Coaching Boys to Develop Healthy Respect for Girls
Today’s boys are growing up in a world where disrespect toward women is too often treated as normal. Dave and Ashley Willis—parents of four boys—will share powerful stories and biblical truths to help you raise sons who value honor, integrity, and true manhood.
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Dave Willis: I'm saying the choices you're making right now are shaping the man you're going to be. The choices you're making right now, even the ones that seem insignificant—from the friends you're hanging around to the words you speak, to the way you treat other people—it's putting you on a path that's going to lead in any number of directions.
If you make wise choices now, it's going to put you in a place of wisdom later on in life. We're just raising up the value of the decisions they make because life is telling them, "Oh, you're young, you're a teenager, you can do whatever you want, it doesn't really matter." We're trying to give the opposite message: that what you say and what you do right now matters so much.
John Fuller: That's Dave Willis. He and his wife, Ashley, join us today on Focus on the Family with Jim Daly and I'm John Fuller.
Jim Daly: John, as parents, we carry a pretty big responsibility, if not the responsibility, to help shape the next generation—our children, maybe even some of their friends that come over to the house to play ping pong or do the things that they do. It means we have to teach our boys how to respect girls.
In this culture today, that's a tough task because there's very little supporting girls and women. Just think about the whole Title IX issue and what has happened to women's sports with the trans issue and so much more. There seems to be a slow and sometimes fast degrading of women in the culture. Boys and men have a responsibility to say, "No, we're going to respect girls and women."
Today, we're going to talk about that subject with experts who have four sons of their own. Dave and Ashley Willis are conference speakers, relationship coaches, and podcast hosts. They've been in full-time marriage ministry for about 10 years now. Dave has a terrific book on this topic called *Raising Boys Who Respect Girls: Upending Locker Room Mentality, Blind Spots, and Unintended Sexism*.
John Fuller: Dave and Ashley, welcome back to Focus on the Family. It's good to have you here.
Jim Daly: We didn't pay you to say that, did we? Okay, I just want to make sure. Now, this question is the way to get out of the gate. Your son Cooper once came home from school asking if girls liked it when boys sent them indecent pictures. When I first read that, I was like, "What?"
It's a different era now. When I was a boy, that never would have popped up. We wouldn't even have thought of that. But that's the kind of question we've got to deal with with our sons today.
Dave Willis: Yeah, a lot of eye-raising moments, shocking moments. We didn't grow up with the technology that made these things possible.
Jim Daly: What did you say to him?
Dave Willis: Well, we've kind of made a pact early on that we're not going to freak out in the moment, no matter what our kids ask. That's the first good parenting tip: don't freak out. You can freak out with each other later, but in the moment, you've got to be calm and be a safe place for them to share, because as you're a safe place for them to share, the more they're going to share.
He came home from his first day of eighth grade and I asked, "How was your day?" He said it was fine, then he asked that question. "Hey, just out of curiosity, do girls really like it when boys send these indecent pictures of themselves?" I said, "Why don't you unpack that for me?"
He said that on the bus on the way home, some of the boys were taking inappropriate pictures of themselves and trying to show the other kids on the bus pictures of what they've taken, saying girls love it when you send them pictures like this. They were laughing about it. Cooper said it felt so inappropriate, but it gave us an opportunity to just unpack it one step at a time.
I told him, "Buddy, listen, you're going to be exposed to a lot of things that just aren't right or healthy. In this case, what those boys were doing is actually illegal. That's child pornography. To possess that or share that is illegal." It gave us a bigger time to talk about God's design for respecting one another and for the sacredness of sex and all these things. He was really receptive to it, but it was a wake-up call for us regarding what our kids are being exposed to.
Jim Daly: Don't think because you have your kids in a Christian school or they're going to church every Sunday that they get this. It's sad, but now your other three boys coming along, you probably before the first day of eighth grade said, "Okay, I've got to talk to you about something. This could happen."
That's one of the difficulties as a parent today—trying to get ahead of especially the sexual discussions because the culture reaks of sexualization. For boys, we've got to get ahead of that to help have those discussions, and for some girls now too. So, as a mama, Ashley, how did you respond to that question?
Ashley Willis: I'm going to be honest, my first instinct was to freak out. Literally, like, "What are you talking about?" I wanted to say, "We're calling the police!" Dave could see it on my face and he just gently grabbed my hand and said, "This is what we wanted. We wanted him to come to us."
Jim Daly: But that's typical. If you're that mom panicking and freaking out, that was Jean as well. This is kind of the normal thing, and the husbands at this point are saying, "Okay, this isn't unusual for boys, but we've got to deal with it."
