Tag Archive - parents

Advent Opportunity

My family started an Advent candle tradition three years ago, and it’s been one of our favorite parts of the holiday season.  As our kids have gained in understanding, we are starting to see the benefits of pointing them back to the Christ child every Christmas season.  For the past two years I’ve created my own Advent devotionals on the Sundays leading up to Christmas Eve, but this year I stumbled into something better.  About two days before we started, I get an email from Gina McClain with an idea she has for creating Advent devotionals using the stories from The Jesus Storybook Bible.  She then passes it off to Sam Luce for some design tweaking and then the idea gets even better.

You can go to Gina’s site right now and download everything for FREE.  It’s easy and simple to do, as it’s only a few times leading up to Christmas.  If you are worried that you’ve already missed the first two weekends of Advent, don’t be!  It’s never too late to take next steps when it comes to spiritually leading your family this Christmas season!

So go download the devotional, and go out right now and purchase The Jesus Storybook Bible to accompany it!  If you don’t already have the Jesus Storybook Bible, then it’s something you need to get right now this minute.  We read it as a family quite regularly, and it brings me to tears often.

Guest Post: Parents in Transition // Reggie Joiner

The following is a guest post by Reggie Joiner, he writes more at http://orangeparents.org and http://orangeleaders.com and you can follow him on Twitter at http://twitter.com/reggiejoiner.

Parents in Transition

Time flies fast from elementary to college age, so get ready to change your parenting habits. Every child seems to move in warp speed toward the teenage years.

I was caught by surprise when a new declaration of personal independence was automatically assumed the day my son got his driver’s license. It was as though I represented an oppressive and extremely unfair regime whenever I tried to enforce any rule. (Whenever I said no to one of my teenage daughters, she would go to her bedroom, close the door and play Britney Spears’ “Overprotected” over and over again for over an hour, loud enough for me and the whole house to hear.) I have to admit, it was difficult for me to transition from parenting children to parenting teenagers. I had worked with teenagers all of my life, but I had never actually had any living in my home. I am still a recovering parent of teens, but here are a few things I have recognized about this chapter of parenting:

It’s a complicated time.

While your children are transitioning from being dependent to independent, you are transitioning as a parent from having authority to leveraging your influence. You can’t parent them the same way you did when they were in elementary school.

It’s an urgent time.

Face it. You know a window is closing fast. Ready or not, in a few short years your children will be leaving home. You are running out of time, and it is easy to feel a little panicked. Everything seems to matter more (grades, decisions, relationships.) And to make matters worse, everything costs more too. Have I mentioned the price of college these days? Feeling better?

Keep fighting for your teenager’s emotional health by investing in relational time with them. Especially during this uncertain season, they need a positive relationship with you more than you or they may realize. Here are a few things to remember that might help you make the time you spend with your teenager more meaningful:

Find a common activity you can both enjoy.

Go to favorite restaurant, movie, or concert. Discover a hobby or a type of recreation you can do together. Find common interests. It only takes a few.

Make sure there is no agenda.

They will see right through a masked motive and interpret your effort to hang out as manipulation. Don’t forget. This is about building your relationship. So don’t use this time to deal with issues. Guard the fun.

Keep it outside the house.

You probably already spend most of your time together in your home. It can be full of duties, responsibilities, and distractions, so get out and do something that is a contrast to your normal routine.

Do it without friends.

Anyone you add to your time will drastically change the dynamic. Give your teenager individual and undivided attention, without your friends or their friends, and even without siblings.

Mutually agree to turn off cell phones.

Make at least part of your time a no-electronic zone. Phones have a way of distracting you from meaningful and engaging dialogue.

Put it on the schedule (but not on a Friday).

Be sensitive to how a teenager wants to organize his or her life. Discover the rhythm that exists in their schedule and agree with them on the best times to hang out.

• Stay flexible (and be willing to reschedule frequently).

A teenager’s world is always changing. They could feel trapped if you are rigid about your scheduled time with them. Don’t let your time with them become a competition with their other interests and priorities. Avoid making them choose between you and something else they really want to do.

Remember your goal is not to change them.

Avoid getting into conversations where you are trying to correct or improve a behavior. Save those conversations for another time. You can shut down a positive experience if you try to leverage it to fix something.

Keep working at it.

Learning to communicate with those you love can be awkward at times. Strive to ask the right kind of questions and listen more than you talk. You are not trying to become your teen’s best friend, but you are laying an important foundation for the kind of friendship you want to enjoy with them during their adult years.

Use it as an opportunity to give your teenager approval.

I’m amazed at how many adults left home without ever really feeling like their parents believed in them. Look for numerous opportunities to encourage their specific strengths and skills.

