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Featured Posts, Parenting

Parenting Post-Divorce

March 17, 2014

Parents swear, and children suffer 2

Divorce is not a single change, it’s a series of changes that parents need to guide their children through. Divorce is second only to death in the degree of stress it creates and the time required to adjust to it. Parents face a myriad of issues when it comes to co-parenting and often struggle to find a peaceful dynamic between the two homes.

Here are some proven strategies described in Putting Children First that can help children deal with the changes that a divorce sets in motion…

1- Put children first

Co-parenting is a conscious choice, made every day, where you must continually keep your child’s best interest in mind. That sounds easier than it is–parents can quickly become overwhelmed by their own emotions and needs. One thing I hear from kids is, “I feel invisible.” It’s also easy to lose sight of the long-range view when it comes to the other parent. It may be terribly difficult but fostering a good relationship with the other parent is not a favor to them, it’s a lifelong gift to your children.

Kids want both parents. So, forgive the past, accept the new normal, pick your battles carefully, set aside your personal feelings and as far as it depends on you, live at peace with your ex.

2- Contain the conflict

It’s easy to justify involving kids in marital disputes. You can easily feel a need to “set the record straight,” but involving kids in your conflict has profound negative consequences on them. I often hear, “I know they both want me on their side.” Managing your emotions and not dragging kids into the conflict helps lower the stress they face.

3- Provide safety and nurture

Parents and kids see divorce differently at first–parents view security as two pillars that are separated but still intact while kids see it as an impenetrable wall that is breached. An important message to communicate to your children when you are in the midst of separation or divorce, is the reassurance that your love for them is the kind that will last forever. When kids feel safe and they anticipate your receptivity even if they know you might not like what they have to say, they will begin to really talk about how they feel.

4- Listen for meaning

Most kids know their parents are suffering and they often hide their true feelings. Emotions can be overwhelming and confusing and it’s often easier to bury them rather than express them. You have to find developmentally appropriate ways for your children to communicate their feelings where there’s no fear of rejection. Try to acknowledge their feelings, (“I know it’s hard to have different homes”), give them smooth transitions and chances to acclimate, show love through your eyes, and express genuine interest in their feelings.

5- Take good care of yourself

When kids see their parents taking good care of themselves, physically and emotionally, it conveys security and confidence that their needs will be met.

What about discipline strategies?

 “All feelings are ok, all behaviors are not ok.” Parents will need to help kids develop an emotional vocabulary to express their feelings, or the permission to draw them if they’re young. A 10-year-old once said, “It seems like the bad feelings have to come out first before the good ones can come in.” Parents will need to be attentive to what the behaviors are communicating and remember that behavior is a form of communication. The Latin root for the word discipline means, “to teach” rather than to punish. There may need to be consequences, but punitive steps aren’t always educational.

How to create a “new normal” between two homes?

The best scenarios I see have these ingredients:

Consistency and simplicity—

Try to avoid two disconnected worlds, get together with a mediator or parenting coordinator if you need help to develop similar expectations in each home.

Adaptability and empathy–

It goes back to putting the child first.

There are many factors that make these decisions difficult, but when they’re consistenly applied, they will greatly help children deal with the changes that a divorce set into motion.

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Featured Posts, Spiritual Formation

One Step From Wisdom to Freedom

March 15, 2014

rhinoskissing

“Wes, are you struggling with anger right now? Your reaction to him seems like you are.” No one said it to me at the time, but I wish they did. Ten years ago, it could have saved me a lot of time and pain.

One small step from wisdom to freedom is seeking out and responding well to correction.

How we respond to correction is one of the greatest single traits that distinguish the wise and foolish.

Why didn’t anyone address my anger issues at the time?

There was no one close enough, who knew enough and cared enough.

People may have said to someone else, “Have you ever noticed Wes’s anger problem?” They may have quietly judged me and/or kept their distance. Typically, when we notice a fault in someone we do one of two things… Continue Reading…

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Featured Posts, Parenting

When Parenting Styles Clash

March 3, 2014

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“Do you think it’s ok to spank?” “Of course,” I said. “Really!? You’d spank our baby girl?” Hmm. It was our first conversation about parenting styles and we quickly realized how different our experiences and expectations were. She was a student of   “love and logic,”  and I was a student of “tough love and do what you’re told.”

We had a long way to go to create a unified presence where our strengths and weaknesses complemented each other. Here are a few things I’ve discovered about merging parenting styles…

There isn’t a “one size fits all” approach to parenting but it’s also true that not all parenting styles are as equally effective. My favorite way to think about parenting styles is with a simple 4-quadrant graph that describes the relationship between the level of nurture and structure we give our kids.

parentingstyles

Children need high structure and high nurture. It’s helpful to look at this graph and try to identify ways that you can increase your level of nurture or structure.

3 observations:

Our parenting style is, at some level, a reaction to our experience as children.

It may be a simple extension of our parent’s strengths and weaknesses or an attempt to offer our kids the exact opposite of what we experienced.

Expect conflict when merging individual parenting styles.

Parents will often try to compensate for deficiencies they perceive in their spouse by exaggerating the style that comes most natural to them. The most common dynamic is between the authoritarian and permissive parent.

-Our parenting style has a strong impact on our children.     

