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5 daily habits that make kids feel deeply loved

TOI Lifestyle Desk
| ETimes.in | Last updated on - Oct 14, 2025, 10:28 IST
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Here are 5 daily habits that make kids feel deeply loved

Every parent loves their child but children don’t always feel that love in ways that adults expect. In the whirlwind of school runs, deadlines and dinner prep, affection can get reduced to logistics of “Did you finish your homework?” or “Eat your veggies”. Yet research in developmental psychology shows that a child’s sense of being loved is not built on grand gestures, it is built on the small but repeated rituals of everyday life. Here are five simple daily habits that nurture the kind of connection every child craves.

2/8

Greet them with warm eye contact

When a child walks into the room, your face tells them how much they matter. Dr. Ed Tronick’s Still Face Experiment in a 1975 study by Harvard Medical School, revisited in Developmental Psychology in 2018, showed that infants become visibly distressed when a caregiver’s face turns expressionless. A parent’s warm gaze activates a child’s sense of safety and belonging. Try this: Every time your child walks in from school or play, pause what you are doing. Smile, make eye contact and say, “Hey, I missed you”. That one moment of attention signals that your child matters more than your screen or your task.

3/8

Use “emotion words” to connect

Language is one of the most powerful tools of love. A 2024 paper in Early Childhood Research Quarterly found that children whose parents regularly name emotions (“You look proud”, “That was frustrating”) develop stronger emotional regulation and empathy. Try this: At bedtime or after school, ask not just what happened but how it felt. “How did that make you feel?” or “You seemed excited when that happened.” These conversations build emotional vocabulary and emotional closeness.

4/8

Create a micro-ritual of affection

Love becomes tangible through routine. A 2020 study in the Journal of Family Psychology linked consistent daily rituals like bedtime stories or morning hugs to lower anxiety and higher family cohesion. Children thrive on predictability and they feel secure when they know that affection is a daily constant, not a random bonus. Try this: A secret handshake, a nightly “grateful-for” moment or a special goodbye phrase. These rituals become tiny emotional anchors.

5/8

Listen without fixing

Many parents rush to solve a child’s problem instead of simply hearing it. Yet Dr. Brené Brown’s empathy research in a 2019 Harvard Business Review by University of Houston, showed that validation and not solutions creates emotional safety. When a child feels heard, their brain releases oxytocin, which is the same hormone linked to bonding. Try this: When your child complains, resist advice for 30 seconds. Instead say, “That sounds hard,” or “I get why you feel that way”. Listening, not lecturing, makes kids feel loved and respected. You can work on solutions later on with them. Also See: Your child isn’t lazy: Here’s what psychologists say is really going on

6/8

End the day with reassurance

Nighttime is when kids are most reflective and most in need of reassurance. A 2021 study in Sleep Health Journal found that children whose parents spent even five calm minutes of positive conversation or touch before bed had significantly lower cortisol (stress hormone) levels. Try this: Before turning off the lights, whisper something grounding like “I love being your parent” or “I’m proud of you”. These words settle both the heart and mind of yours and theirs.

7/8

Children equate love with presence, predictability and peace.

You don’t need a perfect day or a Pinterest craft project to raise emotionally secure kids. You just need to show up with your eyes, your words, your rituals, your ears and your reassurance every single day. Love, after all, is rarely in the grand gestures. It is in the quiet, consistent ones. These small, everyday moments build trust, foster confidence, and create a safe space for children to grow and thrive emotionally. Even on the messy, imperfect days, your presence and empathy matter more than perfection. It's the showing up that makes all the difference.

8/8

Make your kids feel heard

To build trust and connection, truly listen to your kids with full attention, maintain eye contact, acknowledge and validate their feelings, ask thoughtful open-ended questions, and respond with genuine empathy. Small gestures of kindness and patience can go a long way in fostering deeper understanding and trust in the long-term.

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