Building Family Strengths Page 3

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Title: Four Letter Words For Parents

Author: AE Wise

Article:
Rearing children has never been an easy task. Children are human beings in an underdeveloped state and just like their adult counterparts; they exhibit personality traits that can be challenging. Unfortunately, more and more parents are opting for the easy way out and not promoting healthy development in their children. More and more parents are focusing on the intellectual and athletic development of the child ignoring the psychological and sociological development. What is a parent to do? Are there enough words to help develop a truly well rounded adult? Below you will find the best four letter words every parent should use to rear healthy, competent, loving, and happy children.

TIME

"Quality Time vs. Quantity Time" has been kicked around for two decades as a way of absolving parents from their key responsibility: rearing their children. Bussing children around from one sporting event to another is not quality time. Only one in 16,000 children will grow up to be a professional athlete. How many "Hall of Famers" have you heard thank their little league coaches? Unless that person was a parent, the answer is none. How many wealthy men have left their fortune to any of these groups? However, wealthy men who left vast amounts of money to the Boy Scouts of America for the same reason: promotion of values, family involvement, and civic involvement. A parent must ask the following questions: Why am I carting my children off to all these events? Is it truly for the children or are you living vicariously through the child? Are you using your child as a status symbol? When we are together, are we talking about the child, or the activity?

PLAY

Playing is a child's work. It is through play that a child discovers and develops certain skills. A two-year-old needs to learn how to roll a ball back and forth, and preliminary social skills not the alphabet. A parrot can memorize the alphabet, and a chimpanzee can learn sign language. There is no great skill or higher intelligence in that. Playing is a child's version of stress release. It seems odd that someone who in 1968 could enter first grade without knowing how to read, attend a school day that included two fifteen minute recesses and an hour lunch, during a school year that began the day after Labor Day and concluded before Memorial Day could still grow-up to graduate college and end up a CEO of a major company. Why do we think that play is a waste of time? Play is fun. It makes you laugh thus lowering blood pressure, includes uses various muscle groups through activity which keeps weight down, and is multi-dynamic: teaches life lessons, sharing, patience, reading, problem solving, arithmetic, rhythm, strategy, cause and effect, decision making, honor, self-worth, dignity, self-esteem, etc. Anytime a child plays any game, even if alone, a valuable lesson is learned. Just because a self-absorbed workaholic parent cannot see that does not make it less true. It is even more important for children to have parents play with them.

Video games only count if they last for an hour or less, and the whole family is actively involved. A child that spends more than an hour, and worse, alone playing video game does not gain any tangible intellectual reward. Bill Gates does not own a video game system.

TALK/DINE

Children want parents to talk with them, even when they say, "Nothing" or "I don't want to talk about it." How will a child know what is important in life if the parent will not talk to the child? One of the best times to talk with your child is at the dinner table, not in some restaurant, fast or five stars, but in the safety and quiet of home. Home is safe base; it is a time for the child to have the parent alone. Practice rephrasing questions so that they are open-ended, cannot be answered with "yes" or "no." Parents need to listen to their children and talking with them about their day even if the events may not seem important or educationally sound to you. It does not matter the child's nationality, creed, race, or favorite team most of them will answer this question the same way:

PARENT: "What did you do in school today?" CHILD: "Nothin' "

It is surprising how many parents believe that answer carte blanche. Many adults answer that question the same way when "work" is substituted for "school." The reason is simple, school is repetitive, the same subjects everyday. The child is just regurgitating an auto response. The teacher or teachers are teaching and the child is learning. Try reframing: "Did anything new, exciting, interesting, insane happen today?" The humor of the question will flip the auto switch off, and the choices will hit upon a memory. Unfortunately, parents want to hear about the joys of arithmetic, writing, reading a classic. If parents will honestly recall their own childhood, they will remember that PE, art, recess were their favorite times, too.

Let your children know what you value and why. Why is itthat they must make all As? Is it for a better future for them, or parental bragging rights at work? Studies have shown repeatedly that the B-C student is the most successful in life.

