Parents will begin to see and understand that obedience is a very
dangerous goal to seek as they attempt to alter their children's behavior.
Obedience is desirable only when associated with sound application of morals
values and ethics in the decision making process. Children who are blindly
obedient learn that decisions are made outside of their decision making
skills and processes and that becomes very dangerous when the “outside
voice” is telling them to do something illegal, immoral, or life
threatening!
Parents will further explore the concept of discipline in working with
kids; hopefully realizing there is really only one kind of discipline and
that is self-discipline. Parents will learn that the process of parenting
must involve progressively turning more and more authority for bigger and
bigger decisions to their children.
Parents will learn to identify their goals in working with their kids so
that those goals can direct their strategy. If their goal is for their
children to be able to make great decisions for themselves, then those
children must be given opportunities to make big decisions!
Parents will begin to develop their own strategies for working with
their own children and will begin to have confidence in their own abilities
as effective parents. These strategies must involve guiding their children
in making decisions based upon sound ideas (values, morals, ethics,
religious beliefs, laws, manners, social customs, etc.) that the parents
have selected and taught to their children.
Parents will understand that "quality time" is a hoax! There is time…
period. In order to be effective parents, we must give a child a lot of
time. Much of this time will be spent simply developing a relationship but
some of the time will be spent in identifying key ideas that the parents
have chosen to “rule the worlds” of their children!
Key Concepts:
The ideas in our kid's heads will rule their world… Therefore, as
parents work with their children, they must aim at influencing the
selection of those ideas that the parents and children select to rule
their world
Parenting done in the manner advocated here will require lots of
time. If parents are willing to spend time, they will experience amazing
success in guiding heir children in making great decisions for
themselves! Children raised in this manner will become progressively
more and more confident in making big decisions for themselves so that
as they reach maturity they will be empowered to make their own great
decisions!
Activities:
Parents should have their children begin a list of possible
opportunities. This list should include anything that they can DO, BE,
or HAVE. It is strongly advised that this list should be associated with
some real ceremony indicating that this a "Rite of Passage into
Maturity." A very nice notebook should be made or purchased for keeping
this record of possibility thinking and the notebook should be presented
at an appropriately significant time and place.
Parents should then make a daily exercise of sitting down with their
children to help them input new entries into this notebook. This
“Possibilities List” should be "all inclusive" containing not only
positive opportunities, but also negative opportunities. This
acknowledges the real and unavoidable fact that good decisions almost
always involve looking at all possibilities, eliminating bad choices,
and then selecting the best positive choices based upon sound ideas!
After this list has grown to five or six pages of possibilities, the
parent then must challenge the child to take on the very difficult task
of selecting their own "Top Twenty" list of most desirable ideas that
will become the possibilities for their own life; the list of the twenty
things they would most like to DO, BE, or HAVE in their in their own
life! It is important at this point to insist the child keep this "Top
Twenty List" private. They must select the ideas on their own list
completely for themselves. The minute they share the list, it will
change. (Remember Rule 4: "It doesn't matter what you say, it is what
they say to themselves that counts!) Parents may always suggest things
to include on the list, but their suggestions should remain just that:
suggestions!
Parents should begin this process at as early an age as possible.
Certainly, the process could begin as soon as a child can write. However
if the child is already fifteen or eighteen, it is never too late. As a
matter of fact, if parents have never done this, it would be very
worthwhile for the parents to do this process right along with the
child. It would not hurt most parents to have a very clear picture of
the twenty most important ideas in their own lives!
While doing this exercise, parents should acknowledge that this is a
very time consuming assignment! However, this process is absolutely
worth the time invested. Parents who expend this time will never be
sorry! Good things come from big commitments.