Being there for your kids - What Type of Parent Are You?
Episode Date: April 24, 2019Parents come in all shapes and sizes...and types. Some parents are blustery power mongers. They expect to be obeyed without question. They holler both direction and consequence. Don't be a blustery po...wer monger. Your kids will be eager to leave home and start their adult life. Some parents are doormats. "What? Sure, honey. Anything you want....Anything else?" They don't want their child to mess up, be hurt, fail, or any other character-building experiences. Being a servant parent sounds like being a doormat, but it's not. As servant to your child, you are eager to understand their needs and feelings, wise to distinguish what's best for them, and always there to catch them when they fall, turning obstacles to opportunities. What type of parent are you?
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Hi, this is Teachable Moments, and I'm Dr. John Robinson.
You know, parenting comes in all shades, and my question today, are you a doormat or a servant parent?
As we all know, kids come in all shapes and sizes. You know what else? So do parents.
Some parents choose to be the power-oriented, in-control kind of guy.
These folks parent by fear and have only a fear-based relationship with their children.
My Way or the Highway is their theme.
Others go to the opposite extreme and become a doormat to their children.
Yes, dear, whatever you want.
They fear that confronting their child or setting healthy boundaries will stunt their emotional growth and lower their self-esteem.
Such well-intentioned parents will put their child in t-ball where runs scored or not kept because, quote, we want them all to be winners.
Fortunately, Jesus gave us another option, providing a third role model for effective parenting.
Before the Last Supper, he removed his outer robe and got a bowl and washed cloth, and he washed the feet of his disciples.
This lowly but loving act of service is our example of.
of being a servant parent. What? Let's be clear. This is not submission. It is servanthood.
Jesus followed this action with his teachings about the first being last and the greatest
being the least. Being a servant, parent involves understanding your child's needs and feelings
and being supportive while helping tend to them. 15-year-old Chip stomped into his father's den early one
morning where dad was paying bills. Dad, this shirt's dirty and I want to wear it today.
Dad stopped his work and while getting up responded, okay, son, let me wash him.
it right away for you. While thinking he was being helpful, dad was being a doormat with no
teachable moment in sight. Eight-year-old Tommy is doing his homework in his room. His mom checks on him
and offers, I've got some time, son. If you put your vocabulary words on flashcards, I'll quiz you
when you're finished. Classic servant parenting. Being helpful and available, sharing the load,
and ripe for a teachable moment. Which are you? Power dude, dormant, or servant parent. I'm Dr. John
Robinson, licensed clinical psychologist and Christian parenting 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.
