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On
Grocery Shopping with Children: Nurturing Spiritual Self-Reliance
by
Elder L. Whitney Clayton and Kathy Clayton
Editor's
Note: This article is reprinted from the Religious Educator,
a journal published three times a year from the Religious
Studies Center at Brigham Young University. It is for teachers
and students of religious education in the Church. Those
interested in learning more or subscribing can go to http://tre.byu.edu/ .
After
teaching our seven children, who all managed more often than
not to comply fairly well with classroom regulations, a fourth-grade
teacher pulled our youngest son aside and asked, “So what
do your parents do to make you behave? Do they yell at you?
Do they ground you? Do they spank you?” Her list of threatening
consequences exhausted, she waited for the pensive boy to
answer. After a moment’s thought, he responded, “They guilt
us to death.”
We
were not entirely proud of the characterization of our parenting
strategy. Although we were glad he did not report screaming,
grounding, or spanking as our compelling motivators, we wish
he would had responded with euphemistic composure, “They
provide conscience training.”
After
a long laugh and a short wince over the teacher-student exchange,
we considered in earnest her question in an attempt to identify,
somewhat after the fact, a methodology. We concluded that
we had both deliberately and inadvertently interacted with
our children with a generally unified ideology.
Be
Careful with External Rewards
We
agreed that any method of discipline that depends on imposing
external punishment, or even granting rewards, risks becoming
manipulative and delays or minimizes a child’s privilege
of tasting the sweet, personal sensation of the affirming
approval of heaven for right choices. Children who become
satisfied to fold their arms and sit quietly in Church services
solely because they crave the gold star their parents will
put on their foreheads at the end of the exercise may neglect
to recognize the sweet sense of worship and connection to
heaven they are entitled to for their reverent behavior.
As
short-term motivators, gold stars provide bright, positive
encouragement along the way, but they are superficial substitutes
for the more internal, long-lasting rewards of good choices
and jobs well done. Although we parents all celebrate a report
card with excellent marks, the enthusiasm in the voice and
the light in the eyes of children who have solved a simultaneous
equation or written their first sonnet underline and punctuate
a love of learning in a lasting and profound way. Straight
A’s will not be a realistic goal for all children, but satisfying,
personal experiences with learning, discovery, and accomplishment
are realistic goals. Our current educational system may not
allow for such an idealistic view of personal educational
success, but, as parents, we can espouse that view by celebrating
effort, completion, and personal bests.
Nurture
Self-Reliance
Educators
talk of the ideal learning level as “competence plus one,” meaning
that a wise teacher offers students familiar, mastered material,
plus a little more. The wisdom of the concept is clear. Preserving
elements of a familiar curriculum builds student confidence
and nurtures self-reliance, and the introduction of new material
promotes growth. A similar formula could be useful for parents.
A trip to the grocery store with young children serves as
an illustration. Although it is always easier to leave young
children at home than to take them along, the opportunity
to develop self-control is worth the inconvenience for the
parents. When children are very young, going to the store
at all may be the “plus one” part of the equation, so they
may be stretched to an appropriate level just sitting in
the shopping cart and lasting the hour without a tantrum.
As
a child masters that level of behavior, a wise parent might
take the child out of the shopping cart to allow him or her
to walk alongside with one hand either held by the parent
or holding onto the cart. That free hand with the potential
to reach low-level temptations becomes the “plus one.” Anticipating
a readiness for more-advanced self-discipline, the parent
might next release the child’s hand but still require him
or her to stay adjacent to the cart. With two hands free
and no material tether, that maturing child must strengthen
the capacity to resist the runaway inclination of the natural
man and stay beside the parent, in spite of the very real
freedom the child has to tear down the aisles.
A
little older and more self-disciplined, the child may next
experience the “plus one” of an assigned errand to the end
of the aisle to retrieve something from the shopping list
or even be given the prerogative to make a choice of his
or her own.
