This is Mr. Funky Teacher with BeAFunkyTeacher.com. I’m coming to you with another Be a Funky Teacher podcast. Today’s episode is called Let Kids Try Hard Things: The Gift of Struggle. This message matters—not just for students, but for teachers, parents, and anyone who cares about kids becoming capable, confident adults. Before we get into it, I want to share three things I’m thankful for today. The first thing I’m thankful for is fun, colorful posters. They brighten classrooms, lift energy, and help students feel that school can be joyful and engaging. The second thing I’m thankful for is my MacBook. It’s a critical tool for planning, creating, designing, and connecting. It helps me bring my best ideas into the classroom. The third thing I’m thankful for is playful games at home and at school. Joy connects people. It bonds families, builds classroom culture, and reminds us that learning should include laughter. Now let’s get into the main topic. Let kids try hard things. Kids don’t grow without challenge. They grow through challenge. We say we want resilient kids, but sometimes we remove every difficulty in their path. When we help too much, we accidentally steal the growth. Struggle teaches perseverance, problem-solving, frustration management, and self-trust. Struggle is not the enemy. Struggle is the tutor. When adults rescue too quickly, students learn patterns. They learn that someone else will fix it. They learn that struggle means failure. This is how dependence forms—not because kids lack ability, but because they lack opportunity. Productive struggle builds identity. Confidence grows when students experience moments like “I figured this out” or “I didn’t quit.” Each success becomes part of their internal foundation. This does not mean leaving students stuck or overwhelmed. Safe struggle matters. Safe struggle includes clear expectations, encouragement, supportive relationships, and space to fail without shame. Teachers don’t throw students into the deep end. They wade in with them and let them feel the water. Standing back does not mean you don’t care. Sometimes it communicates trust. Support doesn’t always look like rescue. Sometimes it looks like a well-timed pause. Classrooms are the perfect place for kids to practice hard things. Here, they can try, fail, adjust, and grow with guidance. When students learn to try hard things in school, they are more willing to try hard things in life. Hard does not mean impossible. Hard means growth. As I close, here’s the truth I want every educator and parent to remember. Protecting kids from every difficulty leaves them unprepared. Guiding kids through difficulty prepares them for life. Let students try. Let them stretch. Let them struggle. Let them grow. Because the world needs people who know how to do hard things. Remember to inspire greatness in young people. And don’t forget to be a funky teacher. Bye now.