To the amazing parents in the SBC Youth Ministry,
What is the difference
between Reacting and Responding?
Actually there is a huge difference. If you and I can understand
that difference we can build bridges instead of walls in our relationships with
teenagers.
This month’s online parenting class is focused on helping you as
a parent learn some tips to “Respond” to your teenager in a healthy way.
I want to start by sharing a great example from an experienced
mom of teenagers:
It was my favorite lip gloss! Burt’s Bees (the
tinted one, no less) is not exactly cheap. And did I mention it was my
favorite? What could she possibly have been thinking? Every sane person knows
that when lip balm is left in a warm car, it tends to get soft. So what would
possess her to twist it till it was all the way up and then try to push it back
down into the tube? Really? Of course it split right down the middle.
This would have been the perfect time to teach
my teen the difference between reacting and responding. I failed. Again. There
were so many ways to do this better. I could have said anything other than
“What in the world do you think you are doing? Did you even think through
that?”
How am I ever going to teach my child this
lesson if I can’t get it myself? Reactions are governed by emotions, while
responses are governed by the ability to think through the situation. That
means closing our mouths and not saying the first thing that pops into our
heads, which is usually critical.
Not so easy when our teen is hurling their
attitude at us with acute precision. Don’t kid yourself. They know our buttons
and are not above pushing them. Over and over and over. I think they have
created a fantasy league where they earn points by pushing us over the edge
again and again! But how different would our relationships be with our teens if
we responded rationally to their attacks instead of reacting immediately?
There is one tool that I use that is helping
me learn this concept. It’s called breathing. I know, profound, right? But you
would be amazed at how well this works! First, it gives you a moment to lower
your blood pressure. Extra oxygen always helps. And those few precious moments
it takes to breathe a few extra times may be the difference between teaching
them and arguing with them. I will take teaching every time!
______________________________________________
I want to challenge all of the parents in our ministry to
memorize with me a short verse to help us “breathe” when our teenager’s stir up
anger in us.
So, your homework for this week’s class is to look up Proverbs
15:1, memorize it, and repeat it to yourself every time your teenager tries to
push your buttons. Are you with me?
As always, if you have any questions or prayer concerns please
respond to this email and let me know.
Your Parenting Partner,
Lee Boso <><
Associate and Youth Pastor
Summersville Baptist Church
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