Tuesday, November 25, 2014

10 Ways to Create a Haven of Trust

Within the walls of our home, we have the opportunity to create a foundation that prepares our kids to engage with the world around them.  In my work with children and families, I’ve found ten elements to creating a haven of trust and fostering a lasting relationship with your kids.
You know your child feels loved, but a great question to ask yourself is, “Does my child feel heard?”  Whether your child is an introvert, extrovert, verbal processor, or quietly calculated, they need to know they are heard and that their thoughts are valued.
Most of us agree that we believe it’s extremely important for our children to have a voice, but many of us have not done the best job of creating space for them to be heard.  It’s okay!  It is a learning process and one that I promise has lasting rewards!

1. Become your child’s first point of contact.  The truth of the matter is that if your children don’t feel comfortable talking to you, or if you don’t have the time to talk to them, they will find someone else who will listen.  It’s a gamble.  They might find a great mentor in a teacher or another parent, or they might turn to media and other kids.  The cost of turning the radio down and having conversation in the car is pretty low in comparison to the devastating influence a negative mentor can have on your child’s life.

2.  Model hard conversations, spoken with respect.  Show your kids it’s okay to engage conflict and that it is much healthier and productive than sweeping angry feelings under the rug where they will boil and fester and turn into bitterness, resentment, etc.  Model respectful conversations filled with “I Statements” and a desire to understand the other party.  When things don’t go as you hope, allow your kids to see you process your thoughts and emotions.  In this, you become human and show them that all emotion is okay, but what action we decide to take with that emotion can be positive or negative.  Somehow, allowing your kids to see that you have emotions, gives them the safety to express their own emotions to you.  When they see you respectfully handle conflict, it gives them the green light to come to you with tough information when the need arises.  The groundwork you do in this area when your children are young (Don’t worry if they are older, you can start now.) will serve your relationship in immeasurable ways as they grow older.

3. Don’t discipline the processing of thought; discipline inappropriate actions.  If a child comes to you on their own accord to admit a problem or process an inappropriate choice, try to hold your tongue and listen.  It is so tempting to jump in and fix the problem or react to horrible news, but give them the space to talk!  It took a lot of courage for them to admit their mistake to you.  Give them the space to share their thoughts and emotions without judgment.  As you foster the haven of trust, you garner their listening as you later process the ramifications of their inappropriate actions.  Consider these circumstances teachable moments rather than guilty parties in a courtroom awaiting sentencing.

4. Talk less, listen more.  We’ve heard it a million times, but do we actually do it? That’s all I’m going to say about that!

5.  Demand respect among siblings.  Unfortunately, as a parent, sometimes you have to play the role of mediator, and it is crucial that you demand respectful talk from your children – to each other.  Not only are you setting the tone for your home, but you are training them to be people that handle conflict and treat others with dignity in the real world.  You are also setting the tone for what their relationships will look like as adult children.

6. If they witness Mom and Dad fight, let them witness reconciliation.  I’ve heard people say to never let your kids see you fight.  Now, whereas I don’t think you should fight in front of your kids if you can help it, let’s be honest, your kids live with you, you’re not perfect and sometimes your spouse is going to raise your blood pressure!  If your kids witness a fight, or even unkind tone/words between you and your spouse, let them see the reconciliation, as appropriate.  Oftentimes, we feel guilty if our kids see us lose our cool, we reconcile in private, and the next time they see us, everything is back to normal.  This gives them a faulty perspective of healthy communication in close relationships.  If kids don’t get to witness reconciliation, they often struggle with conflict in their close relationships down the road in one of two ways:

a.      Avoiding conflict altogether due to fear of failure and lack of a framework for healthy reconciliation
b.      Having unrealistic expectations that things will “just work out” without engaging in any communication (If your kids see you fight and then the next day you’re fine, they don’t know what happened in the middle and can assume nothing required fixing.)

77.   Exhibit grace over legalism (No question is a dumb question).  If you want your kids to come to you when they’ve made a mistake or even when they have a tough question, you must choose your love for your child over your expectations.  This doesn’t mean that you don’t have a standard of excellence for your family, but it does mean if you have drilled your rules into your kids without exhibiting much grace, there’s a pretty good guarantee they won’t come to you when they’ve messed up.  Let’s be honest, when we know we’ve made a mistake or are uncomfortable discussing a controversial topic, the last thing we want to do is put ourselves in a position to be shamed.  Have standards but exhibit grace and refuse shame a seat at the table in your home.

88.  Learn how to say “I don’t know”.  This might be the most important item on this list.  There is so much power when your child is hurting in saying, “Baby, I don’t know why this is happening and I don’t have the answers right now, but I promise I’m not going anywhere and I will walk with you through this situation.  I will try to find an answer, but even if I don’t, know that I am here and I love you.”


9. Learn how to love from a distance.  It’s hard.  When your kids are hurting, you want to be there to fix everything and sometimes you can’t.  Stay consistent and love from a distance, let them know the door is always open.  Loving from a distance preserves a relationship rather than squelching it by smothering.

10.  Resist the temptation to shelter.  We want to save our kids from the atrocities of this world – and rightly so, it can be a scary place to live.  I’m not suggesting that you expose your children to evil, but I am suggesting that you help shape their worldview and invite them to understand the world around them.  When we shelter our kids and then send them into the real world, many of them end up rejecting what we’ve taught them because it just doesn’t work in the world of pain that they enter.  Teach your kids about pain and suffering and teach them about hope.  Use discretion in sheltering them, for sure, but provide opportunities to build their intellect and confidence and ultimately their hope in a God who is more powerful than any evil they will encounter.  Let them see you interact with the real world.  In doing this, you are raising powerful little champions of change that will grow to become advocates of justice and truth in an evil world.  Build a foundation not a shelter.