Ashley Willis: This is the truth. It was really not so much toward Cooper himself, it was more like, "What in the world? I can't believe this is going on at this age." I just wasn't ready for it because he's our firstborn.
Very quickly, with Dave's help of helping me to remember that we want him to come to us with these things, I just really wanted him to hear as a woman how that would make me feel. I said, "I can tell you 100% that that is so disrespectful. That is not good."
Then there are girls who feel pressured to also send pictures. I know this from being a youth leader for years, that girls feel like, "Oh, that's what boys want," and they're having the same questions. Then it perpetuates this really unhealthy and illegal correspondence between these kids, and they don't even know what to do with this.
Jim Daly: Your book, *Raising Boys Who Respect Girls*, it's beyond just this topic. That's just a "wow" kind of opening question. Moving into more general context of teaching your boys how to respect girls, how do you go about doing that, being mindful of that as a dad and as a mom? Because you're a woman and you're a man, you're going to bring different attributes in your parenting to that. What are some of the core things we need to think about?
Dave Willis: Well, as parents, if you're married, realize that you're modeling for your kids what healthy behavior and interaction looks like. Dads, if you're listening, the way you treat your wife is showing your boys how they should treat women and showing your daughters what they should expect from men someday.
If our example isn't the right example, then we need to take a step back and say, "Lord, help me to do this." I know for a lot of guys that's hard because maybe we didn't have an example ourselves. Even if you didn't have that—the way that my own father didn't have that—he chose with God's grace to break that cycle and to become that. As imperfect as all of us are and as imperfect as he was, he really modeled respect toward my mother and I caught that. I want to do the same for Ashley. I think it starts just in how we're treating each other in marriage because your kids learn a lot more by watching than they do by listening to your advice most of the time.
Ashley Willis: They do. One of the biggest things that I think dads can do especially for their sons is be very mindful of where their eyes go. Having a mindfulness about where your eyes linger is everything. Do not make the mistake of believing your sons don't see it, because they do, and your daughters see it too.
We've got to get a grip on where our eyes go. We can't help as people, men and women, seeing someone attractive walk by, but we get to choose if we keep on staring.
Jim Daly: You mention in the book that Jesus is a wonderful role model about how to treat women. You think about the culture he was born into. It was very demeaning toward women in many ways—the Roman Empire—and yet Jesus came onto the scene and gave women dignity. Mary Magdalene and other women. Speak to that difference that he made, coming onto the scene and raising women to a status of equality, made in his image, male and female.
Dave Willis: I'm so glad you brought that up. It's my favorite chapter in the book. I almost laugh when I hear people in the modern context say, "Oh, I could never be a Christian, it's so oppressive to women." I think, "You don't know history." In all of human history, there has never been anyone who's done more to elevate the status of women than Jesus Christ did.
When you look in the Gospels of how he did that and how counter-cultural it was—it wasn't just about women being over-sexualized, which they were and they had that kind of exploitation, and they had so few rights—but there was also a misogyny and a distrust toward women. A woman's testimony was not valid in a court of law.
But when you look at Jesus taking time to intentionally pursue women—not only women of high respect in society, but women like the Samaritan woman at the well that society had forgotten and ostracized—he's pursuing them and elevating their value. When Jesus would tell his parables, he intentionally made women the heroes of so many of those stories, whether it's the persistent widow and her praying or other examples in the Gospel.
The times that he healed them, the friendships that he formed with women like Mary and Martha, allowing them to be even the first to see the resurrection—the first ones! It wasn't men, the first word the resurrected Christ spoke was saying Mary's name. "Mary." She recognized him and was able to go and share what she saw. None of that is by accident. Jesus is giving us a model that was so counter-cultural and elevates and still to this day elevates women to the God-given sacredness that they have.
Jim Daly: I think the other aspect there is Jesus's relationship with his mother, Mary. Ashley, as a woman, as a mom, when you read scripture in that context of Jesus lifting up women, what do you see?
Ashley Willis: I just see a respecter of women. I love that. I do think it goes against what some people are trying to spread as a narrative today about him holding women down.
Probably one of my favorite stories is the woman at the well. I just love how he went against the cultural norms of his day to go and talk to this woman and minister to her, and not bring necessarily shame on her like others had done, but to show her that she didn't have to keep living in shame. She didn't have to keep living life this way and that there was this living water that only he could offer her. I think it was just so beautiful and it's important that we remember that and that Jesus loves women and he wants women to be respected, and he is the model that we all should follow.
