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With Thanksgiving a mere two days away, I hope you will join
me in counting your blessings. Whether you’ve had a really good year so far or
a lousy one, each one of us has a reason to be grateful.
But if you need some encouragement to focus on the positive
instead of the negative, here are a few of my favorites.
- Having a thankful heart is the
antidote to greed. We all know that being grateful for what you have
can ease the grip of envy, but what we don’t often fully understand is that
it also breeds contentment. And contentment keeps a check on wanting more
“stuff.” Whether it’s buying more stuff for others or ourselves, being
thankful for what we have can help us during this season so often marked
by marketers trying to entice us to want what we don’t have.
- Intangibles are better than tangibles.
Our families, friends, and fellowship are better for our overall being
than more things. Use this season to make sure you’ve told the important
people in your life how much they mean to you. If you need to reconcile
with anyone, don’t let the year slip away without making amends.
- Thankfulness makes you happier.
There’s probably a study done that supports this with empirical evidence,
but gratitude changes your outlook on life.
- Thankfulness isn’t a feeling, it’s an
attitude. You might not feel thankful, but you can become thankful
simply by deciding you will list your blessings. Start with the obvious
ones—your family, your home, your health, your job, etc. If you don’t have
one of those, don’t wallow on that but focus instead on what you do have.
- Write it down. Make a list of your
top 10 things for which to be thankful and tack it up on your fridge or
bathroom mirror. Visit it often, adding to it as you think of new things
for which to be grateful. There’s nothing like being reminded in black and
white of your blessings.
- Get your kids involved. Come up
with a family list of blessings. You’ll be surprised with what your
children will say. Turning this into a family affair and let the creative
juices flow.
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I’ll close with that old hymn, “Count Your Blessings.” When
you are tempted to complain this holiday season, think of these words and
realign your heart with thankfulness.
Count Your Blessings
By Jonathan Oatman Jr.
Public Domain
Verse 1
When upon life’s billows you are tempest-tossed,
When you are discouraged, thinking all is lost,
Count your many blessings, name them one by one,
And it will surprise you what the Lord hath done.
Refrain:
Count your blessings, name them one by one,
Count your blessings, see what God hath done!
Count your blessings, name them one by one,
Count your many blessings, see what God hath done.
Verse 2
Are you ever burdened with a load of care?
Does the cross seem heavy you are called to bear?
Count your many blessings, every doubt will fly,
And you will keep singing as the days go by.
Verse 3
When you look at others with their lands and gold,
Think that Christ has promised you His wealth untold;
Count your many blessings—money cannot buy
Your reward in heaven, nor your home on high.
Verse 4
So, amid the conflict whether great or small,
Do not be discouraged, God is over all;
Count your many blessings, angels will attend,
Help and comfort give you to your journey’s end.
Until next week,
Sarah
Coming in early 2014,
Sarah and Mary Elizabeth Peritti will speak on Parenting With Love &
Leadership in a four-part webinar series. Contact Sarah through her website for
more information.
Q: My kindergartner
is having trouble adjusting to school. He behaves at home because I make it
clear I won’t tolerate misbehavior, but at school, he is out of control. School
policy is to not restrict such a child, so no teacher is stepping in when he
starts throwing things or destroying the classroom. Any suggestions for how to
get him to behave in school?
A. The good news is that he’s shown he can control himself.
After all, he does so at home. It’s likely he’s discovered that he can get way
with bad behavior at school and that has feed his inner monster.
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The other good news is that at this age, you can delay
punishment for several days, so you can certainly institute consequences at
home for misbehavior at school. Meet with the teacher and ask her to implement
a simple, weekly behavior chart. My kindergartner brings home such a chart each
day, with the day’s block colored in to show his behavior.
Print out such a chart and send it to school each Monday
with your son. It’s his responsibility to give it to his teacher in the morning
and to get it from her in the afternoon. Even five-year-olds can do this on
their own.
The teacher rates his behavior on a color scale or numeral
scale agreed upon. Only a full positive rating will be acceptable. Anytime the
teacher indicates misbehavior at school, he receives punishment at home. If he
fails to bring home the chart, then it’s the same as if he had misbehaved.
When he does bring home a chart indicating misbehavior, make
the consequences memorable. For a five-year-old, confining him to his room
(stripped of play value), an earlier-than-usual dinner and to bed directly
afterwards usually makes a good impression.
If you’re consistent with the consequences, he’ll modify his
behavior—eventually. He’s had a good run with being the classroom terror, so don’t
expect overnight changes. But he will probably straighten up within a month or
so.
PS: Don’t forget to give his teacher a little bit extra for
the holidays—she probably wanted to do more, but many public schools hamstring
their teachers so much that she can’t effectively curb such behavior.
