『Raising Kind Kids: The Science Behind Empathy』のカバーアート

Raising Kind Kids: The Science Behind Empathy

Raising Kind Kids: The Science Behind Empathy

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今ならプレミアムプランが3カ月 月額99円

2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

Have you ever worried that your child doesn’t seem empathetic?

Maybe they ignore tears.

Maybe they laugh at the wrong moment.

Maybe they only apologize when prompted.

Before you panic, take a breath.

Empathy is not a character trait you install. It is a skill that develops in relationship. And in this episode of Raise Strong, we unpack what that really means for you at home.

You’ll learn why empathy grows through experience, not lectures—and how your nervous system shapes your child’s compassion more than any moral lesson ever could.

In This Episode, You’ll Learn:
  1. Why forced apologies often create performance instead of real empathy
  2. How mirror neurons shape emotional learning
  3. Why shame shuts down empathy in the brain
  4. The developmental stages of perspective-taking
  5. A simple 4-step framework to build empathy naturally
  6. Five common empathy blockers that show up at home
  7. A weekly practice to help empathy grow without pressure

Why Empathy Isn’t Built Through Lectures

When we say, “Be nice,” or “How would you feel?” we’re often trying to teach empathy. But neuroscience tells us something important:

Empathy requires regulation first.

When a child feels shamed, cornered, or overwhelmed, their brain shifts into survival mode. And survival mode is not capable of perspective-taking.

Empathy grows when children feel understood first.

The 4-Step Empathy Framework

In this episode, you’ll learn a practical approach you can use during everyday sibling conflicts and hard moments:

Regulate → Reflect → Reveal → Repair

Instead of forcing apologies, you’ll learn how to:

  1. Calm the nervous system first
  2. Name emotions without blame
  3. Gently guide perspective-taking
  4. Invite repair instead of commanding it

Empathy develops through repetition, modeling, and emotional safety.

Common Empathy Blockers

We also explore five patterns that unintentionally block empathy at home, including:

  1. Forcing apologies
  2. Shaming language
  3. Minimizing feelings
  4. Over-lecturing
  5. Modeling reactivity

Awareness is the first step toward change.

Weekly Practice

This week, try narrating empathy once a day.

Name emotions.

Notice experiences.

Model compassion in small, everyday moments.

Empathy grows quietly and gradually—through connection.

RESOURCES:

  • Stop Saying “Hurry Up.”Say This Instead. - https://alexandersonkahl.com/hurry-up/
  • Calm Down Corner Essentials - https://bit.ly/48WbUUh
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