Being there for your kids - Are You and Your Child on the Same Page?
Episode Date: July 22, 2023Kids are all over the place. Keeping up with them is a hassle. Teaching and molding them is an even greater task. Here I offer two keys to "training them up in the ways of the Lord, so that, when they... grow old, they will not depart from him." (Proverbs 22:6). Active Listening is the royal road to healthy relationship with your kids. Knowing the Four Stages of Parenting helps you stay in sync with them. Keep these tools in mind, as you find teachable moments with them.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, I'm Dr. John Robinson, and this is Teachable Moments. I have a challenge for you today.
Get in sync with your child. Let's talk about the four stages of parenting.
Parenting is the toughest, most consequential job for which most of us never have any training.
Practice and experience as adults, we all tend to parent just like our parents did with us,
or just opposite of our parents. That's just shy of the old trial and error method.
In my first book, Teachable Moments, Building Blocks of Christian Parenting, I provide such a source book for effective parenting.
In this book, I go into greater length about active listening when things are not going so well,
and I elaborate on the four stages of parenting when things are going well in your family.
Okay, enough of plugging the product. Oh, you can find my book on Amazonbooks.com.
Okay, that's all.
Mikey, age seven, came in from the backyard, slamming the screen door to the key.
kitchen. He growled and stomped toward his bedroom. I hate Devin. He screamed as he fell across his bed.
Uh-oh, here we go again, Amber thought as she dried her hands on the kitchen towel. What's happened now?
She hurried to her son's room. Here, Amber has a choice to make. She could be frustrated with
Mikey's behavior and fire back something like, now you just hold on, young man. You don't go slamming
things in this house. Accurate, but helpful? Or she could have said, you and Devin have been such
good friends, don't you think you should go apologize to him for being mean? Again, a potentially
positive outcome, but timely at this point? Amber chose to go into Mikey's room,
gently sitting on his bed next to his curled position, facing away from her, and softly rub his
back. She waited, saying nothing for several minutes while Mikey cried and then settled.
I'm so sorry, baby, she soothed. Things got out of hand, huh? And you got very upset. Amber used her
active listening to help her son sort out his feelings himself. She used a variety of feeling words
with him and emphasized those with which he agreed. After he settled down, she asked,
So, what do you think you could do now? If he is stumped, she gets permission to share her
thoughts on his upset. Active listening is a parental superpower. All parents know how to help
their child when they have a physical fever, aspirin, cold compress, chicken soup, bed rest.
Active listening is your go-to response when your child has an emotional fever.
Also, most children are both stunned and impressed when after they've settled,
you ask permission to talk, saying something like,
So I have some thoughts about what you've been talking about.
Want to hear them?
When all is well in the family, no fevers, physical or emotional,
and everybody is trucking along,
be aware of the parenting stage each of your children are in.
There are four parenting stages.
You will best connect, and your words will have to be.
the most impact if they match the appropriate age of your child. From birth to about age five,
parents want to use hands-on parenting. You can't leave an infant to feed herself. You show a toddler
how to put stuffed animals in his toy chest. You keep your hand on her bike seat as she learns
to balance and ride her bike. From ages 6 to 10, parents want to use directed parenting. You help her think
through how she wants to play date to go. You are in the room.
to answer questions and guide him as he does his homework, you show him how to weed the garden,
prune the plants, and pick the veggies for the supper table. From ages 11 to 17, parents want to use
advice-based parenting. Tweenagers, ages 10 to 12, think they know everything, but they don't. Give cautionary
tales, fill in their knowledge gaps, tolerate the eye rolls. Young teens, ages 13 to 17,
know they know everything and you know nothing. Tolerate.
their collective attitude, give them room to fail, but pick them up and help them recalculate.
From age 18 to forever, parents want to use consultative parenting. You have knowledge and experience
being an adult. You can be their role model, mentor, confidant. When you see them struggling,
ask if you can help. Wait for permission and then give them what you know. Back off and let them do
what they want or can with their new knowledge. This progression of parenting stages helps you know,
where you and your children are in their development.
Crossing stages can be at least confusing and possibly overwhelming to your child.
Pace, ask for feedback, help them learn how to grow.
Successful parenting is achieved when your child enters adulthood as an independent,
responsible, socially conscious individual.
Blessings, Dr. John.
If my comments, sir questions of your own, contact me through my website at www.
for my kids.com or email me at John Robinson 0.0 at Belseth.net. I'm Dr. Jonathan C. Robinson,
licensed clinical psychologist, and Christian author of Teachable Moments, Building Blocks of Christian
Parenting. And this has been Teachable Moments. Teachable Moments, Building Blocks of Christian Parenting,
is available online at AmazonBooks.com and in local and national bookstores. More on Dr. Robinson at
t m c pinc pinc.com.
