pm
Tags: children students emotion education empower [add/edit tags]

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Linda S. (2)
Tuesday August 25, 2009, 7:17 am
Randy, we tried a similar program in the Special Ed department at the high school where I work. The kids got a weekly lesson on "transition skills." (Special Ed is required to form a plan for each student to make a transition from high school to post-high school life.) They liked some lessons and disliked others, and overall, I think they mostly ignored the practical, everyday application..

It's human nature to resist change, and the kids in our program did resist. They felt uncomfortable dealing with these subjects in class, where their friends and peers might judge them. Some wanted to fit in and hated examining ways in which they're unique. Others thought the lessons meant that their natural response was wrong, and therefore they must be wrong. Teenagers don't like to be told that they're wrong.

The actions you used as examples - bombing, suicide - were taken by people who do not feel their personal connection with their Divine Source. Obviously, no public school is going anywhere near that one. Even in private religiously affiliated schools, some students are going to hear dogma and tune it out, or the teaching may not mesh with their personal beliefs, and they reject it.

As much as I love kids and humanity, I think it's a mistake to believe that we need to "save" everyone, especially through any formal program. I notice that kids generally respond more powerfully to positive role models and their positive actions than to curricula and lectures. If so, maybe the answer is to change the criteria used in hiring school staff: Only positive thinkers need apply.

Anne Stephan (0)
Tuesday August 25, 2009, 1:18 pm
right on Randy! what can I do in my community to see if such program/curriculum would be available in my kids school??

Laurie Peterson (15)
Wednesday August 26, 2009, 1:20 pm
I was lucky enough attend a highschool that believed that education was more than academics. We were challenged in non traditional ways to push our limits physically, artistically, emotionally, and intellectually. I have to say that what worked best for us was being pushed physically - we did pretty extreme mountaineering which gave us a huge sense of accomplishment. Ice climb up a fourteener at the age of 15 and you'll be a pretty confident kid. I dont think most kids will be receptive to seminars, but I do think they can be taught the traits you suggest are important though out of classroom activities designed to make them realize they have the power to succeed.

Robert N. (0)
Wednesday August 26, 2009, 3:30 pm
Great point. I've been saying this for 15 years. Awesome article.

Kelly H. (0)
Thursday August 27, 2009, 11:45 am
Great piece. Speaks for me. I personally feel that the most important skills for my life were never taught to me, not at home, not in school, and now I have to teach myself. Thank goodness for the Internet, but if our society were preparing kids for REAL life, I wouldn't have to be spending this time learning things which should already be in my bag of life skills.

What about practical financial skills? Saving, budgeting, intelligent and ethical spending? Why is that not being taught to kids?

There are all kinds of intelligence, and our school system is not intelligent enough to realize that.

Road LessTraveled (3149)
Monday August 31, 2009, 11:20 am
While I was a teacher, I followed and taught kids the multiple intelligences method... In other words, there are many kinds of intelligence.

Mental IQ tests measure one of many kinds of intelligence. Schools with all of their grading usually focus on only ONE of at least a dozen kinds of intelligence. So if kids do not have this one, they feel like failures. EVERY child is intelligent, but often not in the IQ or school testing department.

Emotional intelligence is one of the more important intelligences out of the dozen or more that exist, but it is ignored and suppressed, as is our connection to our Inner Physician, natural health and all natural healing modalities... Why?

Profit motive has a lot to do with it. Schools are training grounds for companies, who control what students learn. Big Pharma for example funds medical schools, colleges and more, but then they get to set the agenda for what is taught... This embedded link and control is good for big business, especially monopolies, but disastrous for the sustainable health of a civilization.

Short term profits almost never line up with what is good longer term, for seven future generations.

We are stewards of what we were given for free, not owners that can rape, pillage, abuse, use up and destroy this world and everyone in it.

Until a sustainable viewpoint is incorporated into schools and colleges, we will have a harder road ahead. Until education includes sustainability in all forms and ways, thinking about and discussing what is good for seven future generations, some may profit short term, but future generations will pay a HUGE price, mostly not in a good way all due to a myopic focus on paper, that is worthless anyway.

Joy Griffith (27)
Sunday September 6, 2009, 9:08 am
C'mon Randy. I'm a positive person...always have been, but what the people need (especially children and kids growing and learning) is the TRUTH. The truth is that we, the people, have not used our right in YEARS (under the Constitution) to literally guide our representatives about our real needs. Hence, rampant, corporate capitalism! Sure, the people were enjoying capitalism for several years until it became nearly too late to realize that pharmaceutical, corporations, oil, insurances, etc. had and still have the power and the money. Our representatives were (and many still are) bought and controlled, the media is bought and controlled. Yes, now is the time for change!
I have been teaching for 36 years...32 of these years I taught in American schools overseas. By being overseas, I watched what was happening in America to education. It was easier to see and experience what was happening..."lower and lower".By being in different cultures, it most certainly was easy to compare what was happening to us in our American school system and our country.

