Being there for your kids - What Is Your Legacy to Your Children?
Episode Date: November 4, 2023Legacies come in many forms. They could be the family business, a piece of property, some passed-down item from family antiquity. If we are looking at qualities, rather than stuff, helping your kids l...earn and use being resilient in life is a great legacy. Resilience is making the best out of a bad situation. It's dealing with stuff in a positive, redeeming way. It's learning to draw the blessing out of even the toughest situation. Resilience, pass it on to your kids.
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Hi, I'm Dr. John Robinson, and this is Teachable Moments.
Let me share with you probably the most important legacy you can leave your children.
Resilience. Pass it on to your kids.
In my world of mental health, resilience is the new it word.
Lots of research on it, lots of focus on it in the healing process.
So now I'm passing it on to you.
Then you can pass it on to your kids.
When you're being resilient, something in your life has happened and you don't like it.
However, you make the best of the bad things.
situation. What a great way to avoid conflict. When I was in the seventh grade, my science teacher
assigned projects. I chose to use paper mache to construct a model airplane. Of course, I put the project
off to the last minute, the last night before I was to turn it in. My project was a bust. I didn't
get the paste consistency right. I couldn't create anything that remotely resembled an airplane.
I got frustrated and had a full-blown meltdown, being sure I was going to fail the project
the next day. My dad stepped in. With a calming voice and clear direction, he joined me in creating a
poster presentation of five simple science experiments with attending demonstration materials. We planted all that
night, and he let me stay home from school the following day and helped me put it all together.
I got a lower grade for turning it in late, but it wasn't the F I was expecting. That was my dad's
lesson for me in being resilient. What did I learn? First, when your child's melting down,
Model for him deeper breathing to help him get his feelings under control.
Use your active listening to help him get out the bad stuff that's rumbling inside him.
Ask teachable questions of him once he's calmer, such as, is it all really as bad as you are making it out to be?
Is there anything else you can do to repair the situation?
People who are stuck oftentimes see their situation as totally out of their control.
They also catastrophize the situation, making it worse.
than it actually is. Your child learns resilience when you help them calm down, focus on what is in their control,
look at the circumstances realistically, and redirect their efforts. At eight years old,
little Travis was getting ready to go off on his 12-year-old big sister, Heather. She was hogging the
game station. He was working on a verbal rant, huffing and puffing and getting all stressed out
because she wouldn't let him have his turn. You snooze, you lose, little man, she goaded,
and then returned to her gaming.
Instead of going off on his sister,
with Mom in the kitchen overhearing the exchange
and ready to intervene,
Travis showed resilience.
He calmed his breathing, steadied himself,
and declared,
Fine, play your game.
I've got other more important things to do.
He then stomped off.
Mother folded her arms and smiled at him
as he went outside to play.
Another old adage that defines resilience is this.
When life gives you lemons, make lemonade.
You may be stuck with no viable alternative,
but your bad situation is defined by your perspective.
You may not be able to escape or change the bad situation,
but you can change your perspective.
If your child were being bullied or taken advantage of,
helping him calm down,
you can redirect his perspective with these questions.
How can you deal with this without letting the situation get to you?
Isn't this really more about him than it is about you?
Can you feel sorry for him?
What's the blessing in disguise here?
Resilience strengthens both you and your child to manage the worst of times in your lives.
Blessings.
If these letters stir questions of your own, contact me through my website at www.org therefrommykids.com
or email me at John Robinson 0.0. at Bellsouth.net.
I'm Dr. Jonathan C. Robinson, licensed clinical psychologist, and Christian author of Teachable Moments, Building Blocks of Christian Parenting.
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.
