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Focus on the Family Broadcast

Rethinking Your Parenting Strategies (Part 1 of 2)

Rethinking Your Parenting Strategies (Part 1 of 2)

Psychologist Michael Anderson and Dr. Timothy Johanson explain how many parents waste time and energy on parenting strategies that don't work, and offer practical suggestions for more effectively disciplining children and raising them to become well-adjusted adults. (Part 1 of 2)
Original Air Date: May 10, 2016

John Fuller: I want you to imagine this all too familiar but very frustrating situation. For the third time this week, your child has misbehaved, and you’ve tried everything. Warnings, lectures, loss of privileges. Everything. Nothing, though, is working. And for whatever reason, your child is unwilling or maybe incapable of doing the right thing, so you feel like a complete failure as a mom or a dad. What do you do? Maybe you’ve been there, done that, and if so, you’re gonna find some encouragement and practical help, and hope, for your parenting journey. This is Focus on the Family with your host, Focus president and author Jim Daly, and I’m John Fuller.

Jim Daly: And John, I think you have everybody’s attention now, because that stress is simply so common. Every day, it’s homework or chores or some struggle, to get your kids to do better, behaviorally or whatever it might be. And about 25 to 30% of our effort here at Focus is helping parents do the best job they can do for their kids. And I’m excited, as a parent, to, uh, do whatever I can to help in that way. It doesn’t matter whether your child is two years old or 22 years old. Uh, you’re going to face challenges, and it’s inevitable. Uh, so, first of all, accept that. But here at Focus on the Family, we want to help you. We’ve got lots of resources and tools for your parenting journey.

John: And please don’t hesitate to contact us. Our website is focusonthefamily.com/broadcast, or our number is 800, the letter A and the word FAMILY.

Jim: Now, I want to be really clear. One of our goals today is to help parents relax. And I know moms and dads are thinking, “What are you talking about, Jim? Relax? I can’t relax. This is too important.” And I get it. Uh, we’re going to show you how to back up a little bit and maybe try a different approach, maybe a less conflicted approach, in dealing with your children. Our guests today are Michael Anderson and Dr. Timothy Johanson. Michael is a licensed psychologist and Tim is a pediatrician. So, very well qualified people. Both of these men have spent decades studying the way kids grow and learn, and they’ve got some very interesting ideas, out-of-the-box thinking, when it comes to how we should parent our children.

John: And here’s how we began the conversation with our guests on today’s Focus on the Family.

Jim: Now, you two have written this comprehensive book for parents, uh, that will serve as the basis for our discussion today. The title’s Gist, which I, I love that. The gist of it. Uh, is that what you’re trying to drive toward? The gist of parenting?

Dr. Timothy Johanson: Yeah, I think when we wrote the book, it, it came out of a couple of different places. Uh, first, for me, the, the issue of seeing so much stress in families around the-

Jim: (laughs) There is a bit of that, isn’t there?

Dr. Johanson: There’s a lot of that. And over the last 25 years in practice, that seems to have grown each year. Uh, and I think there’s a, a lot of reasons for that. Um, and as we wrote the book, we spent an awful lot of time trying to think of a good title that would really encapsulate what’s in the book, and it, it took a long time, didn’t it, Mike?

Michael Anderson: Yeah, even though the book’s 320 pages, it is just the basics. It’s about how you look at parenting, and that’s what’s different about this book than other books. Because it’s not about how to get your kid to behave a certain way. It’s about how to think about parenting so the right thing comes natural.

Jim: Let’s talk about that. Why are we drawn, as parents, to try to get our kids to behave a certain way? And we think that’s the goal. I mean, when you see a well-behaved child, you’re thinking, “Wow, those guys are doing a great job parenting.” Um, is that accurate?

