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How a simple high five can change everything

Back in 2017 we were all a little teary-eyed by Barry White Jr., the teacher who greeted each of his 5th graders with a personalized handshake every morning.

What an awesome human. šŸ‘Š

Handshakes, high fives, and pandemic-friendly elbow-bumps communicate encouragement, acceptance, and friendship far better than words ever could.

But bestselling authorĀ Mel Robbins thinks kids shouldnā€™t just be high-fiving their teachers, parents and friends ā€” they should be high-fiving themselves.

Ok, I know it sounds a little wacky, I thought the same thing.

But when I dove into the research behind this practice, my curiosity piqued.

šŸ§ Ā The brain science behind the high five

Letā€™s forget about weirdly high-fiving yourself for a minute and focus on how a simple high five can have a profound psychological impact.

It's all about neuroscience. šŸ‘‡

When you give or receive a high five, your brain mixes up a neurochemical cocktail of feel-good libations like:

  • Dopamine

  • Serotonin

  • OxytocinĀ 

This trio boosts your mood, increases happiness, and strengthens social bonds.Ā 

For kids, this means a high five from a parent isnā€™t just a sign of approval ā€” it's a brain-boosting reward.

The crazy part is your kids donā€™t even have to experience a high five to garner the neurological benefits.

Our brains have these cool cells called ā€œmirror neuronsā€ that fire not only when we perform an action, but when we observe someone else doing it.

So when your kid sees athletes high-fiving on the field, or game show contestants high-fiving after scoring points, their mirror neurons fire, simulating the experience and its positive effects. This helps in developing empathy and understanding social cues.

So if theyā€™re gonna watch TV, throw on shows with lotsa high fives!

šŸ™Œ Why your kid should give themselves a high five

Mel RobbinsĀ wrote an entire book about the value of self high fives.

Source: Giphy

Mel claims that this practice will ā€œimmediately boost your mood, build your confidence, and give you the burst of inspiration and support that you need.ā€

Her method is broken down into three steps that should be performed every morning:

  1. Look in the mirror

  2. Set an intention ā€” something you want to achieve that day

  3. Give your reflection a high five

Awkward. I know.

But when you blend the neurological benefits of a high five with power of intention, itā€™s worth 10-seconds awkwardness to give a shot. šŸ¤·

Try it with your kids this week.

Challenge them to do the high five exercise five days in a row, then get in touch and tell me how it went!

The worst that can happen is a handprint on your bathroom mirror. šŸ–ļø