
Valentine’s Day is often filled with cards, candy, and classroom parties. While those traditions are fun, Valentine’s also offers a meaningful opportunity for families to talk about something much deeper: how we give and receive love.
One powerful way to do that is by understanding love languages — the different ways people feel most loved, valued, and connected.
Love languages describe how we naturally express and experience love. While there are many ways to show care, five common love languages include:
💬 Words of Affirmation
🕰 Quality Time
🤝 Acts of Service
🎁 Thoughtful Gifts
🤗 Physical Touch (always age-appropriate and respectful)
When families understand love languages, it helps reduce misunderstandings and strengthens connection — especially during the tween and teen years.
Tweens and teens are in a key stage of emotional and developmental growth. They may often feel misunderstood, yet don’t always have the words to express what they’re experiencing. Emotions can run high, and peer and family relationships begin to take on greater meaning.
When parents understand and intentionally speak their child’s love language during this stage, it strengthens connection, builds emotional safety, and lays an important foundation for healthy communication and relationships in the teen years and beyond.
In many families, love can get “lost in translation.” Parents may show love in one way, while their child receives it best in another. Understanding love languages helps bridge that gap.

Understanding your child’s love language is powerful — and how you communicate it matters just as much. At Birds & Bees Connection, we use our B.E.E. Method to help families turn insight into meaningful connection, especially during the emotional tween and teen years.
Here’s how B.E.E. supports love languages:
B — Be Curious:
Get curious about what truly makes your child feel loved. Ask questions like, “What makes you feel most supported?” or “When do you feel closest to me?” Curiosity helps you discover your child’s love language and shows them their feelings matter.
E — Educate:
Share age-appropriate conversations about emotions, relationships, and connection. Teaching kids that people express love differently helps them understand that mismatches aren’t rejection — they’re communication differences.
E — Empower:
🐝 When families use the B.E.E. Method alongside love languages, Valentine’s becomes more than a holiday — it becomes a way to build lifelong communication and emotional connection.

Learning love languages does more than improve family connection — it also prepares kids for future friendships and romantic relationships. When kids understand what makes them feel valued, they are better equipped to:
Recognize healthy vs. unhealthy attention
Communicate their needs
Set and respect boundaries
Develop self-worth and confidence
These are critical skills for navigating adolescence and beyond.
Parents often give love the way they prefer to receive it. Taking time to notice how your child feels most loved can transform everyday moments — turning conflict into connection and stress into support.
A child who values Quality Time may act out when what they really need is focused attention. A child who needs Words of Affirmation may be especially sensitive to criticism. Recognizing these differences allows parents to respond with greater understanding and intention.
This Valentine’s season, try this simple family conversation:
Ask each family member:
What makes you feel most loved?
What helps you feel supported when you’re having a hard day?
How do you like to show love to others?
These conversations build emotional awareness and help create a shared language of connection.

At Birds & Bees Connection, we believe that strong parent-child communication is one of the most important foundations for raising confident, resilient kids. Understanding love languages — paired with the B.E.E. Method — gives families practical tools to strengthen trust, deepen connection, and support children as they navigate the physical, emotional, and social changes of puberty and adolescence.
Valentine’s isn’t just about romance — it’s about building relationships that help kids feel seen, safe, and supported at every stage of development.
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🐝 Contact Leslie
Cancellation Policy:
We require a minimum of 48 hours notice if you cannot attend a scheduled class.
Refunds are not offered. If you do cancel within the notice period, you will receive a class credit that can be applied towards a future class, including hosting a class or an Open to the Public class.