Help
Children Correct Their Behavior
It
all sounds very academic, but the fact is, based on our own
nonacademic, repeatedly practical experience, there are risks
every time we take children to the store at all, much less
allow them space beyond the shopping cart. What if that previously
well-behaved child takes off to the end of the aisle and
impulsively snatches an apple from the bottom row of a towering
display? Has the experience with self-discipline been a total
failure? Although we would likely have hesitated with the
answer some years ago when we were taking our own unpredictable
children to the grocery store, we think even then we would
have affirmed our commitment to the principle of “competence
plus one,” despite the risks that “plus one” inevitably implies.
Thus, if the display topples and apples bump to the ground
and roll down the aisle, what do we recommend? The obvious—we
take the young culprit to the scene of the crime and assist
him or her in picking up every one.
While
we were visiting family friends one warm California afternoon,
our young sons were amusing themselves wrestling in the front
yard. With a sudden flare of temper, one boy grabbed a small
toy and bonked another over the head, necessitating several
stitches. That young offender’s mother taught him a lesson
with her response that he shared with us fondly fifteen years
later. She drove him to a doughnut store, where she expected
him to spend his own money buying a box of doughnuts for
his injured friend. As if that were not enough, she took
him to his friend’s house and waited while he made the long
trek to the front door to deliver the offering to his friend
with a pained apology. Repentance is an essential privilege,
even for very young wrongdoers.
Prepare
Children’s Minds to Make Good Choices
Although
we cannot anticipate every possible challenging choice, we
can appropriately brief our children by reviewing in advance
the likely experiences and temptations they might face. A
girl who has pictured tantalizing cereal boxes strategically
placed at her eye level and made a mental commitment to avoid
the temptation of snatching them willfully off the shelves
will be better equipped for her “plus one” experience of
walking down the grocery store aisles without physical restraint.
If we think to talk about the cereal boxes but neglect to
consider the appealing apples, conversation after the fact
might be helpful for the next time. Learning and repentance
are lifelong projects.
Cultivate
an Appetite for Good Things
Other
benefits to taking our children with us to the grocery store
and everywhere else that is enriching and interesting are
the opportunity to spend time together in conversation and
to expose them to the varied, lovely things of life. Part
of cultivating a craving for the good implies children’s
having been richly exposed to it. As a result of what we
know about our children’s eternal identity as children of
God, we can believe that they have a disposition to recognize
and desire that which is good. We can trust they will know
what is “virtuous, lovely, or of good report or praiseworthy,” and
they can cultivate an eagerness and determination to “seek
after these things” (Articles of Faith 1:13), even in their
friends, their hobbies, and their activities. Parents, then,
assume the fortunate task of offering children exposure to
and experience with wonderful things.
We
admired a group of six young mothers who organized for their
four-year-old boys a weekly music appreciation group. As
those energetic little music lovers played with happy lyrics
and rhythms, the imaginative mothers were not only taking
initiative for cultivating a God-given gravitation to positive
influences but also engaging affirmatively in activity with
their young sons and their young sons’ friends. Those mothers
were deepening their own affection for homemade tambourines
and other people’s four-year-old boys. The open-minded shared
embracing of good music together will likely have lasting
benefits for them all.
Another
family of six we know formed a family museum club. Together
they searched the Sunday newspapers for listings of appropriate
exhibits they could study and attend together. When we joined
them on a family outing to a traveling exhibit at the Getty
Museum, we were impressed by their children’s intelligent,
cultural pleasure at viewing those challenging, beautiful
works of art. Beginning with a “competence plus one” measure
as their guide when the children were young, the parents
had cultivated and believed in their children’s Godlike gravitation
to lovely things.
Spend
Time Reviewing Each Day’s Choices
Being
affirmative with the use of time increases the opportunity
for exposure to praiseworthy things, and it minimizes the
vacant time for misuse. We might avoid thinking in terms
of “passing time” or “killing time” and choose rather to “take
time,” “make time,” or “invest time.” At the end of every
day, sometimes wearily but always with determination, we
sat for a few minutes at the side of each child’s bed for
each to consider in the semidarkness of his or her room the
answer to the ritualistic nightly request, “Tell me all the
things you’ve done today.” Over the years, we heard sweet
recollections of meaningful firsts, tender confessions of
childlike regrets, earnest deliberations of pending decisions,
nostalgic reflections of missed opportunities, and thoughtful
perceptions of right and wrong. The children were reviewing
in meaningful ways, almost as soon as they could talk, the
productive events of their day with pleasure, building determination
to eliminate or adjust the wasted or poorly spent moments.