Michael: It might be accurate, it might not be. Because everything has to progress from something. So, in other words, discipline is important, but it’s only important if it leads to self-discipline. Just being obedient isn’t, there’s a great story I want to tell about that, um. A guy came in my office and he said, I said, “Why are you here?” And he said, “My daughter, you wouldn’t believe what she’s become. The last 90 days, she’s changed completely.” And, uh, “She’ll do anything her friends say. She’s smoking, she’s stealing, she’s shoplifting.” And I said, “Well, what was she like 90 days ago?” And he said, “Well, she was an A student, and she was a- at, in the church youth group, and she would do anything we told her to do.” And the wording caught my ear. And I said, “Well, she hasn’t changed that much. She just changed who she was listening to.”

Jim: Oh, that’s interesting.

Michael: So, she wasn’t ever thinking for herself. And so, when she stopped being obedient and listening to Mom and Dad, and started listening to her friends, it looked like a radical change. But she hadn’t developed an identity of her own yet.

Jim: Mm. Well, talk about that frustration that is there in parenting today. John’s setup was great, and any of us with children, uh, typically go through bouts of frustration, because we don’t feel like our children are getting it, especially in the Christian community. I think we have a high standard. Um, not to say that those that aren’t in the faith community don’t. But we tend to want to see perfection in our kids, you know, that they never lie, that they never do something that’s outside the character of God. That’s a pretty steep order.

Michael: But there’s some funda- there’s some fundamental misperceptions that make things stressful. For one thing is, um, most of the parents I work with are relentlessly lovers of their kids.

Jim: Yes.

Michael: And what that leads to is they misperceive that their job is to relentlessly parent their kids.

Jim: Huh.

John: Oh that’s good.

Michael: And when, what our job really is is to relentlessly love our kids enough to parent them as little as possible. And that’s not intuitive.

Jim: I thought you were gonna say that’s scary. (laughs)

Michael: It is scary too.

Jim: Tim, that is kind of scary, because, um, again, I think from a human standpoint, we tend to want to control the environment as parents. We want to ensure that they’re safe, that they’re not stepping over the line, whatever that line might be. Why should we relax? Convince me.

Dr. Johanson: Well, Jim, I think that’s a great question. I think so many parents, whether they’re in the Christian community or not, um, really feel like they have to be a perfect parent. And they look at their children and their children’s behaviors and their children’s accomplishments as proof that they’re good parents, or great parents, or perfect parents. And one of the points of our book is we got to back off on that, and you need to understand, as a parent, you’re gonna make a mess of things sometimes. I know certainly I have as a father. I’ve made good decisions and bad decisions, and thankfully my heavenly father stepped in in the places where I’ve been so deficient. Um, but parents need to take that whole mindset of, “I’ve got to b- do this perfectly,” and just throw that away, because that’s not how parenting works, and it’s not how it, it’s intended to work.

Jim: Well, what are some of those outcomes, uh, in the old model, if we want to call it that, where we’re really setting down expectations and we’re laying out the boundaries? Boundaries aren’t bad in themselves, are they?

Michael: Well, what parents don’t realize is that kids often don’t do what they’re told, but they almost always do what they’re taught. And what they’re told and what they’re taught are two different things.

Jim: Give us an example of that, a-

Michael: Okay.

Jim: Practical.

Michael: Okay. A couple months ago, there was a three-year-old standing by his mom in front of a grocery store, and I watched this happen. And the mom had groceries in her hand and she said, “Don’t cross the street. Don’t cross the street. Jimmy, don’t cross the street.” And the little boy looked both ways and ran across the street. And Mom said, “Well, if you’re gonna r- go across the street, look both ways.” So, what she was saying was, “Don’t cross the street.” What she taught him was, “It’s okay to cross the street, because I don’t really mean what I say.”

Jim: Mm.

Michael: And it’s true for u- us as adults too. I always love comparing childhood to adulthood. So, you guys fly a lot. TSA, at the airport, has taught you that they mean what they say. United has taught you they don’t mean what they say.

Jim: (laughs) How’s that?

Dr. Johanson: (laughs)

Michael: Because they have a little basket by the check-in, and they say, “Your luggage has to fit in here, and you can’t take a steamer trunk, and put it in the overhead.”

