Friday, February 09, 2007

More on parenting....

I was reading Mike Cope's blog recently and ran across this on parenting. I thought it was great advice. Since we have been talking about discipline and such lately, I thought this was a great read for us all!


Recently I’ve heard a couple parents talking about the pressure to be their child’s best friend. One is a mother who has the hard job of being firm with her teenage daughter — even while the stepmother is trying to be the cool best friend and while the teenager is making her feel guilty for being so “mean.”

So, here are some words I wrote a couple years ago:

A while back I wrote about how pleasantly surprised we were by the message of the film “In Good Company.” By the previews it looked like a mindless plot about the romance between a hot-shot young executive (Topher Grace) and the college-age daughter (Scarlett Johansson) of the man whose place he took (Dennis Quaid) after a company buy-out.

But the romance is short-lived. The movie isn’t about that. Rather, it’s about the fathering of this young exec by the man he replaced. Near the end, he says to this older guy after being punched in the eye for sleeping with his daughter: “No one ever took the time to give me a hard time.”

What a great line.

I want to encourage all you younger parents out there in blogsphere. It is hard to be the parent who lovingly gives a hard time. It’s hard to be the one who enforces tv/computer time limits, homework, and bedtimes. It’s difficult to set age-appropriate limits to movies when “every other kids’ parents let them watch whatever they want.” It’s tough to be firm when you’re exhausted from work and life’s stresses.

But hang in there! Your kids are counting on you — whether they yet know it or not. (I just saw a teenager on the plane whose t-shirt had two words: NO LECTURES!)

Your children need to know that YOU are the parent. In too many homes, the children run everything by parents who are overly-eager to please. If they don’t like the Bible class, they don’t have to go. If they have more friends at another church, the family leaves. If they want to eat unhealthily — well, we reassure ourselves that at least they’re eating something. If there is a problem with a coach or a teacher, the child is always assumed to be right.

Be the adult! Be the loving, compassionate, tender, but very-much-in-charge parent! It’s one of life’s ironies: that the one thing kids say they don’t want (rules and limits) is what they need.

I’m not talking, of course, about being a tyrant or about being inflexible. I’m talking about being lovingly in charge.

It may seem to kids that parents who mind their own business, don’t serve vegies, let them wear whatever is in style, allow unlimited time on the net to chat, permit any movie to be shown when friends come over, and ask no questions about where they’re going in the evening are the cool parents.

Here’s my encouragement: Don’t try to be the cool parents. Be the parents who take the time and the love to give a hard time.

Eventually, when your kids age a bit, they’ll know that you really were the cool parents.

2 comments:

  1. This is funny (not really, but you know what I mean) for 2 reasons. One - I read another blog today that was about this movie and how great it was. I had never heard about it until today. Two - I was just talking to my kids today about this. How we expect things from them that some parents don't expect of their kids. How we do things that not all parents do. BUT that in the end I think that they will come to realize that WE are the cool parents. That some actions while seem harsh are out of love and actions ALWAYS speak louder than words.

    Great post.

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  2. It was so good to see you today at the shower! I'm glad to have found your blog and keep updated! Isn't it always good to hear (or read) Mike's thoughts!? Parenting can be a scary thing at times. I wish our little babies would stay small and innocent for much longer. I can't imagine watching her grow up and make decisions we won't always approve of. We can do our best at parenting, but you can't make your child make all the right choices all the time. The world is a scary place and aren't we glad we have God on our side to help us through it all!

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