One
exemplary family has made it a practice, beginning when their
children were very young and continuing through their teenage
years, to ask each child at the end of the day to recall
and report a “happy thought.” A life well lived begins with
a spiritual creation, continues with a worthy execution,
and then concludes with a review and analysis. We might use
the pattern of the creation of the earth as our example.
That end-of-the-day review assists us and our children as
we seek to identify, and then duplicate, those activities
and behaviors that were the substance of the “happy thought.”
Take
Young People’s Decisions Seriously
Although
we were sometimes glad to have our smiles veiled by the evening
darkness when our children reviewed in earnest the childlike
things we recognized as inconsequential in the long term,
we sought to take their thoughts and concerns very seriously.
When we approached my father for counsel early in our marriage
regarding the possible purchase of a first home, he set a
valuable example for us. We were poor. The condominium we
were renting in graduate school was going up for sale, so
we were obligated either to purchase it or find another home.
The cost of the very small, two-bedroom condominium was $18,000.
With a mortgage instead of rent, our monthly payments would
actually decrease, but we worried about the down payment
and the commitment of the purchase. My father, surely smiling
on the other end of the telephone about our ardent concern
over what must have seemed to him a small amount of money
and an easy decision, listened with gracious sincerity, offered
his best professional analysis for our consideration, and
then expressed his confidence in our ability to make a good
decision. Likewise, our Heavenly Father sees from His vantage
point the eternally inconsequential nature of many of our
concerns; but His attention is, nonetheless, never condescending.
We and our children are all works in progress.
Trust
Children’s Ability to Receive Inspiration
Happily,
we parents can trust our children’s ability to receive their
own inspiration. Our job, then, becomes one of teaching them
to seek and be sensitive to the Spirit and then honor those
feelings, not demanding with proud imposition that they be
obedient to our arbitrary rules. We are seeking for them,
as we are seeking for ourselves, the determination, wisdom,
and willingness to embrace the will of heaven, not a long
list of family “musts.” Compelling our children’s obedience
to our laws as our highest goal glorifies our ability to
know always the best course for them, underrates their privilege
of receiving inspiration, and intensifies the pressure we
feel to control.
The
Light of Christ is given to everyone, even young men and
women, in sufficient quantity for them to feel the difference
between right and wrong. Our goal is to cultivate their hearts
to crave, their ears to hear, and their wills to honor that
light. The nurture of such spiritual sensitivity begins before
age three, continues to age eight when they receive the constant
companionship of the Holy Ghost, and then goes beyond. As
their lives and decisions become more complicated, their
privilege of inspiration and heavenly assistance becomes
more comprehensive. Ideally and with attentive nurture, their
ability to discern worthy voices from others increases as
the need for that discernment intensifies.
The
privilege of agency has always implied risks, but the quest
to promote spiritual self-reliance is a heavenly one. Trusting
in the Light of Christ, the eternal nature of our project,
and the supplementary grace of God, we can embrace the task
with patience, determination, and joy.
Use
the Building Blocks for Nurturing Self-Reliance
In
summary, we have learned to view the elements of the above
ideological thinking as building blocks for nurturing spiritual
self-reliance, and we recommend all parents adopt the methodology
that has proven so successful in our lives:
· Be
careful to avoid using external rewards and punishments as
the ultimate results of right choices.
· Nurture
self-reliance with a “competence plus one” formula.
· Prepare
children to make responsible choices by discussing alternatives
and visualizing possible outcomes in advance.
· Assist
children with appropriate opportunities to repent, and correct
errors by helping children accept the natural consequences
of their mistakes.
· Cultivate
an appetite for lovely and praiseworthy things by exposing
children lavishly to them.
· Review
and analyze the results of choices made to reinforce commitment
to good choices and to rethink poor ones.
· Take
young people’s decisions seriously with honest attention
and thoughtful counsel.
· Trust
children’s ability as heavenly heirs to receive their own
inspiration.
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© 2004 Meridian
Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
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