John Fuller: Today on Focus on the Family with Jim Daly, our guests are Dave and Ashley Willis. We're talking about some of the content in Dave's book, *Raising Boys Who Respect Girls: Upending Locker Room Mentality, Blind Spots, and Unintended Sexism*. We've got that book here at the ministry. Get your copy at focusonthefamily.com/broadcast.
Jim Daly: What do the conversations sound like with your boys given everything you just said? This is a big topic and we can't protect them 24/7. How do you process the inevitable time when guys are together and they're swaggering or they're sharing things that are degrading? How do you help your boys get ahead of that?
Dave Willis: I think we try to tell them to lead by example. If you can't change the conversation and it's clearly going in a direction and staying in a direction that you're uncomfortable with, then just excuse yourself from that setting. You don't have to stay there. You get to choose what rooms you're in.
It takes a lot of courage sometimes to walk away from settings and sometimes even walk away from relationships where there's a pattern of really unhealthy behavior because you're going to be like the people you hang out with the most. The Bible talks so much about choosing the right friends and that bad company corrupts good character. We've got to be intentional—not in a judgmental way or in an elitist way, but in a really discerning way—to choose our friends wisely because we're going to become like they are.
Ashley Willis: It's so true. I remember one time one of our sons was talking about how he had a friend come up to him and he was like, "Hey, we have this list of girls and we're rating them based on looks and this and that." At first, he thought it was funny.
I said, "Rewind this back and tell me what you just said and think about it if you were... like if there were guys and the girls were rating you. Would you think that was funny?" He goes, "What? Well, they're not doing that. I don't think they're doing that." He kind of started having a whole different attitude.
I said, "What makes this any different, buddy? It's your friends who you love and so it's kind of shadowing the truth of what's going on here. How is this a good thing?" He kind of backtracked from it and was like, "Yeah, that's probably not good." I said, "Yeah, because not only is it mean to these girls, but you're also minimizing them to just bodies." All these kind of things inevitably get out and somebody's going to get hurt. I said, "Do you want to be associated with this? Do you want to really be part of this?" The more he thought about it, the more he was like, "Yeah, I don't want to be part of that."
Because it's really terrible. I would never want someone to do that to me. I think sometimes when we do get into these locker room settings, I think that guys—and I'm sure girls can do this too in our own way—but I think guys forget that these are real women who have souls and have hearts and minds that can be so hurt. Sometimes when they're together, they can forget about that. So we try to remind our kids of that.
Jim Daly: You're developing empathy, which is a good thing. Dave, you made reference to kind of an older generation and how men used to care for and respect women, and we're missing that mark pretty wildly, it seems, in the general culture. How do you bring forward people like your grandfather, I think it was, that you wrote about in the book and say, "This is the kind of person to emulate"?
Dave Willis: Absolutely. I'm thankful to have some of those great examples in my own life from that, but I also want to just acknowledge that it's a complicated time for young men to know how to show respect to women. On one hand, when you try to show chivalry, there are certain women that might be offended by that to say, "Well, I don't need your help. I don't need you to hold a door open for me." A young man's just being polite and he's thinking, "Wow, I feel like I can't win here."
I think it's still the right thing to do to serve and to help people. But when we do it, however we're doing it, we try to do it the way that Jesus said to do it, which is the Golden Rule: treat other people the way that you'd want to be treated. I think that goes for how we treat other men and how we treat women as well.
Even in these confusing times, even when trying to be chivalrous and trying to embody some of those positive masculine traits that God gave us can get you some backlash sometimes, I still think that it's the right thing to do. If criticism comes for that, say, "Look, I didn't mean to offend you, this is how I was raised. I was just trying to be polite and to show deference and kindness in those situations," which usually diffuses the situation. Just know there's a lot of anger out in the world right now and a lot of it is because we've misunderstood so much of these issues.
Jim Daly: In your book, *Raising Boys Who Respect Girls*, you mention seven lessons that turn boys into men. I sent those to my two sons this morning early, like 6:00 a.m. I don't think they were up quite yet, but I did just check my phone. They "hearted" it back to me. So I think they thought those were right on.
Let's hit that and we'll dig into a couple.
One: Have the courage to fight for what's right. Boy, do we need people, men yes, but everybody, pulling for what's right.
Two: Seek responsibility instead of running from it. That'll resonate with the guys. I think boys and young men want that challenge and they don't get that challenge in today's modern culture. I want to be somebody who is choosing what is right and being responsible for my decisions.
Third: Work hard at whatever you do, and when you have a family, work hard to provide. There's a big one. That is an antiquated idea, but I think it's a good one.
Four: Show patience and restraint. Trent, who is my oldest son, big guy, 6'7", weightlifter, he says, "You know, Dad, when it says in the Bible to be meek, you know what that actually means in the Greek? To be ready, but to choose restraint." He's ready, let me tell you. And I'm so glad he's choosing restraint! But that's the point. Patience and restraint, that's manhood.
