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What are “Life Skills” and How Do I Teach Them?
January 21, 2026
Gena Suarez
Life Skills: The Real Education
Stacy Farrell
Essential Life Skills for Uncertain Times
Hal and Melanie Young
Raising Capable and Successful Adults
Heidi Mosher
The Kids Are Watching, So Walk This Way

Hey, Mama!

Life Skills: The Real Education
Hey, Mama.
You’re teaching your kids algebra and literature, but here’s what they really need to know: how to boil an egg, how to introduce themselves without mumbling, how to set a table, how to apologize, how to work hard when no one’s watching.
Those are life skills.
Life skills are the stuff nobody puts on a college transcript, but everybody needs to survive in the real world. Cooking. Basic sewing. Public speaking. Manners. Handling money. Cleaning. Working with your hands. Serving others. These aren’t extras—they’re discipleship.
“A wise man will hear, and will increase learning; and a man of understanding shall attain unto wise counsels” (Proverbs 1:5). Your kids are watching how you do these things. They’re learning by being with you—in the kitchen, at the table, in conversations. Stop assuming they’ll figure it out. They won’t.
Teach them by doing it together. Let them fail at the recipe. Have them practice the introduction ten times. Make them uncomfortable with growth. “Withhold not correction from the child . . . ” (Proverbs 23:13-14). That discipline—that refining—matters.
Your job isn’t to raise perfect kids. It’s to raise capable, faithful adults who can take care of themselves and serve others well. Years from now, they’ll remember your hands teaching theirs. That’s the legacy. His hand is on your head, Mama. Always.
—gena
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Apply today for Bible School at Capernwray Harbour to discover Jesus Christ, and experience the transforming power of His indwelling Life. More info at capernwray.ca

Stacy Farrell
Essential Life Skills for Uncertain Times
With soaring food prices and supply chain vulnerabilities, “life skills” take on new urgency—skills like:
- gardening
- food preservation
- meal planning and strategic pantry management
These aren’t optional extras—they’re pathways to money-saving, self-sustaining abundance and are foundational for thriving amid economic hardship.
Integrate Skills Seamlessly into Homeschool Lessons
As homeschool parents, we have the privilege and responsibility to design a course of study that will equip our children to become successful adults.
Fortunately, teaching life skills blends naturally with academic lessons:
- gardening teaches biology and ecology
- preservation teaches safe food science
- budgeting groceries sharpens math
- cooking builds reading comprehension through recipes
Find Reliable Sources
In this “Age of Information,” it can be difficult to discern reliable counselors from fools (especially with AI on the rise).
But when it comes to learning and teaching skills like canning and food preservation, it’s critical to learn safe practices.
On our FoodPrepGuide.com website and its YouTube channel, we focus on safe, efficient, and practical ways to embrace these timeless life skills.
Start Today
We offer free resources—blog posts, recipes, and video tutorials—to guide families seeking to develop these skills. Here’s some helpful resources to help you get started:
The Food Prep Guide YouTube channel offers free step-by-step videos on gardening, canning, and dehydrating.
It’s never too late to learn. (I didn’t learn how to make chicken soup until I was 50!) That said, the best time to begin is now . . . don’t wait!
With His love,
Stacy
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About the author
Surprised by Jesus, Stacy went from an unmarried, childless, thirty-something career woman to a Christ-following wife of more than thirty years with two sons she homeschooled K-12.
Author of more than twenty books—including the award-winning Philosophy Adventure and Food Prep Guide: A Plan for Money-Saving, Self-Sustaining Abundance in Hard Times—she loves to equip and encourage homeschool families. Visit her at HomeschoolAdventure.com and at FoodPrepGuide.com.

Hal and Melanie Young
Raising Capable and Successful Adults
It’s easy to get focused on curricula and class credits. They’re important, but academics are just a small part of adult life, aren’t they? When our sons and daughters leave home, they need to know much more!
Think through daily life and picture your teen in different situations. Does he know how to shop and cook for himself? Can she make a doctor’s appointment? Can they do their own laundry? Can they manage their own time and schedule? These may sound ridiculously obvious except we’ve run into young adults who couldn’t do these things!
The key we found for training was the example of Jesus. He didn’t enroll the disciples in class; instead, He lived in front of them. He’d teach crowds, then ask them, “Do you understand?” Next, He’d call them alongside to help Him minister. Finally, He sent them out on their own—and followed up afterward, to answer any questions.
That’s how we’ve trained our teens. Show them how things are done. Have them try with our help. Gradually give them opportunities to fly solo. Whenever you think about it, call your child alongside and talk about what you’re doing. “Hey, sweetheart, let’s check the fluids in the car.” “Son, let me show you how to iron a shirt.” “Kids, this is how we prepare the turkey!”
Our teens are capable of surprising things with proper training, support, and supervision. Give them a chance while they’re still at home!
Your friends,
Hal & Melanie
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