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March 25, 2009

Rocky's Ramblings
Impressing Children?

These commandments that I give you today are to be upon your hearts.   Impress them on your children. Talk about them when you sit at home and when you walk along the road, when you lie down and when you get up. (Deuteronomy 6:6-7)

So . . . should you tattoo the commandments on your children? Of course not! How could you even ask such a question?  This verse tells us to "impress" the commandments on our kids.

I'm guessing most of you don't have kids, but notice the strategy this verse describes for getting God's commands to make an impact on their hearts and minds:

Ø      Talk about them together.

Ø      A lot.

Ø      At all different times of day.

 

You can practice this now with your kids, your friends and even with your parents (or maybe in prayer with God). Talk about God's Word when you're home, when you're out, when you're up, and when you're down. Keep the Bible on the discussion menu with those closest to you all the time -- not just at church or during "devotions."

Think: When was the last time you had a conversation about God's Word outside of a Sunday school class or youth group or church? How often does that happen in your world? What would it take for you to initiate a few more of those discussions?

Pray: Ask God to help you to "impress” His Word on your kids - and to "impress” them on you.

Do: Start a conversation about the Bible with your kids or another Christian this week at a time and place you normally would not talk about God's Word.

 

Is it scary to talk to your kids?  

Well yeah!!!  

They look to us for answers and we sometimes stumble through hard ones that make us sweat.  Raising a child is probably the most gratifying job any of us will ever have -- and one of the toughest. Mostly because times have changed since we were kids. We live in an increasingly multifaceted world that challenges us everyday with a wide choice of troubling issues that are hard for our children to understand and for us to explain.

Some parents may question the appropriateness of talking about sensitive issues, such as sex, HIV/AIDS, violence, drugs and alcohol, or other sensitive issues with young children. Maybe you're one. But consider this; our kids are already hearing about these issues from TV, movies, magazines and school friends!!! If we don't talk with them early and often -- and answer their questions -- they'll get their facts from someone else. And we'll have missed an important opportunity to offer our children information that's not only accurate, but also communicate our own personal values and moral principles.

Here are 10 Tips for talking with kids about tough issues:

1. Start Early

Kids are hearing about and forced to cope with tough issues at increasingly early ages, often before they are ready to understand all aspects of these complicated ideas. Additionally, medical research and public health data tells us that when young children want information, advice and guidance, they turn to their parents first. Once they reach the teenage years, they tend to depend more on friends, the media and other outsiders for their information. As a parent, you have a wonderful opportunity to talk with your child about these issues first, before anyone else can confuse your child with incorrect information or explanations that lack the sense of values you want to instill. We need to take advantage of this "window of opportunity" with young children and talk with them earlier and more often, particularly about tough issues like sex, HIV/AIDS, violence, alcohol and drugs.

2. Initiate Conversations with Your Child

While we want our children to feel comfortable enough to come to us with any questions and concerns -- and thus give us the opportunity to begin conversations -- this doesn't always occur. That's why it's perfectly okay -- at times even necessary -- to begin the discussions ourselves. TV and other media are great tools for this. Say, for instance, that you and your 12-year-old are watching TV together and the program's plot includes a teenage pregnancy. After the show is over, ask your child what she thought of the program. Did she agree with how the teenagers behaved? Just one or two questions could help start a valuable discussion that comes from everyday circumstances and events.

Also, when speaking with your child, be sure to use words she can understand. Trying to explain AIDS to a 6-year-old with words like "transmission" and "transfusion" may not be as helpful as using simpler language. The best technique: use simple, short words and straightforward explanations.

If you have more than one child -- and your kids are widely spaced -- try to speak with them separately, even about the same subject. (The reason?)  Children of varied ages are usually at different developmental levels, which mean that they need different information, have different sensitivities and require a different vocabulary. What's more, older children will often dominate the discussion, which may prevent the younger ones from speaking up.

3. ...Even about ”SEX” and Relationships

If you feel uncomfortable talking about such sensitive subjects -- particularly sex and relationships -- with your young child, you're not alone. Many parents feel awkward and uneasy, especially if they are anxious about the subject. But, for your kid's sake, try to overcome your nervousness and bring up the issue with your child. After all, our children are hearing about it both through the media and on the playground, and that information may not include the values that we want our kids to have.

4. Create an Open Environment

Young children want their parents to discuss difficult subjects with them. However, our kids will look to us for answers only if they feel we will be open to their questions. It's up to us to create the kind of atmosphere in which our children can ask any questions -- on any subject -- freely and without fear of consequence.

How do you create such an atmosphere? By being encouraging, supportive and positive. For example, if your child asks, "How many people have AIDS?" try not to answer with, "I don't know. Please just finish your lunch." No matter how busy you are respond with something like, "That's an interesting question, but I'm not sure. Let's go look it up." (FYI: Don't worry that if your children learn that you don't know everything, they won't look up to you. That's simply not true. Kids accept, "I don't know," and "let's go find out," and they are better responses than any inaccurate or misleading answers you may be tempted to offer.)

