“It’s easier to build strong children than to repair broken adults.” — Frederick Douglass
Because you only get one chance to raise amazing kids.
You know the feeling. You walk into someone’s home and within minutes, sometimes within seconds, you just sense something. The way kids and parents talk to each other. The ease of the conversation, or the tension underneath it. The warmth, or the absence of it. The things that are treated as important, and the things that aren’t. You’re not reading their family handbook. You’re feeling their family culture.
We have spent a combined 68 years in public schools: Nancy as a middle school counselor, me as a high school teacher and district leader. We sat with thousands of students across those decades. We partnered with their parents. And through all of it, we kept noticing the same thing: certain kids just stood out. Not because they were perfect. Because they were grounded. Their teachers noticed them. Other parents admired them. When peer pressure or moral dilemmas hit, these kids knew exactly who they were and had access to healthy responses.
What did those families have in common? They had a clearly defined family culture. They knew what they stood for, they talked about it, and they lived it.
Culture Is Built, Not Born
Here’s what most parents don’t realize: your family, just like every group of humans, will have its own distinct culture. Every family has a culture, but most of it forms by default, not by design.
Think about what happens in a great classroom. At the start of every school year, teachers ask: What kind of community are we going to be? What behaviors will we promote? What will it feel like to be in this room? Educators know that if you don’t build culture intentionally, something fills the vacuum, and it’s usually not what you wanted.
Parents don’t get a fresh start every September. You don’t get to reset with a new group of kids. You’re in it for the long haul with the most important people in your life, making hundreds of decisions every week: mostly reactive ones, mostly under pressure, mostly without a plan.
Building family culture isn’t about what you do. It’s about who you are. It speaks to what it means to be a member of your family, of your distinct tribe.
James Clear puts it perfectly in Atomic Habits: if you’re trying to break a habit by just telling yourself “I won’t do that,” it’s incredibly hard. But if you define yourself as someone who values healthy living, you don’t even look at the junk food in the convenience store: because that’s not who you are. Family culture works the same way. When your kids know what your family stands for, they carry that identity with them everywhere they go.
What Family Culture Actually Is
Family culture is the shared values, habits, and behaviors that define how your family operates: at the dinner table, in a conflict, in a moment of stress, and especially when no one is watching.
It’s not about your ethnicity or your religion, though those can certainly shape it. Two families can live in the same neighborhood, celebrate the same holidays, speak the same language, and have completely different cultures. One family asks hard questions at dinner. Another avoids them. One celebrates honest mistakes as learning opportunities. Another punishes failure. One has an open door, where kids’ friends feel at home and help themselves to snacks without being asked. Another is more formal, more hierarchical.
Those differences accumulate. Over years, they shape who your children become.
We grew up with a father who was very intentional about family culture building. When people came over, he didn’t offer snacks; he just made our friends feel at home enough to get them on their own. He listened to the music we liked, not just the music he liked, because he wanted to understand our world. He gave away a car he could have sold because the custodian at our synagogue needed it more. He never sat us down and delivered a lesson on generosity. He just modeled it, over and over, until we absorbed it.
We didn’t have a word for it then. But now we do: that was family culture.
Why It Matters More Than Ever
We’re in the middle of a youth mental health crisis. The data is undeniable. The CDC found that 42% of teenagers report persistent feelings of sadness or hopelessness. Anxiety, depression, and loneliness are rising across every demographic. Social media has amplified comparison culture and disconnection at the same time.
And yet, the families we watched most closely (the ones whose kids seemed to beat the odds) shared one thing: they weren’t just parenting reactively. They were building their families with intention.
Children who grow up in families with strong, clearly defined cultures have a clearer sense of identity. They navigate peer pressure differently. When things get messy with their friends, they’re the ones who say: “I’m out. This isn’t for me.” Not because they’re rigid. Because they know who they are.
No amount of therapy can do after the fact what a strong family culture does before the fact. Frederick Douglass said it 150 years ago. It’s more relevant now than ever.
How to Start Building Yours
The good news: you don’t need a perfect plan. You just need a starting point.
Step 1: Define what your family stands for.
Sit down (with your co-parent, or on your own) and ask: What do I most want my children to become? What qualities matter most to me/us? Don’t just list abstract virtues like “be a good person,” but specific behaviors. Do you want your family to be the kind that shows up for others? That doesn’t quit when things get hard? That tells the truth even when it’s uncomfortable?
Get specific. Name those values as behaviors your kids can clearly understand and practice. “We bounce back” is more useful to a seven-year-old than “we value resilience.”
Step 2: Make it part of your daily life, not an add-on.
Here’s the trap most parents fall into: they try to add family culture to an already overwhelming schedule. That’s not the goal. The goal is to embed it into what you’re already doing.
The Sunday family dinner. The drive home from church. The five minutes before bed. The question at breakfast or on the drive to school. These aren’t new commitments; they’re existing moments, used more intentionally. Put your family’s Fundamental of the week on the refrigerator. Let your kids walk past it ten times a day.
Nancy always says: you’re not asking families to add minutes to their day. You’re asking them to use the minutes they already have differently.
Step 3: Be consistent, not perfect.
Culture is built through repetition. Hearing something once isn’t enough, for adults or kids. The families who succeed are the ones who keep returning to the same values, in different moments, in different ways, over months and years. The fundamentals become internalized. They become who you are.
You’ll get it wrong. You’ll be short-tempered when you want to model patience. You’ll skip a week. That’s not failure; that’s parenting, and acknowledging that it’s not always easy to do. What matters is that you keep coming back to what you said you stood for.
The Outcome Worth Working For
We hear from families all the time now. The thing they mention most often isn’t dramatic transformation. It’s smaller than that, and more profound. They’re having better conversations. They have language for things they used to fight about. One parent told us that when her husband praised their son for “fighting for what’s right” after a school conflict, she was able to say: “Yes, and I wish he’d shown more respect while he did it.” Instead of a disagreement, they had a conversation, and they brought their son into it. They talked about how you do both at once.
That’s what family culture does. It gives your family a shared language. Common language leads to common conversations. And common conversations build connection.
The families whose kids sat across from Nancy in her school counselor’s office weren’t bad families. They were families who never built the structure. They’re reacting to one crisis at a time. They’re doing their best, but they’re working without a plan. They’re building a house without a foundation.
You can build that foundation. You can do it now, no matter how old your kids are or how chaotic your schedule is. And if you build it well enough, your kids will carry it with them: into their friendships, their schools, and eventually, into the families they build themselves.
That’s what lasts. Not the grades, not the activities, and not the résumés.
Your most enduring parental legacy will be the feeling your kids carry with them of knowing exactly who they are and knowing where they came from.
Steven Shapiro and Nancy Shapiro Rapport are a brother-sister team with a combined 68 years of experience in public education. Together with culture-building expert David Friedman, they co-founded Our Family Culture, a groundbreaking system that helps parents raise emotionally healthy kids in close-knit, connected families.
Learn more and start your free trial at OurFamilyCulture.org.
