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[105가정상담] How can I encourage my child to care more about others?, CCEF, Alasdair Groves

How can I encourage my child to care more about others?

 
I am going to give four thoughts on this. It's one I've thought a  fair amount about, as a father of three children. It's something I've  thought about as the son of parents, but especially of a mother who  helped me do this in really significant ways, and I think my mom's input  in my life is part of why I'm a counselor today. How do you help kids  care more about others? First thought, and probably the most important  in terms of the action step regularly, is lead by example. Share what's  going on in your mind, in your life, in your heart. How are you being  impacted by what's going on around you? So just giving your child a  regular window into "Hey, people have feelings and they have responses  and they have reactions." So just like, "Such and such happened and that  made me sad," or "I was really happy that..." So just giving children  access to your inner world in whatever language. You don't have to get  all weird and adopt some new hyper-emotional language if that's not who  you are. And you're welcome to keep using lots of emotional language if  that is who you are. I just mean talk to your kids about how you're  experiencing your life and your world, and in particular, if there are  places where you see them not thinking about others or not thinking  about you, giving them access to that, not a manipulative way where  you're like, well, how do you think I felt? Blah, blah, blah. There's a  way to invite children to realize, you know what? Other people are going  to have different feelings than they do. Other people have different  desires, different perspectives, different concerns. So lead by example,  sharing your own heart, sharing your own experience of life.

Number  two, you lead by example in reflecting on others. Philippians 2, a  fairly well-known passage, talks about how Jesus does this incredible,  unbelievable humility with us, and he doesn't consider all the glories  of heaven and being God with all the privilege of that. He comes down,  he takes the nature of a servant. He's made in human likeness. He dies  on a cross, and that's to his glory. But the phrases right before that  are essentially, look to others ahead of yourself, consider others more  important, look at other people. And so the more that you can lead by  example in that, the more that you can be thinking about other people  and talking about, "You know, I think so-and-so might be feeling such  and such. I think they might be hoping for... this might be hard for  them... I think this would probably really be meaningful to them..."  Those kinds of comments—and if you find yourself struggling like, well, I  never think about anybody that way, then that takes us to the most  helpful thing you can do, which is begin yourself to pursue a  perspective of knowing how is it for someone else? How are they? What  are they thinking, feeling, looking for, hoping, doing, what is on their  heart?

So lead by example, lead by example in reflecting on  others, and then ask your kids how others might be feeling. So if the  first aspects are sort of you driven, where you are the one putting the  information on the table and putting data out there in the conversation,  there's also a place to invite your child to reflect. "How do you think  so-and-so felt?" I remember that was the breakthrough moment for me. I  was six years old. I was playing wiffleball in the backyard with my  friend. We came in and I was just, I was kind of a jerk about it: "Well,  I'm feeling pretty happy because my team won" and blah, blah, blah,  right there in front of my friend. And I remember my mom just in that  moment saying, "How do you think your friend felt when you said that?"  And it was jarring. I wasn't thinking at all about how my friend was  feeling at that moment, and the idea that my friend was feeling  something about it, and I was pretty quick at the intuition level to go,  oh, I don't think he would probably like that. I don't think I would  like that. And I was convicted in the moment. All that to say, there is  such a rich opportunity just to help a child begin to put themself in  someone else's shoes. That's part of putting someone else first. It's  the first part of putting someone else first.

Last thing I'll  say. Ask and come back to on a regular basis how Jesus feels about your  child. The more that you can bring that into conversation, How does  Jesus, how does the ultimate other feel about you? What's going on in  his mind and his heart? There's nothing like seeing the grace, the heart  of love, of compassion, of joy, of grief over sin because he loves you  and does not want to see you in sin. That those things are there in his  heart toward your child. Those are the things I would most want a child  to be seeing through a different set of eyes. And the more you think,  How would Jesus feel? the more you're going to be set up to think about  how other human beings feel around you, and to have a Christlike  perspective on and toward them.


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How can I encourage my child to care more about others?, CCE… 원장 쪽지보내기 메일보내기 자기소개 아이디로 검색 전체게시물 24-08-21 0 43
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