One more point: You don't need to answer all of your children's questions immediately. If your 10-year-old asks, "Mom, what's a condom?" while you're negotiating a tricky turn in rush-hour traffic, it's perfectly okay for you to say something like, "That's an important question. But with all this traffic, I can't explain right now. Let's talk later, after dinner." And make sure you do.

 

 

 

5. Communicate your values

As a parent, you have a wonderful opportunity to be the first person to talk with your child about tough issues like drugs and violence before anyone else can confuse him with "just-the-facts" explanations that lack the sense of values and moral principles you want to instill. Likewise, when talking with your child about sex, remember to talk about more than "the birds and the bees," and communicate your values. Remember: research shows that children want and need moral guidance from their moms and dads, so don't hesitate to make your beliefs clear.

6. Listen to Your Child

 How many times do we listen to our children while folding clothes, preparing for the next day's meeting, or pushing a shopping cart through the supermarket? While that's understandable, it's important to find time to give kids our undivided attention. Listening carefully to our children builds self-esteem by letting our youngsters know that they're important to us and can lead to valuable discussions about a wide variety of sensitive issues.

Listening carefully also helps us better understand what our children really want to know as well as what they already understand. And it keeps us from talking above our youngsters' heads and confusing them even further. For example, suppose your child asks you what crack is. Before you answer, ask him what he thinks it is. If he says, "I think it's something you eat that makes you act funny," then you have a sense of his level of understanding and can adjust your explanations to fit.

Listening to our children and taking their feelings into account also helps us understand when they've had enough. Suppose you're answering your 9-year-old's questions about AIDS. If, after a while, he says, "I want to go out and play," stop the talk and re-introduce the subject at another time.

7. Try to be Honest

Whatever your children's age, they deserve honest answers and explanations. It's what strengthens our children's ability to trust. Also, when we don't provide a straightforward answer, kids make up their own fantasy explanations, which can be more frightening than any real, honest response we can offer.

While we may not want or need to share all the details of a particular situation or issue with our child, try not to leave any big gaps either. When we do, children tend to fill in the blanks themselves, which can generate a good deal of confusion and concern.

 

 

 

 

8. Be Patient

Often it can feel like forever before a youngster gets his story out. As adults, we're tempted to finish the child's sentence for him, filling in words and phrases in an effort to hear the point sooner. Try to resist this impulse. By listening patiently, we allow our children to think at their own pace and we are letting them know that they are worthy of our time.

9. Use Everyday Opportunities to Talk

It's important to try to talk with your kids about tough issues often, but there isn't always time in the day to sit down for a long talk. Also, kids tend to resist formal discussions about today's toughest issues, often categorizing them as just another lecture from mom and dad. But if we use "talk opportunities," moments that arise in everyday life, as occasions for discussion, our children will be a lot less likely to tune us out. For instance, a newspaper item about a child expelled from school for carrying a gun to class can help you start a discussion on guns and violence. A public service TV commercial can give you an opportunity to talk about AIDS.

 








10. Talk about it again, and again, and again, and again, and again.

Since most young children can only take in small bits of information at any one time, they won't learn all they need to know about a particular topic from a single discussion. That's why it's important to let a little time pass, and then ask the child to tell you what she remembers about your conversation. This will help you correct any misconceptions and fill in missing facts.

Finally, in an effort to absorb all they want to know, children often ask questions again and again over time -- which can test any parent's nerves. But such repetition is perfectly normal, so be prepared and tolerant. Don't be afraid to initiate discussions repeatedly, either. Patience and persistence will serve you and your child well.

 

 

 

Text Box: "No matter how calmly you try to referee, parenting will eventually produce bizarre behavior, and I'm not talking about the kids. Their behavior is always normal."
-- Bill Cosby

 

 

 

1-At that time the disciples came to Jesus and asked, "Who is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven?"  

2-He called a little child and had him stand among them.  3-and he said: "I tell you the truth, unless you change and become like little children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven.  

4-therefore, whoever humbles himself like this child is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven. 

5-“And whoever welcomes a little child like this in my name welcomes me.

Spend sometime with your children, visit a playground or volunteer to assist in a Sunday school class.  Prayerfully watch the children interact and play.  What quality in children does Jesus prize so highly?  How can you humble yourself like a child?  What does it mean to “welcome” a child in Jesus’ name?  Why do you think that Jesus never said, “Unless you become like an adult…”?  Why did he choose children to be our example?  How can your become childlike without becoming childish?  Pray slowly and thoughtfully through Psalm 131.
More of Rocky's Ramblings
Rocky's Ramblings - September 3, 2010
Rocky's Ramblings - February 24, 2010
May 20, 2009 - The Daughter of a Marine
March 25, 2009 - Impressing Children
March 16, 2009 - Everything You Need
March 4, 2009 - Pray for People
November 11, 2008 - Veterans Day 2008
November 5, 2008 - Yes We Can
October 28, 2008 - Trust
 


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