Yesterday vs Today

By Kristen Ivy

It wasn’t very long ago that I stepped out of college and into my first ”real job” as a high school teacher.  There were so many things that I experienced that year: realizing that I determined the class rules, that my lessons were responsible for training students, that other people looked to me as an expert in my given subject (Literature).  Even as unsettling as these realizations were, I knew that they were all part of the job.  This was what I had been trained to do.  This was why I had taken courses in classroom management and Shakespearian tragedy.  This was why I had spent countless hours apprenticing under more experienced teachers.

But there was one part of the job that I hadn’t trained for—parenting.

I can remember vividly the face of a woman with years more experience than me, looking at me and asking for advice on how to discipline her daughter.  She wasn’t alone.  Whether through e-mail or in a face-to-face conversation, many parents seemed to express uncertainty in their own ability to parent their teenagers.  As I began to look more closely, I noticed that even those who weren’t expressing their uncertainties seemed to be living them out in the way they interacted with their children.

As I thought about these parents I was struck with the question: What would motivate an adult who is successful and competent to turn to a recent college graduate for advice on raising their child?

My observations led me to believe that one of the most basic and powerful obstacles these parents faced was guilt.  Whether it’s was an ambiguous guilt over feeling inadequate to help their child meet certain standards or whether the guilt came from a more specific piece of family history, many parents seemed to be constantly doubting their own ability to parent their child. 

Guilt is a powerful thing.  It robs us of joy.  It limits our relationships.  It prevents us from being the people we were created to be.  No matter what the source of your guilt may be, no matter how much you feel you deserve your guilt and no matter how strongly others may add to your guilt through explicit or implicit reminders of your shortcomings, one thing is certain—your guilt isn’t helping anyone.

 Guilt cannot heal the past. Guilt cannot somehow serve as penance to change the future.

 After spending hours upon hours immersed in the world of high school students, here is what I know—teenagers need their parents.  They need them to be parental.  They have other friends.  They even have other mentors and role models, but they do not have other parents.

 Don’t let the things that you wish you could have done, or should have done, or would have done differently impede you from what you can do today.  Forgive yourself—work at it, because sometimes it’s a process.  Learn from the past, but be the mom or dad your child needs today.

Leave a Comment

Filed under Parenting

Release: Moving On

May 17-23

Putting forgiveness into process is daunting.  It forces us to deal with some really yucky stuff—stuff that oftentimes feels better left alone.  Whether it’s the offense itself, our response, our perspective, or learning to relate to someone we would rather avoid, the practice of forgiveness is one we need to learn to involve ourselves in.  So what does that actually look like?  Is it a conversation?  Is it an action?  There’s not really a formula for this.  While our actions and words are important, it is our commitment to the process that is crucial and will get us to the place we need to be.

Faith Talk: What is a next step I need to take to move towards forgiveness?

Leave a Comment

Filed under Release

Release: Chris Keith

May 10-16

Check out this link that tells the brief story of our guest speaker from last night: Click here for the article.

 

Faith Talk

What stood out to you the most about Chris’ story?  How do you think his ability to forgive affects the people around him? 

Leave a Comment

Filed under Release

Release: First Things First

May 3 – 9

It feels good to receive forgiveness, doesn’t it?  When we’ve messed up, when we’ve hurt someone, we want to know that what we’ve done wrong can be overlooked and gotten over.  At the same time, when we’ve been hurt, when we’ve been wounded, when we’re the one left a little worse for the wear, it’s not quite as easy to extend forgiveness, is it?  Still, as difficult as it is to do, there’s a value in pursuing forgiveness.  There’s a value in being committed to the process—no matter how long it takes.  It goes beyond something we “should” do to something we have to do for the sake of ourselves—and for our future.

Faith Talk question:

 Where is forgiveness an issue in my life? How does it affect my life? 

Leave a Comment

Filed under Release

New series: Release

We all want forgiveness, but we’re not always eager to give it out, are we? And for some of us, there are some very big hurts that have a grip on our lives. Things that were done, or not done, that wounded us. Even the very memory of those things brings up the emotions as fresh as they were when they were new. So how do you move on? How do you get past the hurt and pain? And how do you push past something you know you should do to the point where you can finally release it?

We’ll be exploring that with parents starting this week as we launch three weeks of studying what the Bible says about the topic of forgiveness this week.

Leave a Comment

Filed under Release

New Friend Request: Ignore?

April 26 – May 2

Relationships=conflict. It’s natural. It’s part of two people relating to one another because at some point, you’re not going to agree. One person will do something the other person doesn’t like. One person will let the other person down. One person will say or do something stupid. It happens. And at some point, it happens to us—either we’re the person making the mess, or the one who is feeling the effects of the mess. So how do you navigate your way through the drama? Do you just ignore it and hope it goes away? Do you just drop that friend? Or do you find a way to work it out? The choice is yours.

What to talk about this week:

What is the biggest fight you’ve ever had with a friend? What was the outcome?

Leave a Comment

Filed under New Friend Request

New Friend Request: Respond?

April 19 – April 25

Someone to listen to my problems. Someone to do stuff with. Someone to talk to constantly. Someone to hang out with. When you make a list of what qualities you want in a friend, how many of the things on your list involve what that person can do for you? Most of us would have to admit that it’s a lot. But the best friendships are ones that are not just about what the other person can do for you—the best friendships also involve how you can be there for someone else. How you can listen, instead of always talking. How you can give someone space when he or she needs it, or just hang out when your friend needs that too. In other words, the best friendships are not centered solely on you—and that’s a good thing.

Talk about this week:

 What are some ways you’ve been able to help out your friends?

Leave a Comment

Filed under New Friend Request