 All  children benefit from being able to cope well with challenges, change, and  adversity. These are coping skills that help build a foundation of resilience.  In this article you'll find tips on how to help children develop a lasting  resilience that will help them all through life.
All  children benefit from being able to cope well with challenges, change, and  adversity. These are coping skills that help build a foundation of resilience.  In this article you'll find tips on how to help children develop a lasting  resilience that will help them all through life.
What  makes a child resilient?
Why  is it that some children seem to have a natural resilience and can stay strong  even when they face challenges that might undo others? Experts agree that  resilience results from a combination of factors. Partly, it comes from the  natural tendency to adapt to change. Social, spiritual, psychological, and biological  factors also contribute to resilience. You can take steps to build those  factors into your child's life.
The  seven C's of childhood resilience
Building  resilience is a process that goes on from infancy through the teenage and young  adult years. You can find help in the book A Parent's Guide to Building  Resilience in Children and Teens: Giving Your Child Roots and Wings,  written by the Academy of American Pediatrics (AAP) and Kenneth Ginsburg, a  pediatrician at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia.
Ginsburg  has identified seven key aspects of resilience that he and the AAP call  "the 7 C's of resilience." The following things, he says, will help  children develop the ability to cope with change and rebound from setbacks:
  Competence, the strengths and abilities  they need to master their challenges and cope with change all through life.
  Confidence, a belief in their  abilities that comes in part from competence.
  Connection, close ties to a family and  community that give them a sense of security and belonging.
  Character, values that help children  see the difference between right and wrong and make good, moral decisions.
  Contribution, the knowledge that they  can make a positive difference and that "the world is a better place  because they are in it."
  Coping, having the emotional and  other tools they need to deal capably with many kinds of stress they may face.
  Control, the knowledge that they  can affect the results of their decisions.
  Help your child appreciate their  skills. Support your child as much as you can if they’d like to gain a new  skill that will help to build competence.
Ways to help children develop resilience
Here  are some ways to build resilience in children from a young age:
  Encourage  your child to keep developing new skills. Help your child appreciate  their skills. Support your child as much as you can if they’d like to gain a  new skill that will help to build competence, such as the ability to play a  musical instrument or learn the basics of computer coding.
  Give  your child frequent and sincere praise. Strengthen their  confidence and sense of self by praising them when they make a good effort,  whether or not it has the results you had hoped.
  Remember  that "it takes a village." Ask for and welcome the  support of relatives, friends, neighbors, teachers and coaches, members of your  faith community, and others. Their help will make your job as a parent easier  and will give your child a strong sense of connection to a wider community.  Have family rituals and routines, and include your extended family in these.
  Model  the kind of character you would like to see. Let your child see you  acting in ways that are honest, kind, and loving—by obeying traffic signs, by  helping older neighbors, by showing respect for people who come from different  religious or cultural traditions. Also model positive coping strategies when  feeling stressed or angry, like meditating, practicing yoga, and exercising.
  Offer  your child many opportunities to help others. When your child helps  others—whether by sharing a meal with a friend or taking part in a  community-wide volunteer project—they learn that their actions make a  difference and that they can make a contribution to the world.
  Let  your child solve problems and make decisions. Give your child  age-appropriate decision-making opportunities.
  Show that you have faith in them  by not rushing in to solve every problem they could handle on their own. This  will help them see that their actions have consequences. If they can't always  get what they want, they do have control over the results of many of their  decisions.
  Teach  your child to manage stress and painful emotions. Help your child develop  the ability to cope with all kinds of challenges. Send the message that  sadness, like happiness, is a part of life. It's natural to feel sad and cry,  and knowing how to handle those feelings is part of staying physically and  emotionally healthy. Talk with your child about how to express feelings in  healthy and appropriate ways—for example, by kicking a soccer ball in the yard  to let off steam when feeling frustrated or talking with a trusted adult, like  a parent or grandparent, when they are sad.
Finally, remember that developing resilience is  a lifelong process. Reassure your child often that you love them, that they can  always come to you if they face challenges that seem overwhelming, and that you  had a lot of those in your own childhood, too.