Tuesday, November 4, 2014

Conflict Resolution

Over the next several Tuesdays, I’m giving readers a sneak peak chapter-by-chapter at what’s inside my new book, Ending Sibling Rivalry: Moving Your Kids From War to Peace, which is available now, with permission of Beacon Hill Press of Kansas City.

Have you ever looked at your kids fighting and seen an opportunity for personal growth? Most parents don’t view tussles between their offspring as anything but disruptive and damaging to the family. However, teaching our children the proper and biblical way to handle conflict can restore peace to our homes and set our kids on the path to relationship success.

The temptation for parents is to skip the teaching part and simply move to making peace themselves, but that harms children by focusing on the why of the conflict and by taking the problem-solving part of the conflict away from the children. What parents all too easily forget is that children, because of their nature, disposition and age, are not civilized beings. That’s something that needs to be taught to a child, such as when we teach them to say “please” and “thank you.”

Some believe that children must be genetically disposed to fighting—after all, they do it so well!—but fail to realize that kids are equally equipped to make peace. That the ability to make up is essential to their emotional and mental development is often overlooked by parents. We can’t continually broker treaties between our children because then they don’t learn to do it for themselves and our cease-fires don’t last as long. Peace made by non-invested parties, i.e., parents, never sticks as well as harmony brought about by the warring parties.

Thus when parents get too involved in their children’s disputes, they rob the kids of a valuable learning experience. Yet it’s hard to resist that involvement. Parents do have a role to play in sibling conflict because parents shouldn’t leave the entire process to the children. Teaching kids how to peacefully resolve conflict is as important as letting them figure out the nitty-gritty details themselves.


Read more about how to teach your children conflict resolutions, as well as how parents can stay out of the process, in Ending Sibling Rivalry: Moving Your Kids From War to Peace, available now on Amazon.com, CBD.com and Beacon Hill Press

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