
What if the thing that drives you crazy about your son is actually one of his greatest God-given strengths?
You know the moment. You’re at the dinner table, and everything’s peaceful — until the silverware starts rattling. One boy’s knee is bouncing. Another is spinning his fork. He’s not trying to be disruptive. He just can’t seem to sit still.
And before you know it, someone says it: “Why can’t you just calm down?” “Why can’t you sit still like your sister?”
“Like your sister.”
Here’s the thing: your son is not like his sister. God made him different. Unfortunately, we’ve spent decades trying to teach boys in a way that works better for their sisters, and the consequences are far-reaching.
But what if we tried something new? What if we paused and considered what it might look like to teach boys in a way that takes into account God’s beautiful and clever design?
After walking with over 100,000 men and boys through Trail Life USA over the last decade, I can tell you: Boys were built to move. Their bodies, their brains, their energy — it’s not a problem to solve. It’s a design to understand. But for too long, we’ve asked boys to act more like girls and punished them when they don’t.
Modern education favors stillness, compliance and quiet focus — things girls tend to develop earlier than boys. Boys, on the other hand, are often still working out how to focus, regulate emotion and control that raw energy. But instead of giving them room to grow, we hand them labels: disruptive, unfocused, disobedient.
But as one Harvard scientist put it, boys have to move in order for their brains to be fully engaged. Movement isn’t a distraction from learning — for many boys, it’s the path to learning.
And yet today, boys hear the same message over and over: Sit still. Be quiet. Try harder. Be more like your sister.
While our society has made great strides in empowering girls, we’ve inadvertently told boys that their instincts, their nature and their strengths are flaws. In lifting up one side of the scale, we’ve unbalanced the whole thing, and boys are paying the price.
We’ve created a system that rewards stillness and punishes motion, and then we wonder why boys seem to be falling behind.
We call them attention-seeking, but I have to ask: What’s wrong with wanting attention?
God wired boys to lead. That desire to be seen, to be part of the action, to do something that matters — it’s not a bug in the system. It’s the beginning of a mission. That so-called “rambunctious” nature? It’s the same drive that leads men to storm beaches in wartime, scale cliffs to rescue the stranded or build something where nothing once stood.
In fact, when we stifle that drive, we risk losing the very spirit God put in them to make them strong, bold and ready to serve.
That’s the picture Scripture gives us: “Teach them diligently … when you walk by the way” (Deuteronomy 6:7). Not “when you strap them to a desk and force them to sit still.” When you walk by the way.
Movement isn’t the enemy. It’s the medium.
Boys do not believe there is a tree that should not be climbed. And maybe they’re right. That courage, that curiosity, that physicality — it’s not a phase. It’s a calling.
So, let’s stop glaring at boys who can’t sit still.
Let’s start gazing with awe at what God might be building in them.
Let’s see that wild, wonderful spark for what it really is — a glimpse of the man he’s meant to become.
Mark Hancock is the CEO of Trail Life USA, a character, leadership, and adventure organization that is both Christ-centered and boy-focused. Trail Life USA partners with churches and parents across America as the premier national character development organization for young men which produces generations of godly and responsible husbands, fathers, and citizens. In over 1,100 churches in all 50 states, fathers and sons are connecting, relationships are deepening, and legacies are beginning as a new generation of godly leaders rises.