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Good Parenting: First of 4R’s – Release

January 24, 2014 by EnnisP Leave a Comment

Parenting's ultimate goal: individualized, independent children.

God Intended Your Kids
To Have A Life
Not Be Yours

The best way to approach parenting is to begin with the end in view. What kind of people do you want you kids to be? What will the parenting process look like? And more importantly what development stages should you anticipate?

The stages are important. They represent transitions. Some of these transitions, like puberty, are naturally occurring. Kids reach puberty with or without parents. Parents can help kids understand what is happening but they can’t make puberty happen or block it.

Some transitions, however, require parental involvement. All transitions can be tricky but those superintended by parents entirely are the ones we must prepare for most. [Read more…] about Good Parenting: First of 4R’s – Release

Filed Under: Family, Parenting

Good Parenting: Material Provision Not Enough

January 6, 2014 by EnnisP Leave a Comment

Parents are not umbilical cords.

Material Provision Is Inconsequential
It Can Be Destructive

I know you’ve heard it. The parent who groans in response to a wayward child, “I provided my child a roof over their head, a shirt on their back, a good school to attend and food to eat and this is how they repay me.”

This is usually a statement of defense, not grief. Wayward children reflect badly on parents. What better way to defend the failure than to point to all the material things provided as if providing materially is all one can or need do to raise happy, healthy, reliable kids.

It’s a way of shifting blame.

The fact is, parents do provide all those things for kids and many times kids aren’t grateful. Instead, they learn to expect more and then become demanding. They don’t want just a shirt. They want a particular style and specific brand.

Since they aren’t beggars, they assume the role of choosers.

This scenario could describe many first world economies, the ones that provide everything a person’s heart could desire. The parents are the conduits through which all material things are made available. The children do all the receiving and the one-way nature of the relationship changes little over time. The parents keep doling out. The kids keep consuming.

There is a reason this becomes chronic. [Read more…] about Good Parenting: Material Provision Not Enough

Filed Under: Family, Parenting

Good Parenting: Five Mistakes Parents Make

January 5, 2014 by EnnisP Leave a Comment

A child's love is earned not demanded.

Parents Guide Children
They Neither Design Them
Nor Own Them

When writing about parenting, it isn’t overstepping to assume that every parent wants the best for their children and plans to do everything in their power to make sure their kids have the best chance in life.

Any other attitude is the exception. Most new parents really care. You can see it in their faces. You can hear in their voices.

But the “Caring” thing makes us a bit vulnerable. It sets us and the kids up for a big fail. There are several mistakes induced by misplaced caring.

Mistake: Entertaining The Wrong Expectations

Because we care, we expect our children to succeed. That isn’t wrong to do but it is easy to over cook the idea.

We visualize their future. We even give the image detail: not just a doctor, we imagine, but the best doctor. A world class “whatever.”

Not very realistic. Only one person at a time can be the best at anything so expecting this for your child puts a lot of pressure on him or her and you.

Wanting to be the best parent possible is a valid aspiration. Expecting your child to be the absolute best at the particular occupation you choose is nothing but pure unwarranted presumption.

Even if this expectation was rational, it’s a mistake to think any parent could guarantee it. [Read more…] about Good Parenting: Five Mistakes Parents Make

Filed Under: Family, Parenting

Good Parenting: Don’t Chirp

January 3, 2014 by EnnisP Leave a Comment

Chirping destroys morale.

Chirping Is Like Sniping
It Hits The Mark
But Kills The Target

Chirping was my Dad’s parenting style, and he did it a lot but don’t get me wrong. I mean no disrespect. I never doubted he loved me and he did many things to show it.

From what I can tell, though, many parents employ the chirp and they, like him, are really good parents in many ways. These are not bad people.

My father, for example, provided all the basic things a family needs.

A roof over our heads, good nutrition, access to good schooling, good medical care and great dental care. In fact, the dentist was the best in our city. No lie. I have fillings today that are over 50 years old. They will outlast the ivory. Also, to my great delight, every Christmas I got everything I wanted and more.

He was a good father but one area in which he didn’t do so well was chirping. That doesn’t mean he was bad. It means he was imperfect and that’s Okay because there is no such thing as a perfect parent.

I tried to honor him by remembering all the great things he did and there are many good memories. But I also honored him by trying to isolate his parenting mistakes and improve on them.

I’ve told my kids the same. Don’t mimic me. Copy the things I did well and improve on what I did wrong.

There’s nothing worse than a father who thinks he can do no wrong. Authenticity is a great relationship tool even between parents and children.

Well, as I mentioned, one thing my Dad did wrong was “Chirp” and he did it a lot. Here’s what I mean by that. [Read more…] about Good Parenting: Don’t Chirp

Filed Under: Family, Parenting, Personal Development

Education Safeguards Against Divorce

January 1, 2014 by EnnisP 1 Comment

In defense of divorce: why a marriage should never be saved at the expense of a life.

Become a star before you marry one.

Marriage Is Not A Crutch
Partners Are Not Cripples

The famous line, “you complete me,” was said by Tom Cruise (Jerry Maguire) to Renée Zellweger (Dorothy Boyd) in the movie Jerry Maguire. The line stands out as one of the more memorable moments in a movie full of great philosophical content and unforgettable quotes.

It’s an idea we all get. It encapsulates a universal fact: no person stands alone. Anything you can do as one is made better by the addition of a soul mate – a person you admire, respect, love and are comfortable to partner with. Someone who completes you.

We usually refer to this second person as “better-HALF” because without them, as Tom said, we aren’t whole. The two reflect well on each other and when they find each other they embrace.

But there is a caveat. The value of what they are together is increased or decreased by what they are as individuals.

Let me explain.

Marriage Is Multiplication Not Addition But . . .

When two people marry, the outcome of their partnership – what they can accomplish together – is greater than the sum of the parts. It’s multiplication not addition. We understand that.

What we don’t readily see is that the outcome is still based on the value of each part. The Bride’s or Groom’s individual value doesn’t change at the wedding. A person can only add what they are to the marriage. Saying “I do” will not magically smelt gold ore into gold ingots.

What that means is this. Marrying too early, before personal development occurs, reduces the potential outcome.

Let’s put it in mathematical terms. If the groom has developed to the value of 4 and the bride to the value of 5 and marriage is multiplication, one multiplies the value of the other, the product is 20. They’ve combined their efforts and increased the output but their individual values haven’t changed.

Warning: If a person develops little before the wedding it is likely not to happen after. In that case married partners become crutches and non-developing mates lean and lounge.

So, to say it again. What a couple is as a pair is determined by what each one is as an individual. A few observations: [Read more…] about Education Safeguards Against Divorce

Filed Under: Family, Marriage, Personal Development

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Calvinism's Fallacies: Why The Gospel Applies To Anyone, Anywhere, At Any Time, Under Any Circumstance
In Defense of Divorce
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