14 Thoughts on Being Friends with Small Children

Mikko
2 min readAug 3, 2019

When I was small, my parents were busy and also did not know much about communicating with children. I think a lot of parents are like that. Communicating with a child is, in fact, one of the great mysteries of human life; we know very little about how it actually works. We have many theories and make plans based on those theories, but it’s like Mike Tyson said. “Everyone has a plan until they’re punched in the face.” As I grew up, I spent much time thinking about how I could avoid the faith of my parents, if I myself ended up having children one day. Also, to understand more generally, how can we best get along with kids in a mutually meaningful way. One day about a decade ago, those thoughts took the shape of 14 thoughts that I wrote down.

  • Don’t use threats or bribery
  • Emphasize eye contact
  • Explain “yes” and “no” through something the child understands
  • Emphasize that you like to spend time with the child
  • Don’t repeat the same things (find new ways to say the same thing)
  • Remember that there is way too much stimuli for a child in the modern world
  • Remember that the child has to adapt to the world, nobody is asking if he/she wants to
  • Remember that nobody (NOBODY!) actually understands the child, and they know it better than everyone else
  • Never, under any circumstance, lose your temper
  • Establish a joint mission
  • Remember that the child only wants to be happy and enjoy life
  • Don’t try to program children, they are human, not computers
  • Lead through example, not through commands
  • Don’t sweat the small stuff and choose your battles well

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Mikko

Worked with machine intelligence for 15 years, and built the interwebs for 25. Nothing here is my own.