Coming in early 2014,
Sarah and Mary Elizabeth Peritti will speak on Parenting With Love &
Leadership in a four-part webinar series. Contact Sarah through her website for
more information.
Over the summer, my children and I often went to yard sales
together. The girls especially loved to “shop” at the sales. One Saturday
morning, I ended up with all four kids accompanying me on a round of garage
sales. We stopped at an estate sale, but before we could even enter, someone
running the sale barred our entrance. Apparently, children weren’t welcome in
the house, probably because too many kids these days run wild throughout public
places, smashing into things and people with abandon.
Of course, I couldn’t tell the man that my kids knew how to
keep their hands to themselves, because I’m sure he’d heard it before. After
all, haven’t you often seen children running around like holy terrors in
restaurants or in department stores with their parents seemingly oblivious to
their destruction?
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Knowing what your child is doing at any given moment is part
of a parent’s job. Yes, we can’t watch our children 24/7, but when we’re in
public places, we should be attuned enough to our children’s behavior that we
can step in immediately if there’s a problem.
We pad our children within an inch of their lives to ride
bikes and scooters, yet we often fail to equip them with the proper training to
go out in public. Common courtesy demands that we as a collective society learn
to curb our children in public (and private, but that’s a topic for another
blog).
It doesn’t take much to show a child how to behave—and then
to follow-up misbehaviors with proper consequences. But some parents seem to think
it’s not their job to do the training or even pay close attention to their
children in a public setting.
Sure, it does take a village to raise a child, but that
doesn’t mean a parent abdicates her responsibility to do most of the hard work
herself. It’s not a totally thankless role, but it’s one that often gets
overlooked in today’s busyness.
So please don’t neglect this important part of raising
children. Those of us who share this world with you offer our heartfelt thanks
of appreciation for a job well done.
Until next time,
Sarah
Coming in early 2014,
Sarah and Mary Elizabeth Peritti will speak on Parenting With Love &
Leadership in a four-part webinar series. Contact Sarah through her website for
more information.
Q. I need to do
something to stop my preteen’s (12 year old) ongoing disrespect of me. It has
now spilled over to other adults, such as his insulting our dinner guests last
week. I am considering taking away his prized, brand-new camera, as it is long
past time to teach him a lesson in this area. Your thoughts?
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A. No disrespect, but this blatant disrespect needs more
than a token consequence. Taking away his prized camera is only a token
consequence. What this boy needs pronto is to be kicked, as in Kicked Out of
The Garden. His wake-up call needs to be loud and long to stop his slid into a
degenerate teenager—which is where he is headed unless you stop pussyfooting
around and get down to business.
First of all, kicking him out of his garden is no more than
stripping his life down to the essentials. That means all of his possessions
except for a few basic items of clothing and school gear (backpack, notebooks,
etc., but no computers, electronics of any kind, music, sports activities,
after school activities, etc.) will be put in storage or at least in a place
inaccessible to him.
Then put up a 30-block chart on the refrigerator. Each day
he’s not disrespectful gets a block crossed off at bedtime. You’ll need to be
specific, such as “You are to answer me yes or no ma’am when spoken to,” etc. Tell
him that the 30-day chart starts over anytime he’s disrespectful to you. When
he can go the full 30 days without being disrespectful, he gets back his least
favorite item or privilege. Each day after the 30 that he’s not disrespectful,
he gets back another item or privilege, starting with what he values the least
to what he values the most.
This should cure him after some false starts. However,
please remember two things. 1) He may never get back all of his
stuff/privileges. Some kids would rather wallow in misery than admit someone
else has authority over them. 2) It’s up to him to change. You can’t change
him. All you can do is establish what you expect and what you won’t tolerate.
Some might call this plan of attack overkill, but you have a
hoodlum in training who needs a jolt to learn how to control his tongue and
attitude. This is for his own good as well as for the good of your family. It’s
time to kick things into high gear and reboot his life. No halfway measures
will do.
Coming in early 2014,
Sarah and Mary Elizabeth Peritti will speak on Parenting With Love &
Leadership in a four-part webinar series. Contact Sarah through her website for
more information.
Grandma was right!
There is an easy way and a hard way to raise kids. By and large, today’s
parents are choosing the hard way. This series of blogs will tackle familiar
phrases that used to be commonplace but fell out of favor during the last few
decades of the 20th century—and why parents should not be afraid to follow the
sentiment expressed in the phrases.
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Photo Credit: Jupiterimages/Stock Photos/Photos.com
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I’m often asked how you teach manners. The simple answer is
just like you teach everything else: by example and instruction. If you’re not
minding your own manners, then your children aren’t going to mind theirs.
