Despite a decade of focus on "grit" and "positive psychology," we are facing an epidemic of unhappiness. Clinical statistics show that beyond the 25% of teens with major depression, another 40% struggle with intrusive anxiety and substance abuse.
In her book, The Spiritual Child, Columbia University psychologist Dr. Lisa Miller who is herself an observant Jew, identifies the culprit: an increasingly narcissistic culture that rewards achievement but ignores the soul. As Miller notes:
"We can see the crisis in the making when spiritual development is neglected or when a child’s individual spiritual curiosity and exploration is denied. In a culture where often enormous amounts of money, empty fame, and cynicism have become toxic dominant values, our children need us to support their quest for a spiritually grounded life."
The Science of the Sacred
For parents who find organized religion "squeamish," the science offers a bridge. Dr. Miller’s research, spanning over 20 years, suggests that spirituality—defined as an innate sense of connection to a larger, sacred world—is the single most powerful predictor of health.
The data is staggering:
Depression: A shared spiritual outlook between parent and child can reduce the risk of depression by 80%.
Risk-Taking: Spiritually connected teens are 40% less likely to use drugs and 80% less likely to engage in dangerous sex.
Neurobiology: fMRI research shows that a transcendent relationship actually deactivates the brain’s "craving mechanism." As Miller writes, it reduces "the draw of all objects of insatiable desire."
In the landscape of human development, Miller is unequivocal:
"In the entire realm of human experience, there is no single factor that will protect your adolescent like a personal sense of spirituality."
Becoming a "Spiritual Ambassador"
You don’t need to be a believer to be a "Spiritual Ambassador." You just need to stop quashing your child's natural curiosity with cynicism. Spirituality is hard-wired—studies on twins show that 30% of our capacity for transcendence is inherited. The "oh wow" feeling you get at dusk on a beach? That is a spiritual heritage you can pass on.
Children are naturally spiritual. A child gazing at an anthill is practicing mindfulness. A child weeping for a homeless person is practicing mercy. When parents acknowledge these moments as "sacred," they build a "sturdy self" rather than a "brittle" one.
As Miller advises:
"Even when you’re away at school we stay connected heart to heart—that’s forever!"
This language might make a secular parent’s teeth edge, but the protective power is undeniable.
The Prophet in the Bedroom
The transition to adolescence is often where the spiritual life is most tested. The typical "teenage rage" is often a search for truth and a rejection of hypocrisy. Miller suggests a radical shift in how we view our rebellious teens:
"The rage of teenagers is like the rage of the prophets. They insist on having their own visions of the world... Shushing a teen is like silencing a mystic. Stay with her. Her perceptions are real."
A spiritual life isn’t about having all the answers; it’s about the courage to ask the "why" questions. It’s about teaching a child that they are more than their last success or failure.
The Fulfillment Goal
Parents who push for the "right" school or the "perfect" resume are missing the biological bottom line: spirituality is more essential to success than the ability to perform. Spiritual children grow into adults who regard human relationships as sacred and see misfortunes as opportunities.
As the philosopher Viktor Frankl once observed:
"Being human always points, and is directed, to something or someone other than oneself... The more one forgets himself—by giving himself to a cause to serve or another person to love—the more human he is."
By moving past our own agnosticism and embracing our "inner earnestness," we give our children the one tool that actually works. We move them from a life of mere "grit" to a life of true fulfillment. And that, more than any soccer trophy or SAT score, is something worth pushing for.