Equipment Needed
Procedure Steps
Choose Your Visible Task
Pick a hands-on task your kids can physically watch you complete. Yard work, a home repair, organizing the garage, cooking a complex meal. The key: visible progress they can see happening.
Park the Phones
Before you start, every phone in the house goes to the parking spot. Yours included. Say out loud: "Phones are parked. We're working now."
Work Side by Side for 25 Minutes
Set the timer for 25 minutes. Start working. If your kids are participating, assign age-appropriate sub-tasks. If they're watching, let them observe. Don't narrate yet — just work.
During this time, let your kids see you struggle with something. Let them see you try, fail, adjust, and try again. That's the real lesson.
Finish Clean — Model Completion
When the timer goes off, finish the current action cleanly. Don't stop mid-motion. Complete the stroke, tighten the bolt, wipe the surface. Then clean up: put tools away, sweep up, return materials.
Debrief Together (5 Minutes)
After cleanup, sit down together — porch, kitchen table, wherever. Ask three questions:
"What did you notice while I was working?"
"What do you think was the hardest part?"
"Why do you think I kept going when it got frustrating?"
Listen more than you talk. Let them connect the dots. If they're young, give them the language: "I kept going because finishing what you start matters. Even when it's hard."
Log It in Your Notebook
After the kids move on, open your Work Ethic Notebook. Write the date, the task, and one observation:
"March 8 — Fixed backyard fence. Maya watched for 20 minutes. Asked why I didn't just buy a new one. Talked about repair vs. replace. She gets it."
Over months, this log becomes a record of what you're building. Not just the projects — the relationship.