PRAY

It is not the fact that God has been removed from schools but that parents have removed Him from the home. A child who is given a spiritual support system tends to handle the difficult moments in life. The world is not worse, contrary to popular belief; however, the coping skills are nonexistent. Everyone needs to know that there is a Higher Force in control when we have lost control. It does not matter how this Higher Force
manifests itself as long as it is positive. A centering prayer is a good way to help a child refocus when Life throws a curve ball. Prayer can give a parent the needed time to rephrase before reacting in a harmful manner, whether physically or verbally.

Pray with your child, for your child, for yourself, for others who encounter your child.

WORK/EARN

Children need to learn that money, privileges, items, grades, etc. are earned not owed. Children get a true feeling of accomplishment when they work and earn something. A parent does not help a child by giving the child anything the child wants without earning it. A baby chick that is helped out of the shell instead of pecking its way out is not strong enough to survive. It is true with children who never learn the value and accomplishment of earning something through work. A parent who completes a child's homework because the child says it is too difficult. Work with the child, reframe for the child, teach the child to ask the teacher for help, but do not complete the assignment for the child. The only lesson a child learns from that example is the parent can be tricked into doing the child's homework.

LOVE

You may not always like your child but you must always love them. It is important that parents tell children often that they love them. All children go through periods of doubt, especially when they have committed some offense. Children do not always "know" that parents love them. If a parent cannot say the words, "I love you," to a child something is wrong and the child will interpret it as rejection. Things are not love, love belongs to people not to things. It is not money that is the root of all evil but the love of money. A child will reciprocate to the world the love received at home.

Lust is not love. Children need to learn that sexual desire does not equate love. If a child is not shown love at home, hugs for example, then the child will seek that physical connection somewhere else. Children need to be loved in a safe and accepting environment in order to grow into loving adults.

Love carries an obligation to be good, kind, and gentle to those who are weaker.

HOPE

Children need to know that "the sun will come out tomorrow." Children need to know that no matter how hard a situation becomes it will get better, it might take some time, but it will get better. Children need to know that they are a parent's hope for the future. The parent knows the world will be better because they are in it. The truth is because of hope the world will get better.

LIFE

Life is not fair. Life is not easy. Life happens. Life is disappointing. Life is boring. Starting in the mid-70s parents decided they needed to protect children from Life. You cannot. Children need to experience life in order to learn how to navigate past the difficult parts. Children who are taught they can say or do anything they wish without consequences fail in life. Life means "no" more times than "yes." The work force has taken a serious turn toward the worst because children have not learned the meaning of "no," discipline, responsibility, honor, pride, or love.

Life is beautiful because other people share in it. Life offers many fulfilling opportunities the most important of which is the number of diverse people in it. Life is rewarding because of the beauty in holds through Nature. Life is worth living because of every single life each person touches, whether the other person realizes it at the time or not.

REAL

Aging teaches children the difference between reality and fantasy as long as the parent guides the child through the process. It is not reality to give children everything they want because that is not Life. Children who do not learn that there is a hierarchy will fail to become productive in the business world. The real world teaches everyone that there will always be someone else to whom to answer. Even someone who owns a business is accountable to suppliers and customers. The real world proves everyday that an adult who throws a tantrum is either mental ill or immature and not to be taken seriously.

In the real world, there are consequences for actions taken. Physics, every action has an opposite and equal reaction, cannot be denied forever even if it seems that a person has gotten away with an illegal or unethical activity. Every Holy Book has some equivalent of "what goes around comes around." Children need to know that a parent cannot always rescue them from problems of
their creation.

WANT vs. NEED

There is a huge difference between want and need. Children, by their egocentric nature, want everything. However, if a parent provides too many material things to a child at an early age then how does the child learn appreciation or gratitude? If a child needs the latest style in clothes in order to express individuality, or an item because everyone else has one, or a high tag item to fit in and the parent gives in without explanation. Then the parent has proven to the child that the child does indeed need material possessions and that they are more important than personal growth.

