Being there for your kids - When Parenting, Choose Quality Time
Episode Date: February 5, 2019Most of us want to parent either just like mom and dad, or just opposite mom and dad. However, conventional wisdom shows us that we are drawn to the familiar, even if that familiar is unhealthy. We ne...ed to make a conscious choice to practice what is healthy but unfamiliar to us long enough for it to become familiar. When quality time with your child comes around, choose to be there for and with your child. Your quality time together is a great source for teachable moments.
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Hi, I'm Dr. John Robinson, and this is Teachable Moments. Are you drawn to the familiar? The short answer is,
yes, by nature, we are all drawn to the familiar. That also holds true regarding our parenting style.
However, there is more to it than that. We are drawn to the familiar, even if it is unhealthy.
Change in parenting style occurs when we acknowledge our familiar habits as unhealthy,
take a step toward healthier habits, and stay there long enough for the healthy habits to become familiar.
Mary was washing up dirty dishes at the kitchen sink.
She looked through the window above the sink and saw her little girl Alice playing on the swings in the backyard.
She's so darling, Mary thought.
I should really go out there and swing with her.
She hesitated for a moment and concluded, but these dishes won't wash themselves, and if I don't do them, who will?
She sighed and then kept washing dishes.
What didn't come to mind to Mary in the moment was her memory of her mama choosing chores over time
with her. Her growing up time was not all bad, certainly not abusive, but her relationship with Alice's
grandmother, her mom, even today, is still on the distant side. Alice felt the wind in her hair as she swung
back and forth on her swings. She glanced up at one moment and saw her mama looking at her
through the kitchen window. She waved excitedly to her mama, almost losing her balance on the swing.
She laughed to herself as she regained her hold, not even thinking about mama joining her for fun on the
swing. Mom doing chores and Alice swinging were the normal in their home. Most children do not put
together their if-onlys and what-ifs until they are grown and look back on their childhood.
Mom kept doing the dishes because that was familiar to her. It was what she did. At the time,
however, she chose chores over a teachable moment with her daughter. Such teachable moments will
forever be lost if parents don't first choose to venture into the unfamiliar because they know
it is healthy and continue to capture teachable moments there until they become familiar.
Guess what? Once you choose quality time with your children, they will be forever blessed by your
healthy choices. I'm Dr. Jonathan C. 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-D-C.com.