Next you said: Respect your wife before you meet her by keeping yourself from sexual sin; respect your wife after you're married by remaining faithful. That's so good.
Next: Keep your word.
Next: Trust God and let His word be the roadmap of your life.
Those seven are really solid. Ashley, do they resonate for you as a woman?
Ashley Willis: Absolutely. When I hear that as a woman, that makes me just feel so good about the future of men if we're raising men in that way. Also, as a mom of men, I really want to instill those things in them alongside Dave. I know it's a high calling and, again, as parents we can blow it so easily. There are times we just don't get it right because we're imperfect. But I think when we're aiming for those things and teaching our boys those things and modeling those things ourselves—because even as women we can model many of those things—I think that more is really caught than taught. In those moments where we don't get it right, being that open, safe place to talk about it goes a long way too.
Jim Daly: You have your boys, you have a little gap between number two and number three and four. What are the ages?
Ashley Willis: Right now they are 10, 13, 18, and 20. Two in college and then two in school.
Jim Daly: You've got the gamut still. I think the big issue here is for the parents, but let's say the dads that feel like they have blown it, they haven't set the right example. You can still come back and set that record straight. In the book, in fact, you're talking about starting this stuff at preschool. Start to talk about these things really early.
But I'm thinking, we sometimes need that punch list. We're thinking about everything: they've got to be taught how to respect women and girls, then we've got to help them respect the word of God, and you're thinking of devotions. That list can get a little overwhelming for the guy who wants to come home from work and just plop down, watch the news maybe, or just chill out. How do we get out of that lazy zone, if I could be bold enough, and say we have to be engaged? Maybe take a 10-minute break or whatever, but you've got to engage those kids and it starts early.
Dave Willis: It does start early. Yeah, we need rest too. I'm not beating up on somebody that needs to chill. The older I get, the more chill time I require.
Ashley Willis: That is the truth.
Dave Willis: Like our last kid, I feel some ways I feel wiser and more patient with him, in other ways I feel so much more tired than I was. You've got to be engaged. You just have to be present, connecting with them in their world, and then just looking for teaching opportunities along the way. That's really what's going to resonate with them.
John Fuller: You had an example in the book of your youngest son playing basketball and there was also a girl on the team. He had a little encounter with her. What happened and how did you help straighten that out?
Dave Willis: He got mad one day—she didn't pass him the ball or something—and he said, "Well, you shouldn't even be here, you're a girl." We really had a huddle. This was like eight-year-old basketball, seven or eight. It really hurt her feelings. She already, I'm sure, felt being the only girl a little bit out of place. But she was such a great player, a hard worker, just brought such life and spirit to the whole team.
We huddled up and talked about respecting each other. "Every person has value, everybody's part of this team, we all belong on this team." We talked about it then. Afterwards, of course, I had that parenting moment to say, "Buddy, listen, that was disrespectful to single her out, to make her feel bad. She works so hard, she's doing so much, and to make her feel like she doesn't belong on this team... imagine if someone did that to you."
I made sure he apologized to her the next practice and all of that.
Jim Daly: Did it resonate for him?
Dave Willis: I think it did. I think it was a good teaching moment and they were friends by the end of the season, which was really, really important.
Jim Daly: One of the mistakes I think we make as parents is, "Ah, it's no big deal, just look the other way." But these are great moments to be able to say, "Let's think about what happened there and tell me what you're feeling and why you did it." But just to use those moments for teaching time and hopefully again develop that empathy for "Do you really know the power of what you said and how that would affect her?" To alienate her, to carve her off and separate her from the team.
Dave Willis: I think he was probably insecure. She was taller than him. I think that's what it was coming down to.
Jim Daly: That's typical at eight years old!
Dave Willis: At eight years old, he was feeling a little bit insecure, but no excuse.
Jim Daly: As your sons grew older, your two older sons now that are 20 and 18, you've gone through those teen years. Those discussions change. It goes from like the eight-year-old co-player, but now you're talking about junior in high school and some of that gets a lot more serious. How does that conversation change with older young men?
Ashley Willis: For us, the conversations looked different once they started dating. I remember our second son, when he started dating someone, it was about, "Okay, here's what you do on a date to show respect to your date," and some of those chivalrous things.
In conversation, I talked a lot to our son about, "Be sure that you don't go and talk disrespectfully about her." Don't talk disrespectfully about her to your friends, like she's a bad kisser or whatever. I remember one of our sons overheard this girl that he was interested in—he was really interested in her—but he overheard her and another girl talking badly about this guy that one of them had dated and how he wasn't a good kisser or something to that effect. It made him not want to date her because he was like, "She could talk that way about me and say something embarrassing."