Dr. Johanson: (laughs)

Jim: (laughs) But that guy in front of you certainly brought it on.

Michael: Yeah.

Jim: (laughs)

Michael: And so, when United says, “Don’t forget, your luggage can’t be bigger than this,” everybody that flies United or Delta knows they don’t really mean that. So, we don’t take ’em serious. But TSA is, when they say, “Take off your belt,” we take off our belt. And that’s the same thing with parenting, is our inconsistencies come back to haunt us far more than we think.

Jim: And that’s so true, and that’s the consistency issue, being able to lay the boundary out. You don’t have to rant and rave and become emotional. In fact, one of the chapters in your book was Just Shut Up. I found that one kind of interesting, because, I fight that. You know, you want to over-explain, you want to over-verbalize as a parent. And you’re saying, “Yeah, sometimes, maybe a lot of the time, you want to just not say anything.”

Dr. Johanson: Yeah, I think many parents fall into this. It’s really a, um, everybody can relate to that at some point in time.

Jim: (laughs)

Dr. Johanson: There aren’t a lot of parents who naturally know how to limit their verbiage to their kids. And the problem with parents lecturing all the time is it just inflicts shame on their kids.

Jim: Mm.

Michael: Mm.

Dr. Johanson: And it, um, creates resentment in their kids. So, their kids are growing up in an environment where they’re always getting reminded or lectured for what they’re not doing right, and they end up feeling pretty down about themselves. And it really affects the relationship. Mike and I talk about the, the relationship is so important for parents, rather than the behavior, complying to a particular behavior.

Jim: Well, but some parents don’t see it, in my opinion, that clearly. I think they tend to see the behavioral component as, and I don’t think they intend it to be this way, but they see it as more important than the relationship. So, we get it backward.

Dr. Johanson: We get it backwards, absolutely.

Jim: Right. How do we d- if we can see that in ourselves, how do we begin to back up and disengage with that destructive behavior?

Michael: Before you go on with that, I want to, just wanted to say, I like to think of it as, when you talk too much, you spend relationship to buy behavior.

Jim: Huh.

Michael: And so, you have 40 units of relationship with your son, and you talk to him for 20 minutes about cleaning the garage. And by the time you’re done, you have a clean garage, but you have 15 units of relationship left.

Jim: Mm.

Michael: And that doesn’t happen when you’re quiet.

Jim: Ah.

Michael: And, um-

Jim: How do you get the garage clean?

Michael: Well, you can, there’s other leverages you have.

Jim: Like, uh, give me an example.

Michael: Well, you-

John: This is an important one, by the way

Jim: (laughs)

Michael: (laughs)

John: Longtime listeners know that the garage is kind of a sacred space for Jim.

Jim: Did he push my hot button or what? There it is. So, what, I mean, how would you go about that in effective way-

Michael: Okay.

Jim: Where you’re not losing your relational credits.

Michael: If you want to go to Jeremy’s for a sleepover Saturday, the garage has to be clean before you go.

Jim: Okay.

Michael: And I’m not gonna talk about it anymore. I’m not gonna remind you.

Dr. Johanson: And that’s it.

Michael: That’s it.

Jim: And then you’re done.

Michael: And then-

Jim: And then don’t do the reminding.

Michael: Yeah. Mm-hmm. Yeah.

Jim: Let’s talk a minute about the shame, because I think that’s a, again, a big issue.

Michael: It’s huge.

Jim: Um, in our parenting styles today. That we tend to, in that desire to have better behavior, uh, we tend to utter words that we probably regret as parents, like, “If you don’t do this, you’re lazy. You’re, um,” whatever.

Dr. Johanson: Yeah, what we say in the book about shame is, shame is really an over-correlation of what your child does with who they are. And parents really need to tease that out, and make sure that they’re choosing words when they talk to their child that don’t judge them in a way that’s shameful. So, maybe your child doesn’t clean their room up very well. A shaming parent would say, “You’re a slob.”

Jim: Right.

