Close your eyes and remember yourself at 10 years old. What did you dream about? A bike, a dog, for your parents to stop fighting, or a trip to the Moon? A 10-year-old's dreams are not just "wishes." They are a map of their inner world. They speak of fears, love, and the future. They can be funny, touching, or scary. Understanding them means understanding your child. Let's dive into this wonderful world.
Dreams can be divided into several categories. Material: "I want an iPhone," "I want a kitten," "I want a room like a blogger's." Social: "I want to be popular," "I don't want to be bullied," "I want to find a real friend." Achievement-oriented: "I want to win an olympiad," "I want to score 100 goals," "I want to become a doctor." Family-oriented: "I want my parents to reconcile," "I want my mom not to be sick," "I want us to have our own home."
Abstract: "I want happiness," "I want to fly," "I want all people to be kind." Fantastic: "I want superpowers," "I want a time machine," "I want to turn into an animal."
A child may have a mix. Today he wants to become a footballer, tomorrow a cosmonaut, the day after tomorrow a blogger. This is normal. Dreams at this age are fluid.
Where does a child get their dreams from? The first source is the family. If Mom dreams of traveling, the child does too. If Dad is a football fan, the son wants to become Messi. The second is school and friends. Seeing a robot at a classmate's — wanting one too. Hearing from a friend about horse riding — wanting a horse.
The third is media. TikTokkers, YouTubers, cartoons, advertising. A child sees a bright image — wants to be inside. The fourth is books and movies. "Harry Potter" spawns dreams of magic, "Star Wars" — of space, "Spider-Man" — of saving the world.
The fifth is personal experiences. If a child is often sick, they may dream of becoming a doctor. If they are lonely, they may dream of a friend. If they are bullied, they may dream of strength.
Unofficial ranking of dreams of 10-year-olds (based on surveys of teachers and psychologists):
Travel (especially to Paris, New York, Japan). Expensive gadget (iPhone, tablet, gaming console). Pet (cat, dog, hamster, rabbit, parrot). Fame (become a blogger, singer, actor, footballer). New friends or a best friend. For parents to stop fighting or get divorced (yes, there's such a thing). To become invisible or have superpowers. To live in your own home with a swimming pool. To get everything you want for your birthday. To save the world or someone specific (for example, to heal grandmother).
Interestingly, the dreams of boys and girls often overlap, but there are nuances: boys more often dream of cool cars and weapons, girls — about family and beauty. But this is not a law.
Behind a dream may be pain. A child dreams of a dog — maybe he lacks unconditional love. Dreams of money — maybe he feels insecure due to comparisons with classmates. Dreams of becoming invisible — maybe he is bullied or afraid to answer at the blackboard.
Dreams of parents not fighting — obviously, there are conflicts in the family. Dreams of strength — maybe he feels weak and defenseless. Dreams of fame — maybe he lacks recognition at home.
Important: don't panic at every dream, but listen. If dreams become anxious (for example, "I want to die" or "I want everyone to die"), this is a reason to talk to a psychologist.
At 7 years old, a child dreams of miracles. At 10, they are more grounded. They understand that you can't become a superhero, but you can become a doctor or a policeman. Dreams become more realistic, but still with elements of fantasy.
By 12, dreams may become more social: "I want to be respected," "I want to have a girlfriend/boyfriend," "I want to get into a cool school." At 10, it's a mix: about a kitten, a million, and world peace.
Important: don't belittle your child's dreams, even if they seem silly to you. "I want a scooter like my neighbor" — for him, it's serious. Don't say "stupidity." Better ask: "Why exactly that?".
10-year-old girls often dream about family, children, beauty, princesses (yes, they haven't outgrown it yet). Boys — about cars, money, strength, computers. But modern children are breaking stereotypes more and more. A boy can dream of becoming a stylist, a girl — a pilot. And that's great.
If you notice that your child's dreams are limited by gender stereotypes, gently expand horizons. "You know, girls can also be engineers. Want to watch a movie about a woman inventor?". Don't impose, just suggest.
"I want to become a billionaire." "I want to fly." "I want to live on Mars." Don't say "that's impossible." Say: "That's hard, but interesting. Let's think about what we need to make it happen?". For flying to Mars — study physics, English, become a cosmonaut or engineer. For a billion — study economics, programming, business.