For example, my husband and I realized a while ago that we
were not setting a good example at the dinner table. We were mumbling around
food in our mouths and interrupting each other and our children. So we instituted
a “game” that would call out the offender for those infractions in a fun way—and
as a result, we’re all eating more pleasantly and not interrupting nearly as
often as before.
Start teaching manners when your children are young and add
to the expectations as they grow. Parents have been using, “What’s the Magic
Word?” to prompt usage of “please” for years, a phrase that is still in use
today. That phrase works only on young children, though. Once a child is older,
you should expect that he’ll remember to say “please” on his own. The prompting
is for a toddler who doesn’t recall the proper way to ask and is more likely to
demand than request.
Remember that manners are for others more than for oneself—and
teaching our children respect, compassion, character, civilization and a better
family through manners is no easy job. The small ways in which we honor others by thinking of them first--that's what manners are really about!--can often enrich the lives of others in ways we may never know.
So when it seems like no one else is instructing their
children in manners, take heart and keep plugging away. Teaching manners is a
gift we parents give to the community at large. Our job to civilize the little
heathens that are our children can be thankless at times, but we are sowing
seeds that will reap a harvest in the years to come.
Q: What would be a
good way to teach children to address adults as either ma’am or sir? We live in
the South, and this type of respect is very common. I want my two children,
ages two and five, to do this as a sign of respect and a nod to our culture. But
I’m always nagging my older child to add the ma’am and sir. I’m tired
of sounding like a broken record. I don’t want to make this a big deal, but I
want results and no more nagging!
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A: We, too, believe in adding ma’am and sir after yeses and nos, and it took a little time before our children caught on. We
simply decided that it was a big deal and then worked on it with all of the
kids at once (the youngest was around three at the time).
The easiest way to do this is to tell your children that you
expect them to answer any adult—including you—with yes/no ma’am/sir. Inform the
older child once, then stop giving second chances. No prompting, “Yes, what?”
The younger one, you’ll need to make it more of a game, but he should follow
the example of his older sibling in time.
When he doesn’t answer correctly by just saying, “Yes,” then
send him directly to his room for an hour, keep him inside for an hour or pull
the plug on a favorite TV show for the day—whatever you think will make an
impression on him. At five, he’s plenty old enough to remember to say ma’am and
sir.
With the holidays just around the corner, now is the perfect time
for practicing his manners. Before we head out to go trick-or-treating, I remind
my children that if they don’t remember to say, “Trick or Treat” and “Please,”
and “Thank you,” when they knock on door—in a voice loud enough for us to hear
them—then the candy they receive goes into Mom and Dad’s stash. That’s enough
to make them overcome their “shyness” and remember their manners.
Coming in early 2014,
Sarah and Mary Elizabeth Peritti will speak on Parenting With Love &
Leadership in a four-part webinar series. Contact Sarah through her website for
more information.
Election Day always brings a fissure of excitement to our
household, even years—like this one—that are not presidential or even
congressional elections. We are a family that embraces any chance to vote for
our local, state and federal governments as a chance to participate fully in
this great nation of ours.
But on the so-called “off years,” those without federal
candidates up for office, turnout is likely to be low, very low. I always take
my kids whenever possible to the polls so that they can learn from an early age
why voting matters. If our children see us not caring about who runs our local
government, or our state, then why should they? If our kids see us only voting
on the “big” elections, like the presidential ones, they will conclude that
only those really matter.
And that would be a shame, because it’s the local elections
that have the biggest impact on our daily lives. It’s the statewide elections that
often dictate how our tax money is spent and how our schools are run. Each
chance to cast your vote is a chance to put democracy into action.
For our kids, imparting that sense of responsibility about
voting is the foundation of what makes a good citizen. By helping our children
understand citizenship, we can start them on the path to being involved
citizens when they grow up.
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Here are some ways to instill a right understanding—and a
love of voting—in your children.
Look at the historical
record. There are many examples of men and women who changed the course of
history through the political system. There are also instances of when one vote—or
a few votes—made the difference in an election.
Debate the issues.
With younger children, discuss what each candidate believes. For older kids,
hold mock debates to bring the issues alive.
Join the cause.
If you have older teens, they can participate in campaigning for a particular
candidate alongside you. Walking neighborhoods, making phone calls and giving
out literature can give them an appreciation for what it takes to run for
office.
Let them vote with
you. Don’t leave the kids at home when you go vote. I still remember the
thrill of joining my mom in the old-fashioned voting booths, the ones with the little
levers and the curtain that swooshed closed when you were inside. Those
memories helped spur me to register to vote—and to exercise my right to cast a
ballot.
Until next time,
Sarah
Early next year, Sarah
and Mary Elizabeth Peritti will speak on Parenting With Love & Leadership
in a four-part webinar series. Contact Sarah through her website for more
information.
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