Crafting your family's culture ๐จโ๐ฉโ๐งโ๐ฆ
Taking the time to be intentional about raising a family based on the values that are important to you.

This week weโre getting out of the weeds of the everyday and focusing on being intentional about the kind of families we want to build.
In the hectic day-to-day, this is the biggest worry Iโve heard - this idea that weโre doing so much but is it amounting to the right stuff? So we did a little digging on how families tackle this and what weโve found is surprisingly familiar.
Because it comes down to building culture.
For all of us used to building thoughtful cultures at work, this wonโt come as a surprise.
The definition of culture from MIT professorย Edgar Schein:
โCulture is a way of working together toward common goals that have been followed so frequently and so successfully that people donโt even think about trying to do things another way. If a culture has formed, people will autonomously do what they need to do to be successful.โ
Seen through the lens of our family, this resonates deeply with me: this idea that weโre a little unit that comes together to achieve shared goals.
So this week, weโre breaking down how to get started on the idea of being intentional about building your own unique family culture, living it day-to-day and building regular family check-ins.
Crafting your Family Culture โจ
Figuring out what you want your familyโs culture to be comes down to 3 things: Values, Norms+Traditions and Goals+Check-ins.
1) ๐Start with Values. The first is identifying the core values your family is all about. These can be things like generosity or adventure or creativity. Whatever they are, theyโre the backbone of everything else. Come up with a list of 6-8 that most represent your family (weโve shared a starter list of values in the worksheet below).
2) ๐บ๐ปEstablish Norms and Traditions. The next is how you bring those values to life in your daily life. Theyโre both the everyday way everyone behaves plus the rituals and special things you do. How you deal with conflict or discipline or even celebrations should be inline with your values, for your kids to see the consistency. Itโs also helpful in challenging times like when your kids are acting out or you have a major decision to make, to refer to your values.
3) โ
Check-in around your Goals. To make sure youโre living up to the values, itโs important to do regular reviews. Weโve seen families do anything from quarterly check-ins to once a year โfamily retreatsโ. Find a cadence and a structure that feels fun and right for your family. Maybe itโs a family movie night with popcorn, with a quick check-in over dinner. Or maybe itโs a weekend away, with activities all around the themes of your values.
The key here is to just check-in and see if you feel youโre focusing on the right values and if your day to day life is aligned with them, through your norms and traditions.
Bonus: Write a Family Mission Statement. For those of you that love this stuff (๐๐พโโ๏ธ), you can even go so far as to craft a mission statement. A short, descriptive set of statements that bring your values to life.
Though it can seem like overkill, I find there is value in clearly articulating in detail your intention, especially in areas where thereโs a lot of gray area in the interpretation.
Hereโs a worksheet to make it easier (right click, save image):

On a personal note, this weekโs topic was personally really meaningful. Our girls are ~8 and 5.5 which is still fairly young, but the idea of โwhat our family does or believesโ is starting to come up a lot - everything from why we love to travel to why our family doesnโt eat meat or why we donate toys we donโt use.
Iโm looking forward to sitting down together and explicitly articulating our beliefs and values. To be honest, I think this is something we probably could have done before now, to make sure my husband and I were on the same page about how we thought everything from little things like approach to meals or what play looks like to the big things like discipline and our role as parents.
The bright side is now, our girls can have a say. So weโve scheduled a little family meeting for next Saturday with a little Leap Year party afterwards, because well, thatโs what our family does.
Want to read up more on this topic? Here are a couple of great resources:
Last thing - weโre still in the early days of gathering these โbest practicesโ of busy parents and sharing them out. Iโd love the honest feedback - how is it helpful? How is it not? Email me atย avni@modernvillage.comย with the ๐, the ๐ and the ๐ซ.
Until next week.
Letโs parent forward.
-avni
Coming up:
๐ฐFamily finances. What are the biggies that we should all be thinking about and what are the tools and services making it easier?
๐ฅฐRelationships - it can be hard to figure out how to find the time and energy to invest back into our relationship with our partner. How do others do it?
๐๐ปโโ๏ธBuild your Back-up Bench - for those of us that donโt live near family or close friends, itโs a lifesaver having a Back-up Bench of people we can count on in a pinch. Weโll walk through how to build one that works for the long haul.
Do you have tips, tricks or tools that you think could help everyone? Share them here:ย https://themodernvillage.typeform.com/to/CpIfhT