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Danny Brown

Danny Brown

podcaster - author - creator

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When Your Five Year Old Son Asks If You’re Not Happy With Him

The other day, my five year old son Ewan came up to me, looked me in the eye, and asked me if I was happy with him.

This was after I’d told him off a little earlier for not listening and continuing to play with his toys after I’d asked him to clean up with Salem, his four year old sister.

This particular task is like a mental tug of war, with both kids starting the clean up process and then invariably getting distracted by the primary reason toys were invented – to play with them.

So then we get into the back and forth that I’m sure any parent must recognize:

Me: Clean up, please.
Kids: Okay. [Cleaning starts, two minutes later the kids are playing again]
Me: Clean up please, this isn’t cleaning.
Kids: Okay! [Cleaning resumes, now it’s down to one minute before playtime takes precedence]

This goes on for a couple more exchanges, at which point parenting takes over and leniency of play while cleaning takes a backseat.

This is usually followed by a raised voice, with a different tone, and the kids realize that daddy (or mummy) means business. So, they clean, but you can see they’re a little crestfallen (for want of a better word).

And you, the parent, take no victory in getting your kids to clean because now you’ve also made them sad.

It was after one of these recent battle of wits that Ewan asked the question about me being happy with him.

The Truth and Explanation Often Don’t Mix Well

As parents, my wife Jaclyn and I want to raise our kids knowing the very clear difference between good and bad.

We also have a very “open parenting” mindset where our kids aren’t tied to gender-specific toys and dress-up. If our son wants to play with his sister’s dolls,?or wear a Princess dress, he can. If our daughter wants to play with our son’s Avenger toys, or wear his stuff, she does.

We also want our kids to challenge us, and not be afraid to ask “Why?” when they need to do things, or when they don’t understand why we took specific actions.

In short, we’re trying to allow our kids to just be, and not conform to what certain parts of society tells kids they should be.

Part of that means we often sit down and explain things through, until (hopefully) our kids understand the reason behind certain things, and can take that and learn from it and put to use in their own lives away from the home (school, daycare, friends’ houses, etc.).

But how do you explain to a five year old the difference between “happy” as in behaviour-wise, and “happy” as in how wonderful life is now you’re in the world (sorry for paraphrasing, Elton!)?

Sure – you can try:

Sorry, Ewan, right now I’m not happy with what you did. I asked you to do something, and you didn’t. You didn’t listen, and you kept doing things you weren’t meant to be doing at that time. So, no, I’m not happy.

Because how long does that unhappiness last? We, as adults, know it’s temporary. And we, as parents, can tell our kids, “Okay, we’re happy with you again.”

[clickToTweet tweet=”How do we explain to children the difference between not happy right now and unhappy full stop?” quote=”How do we explain to children the difference between not happy right now and unhappy full stop?”]

But what if there was no definitive action to make us happy?

For example, the mess was still left until after dinner, and your child said something so amazingly sweet at the dinner table that made you happy, and your subsequent smile tells your child you’re happy – does that now negate the “unhappiness” you had over the lack of cleaning up?

Come-on-how-can-you-really-not-be

And how much does a five year old really understand and differentiate anyway? I’m no psychologist, and I’m an extremely proud parent at how smart my kids can be, but how much are they really taking in and retaining at four and five?

So, the explanation becomes a soundbite and the worry of unhappiness remains.

Am I Breaking My Son?

Of course, then there’s the follow-up to that.

If I’m trying to explain my unhappiness and why I’m not happy at Ewan, and he nods to understand but all he knows is that daddy is unhappy, and not that it’s a very, very small percentage compared to the happiness he invokes in me all the time,?am I breaking my son’s heart and spirit?

Even if I feel I’ve done the best job I can at explaining, and even if I ask Ewan if he understands why I’m not happy at that very specific moment in time, is he really understanding that I could not be happier that he’s my son – I’m just not happy at his actions?

I grew up in a household where my stepfather was an asshole, which (I think) contributed to me taking a path where I was a little shit in my early years. It was only though making changes that saw me “recover”.

Because of that, I want to make sure my own kids never have to worry about how their mum and dad feel about them. To make sure they know they’re loved, and they can grow the way they want to grow, and know it’s okay to mess up.

But if I can’t explain the difference between “not happy right now at your actions” versus “not happy with you”, will that message even come through?

Of course, I know you keep explaining, keep explaining, and keep explaining through words, actions and understanding, and that differentiation will appear.

As a marketer, though, I just wish there was an analytics program like Google Analytics for you to understand your kids’ behaviours – man, how that would make life a whole lot easier!

How about you, fellow parents – how have you approached this “landmark”? This dad is all ears.

Why You Have to Push Back on Unethical Content Thieves

When you create content – either written, visual, or aural – you hope that people will read/watch/listen and enjoy.

The added benefit is if that content consumer shares with their friends, or recommends your content to others, more people become aware of what you’re trying to do.

[Read more…] about Why You Have to Push Back on Unethical Content Thieves

Why I’m Loving the Pure Blogging Project

Last year, as summer started to get into full swing, I published a couple of posts over on my own blog that talked about getting back to pure blogging.

