Simply Jewish Parenting

How Chores Build Responsible Kids In Real Life

7 min · Gisteren
aflevering How Chores Build Responsible Kids In Real Life artwork

Beschrijving

You know the moment: you ask your kid to clear the table, put away toys, or help with laundry and after the fifth reminder you think, “It’s faster if I do it myself.” I’m Adina Sakloff, and I’m pulling apart why chores feel so loaded and how we can stop turning everyday help into a constant power struggle. Chores are not really about a clean house. They’re about raising capable children who understand they belong, they matter, and they contribute. I connect the dots between family responsibilities and the values we want to teach in Jewish homes: community, kindness, responsibility, and showing up for something bigger than ourselves. I also share an easy-to-miss benefit: chores can become real connection time, because kids often open up when we’re doing something side by side with busy hands. You’ll get practical, realistic strategies for getting cooperation without nagging: choosing age-appropriate chores, modeling what “clean your room” actually means, breaking tasks into small steps, and praising effort instead of perfection. We’ll talk about better communication, including I-statements, giving simple choices like “cups or forks,” and problem-solving together so kids have buy-in. And because resistance is normal, I share playful ways to reset the tone with timers, music, and small wins that build momentum. Try the one-small-job challenge this week and watch what changes. Subscribe for more parenting tools, share this with a friend who is tired of repeating themselves, and leave a review so more parents can find the show.

Reacties

0

Wees de eerste die een reactie plaatst

Meld je nu aan en word lid van de Simply Jewish Parenting community!

Probeer gratis

Probeer 14 dagen gratis

€ 9,99 / maand na proefperiode. · Elk moment opzegbaar.

  • Podcasts die je alleen op Podimo hoort
  • 20 uur luisterboeken / maand
  • Gratis podcasts

Alle afleveringen

30 afleveringen

aflevering How Chores Build Responsible Kids In Real Life artwork

How Chores Build Responsible Kids In Real Life

You know the moment: you ask your kid to clear the table, put away toys, or help with laundry and after the fifth reminder you think, “It’s faster if I do it myself.” I’m Adina Sakloff, and I’m pulling apart why chores feel so loaded and how we can stop turning everyday help into a constant power struggle. Chores are not really about a clean house. They’re about raising capable children who understand they belong, they matter, and they contribute. I connect the dots between family responsibilities and the values we want to teach in Jewish homes: community, kindness, responsibility, and showing up for something bigger than ourselves. I also share an easy-to-miss benefit: chores can become real connection time, because kids often open up when we’re doing something side by side with busy hands. You’ll get practical, realistic strategies for getting cooperation without nagging: choosing age-appropriate chores, modeling what “clean your room” actually means, breaking tasks into small steps, and praising effort instead of perfection. We’ll talk about better communication, including I-statements, giving simple choices like “cups or forks,” and problem-solving together so kids have buy-in. And because resistance is normal, I share playful ways to reset the tone with timers, music, and small wins that build momentum. Try the one-small-job challenge this week and watch what changes. Subscribe for more parenting tools, share this with a friend who is tired of repeating themselves, and leave a review so more parents can find the show.

Gisteren7 min
aflevering How Jewish Parents Build Respectful Kids artwork

How Jewish Parents Build Respectful Kids

Respect can feel like a constant battle at home, but we’ve learned something that flips the whole dynamic: respect is not mainly for us as parents. It’s for our children. When kids experience respectful authority, they feel secure and steady, and that security becomes the foundation for how they treat teachers, friends, future partners, and everyone they meet. We get practical about what “teaching respect” actually looks like day to day. We talk about why respectful speech is one of the strongest parenting tools you have, and why it doesn’t weaken your authority at all. Then we move into concrete ways to show respect that kids can feel: taking their interests seriously (even the obscure ones), accepting big feelings over small things without giving in, and making room for a child or teen to have a different opinion while still holding family boundaries. We also dig into respecting children’s time, including play for younger kids and real downtime for teens, and we share language you can use that lowers defensiveness fast, like asking, “Will that work for you?” Finally, we touch on Jewish wisdom around correction and discipline: rebuke calmly, privately, and never with humiliation, so your child can keep their dignity and still learn. If this resonates, subscribe, share this with a parent friend, and leave a review so more families can find the show.

26 mei 20265 min
aflevering Shavuot Parenting: Teaching Honor Without Power Struggles artwork

Shavuot Parenting: Teaching Honor Without Power Struggles

If your child’s tone is getting sharper and you feel like you’re negotiating every basic request, this conversation offers a calm reset. We take Shavuot as a launching point, focusing on kibbud av va’em (honoring parents) and what it means for real life Jewish parenting when you want respectful kids without turning your home into a battleground.  We dig into a core idea that often gets missed: teaching respect is not about feeding our ego. Kids actually do better when we’re willing to be in charge not harsh, not controlling, but steady, clear, and comfortable being the parent. When we over-explain, bargain, or ask instead of tell because we’re afraid of seeming “mean,” we accidentally train kids to treat us like their assistants. Respectful homes come from parents acting like parents, holding authority with warmth, and keeping boundaries without drama.  You’ll also get a simple, practical tool to try this week: choose one sentence you’ll use every time your child speaks disrespectfully, like “I want to hear you, let’s be respectful,” or “Can we start over?” Said calmly and consistently, it changes the tone of the home over time. If you found this helpful, subscribe, share with a friend who needs it, and leave a review so more parents can find the podcast.

19 mei 20263 min
aflevering Simple Self Care For Moms artwork

Simple Self Care For Moms

We share three simple self-care habits that help moms stay calmer, more patient, and more grounded when parenting gets messy. We focus on changing self-talk after mistakes, setting respectful boundaries with kids, and using one small treat plus one practical task to shift the tone of the whole day.  • talking to ourselves like we would talk to a friend after a mistake  • allowing children’s feelings while requiring respectful speech  • using a calm script to reset backtalk without yelling  • choosing one indulgent action and one practical action for real-life self-care  • keeping the daily takeaway small enough to actually do  If this episode spoke to you, I'd love to hear from you. You can email me at asockloath at parentingsimply.com with your questions, your parenting struggles, or even topics you'd love for me to cover on a future episode. And if this podcast is helpful to you, please take a minute to leave a review. Reviews help parents find the podcast and they really do make a difference. You could also share this episode with a friend who might need to hear it today.

12 mei 20262 min
aflevering Let Go Of Perfect Mothering artwork

Let Go Of Perfect Mothering

Motherhood can feel like an endless test you never signed up for and Mother’s Day can turn the pressure up even more. I want to offer something kinder and more useful: a set of small, practical shifts that make family life more meaningful, more manageable, and a lot more real, without asking you to become a brand-new person by tomorrow. We talk about letting go of perfect mothering and naming the truth that no mom stays patient all the time and no child is perfectly behaved either. From there, we get practical: using gratitude to change the atmosphere at home, delegating so you are not carrying the whole household alone, and holding a quick family meeting so everyone shares responsibility. We also dig into “setting the tone” and how tiny moments like a warm voice, a smile, a kiss goodbye, or a heartfelt welcome home can shape the emotional climate your kids grow up in. Then we go where many parenting conversations forget to go: your needs matter. I share simple scripts for healthy boundaries, like eating your meal before jumping in, and why that kind of self-care is powerful role modeling for children. We close with a reminder that joy is not frivolous, it restores us and sometimes the most Jewish, most human thing you can do is play, move, and breathe again. If this helped, subscribe to Simply Jewish Parenting, share it with a friend who needs a lighter day, and leave a review so more parents can find us. What is the one small change you are going to try this week?

5 mei 20264 min