Home / Health & Wellness Motivating your child to take risks actually helps to prevent anxiety When parents display confidence in their kids, the kids assume that confidence for themselves. By Emily Glover December 14, 2017 Rectangle One of my most vivid childhood memories is when I was determined to hike up a steep, sandy embankmentâand my mom actually encouraged me to do it. I scaled it without a problem, but finding my way down proved much harder. When I finally made it to the bottom safely, I asked my mom in frustration why she let me do it. Her answer: If you believed you could, I believed you could. The confidence she had in me made a huge impression that day. Now, research backs her up by showing that parents who encourage their kids to go after difficult tasks are reducing those kidsâ risks for anxiety disorders. For the study recently published in Journal of Clinical Child & Adolescent Psychology, researchers looked at 313 families from both the Netherlands and Australia. In both cultures, the children of parents who helped them push their limits were âsignificantlyâ less likely to struggle with anxiety disorders. The beneficial âchallenging parent behavioralâ (CPB) methods applied to both intimidating physical challengesâsuch as ârough and tumble playââand unfamiliar social situations. In other words, when parents display confidence in their kids, the kids assume that confidence for themselves. âWhile this isn’t a cure for anxiety, and we cannot at this stage determine causality, the results are promising in terms of parent education,â says co-author Professor Jennie Hudson, Director of Centre for Emotional Health at Macquarie University. âBy gently encouraging their kids in a reasonable way to push their limits, parents could be helping to reduce their child’s risk of developing an anxiety disorder, which is a great insight.â Another big takeaway from the study: Parents need to encourage both boys and girls to go and get âem, especially as girls are prone to believing gender stereotypes as young as the age of five. Reshma Saujani, the founder of Girls Who Code, says in her viral TED talk says that the danger in this is that many girls grow up playing it too safe: âMost girls are taught to avoid failure and risk. To smile pretty, play it safe, get all Aâs. Boys, on the other hand, are taught to play rough, swing high, crawl to the top of the monkey bars and then jump off head first. By the time theyâre adults and whether theyâre negotiating a raise or even asking someone out on a date, men are habituated to take risk after risk. Theyâre rewarded for it. Itâs often said in Silicon Valley that no one even takes you seriously unless youâve had two failed startups. In other words, weâre raising our girls to be perfect and weâre raising our boys to be brave.â This new study again underlines the importance of that, not only because encouraging children guards them from anxietyâbut also because the results of those tasks they attempt doesnât matter. Win or lose, when we cheer on our children, the results are the same: They are more confident. The latest Toddler The sweet science behind why toddlers call peppermints ‘hippos’ (and other adorable word mix-ups) Health & Wellness Why moms need to prioritize sleepâand how to make it happen Children's Health I’ll be an ‘overprotective’ mama this RSV seasonâand I’m not sorry for it News What parents need to know about the âglass childâ effectâand how to address it