In the same way, we try to tell our boys to be careful about how you talk about your girlfriend, your relationship, and always come from a place of kindness and respect.
Jim Daly: That is so good. Right here at the end, for the parents that really are going, "Wow, we've really blown it," what's one thing they can do to say, "Okay, let's help our 14, 15-year-old get a little reorientation around respect for girls"?
Dave Willis: I think like with most things in parenting and life, it comes down to intentionality. I just want to be intentional about this. Maybe admit, "I've kind of gotten on autopilot with this and this is too big a deal to be on autopilot. So I want to have these conversations."
They'll lean in if in those conversations you talk about mistakes you've made in your own past, which I know is super scary for parents, but our authority as parents doesn't come from having lived perfect lives. It comes from being authentic and honest and real and saying, "I've made plenty of mistakes."
As our boys got older, I've tried to talk about pornography and how that wrecked me and tried to prevent them from making those same mistakes and other mistakes that I've made. I try to be honest about that. I come back to this principle: never trade temporary pleasure for permanent regret. I said there are going to be so many times in your life where you might, in a moment, do something because you think it's going to feel good. That one moment of pleasure could lead to regret that just stays.
Now, because of God's grace, God wipes away every sin, Jesus paid for it on the cross. But even with the forgiveness and grace that God gives, there's still some baggage that we can carry because of our decisions. I want to prevent them from carrying unnecessary baggage.
I'm saying the choices you're making right now are shaping the man you're going to be. The choices you're making right now, even the ones that seem insignificant—from the friends you're hanging around to the words you speak, to the way you treat other people—it's putting you on a path that's going to lead in any number of directions. If you make wise choices now, it's going to put you in a place of wisdom later on in life.
We're just raising up the value of the decisions they make because life is telling them, "Oh, you're young, you're a teenager, you can do whatever you want, it doesn't really matter." We're trying to give the opposite message: that what you say and what you do right now matters so much. It shapes who you are.
Jim Daly: This has been great. What a good reminder of some of the tasks we have as parents, and that is a big one: to help our sons particularly learn how to respect women and girls. I think it's a great reminder of something we need to do.
Let me turn to you, the listener. Focus on the Family is here for you. We want you to have a rewarding and God-honoring relationship with your son. When that's in place, concepts like respect come much easier. We have lots of great resources to help. You can take our parenting assessment. It's free, it's online, and it's quick. It helps you to better understand those things you do well and those things that might need a little work.
Another solid place to start is Dave's book, *Raising Boys Who Respect Girls: Upending Locker Room Mentality, Blind Spots, and Unintended Sexism*. We'll make it easy for you. When you give a gift of any amount, we'll send you a copy as our way of saying thanks for supporting the ministry of Focus on the Family. Your continued prayers and financial support allow us to provide much-needed help to individuals and families.
Over the past 12 months, and I say this as a thank you to the donors, Focus on the Family has helped more than 360,000 parents improve their parenting skills, build closer family bonds, and instill faith and character within the children God has entrusted to their care. We couldn't do this ministry without you, so please give today and be part of the ministry.
John Fuller: Take that parenting assessment, donate as you can, and request your copy of the book *Raising Boys Who Respect Girls* when you call 800, the letter A, and the word FAMILY, or online you'll find us at focusonthefamily.com/broadcast. Coming up next time, why it's so important for you to care for your soul.
Guest (Ashley Willis): When I self-neglect, when I neglect my needs and I neglect what's going on inside of me, I feel so burnt out and empty that the only person I can think of is myself.
John Fuller: Thanks for listening to Focus on the Family with Jim Daly. I'm John Fuller, inviting you back as we once again help you and your family thrive in Christ.
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About Jim Daly
Jim Daly
Jim Daly is President of Focus on the Family. His personal story from orphan to head of an international Christian organization dedicated to helping families thrive demonstrates — as he says — "that no matter how torn up the road has already been, or how pothole-infested it may look ahead, nothing — nothing — is impossible for God."
Daly is author of two books, Finding Home and Stronger. He is also a regular panelist for The Washington Post/Newsweek blog “On Faith.”
Keep up with Daly at www.JimDalyBlog.com.
John Fuller
John Fuller is vice president of Focus on the Family's Audio and New Media division, leading the team that creates and produces more than a dozen different audio programs.
John joined Focus on the Family in 1991 and began co-hosting the daily Focus on the Family radio program in 2001.
John also serves on the board of the National Religious Broadcasters.
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