Loving-Kindness for Someone You Care About
Encourage students’ feelings of loving-kindness by focusing on an easy target—someone they care about; then ask them to offer kindness to themselves.
Encourage students’ feelings of loving-kindness by focusing on an easy target—someone they care about; then ask them to offer kindness to themselves.
Students will:
(Repeat twice, slowly).
(Repeat twice, slowly; pause.)
(Repeat twice, slowly; pause.)
This practice, which is part of the Mindful Self-Compassion (MSC) program for teens, prompts students to foster their natural capacity for kindness by encouraging good wishes and compassion (“I want you to be happy”).
In a pilot study of this program, teens reported decreases in depression, stress, and negative feelings after completing a six-session course, while students in a similar study reported greater resilience, gratitude, and a willingness to take on new challenges.
Researchers have discovered that toddlers as young as 14-months demonstrate a natural capacity for kindness, but this capacity must be nurtured through healthy relationships with adults and peers—the foundation of a positive school climate.
Studies have found that kind students who are well-liked by their peers are helpful, cooperative, and emotionally well-adjusted. In addition, students who show kindness at a young age achieve greater academic and social success in the long-run.
Do you want to dive deeper into the science behind our GGIE practices? Enroll in one of our online courses for educators!
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