Joy Griffith (27)
Monday September 7, 2009, 5:23 pm
p.s. There are several books already explaining about the "Dumbing Down of Education in America". Read about the truth about the "cause". The "real cause". Many of the discussions in comments here are good, very good, but one must realize the cause, before we can start to "change that cause".

Nona B. (16)
Wednesday September 30, 2009, 3:58 am
Randy, I understand your viewpoint. However, I do not believe "emotional management techniques" should be an extension of our public education system. The problem began when the institution of traditional marriage and church training eroded and eventually ended. My 'Baby-Boomer' generation was the last one to have full-time Moms to rear them, and if the Moms worked, they waited until we started school and they only worked during school hours. Our Fathers typically worked only M-F and the weekends were spent with church activities, visiting Grandparents and other relatives. We did not relocate for a 'career' because we remained in a 30 to 50-mile radius of our birthplace and family. We were not forced by employers to work on weekends because that was family time. Our churches instilled our moral compass and we typically did volunteer work at least two Saturdays per month. We knew our neighbors and they were part of our extended parenting, because they would tell our parents when we did something wrong. Folks were not told to butt-out, nor were they threatened, because they typically were our parents' former classmates. We knew our cousins as playmates instead of just another leaf on the family tree. Our lives were not perfect, but small town living often felt like the Andy Griffith Show 'Mayberry' TV series. Families flourished back then because our parents knew that 3-car garages and other unnecessary possessions were not the yardstick to measure our self-esteem and moral compass. When American jobs started going overseas, the core of the family unit became shattered. Our Fathers were forced to commute and our Mothers were forced to supplement his income. American society has bought into the lie that the "one with the most toys" wins in this time-frame which we call life. But, in their 'Golden Years', most folks yearn for the simple life of 'Mayberry' when Opie could walk to the local fishing hole with his Dad and be content with a plain cane pole while sitting on the bank, because the fish tasted the same even if the fellow in the boat had a fancy reel fishing pole. Most children are now growing up with a sense of entitlement because parents are trying to compensate for their absence of parenting due to their demanding careers, and the shattered family compass which I grew up with.

Nona B. (16)
Wednesday September 30, 2009, 4:38 am
I agree with Joy Griffith RE: "Dumbing Down of Education in America". Due to the "Leave No Child Behind" federal law and its requirements, public school teachers are no longer TEACHING our children and grandchildren! They are simply coaching the students to pass the federal exam! My grandchildren were fortunate that their parents were able to send them to private church schools where they are now being EDUCATED. As Joy stated, whenever Americans are overseas, they see the lack of true education in our public schools more clearly. Sadly, most High School graduates will only end up with dead-end jobs with no health insurance & no retirement benefits--- just like their peers who opted for a GED.

Nona B. (16)
Wednesday September 30, 2009, 4:43 am
RE: the comments by "Road Less Traveled", I have never disagreed with any of his wisdom. It is fitting that his Care2 ID shares the title of my favorite poem by Robert Frost.

Nona B. (16)
Wednesday September 30, 2009, 4:50 am
I just realized that my closing statement was not clear! RE: "Most children are now growing up with a sense of entitlement because parents are trying to compensate for their absence of parenting due to their demanding careers, and the shattered family compass which I grew up with." --- I meant, "...unlike the compass which I grew up with".

Randy Paynter (470)
Wednesday September 30, 2009, 9:00 am
Nona - thanks for your thoughts.

Personally, while I agree important emotional support was given, and to some degree taught, by families, churches, etc.. I actually think even most of our parents didn't really know how to manage their emotional states - they learned how to suppress emotional outbursts (often through unhealthy means that lead to increased stress, alcoholism, drugs, etc.) but they didn't really learn how to harness their emotions for positive outcome.

So, in general, we seem to agree there's a problem... but if you believe the schools aren't the solution, what is?? I don't see it happening via parents... ? I'm not saying schools are a perfect solution, but IMO, it's the best / most realistic opportunity we have.


Antony Merz (0)
Monday November 9, 2009, 8:56 am
A discussion about the current condition of the world in 2009 apparentlly never includes a topic which I think is fairly close to central in importance.
This is the human population problem, which continues its growth despite wordwide presence of wars. This appears to be "stabilizing" in its effect on net population growth, but a quick search of the bible and the popularity of wars in the near-east in the centuries before and after Christ shows that we have fewer but bigger wars. This indicates that humans are slow learners. The feature which is absent from any discussion of population in the 21st century is birth control. Europe's birth rate in the past century was about 2 children per family, but the "invasion" by north African residents into Italy and France has raised this average figure to 4.

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