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6 most important minutes of a child's day and how to plan around them

TOI Lifestyle Desk
| ETimes.in | Last updated on - Jul 1, 2025, 05:30 IST
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What are the most important moments in a child’s day?


There’s a common belief that parenting is about the big gestures, grand birthday parties, exotic vacations, fancy gifts. But, it’s the quiet, unnoticed small windows in a child’s day that hold the most power. Just six minutes can shift their entire mood, influence their emotional growth, and shape how they respond to the world.
These six minutes are not randomly picked. They are moments when a child is most vulnerable and open to influence, right after waking up, after play or screentime, and just before going to sleep. Many might already know these are sensitive times, but what often gets missed is the why and how of being intentional in these minutes.
Here’s all we need to know about the 6 minutes and see how thoughtful planning can turn them into something truly beautiful.

2/4

The first 2 minutes after waking up


When the eyes open and the brain is still crossing the bridge between dreams and reality, something magical happens. The mind is quiet, unguarded, and highly absorbent. In these moments, a child doesn’t need a checklist of what to do or hurry into brushing teeth. What helps more is a gentle connection—maybe a stretch together, a few calming words, or even just a soft humming of a tune that becomes their personal “sunrise signal.”

This moment isn’t about function. It’s about emotional grounding. A small whisper like “It's a new day, and it loves you already” can stay longer in memory than any loud alarm or rushed school reminder.

Planning around this means adjusting adult mornings a bit—waking up a few minutes earlier, putting the phone away, and making space for this quiet emotional entry into the day.


3/4

2 minutes after deep play or screentime


After building blocks for an hour or diving into cartoons, the mind enters a different rhythm, like a fast train that suddenly needs to stop. This transition is often underestimated. A child might not be disobedient or rude after screentime; they’re just emotionally jet-lagged.

The best two minutes here are like a reboarding gate, soft questions like, “What part of the game did you love most?” or “Want to show what you made?” gently bring them back. Instead of commanding the shift, joining them briefly where they are helps steer their emotions to calmness.

Planning around this doesn’t mean cancelling screentime or play, it means building a two-minute bridge right after. A drink of water, a short walk across the room, or even just a playful stretch can turn a moody transition into a shared moment of presence.


4/4

The last 2 minutes before sleep

Many believe sleep is the closing chapter of a day. But for children, it’s also a time when the brain arranges emotional “snapshots” of what happened. The last thing said, heard, or felt often becomes the tone of the entire day in their memories.

Those two minutes are sacred. Not for stories or lectures, but for tiny rituals. A soft sentence like, “Thank you for being here today,” or a quiet hand squeeze, can become more healing than a lullaby. It signals to the child: “All is well. You are safe. Tomorrow is waiting for you kindly.”

Planning around this involves slowing down just before the lights go out. Avoiding corrections, reminders, or even excited chatter. Just stillness. Some parents use a secret handshake or a sentence they always repeat, it doesn’t matter what, as long as it is gentle and consistent.

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