Control and Uncertainty

Concrete parental stories help children understand fear as something workable rather than something that must be avoided. The idea that humans can shape their response to events appears in Buddhist philosophy and many of the world's religi…

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Concrete parental stories help children understand fear as something workable rather than something that must be avoided. The idea that humans can shape their response to events appears in Buddhist philosophy and many of the world's religious traditions. Most external events cannot be controlled; what can be controlled is the response to them. Parents can teach children about fear most effectively by sharing concrete personal stories of being frightened and describing what happened afterward.