Having fun and spending quality time together is increasingly important as your relationship with your child changes. This week, find out what kind of activities your teenager likes, and schedule some intentional time together when you can simply enjoy being together.

And if you have other tips you’ve discovered about spending time with a teenage son or daughter, please post them in the comments so we can all learn from our shared experiences.

Disconnect to Connect

And we all reach for our phones to email this to someone, right?  I believe one of the saddest things in the world is watching a parent make their kid invisible.  I do it, you do it, we all do it.  Convicted?

HT: BON

The Best of Orange Week

I’ve been reading some great Orange Week 2.0 material all over the blogosphere, and wanted to share some of my favorites.  A big thanks the the Texas Giant, Kenny Conley for his daily recaps of Orange Week.  I’m a thief.  Most of the things that make me smart, I’ve blatantly stolen from other people.  That my friend is smart!

Here is my list of great Orange Week blog posts:

Michael Bayne wrote an incredible post about the challenge of helping parents with the red side of the Orange equation. He talks about how most parents just want the student ministries to fix or entertain their kids. He’s got some great advice on how to engage parents to be red!

Zeremy Zach nailed it when it comes to student ministries become Orange. He addressed the stereotype of student ministries being isolated and “black sheep” of the church. He gives specific steps for student pastors to take to “drink the Orange juice.” This is something all the Kidmin leader will want to email to their student leaders!

Chad Swanzy posted an incredible resource on his other site, YouthLeaderStash.com

Gina McClain wrote a great post, I see RED people.  I’m saying it’s her superior Oklahoma upbringing that brings us such great ideas.

Kenny gives us a reminder of what Orange should look like.  Great honest post!

Sam Luce is a freaking blogging beast, and he nails it with this post about staying Yellow and doing it right!

I wish Dan Scott wrote one really great post that I could link to, but he hit homeruns all week long.  Just go read it all! (On a side note, sometimes I read Dan’s blog and can hear his loud, larger than life laugh in my brain.)

Carlos Whittaker talks about his Orange Parenting, and it’s great to have a blog with as many readers as the Ragamuffin Soul community bring attention to the Orange ideology!

Gina writes another stellar post. Here’s a fantastic idea she’s done for some time on helping parents engage in the most important thing they can do as parents.  Great, great stuff!

There is so much more out there, and I want to encourage you to visit all those participating in Orange Week 2.0!



The Family Side of Change

During this Orange Week 2.0, I’ve covered many of the reasons and thoughts behind why we have made a transition to the Orange Curriculum package of 252 Basics and First Look.  But what about the family side (RED) of this change?

Let me be honest about something.  A family ministry is NOT started with a curriculum change. Curriculum is a tool, and so far I do love the Orange curriculum; however, it’s still just a teaching model.  But there is a great potential for reaching out to parents and engaging with the RED side of the Orange environment.

It’s simple really.  It all starts with the take-home page.

We’ve all done take-home pages, right?  I’ve done it for years, only to discover once my kids were old enough to get take-home pages that they go unused.  Why do they go unused?  Because anything I get on a Sunday Morning, in the hectic environment of dismissal will be lost.  There is just something about that crazy, pickup your kids, gather all the crafts, and get to the car that leave take-home pages unused.   But 252 Basics and First Look create quite a conundrum.  The God Time and Small Talk take-home pages are great, but how can I get these to parents and avoid the confusion of it being a take-home item?

A solution to the problem?

We’ve decided to distribute take-home pages through email.  But we’re being very intentional about it.  Parents at Trinity Church can only sign-up for the pages via the website at parents.trinitykidsplace.com.  Once signed up, they will receive the appropriate take-home kid for their child at 3:00pm on Sunday Afternoon.  It is perfect?  No, but it’s something.  With only Facebook promotion on our parent sign-ups, we have 25 families receiving the weekly email.  That’s a win.  We’re establishing a schedule of promoting the website on the first Sunday of every month with take-home pages, and then we’ll let it rest for 3 weeks.  Then hit it again the next month.

But what’s next?

I’ve got a list now of 25 families that have jumped through a minor hoop to continue the conversations at home from what their kids are hearing at church.  See where I’m going with this?  I now have a list of those parents and families most interested in the things that I want them to be interested in.  I now have a list of the families to promote the new Cue Box too.  What’s the CUE BOX?  Clickety-click to read more.  Combined with 252studio.tv and the CUE Box, I can help families engage with the bright YELLOW side of the Orange environment.

Let’s be honest please…

This is just one small step in what I hope will be combined with many of the other things we’ve done to engage parents.  When combined with our Baptism process and Child Dedication experience and Family Friendly events; it is my prayer and hope that we can shine our bright YELLOW and engage the deep RED of the families at Trinity.



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