“Discipline your children while there is hope, otherwise you will ruin their lives.” Prov. 19:18
- Put your child’s happiness first as the guiding value in your home
Parenting Insights:
- Happiness is a transitory, conditional, feeling based on circumstances, it is not a value, therefore, we should not strive to build a parental relationship based on it.
- Children need parents who are Christ-centered and mature enough to make decisions based on what is best for the child, not on what will make the child happy.
Going Deeper:
- Recall a time when your parents made a decision that went against what would have made you happy.
- Recall a time when you had to make a decision for your child that did not make him or her happy.
- Recall a time when you made a decision for your child on the basis his or her happiness against your better judgment.
- Make your child the focus of your marital relationship
Parenting Insights:
- The primary relationship in the home is the parent’s marital relationship
- A child-focused family puts anxiety on the child and takes attention away from the primary relationship in the home
Going Deeper:
- Can you identify the triangles in your family of origin?
- Has your family become a child- focused family?
- Do things for your child that he can do for himself
Parenting Insights:
- The test of successful parenting is how well we have prepared our children to be independent, self-sufficient adults.
- The more you do for your children that they can do for themselves, the more dependent and incompetent you make them.
- The only way to nurture responsible, independent children is to give them responsibility and then hold them accountable.
Going Deeper:
- Can you discern “over-involved” behaviors on your part?
- What do you imagine will be the consequences to you and your child if this pattern continues?
- Map out your child’s life based on your own dreams and aspirations
Parenting Insights:
- Mapping out your child’s life based on your self-worth, dreams, personal reputation, and personal hopes in their children rob them of their destiny.
- Your job as a parent is to rear a child who will have the capacity to be his or her own person.
Going Deeper:
- Share a story about your own parents’ expectations of you as a child.
- Share a story of a time when you “failed” at something that your parents expected of you.
- Get involved in fights between siblings
Parenting Insights:
- Parents who interfere in the developing sibling relationship of their children run the risk of alienating them from one another and keeping their relationship from developing.
- Parents need to raise their tolerance level for appropriate sibling conflict and stay out of the emerging relationships between their children.
Going Deeper:
- What are the five top things your kids fight about?
- If you don’t intervene in your kid’s conflict, what do think will happen?
- Argue with your child
Parenting Insights:
- When you argue with your child you abdicate your parental role.
- When you argue with your child you teach him that he has the right to question your judgment and decisions every time.
- You are the parent; you have more rights and responsibilities for your child’s well-being.
Going Deeper:
- Identify a time and circumstance in which you and your child argued.
- What do you commonly argue about?
- Is the pattern in your family one where the children argue with one parent but not the other? What does that say?
- Call on your spouse to be the disciplinarian
Parenting Insights:
- Calling on your spouse to be the family disciplinarian teaches the children that you, the parent, have no authority or power over the child.
- Calling on your spouse to be the disciplinarian keeps your family in a perpetual triangle.
- When children know that their parents are in charge it provides a sense of security and a moral center for their world.
- The parent who is present at the time of misbehavior or infraction is the parent who must administer the discipline.
Going Deeper:
- Do you tend to call on your spouse to be the disciplinarian?
- Why do make your spouse the disciplinarian?
- Over-praise your child
Parenting Insight:
- Over-praising a child can do more harm than good.
- The “everyone gets a trophy” mentality ignores poor behavior, which can tempt children to children cheat and lie. They become unable to handle life’s difficulties.
- Praise should be specific and more about effort than ability.
Going Deeper:
- Do you over-praise your child in an effort to bolster their self-esteem?
- Are your kids involved in sports, clubs, etc. that promote the “everyone gets a trophy” mentality?
- Insulate your child from risk
Parenting Insights:
- Rescuing your kids too quickly and not letting them solve problems on their own prevents them from experiencing normal failures or pain (a breakup or a skinned knee), which can develop into anxiety, arrogant attitude, or low self-esteem.
Going Deeper:
- Are you a “helicopter” parent?
- Identify a time that you rescued your child rather than let him suffer the consequences of his behavior.
- Spoil your child
Parenting Insights:
- Consistently giving a child what he wants rather than what he needs leads to excessive, self-centered, and immature behavior. It includes lack of consideration for other people, recurrent temper tantrums, an inability to delay gratification, and demanding or manipulating to get his own way.
- Spoiling a child is the failure of the parents to enforce consistent, age-appropriate limits.
Going Deeper:
- Are you guilty of spoiling your child? What do you think is your motive?
- Do you observe excessive, self-centered, and immature behavior in any of your children?
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