Jane Nelsen, author of the seminal , advocates 鈥 above all else 鈥 empathy as a parent’s guilding principle. Here, Nelsen offers a way to teach a child how expansive a parent’s love can be, no matter how many siblings are in the picture:

鈥淣ine-year-old Alicia was sure her parents loved her four-year-old brother more than her. After all, he was the first boy. One evening, mom sat down at the kitchen table with her daughter and said, 鈥楬oney, I would like to tell you a story about our family.鈥 She had found four candles of varying lengths. 鈥楾hese candles represent our family.鈥 She picked up one long candle and said, 鈥楾his is the mommy candle. This one is for me.鈥 She lit the candle as she said, 鈥楾his flame represents my love.鈥 She picked up another long candle and said, 鈥楾his candle is the daddy candle.鈥 She used the flame from the mommy candle to light the daddy candle and said, 鈥榃hen I married your daddy, I gave him all my love聽鈥 and I still have all my love left.鈥 Mom placed the daddy candle in a candle holder. She then picked up a smaller candle and said, 鈥楾his candle is for you.鈥

鈥淪he lit the smaller candle with the flame from her candle and said, 鈥榃hen you were born, I gave you all my love. And look. Daddy still has all my love, and I still have all my love left.鈥 Mom put that candle in a candle holder next to the daddy candle. Then she picked up the smallest candle and, while lighting it from the mommy candle, said, 鈥楾his is a candle for your brother. When he was born I gave him all my love. And look 鈥 you still have all my love. Daddy has all my love. And I still have all my love left because that is the way love is. You can give it to everyone you love and still have all your love. Now look at all the light we have in our family with all this love. This is how love works.”


Check out The essential guide to managing your child’s behavior and discipline. In our guide, you can see all the aspects of children’s behavior that we cover. Our guide helps you understand your child鈥檚 behavior, respond with care, and use discipline effectively.


Here鈥檚 how 4 other parenting experts say to respond…

 

YouTube video

Christine Carter
It’s a loaded question that can leave a parent gobsmacked. Expert Christine Carter explains how she responds when her own kids demand an answer. Format: Video (1:29)


Adele Faber
When your child asks this question, says parenting guru Adele Faber, they don’t need to hear that they’re the favorite. Instead, reassure them this way. Format: Article


YouTube video

Richard Weissbourd
Harvard University family psychologist Richard Weissbourd says before answering, ask this question to get to the heart of the matter. Format: Video (1:35)