A prime example of this is the perceived need for portable media devices. There was a time when a family trip afforded the perfect opportunity for families to reconnect. Only family members were allowed because the point was family togetherness. The long drive's entertainment included talking, singing (either to the radio or family songs when the airwaves were not available), arguing, reading, crossword puzzles, or travel size version of board games. No, however, cars are equipped, or can be equipped with DVD players, each child has an individual handheld video game, several members may have MP3 players, or a member is on the cell phone. All this is going on in place of true communication. Children literally tuning out the world and their parents can be seen outside the vehicle. Even when the family shops children and their parents can be seen ear plugged into MP3 players, and cell phones as they shop. It is interesting to note that more and more youth retreats and school field trips are no longer allowing children to bring their electronic devices. One reason is a security issue; however, behind that is an issue that schools are finally starting to address: personal communication between students.

Children's worlds are by nature egocentric, it is a parent's job to help them ascertain between want and need. Take an inventory of a child's room and see how many needed items have been set aside and neglected for the latest fad.

FREE

In today's society, most individuals are wary of anything that is free. People have been trained to believe that the most expensive is the best, the most exclusive the ultimate. It is important to understand the essence of the human being: to be love, understood, wanted, and productive. All unhappiness can be found in a shortage in one, or all, of those four. Fortunately, all can be attained and parents are the most important supplier.

All parents want the best for their children. However, the past thirty years have placed modern parenting on shifting sand and have maintained this precarious foundation through pseudo-educational-psychological smoke and mirrors. Professional educators, child psychologists, and toy manufacturers have made millions on the backs of well meaning but ill- prepared parents. Stop the decline by introducing four letter words into your child rearing vocabulary.

 

About the author:
AE Wise is an author on
http://www.Writing.Com/ which is a site for http://www.Writing.Com/ Writers. She
has over 20 years experience has a classroom teacher and mentor.


Title: The Gift Of Grandparents

Author: Julee Mitchelsin

Article:
One of the biggest blessings you can have in life is grandparents. Not too many people take the time or care to learn from and enjoy the people who raised their parents. Being in consistent relationship with your grandparents can add so many good things to your life.

For starters, you should get to know the gift of your grandparents simply because they are a part of your family and because without them you literally wouldn't be alive. Your grandparents are the ones who had your parents and who raised them to be the kind of people that have raised and loved you. Think about all the hard work your grandparents put in to raising their children. What a shame to miss out on the blessing that grandparents can be in your life.

Think about the wealth of knowledge that your grandparents have. Depending on how old they are, they have lived many years and have seen the world change in many ways. Grandparents are a great resource to learn things about the history of our nation and of the world. The next time you are struggling in a history class or you simply want to learn something new, go to your grandparents and see what they can teach you. The next time you have a free afternoon set a time to enjoy a coffee or a lemonade with your grandparents. Ask them about their lives and the things they have learned. You'll be amazed how much practical life advice comes from grandparents who have lived a few years.

Having relationship with your grandparents can be really fun. Many grandparents are much more relaxed than parents and so they often will spend more time, energy and money on things that your parents would never agree to. Everyone knows that they can eat dessert before dinner at grandma's house or that a visit to their grandparents house means staying up later and playing more games than you ever play at home.

Many grandparents would love to spend time with their grandchildren but are just unsure of how to initiate the relationship. Make an effort to go out of your way and maybe even your comfort zone and get to know them. They will be nothing but delighted to get to know you. I promise that you'll never regret the time and effort you put into knowing your grandparents. They are some of the best people on earth and you can learn a lot about your parents and about yourself just by learning about them.

You never know how long your grandparents are going to live, so take time today to get to know them a little bit better.

About the author:
Author Julee Mitchelsin has encouraged the relationships between her children and her parents for the last few years. Learn more about
http://www.grandparentsnews.info grandparents at www.grandparentsnews.info

 

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