Strong families develop when parents know the correct battles to fight with their children. Parents should understand that they cannot fight every battle that occurs with their child/children, so they must choose the most important battles. When families are strong, they strengthen their communities, states, and nations.
I
found a post on Facebook that shared eight fights that are worth fighting with
your children. Credit goes to Casci Lynn Land who gives credit to David Morris
on Twitter. The eight worthwhile fights are as follow:
The
Reading Fight
Make
your kids read. Because reading is tied to everything from cognitive
development to the ability to focus. Make your kids read now.
The
Outside Fight
Make
your kids go outside. The natural world teaches us things. Plus, outside there’s
sunshine, fresh air, and exercise waiting for them. Most importantly, nature is
full of things in short supply in our world: Discovery, wonder, peace, joy.
The
Work Fight
Make
your kids work. I’m saddened by how many parents don’t require their kids to
lift a finger at home. There are priceless life principles you can only learn
with a mop in your hand. Let sweat be their teacher.
The
Meal Fight
Make
your kids eat as a family. Our lives are a blur of incessant activity. Meals
together are a physical pause to recover a truth so easily sacrificed at the
altar of busyness. Nothing’s more important than family.
The
Boredom Fight
Make
your kids live with boredom. Don’t show a DVD on each car ride. Kids need
unscheduled time. And, odd as it sounds, boredom is a skill. It’s hard as a
parent to deal with the assault of boredom complaints. But if you give in and
fill up their time with external stimuli, you’ll raise an activity addict. Make
them learn how to be.
The
“Me First” Fight
Make
your kids go last. Not every time for everything. But enough to remember that
the world doesn’t revolve around them. Take the smallest piece. Give up the
remote. Do someone else’s chores. Get their least favorite choice. They won’t
like it, but they need it.
The
Awkward Conversation Fight
Make
your kids have uncomfortable conversations with you. Sex, dating, body image,
values…. Your kids will roll their eyes and resist. You will stumble and
stutter. They need and want your perspective, lessons learned, and wisdom.
The
Limitation Fight
Learning
to live within limits is a valuable life skill. In fact, many adult problems
arise from an inability to accept them. Screen time limits, dietary limits,
activity limits, and schedule limits are all good.
Remember
parents: you must pick your battles, so you should concentrate your efforts on
the battles that are most important to you and to the future of your child. The
fights listed here are good, but others could easily be added or included with
these.
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