V
A R I A T I O N S
⽧ High-Low. Instead of noticing five good things, notice
both the high of
the day and the low.
⽧ My Story. Ask your teen to write down one of the things that happened
as a short story or vignette. Make a small book and add stories to it over
the years as a kind of autobiography that
your child might someday
share with his own children or leaf through when he is older.
W
H A T
’
S
B
E I N G
L
E A R N E D
Teens are learning to pay attention to all the events that happen in a day
and then focus in on the positive aspects by intentionally looking for them.
This game also encourages players to pay attention to how specific
events make them feel.
This activity is a reminder that life contains many kinds of moments.
Often teens get stuck on a negative moment
and enlarge its significance,
such as when they hear a criticism and believe that it means they are hope-
lessly hopeless. This game shows young people that good moments are
always part of the mix if they keep a lookout for them.
Getting the Priorities
I heard this story about a professor who was trying to teach his students a
life lesson. He took a clear, narrow-necked vase and filled it with as many
large stones as could fit through the neck. Then he asked his students if the
vase was full. They said it was. “Wrong,” he said, and then filled it with
small pebbles that he shook down until he got in all he could. “Full now?”
he asked. “Yes,” they said. “Wrong,” he countered, and proceeded to fill up
every nook and cranny with fine sand. “Now?” he asked. “Absolutely!” they
replied. Then he poured in some water.
“What’s the life lesson?” he queried.
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