Being there for your kids - Do You Have A Round Tuit?
Episode Date: June 21, 2019When it's hard to change old habits that don't work for you, you may need to get a round tuit. Mine is a kitchen potholder that says, "here's what you need when you are not doing what you need to do, ...and you need to get a round to it." After helping your child sort out his difficulty, using your active listening, ask permission to brainstorm possibilities with him. After he puts together a workable plan, the "Round Tuit" is a humorous prompt to help him put his plan into action. Don't we all need a round tuit at times?
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, I'm Dr. John Robinson, and this is Teachable Moments.
Have a question for you. Do you have a round to it?
Early in our marriage, my wife received a unique stocking stuffer, Christmas gift.
It was a circular pot holder.
On it was this message.
This is a round to it, T-U-I-T.
Did you ever think about something you had to do but failed to get around to it?
Well, now you have one.
So stop making excuses and do it.
Often parents think about doing things differently with their children,
but seem to be stuck on the same old behavior pattern.
If what you are doing isn't working, then change it.
The standard definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.
Now in middle school, 12-year-old Anthony continued to get up late, missed breakfast, and run out the door, often missing his school bus.
He ran up the tardies at school and was getting extra assignments because of them.
He wanted to change his morning habits, but he didn't seem to ever get around to it.
With yet another tardy slip in hand, he slumped into the chair at the kitchen table.
his mom sat down next to him and heard his tale of woe.
She used her best act of listening without judging and without her own solutions.
Seeing that he was more settled, she added,
I have some thoughts about your frustrations.
Do you want to hear them?
Mom went to the family events calendar on the cork board
and retrieved the family Round Two at Potholder.
Here she gave the potholder to her son.
I think you need to hold on to this for a while.
Both laughed as the Round Tuit potholder had been passed
from one family member to another over many years.
Mom and Anthony then talked over a plan that involved getting his stuff and setting his clothes out the night before,
an earlier bedtime, two alarm clock set distance from his bed,
posted prompts around his room and the kitchen,
and a cash incentive for daily and weekly compliance to the new morning routine
and reaching his goal of being on time for school each day.
The round to it potholder stayed in his room as a reminder until his new routine was set in stone.
Do you need to get around to it?
This cute little reminder will help you move.
from planning helpful changes to actually doing them.
I'm Dr. John Robinson, licensed clinical psychologist and Christian author, 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 TMC-P-I-N-C.com.
