FamilyLife Blended®

Ron L. Deal

Move Toward Your Kids

October 8, 2019

On Facebook, Amanda, a single mother of two, wants to know how she can date a man well and set her future stepfamily up for success.

 

Well, Amanda, move emotionally toward your kids while seriously dating someone. The natural tendency is to only move emotionally toward your dating partner. Move toward both. Your kid's motivation to embrace the person you’re dating comes through their relationship with you. You are the gateway to that person. If your kids feel like they are losing you, why would they be motivated to accept them? Watching you date is hard enough. So move toward your kids and remind them that you’re still there

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Alright parents, I’m wondering: would you rather parent half-heartedly and hope it blesses your kids, or parent well and know that it will?   You see what I did there? I gave you a choice. And, that’s a good way to train children. Beginning as early as you can give them choices and let them experience the blessing or difficulties of that choice. “Would you rather clean your room or pay your sister with your allowance to do it for you?” “Would you rather help cook dinner or help clean up?” Helping with dinner is a given, but how the child helps is up to them. Giving choices invites cooperation and trains kids to think for themselves.
October 7, 2019
Well, here it is parents. The single best discipline strategy known to mankind.   The best way to shape a child’s behavior is to notice them doing what you want and call attention to it. Catch them doing something right. Compliments put a smile on your face and encourage you, right? Build others up, the Bible commends in Ephesians 4:29, “that it may benefit those who listen.” Well, children benefit greatly when you applaud them. Stepparents, when you compliment a child you get the added benefit of strengthening your relationship with the child. Double-bonus!
October 4, 2019
Soooo, how strong is your flexibility muscle?   Like a pair of Olympic ice-skaters, your family needs strength and stability to lean on each other but flexibility to bend, spin, or move in sequenced motion. Just like that, parents should have consistent expectations for their children, but adjust their expectations as they grow. Couples need clear values to manage spending money, but they need to flex when life demands a shift in financial priorities. Blended families need parents to be strong leaders who know when to bend and when not to.
October 3, 2019
Parenting is challenging at times. So, here’s a discipline tip for parents and stepparents: Connect the dots.   It’s important to help children connect their choices with the consequences that follow. If a child spills their milk they should clean it up. If they agree to finish their chores before supper but don’t they shouldn’t get to eat until they finish. If they intentionally stay out past their curfew they should be docked double the time. It’s really not difficult and there’s no screaming required (or recommended). Just a firm, loving follow-through that connects the dots. They’ll learn.
October 2, 2019
Ron, I never thought I’d say this, but my 67-year-old mom has a boyfriend.   Yes, adult children have thought about their parent dating again, but once it’s real, it’s just bizarre. Sometimes their roles change. The child becomes the dating coach, telling their parent how to ask for a date and to guard against sexual temptation. Ewww. And all the while the child is feeling frightened about how the family’s going to change again. Yes, many questions will need answers. So neither generation should make any assumptions. This is a family matter and you need to talk.
October 1, 2019
If you want to love someone well, be a gentle-servant.   Jesus washing his disciple’s feet in John 13 in the Bible is such a profound picture of love. And it really is simple: When you pay a compliment to a child, you’re washing their feet. When you serve your spouse, you’re washing their feet. When you put on self-control and calmly respond in a heated moment, you’re washing someone’s feet. When you stand firm in your commitments, even in the midst of discouragement, you’re washing feet. And in so doing, you are loving as Jesus loved.
September 30, 2019
Is your family communication filtered or unfiltered? In this digital age we have many communication filtering options. Say your mobile phone rings, but you let it go to voicemail. You listen to the message and reply with a text. That’s filtering. This has pros and cons. For blended families, filtering can help reduce conflict in strained relationships. But if new family members don’t stop filtering they’ll never develop a genuine relationship. The way to add depth is to actually talk and hang out in person. That throwback idea needs a comeback.
September 27, 2019
This is ironic, in today’s digital world we’re more connected and disconnected than ever before. Jealousy and envy are at an all-time high in our culture. Why? Because the daily “highlight reel” of social media makes everyone else’s life look perfect. So, while we’re seemingly more connected to other people’s lives, we distance ourselves in envy because our lives don’t compete. The way to truly connect between families and within your family is through transparency. Find the courage to give your family and friends a chance to love the real you; and see if they don’t return the favor.
September 26, 2019
In biological families, when a husband and wife move toward each other, they bring their children with them. Children are blessed when mom and dad love each other and spend time together. But in the beginning in a stepfamily it’s different. When a parent and stepparent spend time together children sometimes feel pushed aside. This naturally puts the biological parent in the middle. That’s a big difference between biological families and blended families. But what’s the same is how God’s instruction to extend grace and apply patience to relationships softens the competition and brings people together.
September 25, 2019
Sometimes life throws you a curve. My five-year-old daughter adored Mike. They had a great connection and things were going well. But of course, the night before the wedding, she says, “I don’t want you to marry Mike.” I was blindsided. “What’s going on here?” I interviewed Kim Anderson and her husband, Mike, for the FamilyLife Blended podcast. Boy did life throw them a curve. It’s fairly common for the weight of a new marriage to cause hiccups in kids. Don’t panic, just reassure them as you walk through adjustments together.
September 24, 2019
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About FamilyLife Blended®

FamilyLife Blended® provides  biblically-based resources that help prevent re-divorce, strengthen stepfamilies, and help break the generational cycle of divorce.

About Ron L. Deal

Ron L. Deal is the Director of blended family ministries at FamilyLife®, and is the author/coauthor of the books The Smart StepfamilyThe Smart Stepdad, The Smart Stepmom, Dating and the Single Parent, and The Remarriage Checkup. Ron voices the FamilyLife Blended short feature and is one of the most widely read authors on stepfamily living in the country. He is a licensed marriage and family therapist who frequently appears in the national media, including FamilyLife Today® and Focus on the Family, and he conducts marriage and family seminars around the countryRon and his wife, Nan, have been married since 1986 and have three boys.

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