The symbolism of interlocking fingers appeared to give the pinky promise a deeper significance than words. It is currently popular among people. It is a promise made by two people, most notably parents and children. Keeping a promise to our children builds the foundation for trust and respect. When we do things consistently, our children can trust us. Nurturing this behaviour in children early on sets a habit that leads to reliability and credibility later in life.
Children are not forgetful, breaking a promise has a negative psychological impact on them as they grow. Keeping our promises to children requires us to be consistent in both our words and acts. When we live up to our words and show our commitment, children feel secure and can understand commitment better.
Naturally, a child will learn not to trust you until he witnesses it. Perhaps he will also learn to lie about his intentions and break promises. Children pick up everything from you, even your imperfections. Respect, integrity, and follow-through are virtues that you should also be demonstrating for them.
You may think of breaking a promise as an unsettling part of life, but your child may see it otherwise. A failed promise, or a string of broken promises, might start to seem more and more like falsehoods. Broken promises teach children that not everything they say has to be true.
Speaking words like "I promise" becomes your option when you don't make the necessary progress towards keeping your word. Even if at your end it is just a simple promise like visiting their grandparents on weekends. To your children, it's a big deal. I am sure
you do not want your children to grow up to be habitual liars. If you lead by example and keep your word, they will come to trust you more.
Do not break a promise, especially to children, because it hurts them the most when you fail to keep your word, and they will never believe you anymore. Father God vowed to send His only son to us and kept His word.
Namaste,
@diosarich💞