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Future Parenting

How No TV And Junk Food Has Changed My Child’s Mindset

How No TV And Junk Food Has Changed My Child's Mindset

We live in a world now full of distractions and junk food all around us. The pull TV and film have on us is unprecedented in human history. There are still people alive who grew up as children who never had these dopamine heavy hitters pulling on them.

I have noticed in my children how TV and junk food has a spell over their actions where the need to have them is similar to an addict craving their next hit.

The art of being bored is becoming lost with every generation and as an adult, I can see the challenges in this let alone a child dealing with these new impulses.

Wanting the best for our children’s health. We made a parenting decision to ban all junk food and reduce TV time to just 20 minutes a day.

Here’s what I found. The results are amazing.

How No TV And Junk Food

1. We Talk More

Without distractions from TV, I have noticed we defiantly talk more as a family. It’s so easy to have Netflix streaming all their favourite programs to give a parent rest bite or so they can focus on their work. But the only person that’s benefiting is you. Building a strong relationship with your child is the bedrock of a healthy child. The bond between parent and child is one of the strongest relationships there is. Nurturing this through quality one on one time without distraction is important.

2. Creativity Is Unlocked

Our first child never watched much TV when he was little. The creativity of a child is wonderous and the amazing things he created always impressed me. Since we reduced TV time he’s creativity has gone through the roof. Now he’s building his lego and creating playful games with his imagination. Creativity plays a major role in someone’s life and developing it in childhood is a great place to start. Without TV pulling him away from creativity, it’s now unlocked a part of his mind he can utilise more easily.

3. Become Calmer

The effects of sugar on a child’s brain are apparent and the need for a child to watch their TV shows. We started to notice a demand for sugar and tv that was making them emotionally unbalanced. After the second day, we noticed a profound calmness in our children that was amazing. They still asked for sweets and extra TV time. But when we said no it was more understood and overall their energy became less erratic and much calmer.

4. Mealtime Is Relaxed

Getting any child to eat their greens is a chore. We found it difficult getting our children to eat food with TV distracting them and eating healthy food when they have had sugar throughout the day. Now without TV, the food is eaten without having to tell them to eat. The tastebuds are changing to like healthier options more. Overall mealtime has become a resounding hit. Where we eat food without distraction building stronger connections with our children.

5. More Time For Learning

Every parent wants the best for their children and we are no different. But getting our child to do extra work at home was always met with sighs. In his mind, all he wanted to do was watch TV or play his games all day. This became a too and throw battle every time it was brought up and became tiring for both of us. Since TV time has been reduced it has become a lot easier to focus on his education at home. We have seen an improvement in his Maths and English writing and now he even looks forward to doing it.

6. Time Alone With Their Thoughts

Being happy to spend alone time with yourself is so important for everyone’s mental health. It always saddened me when my child hated to spend time alone and the need to be distracted compelled him. I’m happy to say this has now changed and the skill of being able to spend time with his thoughts happily is here. Now he’s developing his ideas and wants in life. He’s also becoming more independent and wanting responsibilities. Lastly, he is happy to spend time on his working on his projects happily. Without distraction, there is more time for mindful thoughts.

The Results

I’m so happy with the decision we made as parents. With the pull of TV, junk food, games and social media on children. It’s ever-important we educate ourselves on the danger this could have on a child’s upbringing.

When listening to people who have created these platforms they don’t even let their children use them. Steve Jobs created the iPad but refused to let his child use it, knowing its addiction fully existed. The same goes for social media developers who have come forward to state the dangers these platforms have and their children will never go on it until they are 18.

Deep down we all know the impact technology and the food we eat has on ourselves and our children. It’s just waking up our minds to action. To put the rights structures in place and to not let them control your thoughts. Balance Is everything and creating that for your child is so important.

These are my findings and I hope they help you with your parenting in any way.

Want more on parenting tips? Read our articles on becoming a better parent.

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Future Habits Future Men Future Performance Mindset Toolkit

How To Win Your Day By Morning Journaling

How To Win Your Day By Morning Journaling

Recently I’ve expanded my journalling to morning journaling. It has helped to sharpen my focus and avoid the procrastination pitfalls that can sometimes happen when you are not conscious of your actions.

I want to share this with you so you can start every morning with a bang and reap the momentum benefits throughout your day.

The best part? It’s a simple strategy that couldn’t be easier to implement.

Here’s what you need to know…

Why You Should Journal?

There is plenty of science-backed research that details the benefits of journaling on a person’s physical and mental health but also your emotional intelligence.

Simply put journalling is essential to overall health. The best thing about it’s accessible to anyone.

I have championed men, especially why taking up journaling is important for developing a healthy but productive mindset. But journaling is for everyone and morning journaling is an underused tool to kick-start your day.

How To Implement Morning Journaling

Here are some of my favourite strategies for making morning journalling a consistent habit.

Make it super easy to start. When you wake up in the morning the last thing you want to do is something challenging. By making morning journalling appealing and easy to start. I download a writing app (Writing by hand is good too) and put the head title “Today’s going to be a great day” followed by when starting my main content “Today’s intention is…”. I do this the previous night so when I start my morning journal I’m ready to go straight away.

Finding a quiet place is essential. Being able to connect your mind to paper in an effective way. Can only be done through alone time without distraction. For me, I have to wake up before my family. Whatever strategy you pick to find alone time. Make it a priority. Your thoughts will be able to flow and get into a zone of peace and focus so much easier.

Make it unique to you. At this moment in time, all I want my morning journal to be is about productivity and focus. But this might change in the future. So when you create your morning journaling habit. Ask yourself what do you want out of it? By asking this question it will lead you to find what will help and make it a practice you enjoy. Omar Itani has some great ideas you can check out here.

Create a time limit. When writing I can easily get carried away and write for a long time. By creating a time limit for yourself is important. You could be doing a school run, having to go to work or other self-care habits in the morning. The sweet spot for me is 15 minutes. This allows me to write for 10 minutes and then have 5 minutes to feel the plan for the day. Pick a time that works for you. Whatever time it is. You will gain something in return.

What Do You Write About?

When I evening journal I tend to focus on;

  • The feelings of the day
  • What I failed at
  • What I achieved
  • Who and what to forgive
  • What I’m grateful for
  • Thoughtful questions I ask myself

I do this until I’ve shed all the unwanting feelings, built my confidence up and have a clear plan for the next day.

When it comes to morning journalling for me it’s like starting an engine. The fuel is already in the tank, it’s being serviced and cleaned. Now it’s time to put it in first gear and get on the road for a productive and enjoyable day.

So I focus on two things;

  • My intention for the day
  • Feeling and believing it’s already done

This allows me to have a clear focus of what I need to do but also makes it a done deal. By the end it’s like I’ve just created a movie and when I finish my morning journaling. It’s time to live the movie I’ve watched before.

Morning journaling should definitely have its place in anyone’s morning routine. The benefits far out way the inconvenience of doing it. See if you can give it a go tomorrow. Then come back and leave a comment about your experience. I would love to know.

Want more on journaling? Read this article about the benefits journalling has on the mind.

Thanks for reading. You can get more actionable ideas in my Mindset Monday email newsletter. Each week, I share amazing content that will develop your mindset into the best version you can be. Let’s build an amazing community Enter your email now and join us.