The Family Night Virtual Course
Do you want to help your child move past “I’m fine” and find out what’s really going on? Family Night helps you do that and more like strengthening emotional intelligence (more important than IQ to future success), learning to ask for help and connecting as a family. Oh yeah, and it’s fun!
The Family Night Virtual Course
Do you want to help your child move past “I’m fine” and find out what’s really going on? Family Night helps you do that and more like strengthening emotional intelligence (more important than IQ to future success), learning to ask for help and connecting as a family. Oh yeah, and it’s fun!
A world of distractions
A family tradition to help your children learn to share their feelings and ask for help.
Helping your children become self-sufficient adults
The right product at the right time.
- A family distracted by devices that rarely spends quality time together.
- A weekly family tradition where you sit down to discuss how everyone in the family is doing.
- Hoping your child grows up able to express their feelings and ask for help when they need it.
- Teaching your children the foundations to be self-sufficient adults who advocate for themselves.
- Hoping your family stays close as your children get older.
- A family tradition you can even do when your children move out on their own.
- A family distracted by devices that rarely spends quality time together.
- A weekly family tradition where you sit down to discuss how everyone in the family is doing.
- Hoping your child grows up to express their feelings and ask for help when they need it.
- Teaching your children the foundations to be self-sufficient adults who advocate for themselves.
- Hoping your family stays close as your children get older.
- A family tradition you can continue when your children move out on their own.
What do parents think of Family Night?
Family Night did a great job helping us communicate better with our children. We understand our children better than before using the program.
Sarah
N.C.
The book and course have a ton of helpful information. They also pair perfectly with the playbook. I love having everything laid out so simply for my wife and I.
Karl
CA
The program did a great job of making me believe I could get my kids to share more with me. And my kids do share more now. I didn't feel this was possible before Family Night!
Monique
CO
What do children think of Family Night?
I look forward to Family Night. I used to think sharing feelings was not a good idea before Family Night. I have learned to stand up for myself more and to ask teachers for help.
Brando
N.Y.
Family Night is the best. It's the time we feel most like a family. It makes me feel so happy. We have a yummy meal before the meetings and dessert. It's the best night of the week.
Abi
CA
I like Family Night because I get to share my thoughts. I like that everyone focuses on me and doesn't look at their phones. After the meeting we watch a fun show together.
Bodhi
N.Y.
“Communication must be taught and practiced in order to bring everyone together as one.”
- Mike Krzyzewski
The winningest coach in Division I men's college basketball history.
Start The Family Night Virtual Course For FREE
Family Night Chapter Index
Our story
- Welcome to Family Night
- Our story
- The benefits of Family Night
- A special message for fathers
Quick start guide
- Quick Start Guide: Part One
- Quick Start Guide: Part Two
- Things To Avoid
- Perfection Is The Enemy Of Progress
- This Is A Marathon
Let's have a meeting
- Before The Meeting
- Our First Meeting
- After The Meeting
Playbook
- Playbook
- Interests
- Weekly Goal
- Holding Yourself Accountable
- Before Moving Forward
Listening & Responding
- Basics
- Fake It Till You Make It
- The Doubt Police
- Asking Permission
- Asking Questions
- I Don't Know
- Code Words
- Reflecting
- I Messed Up
- Speak The Same Language
- My Child Is Yessing Me
- Referee Syndrome
Advanced Topics
- Divisive Topics
- One-on-Ones
- Outside Help
- Processing Loss
- ADHD, Executive Functions, On The Spectrum
- Anxiety
- Honesty
- Asking for help
Becoming A Great Family Night Guide
- The Honesty Of Children
- Limiting Beliefs
- Guilt And Shame
- The Blame Game
- Hypocrisy
- Being In Control
- Fathers
- Mothers
- Over Investigating
- Ask And You Will Receive
Weekly Themes
- Theme: Grief & Loss
- Theme: Teamwork
- Theme: Listening
- A Library Of Weekly Themes
Resources
- Your new homebase
- Cooldown Kit
- Parent report card
Some of the topics covered in Family Night
- Communicating instead of yelling.
- Naming your feelings.
- Why your children stop communicating, and how to avoid it.
- Staying connected as a family in a digital world.
- How to discuss sensitive topics.
- Learning to advocate for yourself.
- The importance of asking for help.
- Inner coaching.
- Emotional intelligence.
- Self-esteem.
- Self-confidence.
- Empathy for others.
- Helping your child when they are stuck.
- The best questions for the deepest answers.
- How to address divisive topics.
- Tips to make your children comfortable to share their fears.
- Avoiding the mistakes our parents made raising us.
- Breaking toxic family patterns.