We may not be able to prepare the future for our children, but we can at least prepare our children for the fu... — Franklin D. Roosevelt

We may not be able to prepare the future for our children, but we can at least prepare our children for the future.

Author: Franklin D. Roosevelt

Insight: The future feels increasingly unpredictable—economic shifts, technological change, social upheaval. We can't control what's coming. But there's something freeing in that realization, because it flips what we actually have power over. You can't guarantee your kids will land their dream job or avoid hardship, but you can teach them how to think, adapt, and bounce back when things don't go according to plan. This matters more now than ever. We often get caught in the trap of trying to engineer perfect outcomes—the right school, the right connections, the right safety net. But the kids who weather uncertainty best aren't necessarily those with the most advantages. They're the ones who've learned resilience, curiosity, and how to handle failure without falling apart. Teaching a child to be resourceful, to learn from mistakes, to sit with discomfort—that's investing in something that actually travels with them. The shift is subtle but profound: stop obsessing over controlling what comes next, and focus instead on who they're becoming. That's the only real preparation that carries forward.

Build Resilience, Not Certainty

We may not be able to prepare the future for our children, but we can at least prepare our children for the future.

The future feels increasingly unpredictable—economic shifts, technological change, social upheaval. We can't control what's coming. But there's something freeing in that realization, because it flips what we actually have power over. You can't guarantee your kids will land their dream job or avoid hardship, but you can teach them how to think, adapt, and bounce back when things don't go according to plan.

This matters more now than ever. We often get caught in the trap of trying to engineer perfect outcomes—the right school, the right connections, the right safety net. But the kids who weather uncertainty best aren't necessarily those with the most advantages. They're the ones who've learned resilience, curiosity, and how to handle failure without falling apart. Teaching a child to be resourceful, to learn from mistakes, to sit with discomfort—that's investing in something that actually travels with them.

The shift is subtle but profound: stop obsessing over controlling what comes next, and focus instead on who they're becoming. That's the only real preparation that carries forward.

AI generated

Comments

Sign in to leave a comment or reply to one.

Sign in

Franklin D. Roosevelt

Franklin D. Roosevelt was the 32nd President of the United States, serving from 1933 to 1945, making him the only president to be elected for four terms. He is widely known for his leadership during the Great Depression and World War II, implementing his New Deal programs to help the nation recover from the economic downturn and guiding the country through the war.

Graph

Related