The Soft-Spoken Parent
The Top 10 Strategies
to Turn Away Wrath
By H. Wallace Goddard
This week:
10. Blame it on the
rain.
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A
few years ago two dear friends called me from
a distant city. Their voices betrayed their exhaustion.
"We've had trouble with Breck lately. We
don't know what to do. We're desperate. Will you
help us?"
The weary parents described
the stresses around their recent move to a new city. The
dad's new job entailed long hours leaving very little
time or energy for his family. The mom was overwhelmed
with the demands of the move and organizing the household.
Six-year-old Breck had started
acting in angry and hostile ways. Every day he would battle
against getting on the bus. He seemed almost to take joy
in torturing his mother as she tried to rush him to the
school bus that was holding up traffic by fighting with
her. "It seems that he is deliberately trying to
manipulate me," observed the frustrated mother. "I
think he wants to use his power to control the family.
He seems to enjoy it."
Why does he misbehave?
When the mother asked me
if I believed that Breck was trying to manipulate her,
my instinctive response was, "No. I know Breck. He
is an earnest, sweet, normal boy whose worst fault may
be that he is tender and a perfectionist. I think he is
saying, 'I am so confused about this move! I like to have
some order in my life but I have been torn away from friends,
our old house, familiar routines...and now my mom and
dad don't even want to snuggle with me at night because
they say I need to be grown up. I feel desperately confused
and lonely! Please! Please! Someone help me!'"
Seeing Breck as a lonely,
confused boy leads to a parenting response very different
from the one that would result from seeing him as devious
and contrary. Bringing him up in light and truth includes
seeing him in the best possible light—as a little boy
wanting to be good but feeling very lost, lonely, and
overwhelmed.
Rather than accuse, confront,
and threaten, parents might respond to the message of
pain and confusion that the boy's behavior represents.
They can help the troubled boy against their common enemies
of confusion, alienation, and fear.
How to help
His father might say, "Wow!
Son, you are really angry. Shall we run around the block
together so that you can show me your anger?"
Or mother might say, "Son,
this all seems so confusing. Can we snuggle together in
the rocking chair?" There are probably many more
ideas that are still better. And parents are uniquely
qualified, based on experience and inspiration, to know
what will work with a given child in a specific circumstance.
There are many responses that might help the boy deal
with his immediate anger and confusion.
Long term solutions to help
the boy might include arranging for the mother to volunteer
at school so that she could be with her boy during the
difficult weeks of transition to a new school. Dad might
carve out some time for his son on the weekends. Mom might
have the boy stay home from school with her once a week
to have time together for a picnic. The family might invite
one of Breck's classmates over to play at the house after
school to help him build new friendships.
Children’s terrorism
When children cannot find
a good way to get their needs met, they may resort to
terrorism—not out of spiteful nastiness, but out of desperation.
Maybe rather than wanting power over the family, Breck
really wanted to feel a little power in his own life.
Maybe rather than trying to manipulate and punish the
family, he really wanted to feel loved and safe.
That’s why I say to blame
it on the rain. Think about the rain that is falling in
your child’s life. Think about the stresses in his or
her life. Think about the stresses in the family that
might make your child feel anxious or lonely. A move?
Health problems? Stress? Money problems?
The bad behavior we see in
children is often due to the thunderstorm in their lives.
So, blame it on the rain rather than blame it on badness
in the child.
Reflection
Think of a time when you
have recognized the circumstances that make it hard for
your child to be peaceful and loving. Think of a time
when you have tried to understand the pressures in your
child’s life. How did it feel? What helped you get there?
How can you get there again? How can you make that experience
more common for you?
This is the last strategy
to be shared on Meridian. To make your family more peaceful,
purchase the book, The Soft-Spoken Parent: More than
50 Strategies to Turn Away Wrath by visiting your
local LDS bookseller or by clicking here.
If you are a part of a study
group, you may be able to arrange a quantity discount
with your bookseller. We recommend this book for personal
study, for mothers’ groups, and family discussion groups,
as well as general book groups.