Starting with the work of Diana Baumrind in the early 60’s, developmental psychologists have studied the impact of parenting styles on children. Many websites now detail these findings.

3 recommendations:

Expect a learning curve.

Talk about your experience as a child and how it shapes your parenting style. Be open to growth. Acknowledge your differences and try to understand and combine your strengths and weaknesses toward the best interest of your child. In our home, Bonnie leans more to the nurture side and I lean more towards structure. We both try to learn from each other but also lean on each other’s natural bent. Sometimes, I can be harsh and Bonnie will remind me of the bigger picture and the importance of connection. Sometimes, I’ll see her nurture bordering on unhealthy insulation and she’ll trust me to push them in ways that make her uncomfortable. Keep talking, reading, reevaluating, and praying constantly for your kids.

Seek a united front.

When you see your spouse parenting in a way that you disagree with, address it respectfully and privately. Kids can detect any break in the lines and will exploit it!

Pray blessing over your children.

Develop a nightly routine together with your children. For some reason, kids love to talk at bedtime. Give space for connection by asking questions, listening well, and praying with your kids.

Here’s a good book for further reading: How We Love Our Kids.

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Compassion, Featured Posts, Spiritual Formation

The Best Last Words Ever

March 1, 2014

bestlast

In 1957, after a “grace awakening,” jazz musician John Coltrane played a 32-minute rendition of a “Love Supreme” as a prayer to God, then stepped off the stage, put his saxophone down, and said simply, “Nunc dimittis.” It’s Latin for “now dismiss” and comes from the Song of Simeon (Luke 2:29-32) where Simeon says he is ready to die because he had seen the promised Messiah. “Lord, now let your servant depart in peace, according to your word, for my eyes have seen your salvation.”

I’ve read a lot of famous last words but I think nunc dimitis is the best ever.

It’s a prayer of completion. “I’ve poured out everything to God and seen all there is to see this side of heaven. Now, let me depart into my reward.”

How can we live to utter such a phrase?

Keep the end in mind.

Live with an eternal worldview.

Remember that people matter, things don’t.

“To make an end is to make a beginning. The end is where we start from. -T. S. Eliot”

Keep God at the center.

Live with the posture of the shema (“to hear and obey”) in relationship to God. “What is God saying and how am I responding?” “Do I hear and will I obey?”

And be fully present where you are.

A young student once asked a rabbi, “What must I do to change the world?” The rabbi instructed the young man to walk over to a small graveyard and criticize everyone buried. He then instructed him to praise them. Finally, the rabbi said, “When you can be as dead to the praises and insults of people, you will begin to change the world.”

Anything you’d add to the list?

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Featured Posts, Healing Presence

That Restless Hollow Feeling You Can’t Shake…Here’s The Deal

February 26, 2014

Building

Part one.

“I struggle with a chronic but low level depression and am not sure why.”

“I don’t vacillate between high’s and low’s. I usually just feel numb.”

“Often, I feel like there’s a wall between me and other people.”

 

Such statements are symptoms of acedia. It’s a word that needs to reenter our vocabulary because so many people struggle with it. The Greek root means, “negligence,” and its often used to describe a state of restlessness or apathy. But in the ancient world, the understood cause of acedia was a deep and tragic disconnect between one’s will and his being. Basically, he had chosen not to become who he was.

Your life has been pre-imaged in the eyes of God. There is a “true self” in you that God is always calling forth. The closer you grow to God, the more your true self will emerge. When you choose not to become who God has created you to be, acedia is the result.

The problem with acedia is that we seldom address the root problem.

Instead of allowing God to heal us at our core (fill deep deficits, align our will and being, and speak the gift of identity and vocation) we…

Self-medicate

Distract ourselves with ambitious pursuits (“Once I can have or become____, life will feel full.”) 

Engage in self-sabotaging thoughts and behaviors

Basically, in one way or another, we settle for a pseudo-life. Fears have won out. Vision has faded. A passive resignation has set in. Our will has atrophied. We still sail through our days, but deep down, we’ve checked out. There’s no rudder and not much of an engine left. So, we settle for cheap pleasures and avoid risks.

Tomorrow, we’ll start on the pathway to healing.

In the meantime, if you resonate with such descriptions, here are a few things you can do:

-Avoid introspection

What you focus on expands.

When your thoughts are toxic and turned inward, you are gravitating toward hell. Lift your eyes off yourself and set your mind on what’s good and pure (Philippians 4:8, 2 Corinthians 10:5).

Pray Ephesians 3: 16-21:

I pray that out of his glorious riches he may strengthen you with power through his Spirit in your inner being, so that Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith. And I pray that you, being rooted and established in love, may have power, together with all the Lord’s holy people, to grasp how wide and long and high and deep is the love of Christ,  and to know this love that surpasses knowledge—that you may be filled to the measure of all the fullness of God. Now to him who is able to do immeasurably more than all we ask or imagine, according to his power that is at work within us, to him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus throughout all generations, for ever and ever! Amen.

Change your daily rhythm 

Find some simple ways to choose life today. What’s most life giving to you? Schedule it tomorrow. Who’s the most life-giving person you know? Call him or her today and schedule a time to get together. It’s not the solution itself, but it will inject an extra dose of joy while you work toward it.

Question:

How have you seen acedia manifest in your life or others? How have you dealt with it?



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