These posts – Why the Real Driver of Traffic is Content That Matters to You, and Pure Blogging and the Experience We Give Our Readers – saw me taking a step back and looking at how the chase for traffic, shares and monetization was making us forget the reason we started blogging in the first place.

Not for glory. Not for fame. Not for fortune. But for the sheer joy of writing (or video blogging, or podcasting).

The joy of just putting something out there, with no other agenda than to share your thoughts with the world, and see if anyone responded and started a conversation with you.

It’s the direction my own blog had been moving in for a while (from its initial premise of marketing and social media topics), and – going by the comments after each of the two posts linked above – many others also wanted to see a return to the “pure blogging” approach.

So, after thinking about it for a while, and talking with some fellow bloggers whose work and style I admired, I launched the?Pure Blogging project.

And it’s one of the most enjoyable projects I’ve been part of.

It’s All About the Content

When you look at the?Pure Blogging logo, you’ll see the tagline, “where it’s all about the content.”

This is something that was the driver of the project to begin with (and remains that way today).

Instead of worrying about creating the kind of “viral content” [*cough*] that many bloggers and content creators are happy producing, Pure Blogging is the antithesis of that.

[clickToTweet tweet=”Here’s to Pure Blogging, where the only thing that matters is the content. #pureblogging” quote=”Here’s to Pure Blogging, where the only thing that matters is the content. #pureblogging”]

No buzzwords. No clickbait titles that have little (or nothing) to do with the post. No easy listicles like “Top 50 Content Rules for Content Marketers”, blah blah.

Nope. None of that would be encouraged at Pure Blogging.

Instead, it’d be what moves you at the time of writing.

It could be a personal story. A story about someone or something that shaped who you are today.

It could be about personal battles, or supporting those going through battles of their own.

It could be a story about faith (or how faith was lost).

It could be something as simple as why someone has so many pets.

The only caveat that I gave the folks kind enough to be part of the project was simple – no hate, bigotry, bullying, or any of that crap. Everything else was pretty much good to go.

Because of this open approach, Pure Blogging has resulted in some amazing posts, and the kind of topics that more often than not get bypassed in lieu of “content this”, “social media that”, etc.

http://forbloggersbybloggers.com/1953-woody-old-spice/

http://forbloggersbybloggers.com/this-is-not-a-dress-rehearsal-this-is-your-life/

http://forbloggersbybloggers.com/a-question-of-faith-or-why-are-aliens-less-believable-than-religion/

http://forbloggersbybloggers.com/one-child-worth/

http://forbloggersbybloggers.com/wrestling-time-dinosaurs/

http://forbloggersbybloggers.com/the-day-i-died/

http://forbloggersbybloggers.com/a-writer-stops/

http://forbloggersbybloggers.com/youre-not-too-busy-to-be-a-dad/

http://forbloggersbybloggers.com/laws-of-distraction-the-dangers-in-legislating-what-women-wear/

As you can see from these posts above, there’s a huge variety in the topics being discussed.

Some are funny, some are sombre. Some are introspective, some are optimistic. Others are somewhere in-between.

The one thing they all have in common, though, is they are written from the heart, and talking to you – the reader – as if you’re the only other person in the room.

In short, they’re pure blogging at its finest.

Rediscover What Blogging Can Be

There is absolutely nothing wrong with creating content for the masses. There is zero wrong with creating content that needs to be created a certain way to meet business goals.

That was never the reason Pure Blogging was started.

Instead, Pure Blogging came to be simply to counter the easy, lazy way of content creation that seems to be ever more pervasive today.

If shares, comment counts and page views are the goals by which you set your content strategy, then Pure Blogging is probably not for you.

Although, ironically, by ignoring all of these goals and simply concentrating on the content, Pure Blogging has a decent amount of each – go figure!

However, if you’re a fan of blogging from the heart; blogging that inspires; blogging that makes you think differently from when you first landed on the page… then I invite you to check out the posts currently on the site.

You may just find you have a new favourite blog.

And if you’re finding you want a change from writing for social proof metrics alone, and you want to get back to creating the content that really matters to you, there’s an open invite to be part of the team, which you can find here.

Here’s to Pure Blogging, where the only thing that matters is the content.

How Mill Street Brewery Remains A Close Family of Punks in a World of Corporate Beer

Mill Street Distillery District Love

In his book Nothing Feels Good: Punk Rock, Teenagers, and Emo, Andy Greenwald shares the words of Joe Carroll from punk band The Insurgent, when describing what punk means to him.

[Read more…] about How Mill Street Brewery Remains A Close Family of Punks in a World of Corporate Beer

The Personalization of Social (Or Why We Need to be Architects)

It?s funny how our mindsets change with the onset of age. Or experience. Or a mixture of both.

Take social media. When it first started gaining traction with the masses around 2009, it was seen as ?the great connector? ? a way for everyone to share, learn, support, and more.

[Read more…] about The Personalization of Social (Or Why We Need to be Architects)

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