Dr. Johanson: A non-shaming parent would say, “You need to clean your room.” But the child hears very different things in that.

Michael: And any 10 or 12 times of that isn’t gonna matter, but over the course of a lifetime, it really does matter.

Jim: Mm-hmm.

Michael: Um. “You’re five assignments behind in math.” That’s all I’m gonna say. My daughter used to say to me, “You don’t trust me.” And I would say to her, “I’m not talking about whether I trust you or don’t trust you. I’m saying I don’t think Friday happened the way you told me.”

Jim: Huh.

Michael: Trusting her is a comment about her. And we can train ourselves as parents to talk about the incident, the five assignments, the messy room, the version of what happened Friday night.

Jim: And when you’re doing that, again, the shaming aspect of it. Let me ask the question this way. Why do we, as parents, feel that’s a, a tool that works? Why do we go there?

Dr. Johanson: Probably because we were shamed as children growing up, in our families of origin. I would bet that that’s the, that’s what they know. That’s what they heard growing up, and they think that they have to do the same thing because they think it’s gonna work.

Michael: Well, one thing is the misperception that my child would be better if he could grasp how bad he, what he just did was. There’s a story in the book about a policeman that pulls me over because I was going 50 in a 40. And when I see his lights in the rear-view mirror, I think, “Man, I was speeding. That was terrible. I should have slowed down. I wish I could reverse this. I hope I just get a warning.” Um. And then, as he comes up, I think, “I’m probably not gonna get a warning.” And then I hope he just gets a ticket. And the policeman comes up in this fictional story, and rolls down the w- I roll down the window and he says, “I want to talk to you about your behavior.” Um, “I noticed you were speeding, you know, there’s kids in this neighborhood. I’ve noticed you don’t pay attention when you’re going anywhere. I noticed your dog out in the street. I noticed that, um, your garage is getting to be a mess.” And as he talks, what’s happening in my head is I’m getting more and more mad at him. And by, instead of me walking away from that incident owning my speeding with regret, with remorse, and paying the ticket, which is the perfect thing, that’s what would have happened if he came up to the window and said, “Mr. Anderson, I’m sure you’re usually a safe driver, but today you were going too fast and I’ve got to give you this ticket.” As he talks, I start blaming him because of my shame, and I’m thinking that he’s putting me down, which triggers defensiveness. And that’s what usually happens with parents that talk too much, is it starts expanding the issue, and the kid then clicks into a defense mechanism. And when they start defending ours- themselves, we feel as parents that they don’t feel bad enough-

Jim: Mm-hmm.

Michael: About what they’re doing.

John: So we keep talking.

Michael: Yeah.

John: (laughs)

Jim: Well-

John: It’s a cycle.

Jim: Yeah, and let’s expand on that, because I think we’re touching right on an area that, I know it happens in our household, and probably yours, John-

John: It does.

Jim: And many, many others. Um, you can’t motivate, seemingly, that child to get that homework assignment done. And you’ve been battling this for maybe not just a few weeks or a few months. Maybe now its year number two. It’s seventh grade, it’s eighth grade, it’s ninth grade. Um, what can we do differently that will begin to, uh, prompt that child to begin to show the right behavior, to do the homework when it’s assigned? Um-

Michael: Well, we have to be creative there. And part of being a good parent is having fun parenting. And because it’s only when we’re having fun, I think, that we can be creative.

Jim: So, have fun.

Michael: Have fun parenting.

Jim: Even in the negative?

John: My child is about to fail school, and you’re telling me I should have fun?

Michael: Yes. I’m telling you there’s a better way than talking to them about, if talking was gonna work, it would have worked when they were in third grade, and now they’re in fifth grade. So, we’ve already extinguished that as a possibility.

Dr. Johanson: But I’d, I would also interject that this is a place where a lot of parents just don’t think right about it. They’ve been doing it the same way for five years. It hasn’t worked, but they keep doing it. And both Mike and I see in our offices this dynamic, where it’s like, you want to ask, and I have asked many parents, “So, this way of doing it doesn’t work. Why would you continue doing it?”

