Ask most parents what they want for their sons, and you’ll hear variations of the same list: confidence, kindness, strength, resilience. Ask most boys what strength looks like, and they’ll describe something physical. Something loud. Something that doesn’t involve feelings.
That gap between what we want for them and what we’re actually teaching them is exactly where things go sideways.
Kindness has a messaging problem.
For boys, kindness is often framed as passive something soft, something for other people. Be nice. Share. Say sorry. What’s missing from that framing is that kindness requires courage. It means showing up for someone when it’s inconvenient. It means saying the hard thing instead of the easy one. It means staying in the room when a conversation gets uncomfortable.
That’s not soft. That’s one of the hardest things a person can do.
Liam Learns Strength makes this case in a way children understand intuitively. When Liam sees that his Uncle Alex is struggling, he doesn’t pretend not to notice. He asks. He checks in. He makes room for the conversation as a little kid, without any training because the adults around him have modeled what caring for someone actually looks like.
Boys learn what they’re shown, not what they’re told.
There is very little point in telling a child to be kind if the adults in their life don’t demonstrate it. Children learn emotional behavior by watching how adults handle disagreement, how they respond to someone else’s pain, whether they stay or leave when things get hard.
The good news is that this works in reverse too. When a boy sees his father sit with a grieving friend rather than try to fix it, he learns something permanent. When a teacher stays patient with a struggling student instead of moving on, the class sees it. Those are kindness lessons. They don’t require a worksheet.
Setting limits is also kindness.
One of the most important things children can learn is that kindness doesn’t mean saying yes to everything. Teaching children to protect their own limits and communicate them without aggression is part of the same emotional framework.
A child who knows what they’re comfortable with, and can say so clearly, isn’t unkind. They’re self-aware. That’s the foundation everything else is built on.
What educators can do with this.
In classrooms, kindness is often taught through rules include everyone, don’t leave anyone out, be respectful. Those are good rules. But rules don’t teach children why kindness matters, or what it feels like to be on the receiving end of it.
Books that show emotional honesty between characters especially male characters, where this modeling is far less common can fill that gap. When boys see a father figure in a story being vulnerable and respected for it, the message quietly shifts. Strength looks different now. And that’s the beginning of something.
The real lesson underneath.
The reason kindness is hard to teach boys isn’t because boys are unkind. It’s because we’ve spent a long time not intentionally, but consistently teaching them that feelings are private and strength is performed. Nobody made that decision. It’s just what got handed down.
Changing that narrative doesn’t require a revolution. It requires small, consistent, honest moments. A book at bedtime. A conversation that doesn’t wrap up neatly. An adult willing to say “I don’t know, but let’s think about it together.”
Those moments add up.
Liam Learns Strength is available on Amazon and at LiamLearns.com.

