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Say
Goodbye to Whining, Complaining, and
Bad Attitudes...
in You and Your Kids
Video Series
Summaries of the Videos
Session 1 - Honor: The Secret
Ingredient for Family Life
The concept of honor is introduced with a practical definition.
Honor means treating people as special, doing more than
what's expected, and having a good attitude. Parents
are given specific suggestions for teaching children how
to treat people as special. The session includes a story
of how Dr. Turansky's son, Josh, honored him with
a special meal. Ephesians 6:2-3 is used. A spiritual application
concludes this session asking people to consider their relationship
with God as their Heavenly Father.
Session 2 - Helping Children
Add Energy to Family Life
(Instead of Draining It)
Introducing this session, Dr. Turansky tells the story of
Mike who learns a surprising lesson by doing more than what's
expected. Children are taught how to add energy back into
family life instead of draining it. Practical suggestions
are given for teaching children to do more than what's
expected. Ideas include honoring others while setting the
table, the importance of cleaning the corners, not just
getting by, and how to show honor when you leave the bathroom.
Matthew 5:38-45 is used. Four suggestions for dealing with
a bad attitude are also presented.
Session 3 - Dealing with
Whining and Complaining
Whining and complaining are dishonoring. Children are taught
that there are two kinds of people in the world, whiners
and solvers. Whiners focus on the problem. Solvers concentrate
on the solution. Two biblical alternatives are presented
for whining and complaining. "Obey first and then
we'll talk about it" is illustrated in scripture with
people like Abraham, Peter, and Philip. A "wise appeal"
is illustrated through the life of Daniel, Esther, and Nehemiah.
Parents learn how they sometimes contribute to their children's
whining and learn several practical ways to address it.
Session 4 - The Solution
Isn't Just Bigger Consequences
Four goals are presented to help parents solve parenting
problems. First, parents learn to be practical, helping
their children know exactly what to do, not just what not
to do. Second, the parents are challenged to work toward
heart change in children, not just behavior change. Third,
parents are encouraged to use the scriptures in day-to-day
life with their children. Fourth, parents are encouraged
to develop adult solutions to children's problems
so that children can grow into mature responses that will
strengthen them for the rest of their lives.
Session 5 - Parenting
with Honor #1: Being Firm Without Being Harsh
Honor is a two-way street. Children need to honor their
parents, but parents also need to learn to honor their children.
Parents often fall into extremes in parenting. Either they
become too lenient, wanting to please their children, or
they become too strict and overly controlling. Honor-based
parenting requires a number of skills, and since many parents
don't have a good history with honor in their own family
growing up, these skills provide a helpful framework. This
session focuses on one skill, "Being firm without
being harsh." Parents learn that firmness sets a boundary
that won't be crossed without a consequence. Harshness
pours emotional intensity into that limit to try to convince
a child that you mean business. Suggestions are given for
handling bedtimes. With a tighter action point and clearer
consequences, parents can replace their harshness with honor.
Session 6 - Parenting
with Honor #2: When Parents Change, Kids Change
Three more honor-based parenting skills are presented in
this session. "Use sorrow instead
of anger in the discipline process" reflects the way
God grieves when we sin against him as mentioned in Ephesians
4:30. "Use decision-making and problem-solving to
teach honor" helps parents know when to step in and
how to use common everyday experiences in the teaching process.
And "Envision a positive future" helps parents
to focus on the positive qualities in their children so
they can encourage their kids with a preview of a successful
future. Jesus is used as a model of balance as he worked
with his disciples.
Session 7 - A Special
Gift
Can you honor your family too much? Yes, we believe you
can. A family can become so inwardly focused that it encourages
selfishness. The solution is to work as a family to give
honor away. Then children see that their family has a special
gift that they can pass on to others. A family actually
grows closer together as they learn to reach out with honor.
Practical ideas are shared of how a family can show honor
to others.
Session 8 - Sibling Conflict
#1: A Plan for Anger in Children
This session focuses on the first of three roadblocks to
sibling harmony - anger. A plan for anger management
is presented, and then parents are reminded that honor means
adding something more. In Matthew 5:9, Jesus talks about
being a peacemaker. Children are encouraged to see their
own anger coming on and deal with it appropriately, then
look for ways to bring peace into relationships as well.
Session 9 - Sibling Conflict
#2: When Children Want to be First or Best
Selfishness or "wanting to be first or best"
is one of the greatest enemies of honor. Two guys who wanted
the best seat approached Jesus. His answer was, "Whoever
wants to become great among you must be your servant."
This session helps parents develop servant attitudes in
their children. In particular the common complaint children
raise is "That's not fair." Parents learn
that fair doesn't mean equal and that they can cut
down on a lot of the competitiveness and comparison in children
by treating them all uniquely as God does us. Several practical
ideas are presented that help parents know how to teach
children about servanthood.
Session 10 - Sibling
Conflict #3: When Children are Foolish or Mean
The third roadblock to sibling harmony is foolishness: the
inability to see how present actions will result in negative
consequences. Meanness is discussed because children who
are mean don't realize the value of their brothers
and sisters and don't see how their actions are damaging
relationships. Parents learn to see foolishness in their
children when kids say things like, "I was only kidding,"
or "I didn't mean to hurt him." The solution
is to help children become wise. Verses from the book of
Proverbs are shared to help parents see the importance and
value of teaching children wisdom. Parents learn to address
foolishness by teaching children to take responsibility,
accept correction, anticipate consequences, and avoid meanness.
Session 11 - Teens +
Honor = Success
Family life changes when children become teenagers. The
causes and purpose of these changes are discussed in this
session. Parents are encouraged to make the Teenage Parenting
Shift. A helpful discipline technique is presented from
the parable of the talents (Matthew 25). When the landowner
returned he rewarded the servants who were responsible by
giving more privileges. That principle can be applied to
teens as the primary discipline technique: privilege and
responsibility go together. Parents are encouraged to use
honor to build bridges with teenagers.
Session 12 - Mapping
Your Family Dynamics
In this session the Network Factor is described, a tool
used to change the way families interact. All relationships
have predictable patterns. Some are helpful and others are
not. Parents are taught to look closely at the patterns
in their family and encouraged to target the relationships
that need more honor. Triangling happens in relationships
when two people in conflict draw another one into the fray.
Triangling happens more than many parents realize. Using
the Network Factor, parents learn to identify negative relating
patterns and replace them with honoring ones.
Session 13 - Developing
a Team Attitude
Honor comes when we value each other. This session talks
about viewing our children as brothers and sisters in Christ.
When families grasp this truth, they see the tremendous
value of children and parents. Several practical ideas are
shared to help families grow closer together as a team.
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