Being there for your kids - Summer Plans that can Fill all Family Needs
Episode Date: June 14, 2022Families aren't supposed to be win/lose propositions. We need to build them to be win/win for all members. Making family plans for the summer can be taxing and stressful, where one or more family memb...ers feel left out. Enter the family planning meeting. This process gives everybody voice. The first letter addresses this. In the second letter, mom fears not getting her own needs met. I encourage her to switch her mindset from either/or to both/and. As long as kids have supervision and accountability, mommies can get their needs met too.
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Hi, I'm Dr. John Robinson, and this is Teachable Moments.
I have a few more letters for you today.
Here's the first one.
Dear Dr. Robinson, we just had our summer planning family meeting, as you have suggested,
and we are at a loss.
Where do we go from here?
Our boys, ages 8, 12, and 14, loved the brainstorming part.
Lots of ideas from them, all very expensive.
My husband's company downsized recently.
He kept his job but had to take a pay cut.
Inflation and gas prices have really hit us hard.
Now our kids expect the same from us when we really need to cut back.
Maybe next year? Signed, Now What?
Dear, Now What, good for you for putting the family meeting in play.
Hope you all are using this tool weekly, along with a dry erase wall calendar to log individual and family events.
It's a great way to keep everybody connected and involved.
Sorry about the financial hit you folks are having.
to deal with. Kids tend to get into expectation mode that sometimes doesn't mesh with reality.
With your active listening, their feelings, especially the reality check and their disappointment,
I think your kids are at the ages to rise to the occasion. I have three ideas for you.
First, after addressing their emotional fever and prompting with, I have some thoughts on what we can
do. Do you want to hear them? Remember, asking permission before launching in works wonders,
for they're actually hearing you.
Suggest another summer vacation themed family meeting.
This time, qualify that focusing on only what family can afford
will lower their expectations and get you over the hump.
Second, let me introduce you to the concept of a staycation,
potentially just as much fun and far less expensive.
Stacations start every morning with the question,
So, what do you want to do today that will be fun and different?
Use a little humor to help them get into their creative spirit and, again, be conscious of cost.
Ideas that are outside the box, creative, innovative, can be great fun and not costly.
Try to avoid excessive video gaming and other singular withdrawing activities.
Finally, as time and circumstances permit, consider day trips to tourist sites in your area.
I grew up near Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and never saw all the neat tourist attractions until I became a tourist for a day as a senior in high school.
Overnights are always more costly.
Hope these ideas are helpful.
This summer will be different for all of you, but it can also be exquisite as you get creative.
Blessings, Dr. John.
Here's another letter.
Dear Dr. Robinson, is it ever okay to just be selfish?
You know, do stuff for me?
summertime seems to just be about what the kids want to do and managing the chaos of their not being in school for chunks of each day.
Am I a bad parent?
Signed, resigned.
Dear resigned, are we having a pity party here?
Hey, no disrespect, but don't beat yourself up.
It may not be okay to be selfish, but being self-caring will work wonders both for you and for your family.
You pose an either or question.
I would like for you to consider the both and of summer fun.
selfish would be, I don't care what you're doing. Take care of yourself. That's what I'm going to do.
This is activity without consideration for the consequences of your choices.
Since we are charged with raising our kids in the ways of the Lord so that he will not depart from them when they are old, that's Proverbs 226, this kind of selfishness hurts your kids.
Self-caring, however, is not activity-based, rather it's need-based. You most certainly can tend to your needs without letting your children.
and run wild. You need some me time to read, to go to the bathroom privately, hang with a friend
for a while, then make room for these things in your days. The key is that your kids are otherwise
occupied with supervision and accountability built into the system. Depending on the ages of your kids,
getting self-caring time might include arranging play dates, participating in a babysitting co-op,
signing your brood up for camps, classes, hobby groups, and other short-term activities that don't
involve you. When they are around and you need privacy, qualify it with, I need some mommy time.
Give me 20 minutes and I'll be refreshed and more fun to be with. This is not selfish. It's
self-caring. You are not a bad parent. As long as your kids have accountability and supervision,
meeting needs can be a both-and option and everybody wins. Good luck. Blessings, Dr. John.
If these letters stir questions of your own, contact me through my website.
at www. ThereformyKids.com or email me at John Robinson 0.0.0.BelSouth.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 TMC.
incinc.com.