John: Mm-hmm.

Jim: I was trying to make, I was trying to-

Dr. Johanson: And they’re like, and it’s like this lightbulb goes-

Jim: Right.

Dr. Johanson: “Oh, yeah.”

Jim: And that’s fair, but then, what is it I should do?

Dr. Johanson: Well, I think Mike alluded to, you have to think creatively and different. You, you can’t do the same thing. And this, again, is not a book about how to do a particular thing. It’s how to think differently about parenting-

Jim: Right.

Dr. Johanson: So that you can take your creativeness into it. Here’s an example. Uh, let’s say your daughter’s responsible for vacuuming the basement once a week. Well, you find out after a while that your 14-year-old daughter just turns on the vacuum cleaner.

John: (laughs)

Jim: (laughs)

Dr. Johanson: You and your wi-

John: Never. Never.

Dr. Johanson: You and your wife are upstairs, and you find out also that, you go down and sneak into her bedroom, and see that she’s putting her makeup on with the vacuum cleaner running in the family room.

John: (laughs)

Jim: (laughs)

Dr. Johanson: And you wonder, with your Golden Retriever dog, and I’m, you know, not talking personally about that.

Jim: Not at all, but you have good detail on this story.

Dr. Johanson: Yes, uh, that your Golden Retriever, there’s a lot of hair in the house. And it’s interesting, every time she vacuums, there’s still hair on the stairs, in the basement. And you say to yourself-

John: Need a new vacuum cleaner.

Jim: Well, dog hair’s hard to get out.

Dr. Johanson: “It must be the new vacuum cleaner.”

Jim: Yeah, especially when you’re putting your makeup on.

Dr. Johanson: Well, thinking creatively is like, “Okay, uh, let’s do something differently here,” rather than just remind her that she needs to vacuum this weekend. And, uh, let’s say your wife and you talk about this, and you say, “Let’s go to Party America, and let’s get a whole bag of glitter stars, and spread them in every corner of the basement, and on the stairs.”

Jim: (laughs)

Dr. Johanson: And then, that Saturday morning, remind your daughter, “By the way, it’s time to vacuum this weekend. Please do that.” “Oh yeah, we’ll do that. I’ll, I’ll do that, Dad.” And then you watch your wife, uh, prance around the basement before your daughter wakes up, giddily laughing as she spreads the glitter all over the place.

Jim: Yeah.

Dr. Johanson: That solves a problem.

Jim: Does it really?

Dr. Johanson: It, it really does.

Jim: Now, in my house, what they would come to is, “Hey, you put the glitter there, you, you should be the one to-

John: Get us back there.

Jim: Vacuum it, Mom.” (laughs)

John: Or there’s a fight, or there’s a conflict, because, I mean, you’re setting up a conflict.

Dr. Johanson: And actually you are, and that’s okay. It’s okay to say, “Well, there’s glitter on the floor. It needs to be vacuumed. Your job is to vacuum. It’s, it doesn’t matter if there’s glitter on the floor or dog hair, or just a little dust.”

John: “Well, you’re just being mean, Mom and Dad.”

Michael: Then I would say, “What’s it to you? You have to vacuum anyways. The glitter isn’t gonna create a problem for you.”

Jim: And then say less.

Dr. Johanson: And then say less, and then zip it. I, I find parents-

Jim: Is there already-

John: Well, that’s the challenge.

Jim: Is there already consequences in that situation? I mean, since this is a hypothetical.

Dr. Johanson: Well, um-

John: (laughs)

Dr. Johanson: (laughs)

Jim: Are there already consequences set up?

Dr. Johanson: Right. Some families will set up, um-

Jim: That if you don’t do your chores, which include-

Dr. Johanson: You don’t get your allowance.

Jim: Yeah.

Dr. Johanson: Or you don’t get to go on a sleepover. You don’t get to meet your friends at the mall.

Jim: That’s kind of the key.

Dr. Johanson: Right.

Jim: Yeah.