Make the dream a project. Draw a map together: what needs to be studied, where to go, who to meet. Even if the dream doesn't come true, the child will gain planning skills and not be disappointed in themselves.
But if the dream is obviously dangerous ("I want to become a vampire and drink blood"), don't support it. Explain that this is fantasy and it's not possible in reality. Offer an alternative: "If you like vampires, let's read about bats or write a story."
The first is to listen. Don't dismiss. The child should know that their dreams are important to you. The second is to help with planning. If the dream is material (iPhone), discuss how to save up (pocket money, part-time job, birthday gift). Don't buy it immediately, otherwise the child won't learn to value it.
If the dream is not material (become an artist), sign up for a class, buy paints, find a good teacher. If the dream is social (find a friend), help with socialization: sign up for a class where there are children with similar interests.
But don't do everything for the child. The dream should be theirs, not yours. If you impose your own realization of the dream ("I want you to become a doctor like me"), it won't bring happiness.
The child dreamed of a puppy, but has allergies. Dreamed of winning a contest, but came in fifth place. Dreamed of a trip, but the money was spent on repairs. How to support? Don't say "don't be sad, it's nonsense." This is devaluation. Say: "I see how sad you are. Let's talk for 5 minutes, and then think about what we can do."
Offer an alternative not immediately, but after a pause. Not "instead of a puppy, let's get a hamster," but "what other animals do you like?". Or "you didn't win, but you did enjoy participating?".
Important lesson: dreams may not come true, but this does not make life meaningless. Teach the child to live with disappointments. This will be useful in adult life.
The child dreams of an iPhone because everyone has one? This is envy. Dreams because it's needed for school? This is a need. How to distinguish? Ask: "What will you do with it? If it's just to show off, it's envy. If it's to make educational videos, it's interest."
Work on envy. Explain that you can't have everything that others have. Tell about your own childlike envious dreams. "I also wanted jeans like Lena's. But then I realized that I have other advantages." Help the child find their strengths that are not related to things.
And here, envy of abilities ("he draws better than everyone, and I don't") can be turned into motivation: "Let's ask him to teach? Or go to courses?".
Dream — "I want to become a footballer." Imagination — "I am already a footballer, I scored a goal at the stadium." Dream — a real goal (however distant). Imagination — an escape from reality. If a child only imagines and does nothing for the dream — it's okay, they have time. If they live in imagination, don't study, don't communicate — this is a reason to think.
Help translate imagination into action. Dreams of pirate adventures? — read books about pirates, watch movies, go to an aerial park. Dreams of magic? — learn tricks, chemistry on the kitchen.
"I don't need anything," "I don't know," "Everything is fine." The absence of dreams may be a sign of depression, or it may just be a characteristic of their character. Some children are pragmatic: they don't need unattainable dreams, they live here and now.
Try to "wake up." Ask open-ended questions: "If you had a magic wand, what would you do?", "What would you like for your birthday if there were no limits?". Don't pressure. Sometimes dreams awaken at 11-12 years old.
If the child says "I don't want anything" and at the same time has a bad mood, problems at school, eats poorly — take them to a psychologist. The absence of desires may be a symptom.
Research shows that children who can dream and plan are more successful in adult life. Dreams train imagination, goal-setting, perseverance. Even if the dream doesn't come true, the path to it gives skills.
But don't force the child to "decide on a profession at 10 years old." Dreams will change. And that's normal. Your task is to support the process, not the result. Let him want to become a fireman today, a singer tomorrow, a programmer the day after tomorrow. There is a seed in every dream.
And remember: sometimes dreams come true not as we expected. The child dreamed of a dog, but 10 years later he will have a cat, and he will be happy. Dreamed of a million, but found a job that brings joy, not money. Don't be attached to the letter of the dream, value the spirit.
10-year-old children's dreams are fragile, bright butterflies. You can't catch them, but you can observe, admire, help them fly. Don't criticize, don't belittle, don't mock. Better ask: "Tell me about your dream. I want to understand it." And listen. And be amazed. And maybe you will remember your own childhood dreams. Those that have come true. And those that haven't.
The world of a 10-year-old's dreams is proof that they are alive, feel, hope. As long as there are dreams, there is a future. And our task, as adults, is not to cut off these wings with our skeptical "it won't work." Let the child dream. This is the best you can do for them.
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