Dr. Johanson: And have that, you know, written out, contracted. I’m a big fan of contracting. We did that with our kids.

Jim: (laughs) We’ve got the contract too.

Dr. Johanson: Oh, signed, date, this is what you said you would do, and you didn’t do.

Jim: The problem is I feel like I’m raising now two lawyers.

Dr. Johanson: (laughs)

John: (laughs) Yes.

Jim: I mean, my boys are so good at cutting up the contract. “It says a thing, Dad. It doesn’t say the thing.” I mean, they’re really getting down into the wordsmithing of the contract.

Dr. Johanson: Well, you, you, you have to really wordsmith it correctly the first time.

Jim: (laughs)

John: (laughs)

Dr. Johanson: You can’t leave any vagueness in there.

Michael: Or, or you can say, “I would like to use a contract but I know you’ll go over it with a fine tooth comb-”

John: Yeah.

Michael: “So I can’t use contracts with you.”

John: Our guests on Focus on the Family are Michael Anderson and Dr. Timothy Johanson, and they’ve written a really fascinating parenting book called Gist: The Essence of Raising Life-Ready Kids, and you can learn more and make a donation at focusonthefamily.com/broadcast.

Jim: We’ve talked about that shaming aspect, and, um, I just want to remind those that might be joining for the first time, uh, that is really devastating in terms of the residual effect of shaming. Before we leave that topic, talk about the 20-something that’s been in that household of shame. What’s the outcome of it? So that if we have the younger child in the home, it helps us to bite our lip, and not say those destructive things as a parent. But help, help me, looking down the road, why, at 25 and 28, my kids, if I’ve shamed them, uh, what will that relationship look like?

Dr. Johanson: I, I see it in kids that are much younger than that, but it certainly becomes even more of a problem for those young adults. Um, when I’m in the clinic and I have a patient come in who’s chronically shamed, and it doesn’t take long to figure this out, you can just see their whole body change in the office, while the mother or the father keeps barraging them with shameful things. And I think that is a child that grows up with significant resentment.

Jim: Well, and, you know, I admit that, I think all of us as parents have those moments. I can remember with one of my boys (laughs) you know, they weren’t doing well with some of their classes. And I said, “You know, if you don’t get going, your career’s gonna be a ditch digger.” And I had said this maybe three or four times over the course of a year, and he finally looked at me and said, “Dad, hey, as long as I love the Lord, what’s wrong with digging ditches?”

Dr. Johanson: (laughs)

Michael: (laughs)

Jim: I mean, I was like, “Wow, okay, touché.” And I stopped saying it, you know?

Dr. Johanson: Stopped saying that one.

Jim: So…

Michael: There’s the, there’s the young attorney.

Jim: But that, (laughs) but that’s a great point, isn’t it? We, we’re, you know, my goal, wrongfully, was how to motivate him to do better in school, by pointing out his career choices are gonna be more limited if he’s not getting a, a grade point average that is reflective of his ability. But just talk about that for a second. How, when you see the potential there, this kid’s bright.

Michael: I thi-

Jim: I know he could do much better.

Michael: I think this illustration captures some of the heart of the conscientious parent. Um. I have asked kids, parents, in my office, working with families of adolescents for 15 years, “If we drew up a contract here that if your child had a three-four grade point, you would agree to never mention school to them, would you sign the contract?”

Jim: Mm.

Michael: So, what I’m trying to do there is get, tell the kid that, if you want to be free from your parents’ nagging, just maintain this grade point average. And they are forbidden by this contract to ever mention homework if you maintain this grade point average.

Jim: Oh, that’s good.

Michael: And it, it works beautiful. Um.

Jim: “My parents are forbidden.”

Michael: Yeah.

Jim: That’s, I like that.

Michael: My dau-

Jim: I, I wouldn’t mind being forbidden.

Michael: If my daughter were here today, she would say, in her entire childhood, she never remembers me or my wife ever mentioning homework, in her whole childhood.

Jim: Yeah, well, she was a straight A student, wasn’t she.

Michael: No, she wasn’t. But she barely made it over that threshold.

Jim: Yeah.

Michael: But here’s the interesting thing. In all these years I’ve asked parents to do that, 90% of them won’t sign the contract. Because-

Jim: The parents won’t?

Michael: They won’t, because-

Jim: They lose control.

Michael: Because they want the right to badger their kid about homework, whether their kid’s doing well or not.

Jim: Wow. That is heavy duty.

John: Mm-hmm.

Jim: And unfortunately, we’re right at the end of the day, so we’ve got to come back next time and explore this a bit more, look at some other examples that help us as parents think differently about how we’re helping and equipping our children to launch well, and in a healthy way, as adults. Can we stick with it?

Michael: Great. Absolutely.

John: Well, maybe you’ve been challenged by some of the parenting advice that our guests, Michael Anderson and Dr. Timothy Johanson, have shared, and it’s making you think a little bit differently about your family. I hope so, and I hope you’ll make plans now to join us for part two of this very important conversation.

Jim: And John, we’re talking to lots of families right now who are in the thick of these challenges. Dealing with homework every night. Maybe, maybe there’s some conflict and bad attitudes, and even stress, like Tim and Michael talked about. Uh, we know exactly what you’re going through, partly because we’ve gone through it too. Uh, you love your kids dearly, but sometimes they do kind of drive you up the wall-

John: Mm-hmm.

Jim: ‘Cause they’re not doing the wise things that you’re asking them to do. What we’re trying to do here at Focus on the Family is provide you with practical strategies and these tools that you need to help your kids make wise choices today, and prepare for the bigger goal of adulthood in the future.

John: And one resource we have is a free online survey about how you can be a more effective parent. Um, we’ve identified seven traits for healthy families, and by taking this survey, you can get a good overview of what’s working well, and areas where you as a mom or dad might want to improve a little bit. And of course, we also have the book by Michael and Tim, Gist: The Essence of Raising Life-Ready Kids, which is an amazing resource. It’s full of helpful advice and encouragement. Uh, ask us about the parenting survey and that book, Gist, and how you can get an audio copy of our conversation today as well. We’ll include the next part of the conversation in that. Just call 800, the letter A and the word FAMILY. 800-232-6459, or visit focusonthefamily.com/broadcast, or visit focusonthefamily.ca, or click the link in the program notes to learn more.

Jim: And John, I hope our listeners will partner with us to build stronger, healthier families. That’s why Focus on the Family is here. To be a treasure trove of resources for your marriage and parenting, and for your spiritual growth as well. And remember, your generosity makes this family ministry possible to others. Your ongoing support throughout the year enables us to respond to more than a half a million moms and dads. That’s amazing. And these folks are looking to improve their parenting skills, build closer family bonds and share their faith with their children. I’m telling you what, this is job one in our country, to strengthen families and make a better culture. Make a pledge to Focus on the Family today. Your monthly commitment will help stabilize our budget and ensure we have the resources in place for these families that need us. But if a pledge is more than you can afford right now, a one-time gift will also be helpful. And when you make a pledge or give a gift of any amount to Focus, we’ll send Michael and Tim’s book Gist to you right away. That’s our way of saying thanks for partnering with us.

John: Yeah, get in touch today, make a donation, and, uh, get a copy of that book Gist when you donate at focusonthefamily.com/broadcast, or call 800, the letter A, and the word FAMILY. And coming up next time, you’ll hear more from our guests about how consequences may be the very best way to teach children.

Michael: It’s not always a bad thing for a young kid to be fired from a job, especially if they need to learn more responsibility. It might be the only thing that’ll get them to take it seriously.

Today's Guests

Book Cover: GIST: The Essence of Raising Life-Ready Kids

GIST: The Essence of Raising Life-Ready Kids

Receive the book GIST and the audio download of the broadcast "Rethinking Your Parenting Strategies" for your donation of any amount! Plus, receive member-exclusive benefits when you make a recurring gift today. Your monthly support helps families thrive.

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