Part 2: Bringing Healthy Sports into the Lives of Kids

Victory for Title IX and Girls and Women in Sports

Julia wanted to play college tennis, but when she got to school the team had been demoted to a club sport due to “lack of interest.”

Discussion:
Title IX has particular significance for me. It was passed the year after I graduated from high school.

Personally, I was lucky in the sports arena, growing up as an “army brat” with barracks of kids to play with and a baseball field across the street. I played baseball all spring and football all fall and every sport I could get my hands on in-between. I had a dad who thought girls could do anything. I had a high school that had swim team, track team and I was part of the first ski team. In college, I competed on the basketball, tennis and swim team.

Some of my friends did not fare so well, where girls just did not think about doing sports. No other girls did it and there were few opportunities. All that changed after Title IX and my daughter and her friends thrived. Women’s participation at the college level has increased more than 500 percent since Title IX’s enactment. Better still, these gains have not come at the expense of men, whose athletic opportunities have also increased since Title IX’s passage in 1972. We know that girls thrive when they participate in sports, and that the benefit of playing sports stays with them for years to come.

I was upset when Title IX powerful influence was gauged by a deeply flawed 2005 policy that allowed schools to count non-responses to the spam-like survey as a lack of interest in athletics. The AAUW (American Association of University Women) fought this, saying, “It not only created a major loophole through which schools could evade their Title IX obligations, it jeopardized the number of athletic opportunities available to women. “

All of this ended on April 20 when the Obama administration and Department of Education issued new guidance for Title IX, rescinding the 2005 policy. The new guidance returns to the previous standard, under which schools will consider a number of factors, including athletic participation rates at the secondary school levels and interviews with coaches, to ensure they are following Title IX requirements. Schools will have a much better road map for compliance, and women and girls will have a much better shot at fair play.

“Making Title IX as strong as possible is a no-brainer,” said Vice President Biden. “What we’re doing here today will better ensure equal opportunity in athletics, and allow women to realize their potential – so this nation can realize its potential.”

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If I knew then what I know now,
I would have encouraged my grade school girlfriends to play sport with me and the boys I played with.

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Let us know what you think.
Send us any questions you have.

Bringing Healthy Sports into the Lives of Kids

Learning Life Lessons through Sports

Bill really wanted his son to experience the fun of baseball the way he did as a kid. He was worried about the serious competitiveness that happened even in early grade school.

Discussion:
I want to share my friend John Child’s story as a coach of his 2 children to help us all remember the main point of sports for kids- to have fun.
John Child’s coaching style started with his management role at work. When he started a review with “you are doing ‘this’ wrong”, people would shut down and get defensive. So he started asking, “Tell me what you’re proud of.” and then asked, “What’s sub-par?” He found people to be surprisingly honest. It was easy for John to just “coach” them along to figure out solutions for improvement.
When John started coaching his child’s team—same thing happened. Kids shut down when told what they were doing wrong, not unlike the adults. Over time he developed a routine. Early in the season, after the first game, he starts the practice with what he thinks the team did well, then poorly as a team. Then he asks the kids to share something they were proud of and something they want to work on. He picks the kids with naturally out-going personalities first. Without fail, they pick something accurate in their self-critique. There are always 3-4 shy, non-athletic kids who find this process very painful, but John helps them through it. Every 2-3 games he repeats this, and gradually the shy ones have their hands up in the air as fast as the others. In addition, they start to critique themselves as a team and to see what the other team didn’t do as a team. This leads them to think for themselves on the field.

Team sports are a great place to learn life lessons.

  • We belong. In addition to their team name, the team develops a song and a banner. Each game the kid who tried especially hard takes the banner home (John starts this at age 9. Every kid gets picked by the end of the season).
  • Empowerment–everyone counts: If you show up to practice you get equal playing time.
  • Everyone does something well and even the “best” have their weak points. We want the kids to be proud of themselves and to be proud to be on the team. We want them to learn to critique themselves
  • Life is not fair. There will always be bad referees, people make mistakes. It is no big deal. (John deliberately makes bad calls in practice so they get used to it. “Bad calls” occur many times in life too.)
  • Winning is just a by-product, success is something more. John likes to start with his soccer teams early at the kindergarten coed level and stay with them until they enter classics or high school. His “average” caliber kids have a lot of fun and also win most of their games.

ATTENTION ADULTS
50% of kids drop out of youth sports by age 13.
Number one reason: “It’s not fun anymore.”
LIFE LESSON HAVE FUN!

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If I knew then what I know now, I would have stepped up to being a coach of my kids sports teams.
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What was your biggest take-away?
What action step do you plan to take?
What additional questions do you have about this topic?

MEDIA ALERT: SEXTING

SUBTITLE

Alex opened the semi-nude photos that Laurie sent to his cell phone. Later she sent more, a video clip of herself doing a striptease. She seemed happy to do it as a “gift” to Alex. Alex’s buddy saw the open email box and forwarded the images on to his friends. Soon everyone had a copy.

Discussion:
I just heard about the prevalance of sexting: sending pornographic images via cell phone. You might wonder why I want to talk about this. Here are a few stories:

  • A 15 year old girl was charged as a “child pornographer” for texting a nude photo of herself to a boyfriend.
  • One 10th grader received four requests for nude photos from boys in her class.
  • One 7th grader found out the nude photo she was talked into giving to an adult man were posted on several pornography sites, for the world, including her classmates, to discover.

It is prevalent. A survey of teens and young adults released last week reported that 1 in 5 teens and 1 in 3- 20-somethings–have electronically sent or posted online nude or semi-nude pictures or videos of themselves.

I want to talk about this from a prevention point of view- to support you to catch it before it happens with your kids.

For the most part our kids are trusting and open, which is why Facebook and My Space are so prevalent. They do not share the privacy tendency of their parents and grandparents.

The Internet has led to a rampant increase in both bullying and pornography. The “shame factor” that used to keep people “in check” is no longer there. Kids think they can do things anonymously on-line and on their phone. At a superficial level they do get away with it. What they don’t realize is that everything they do can be traced, with the right know-how. What they don’t realize is that everything they do on the Internet and on their phone is like a “digital tattoo,” that cannot be removed. It is forever and it can spread to millions.

So back to sexting. A nude photo is valuable information. Information is like gold in the pre-teen and teen years. Why not ask for a nude photo from a girl? Why not give it if you are the girl. It is fun. It is hot. It may get you some major attention/ popularity points.

Many times nude photos are sent by girlfriend as a “gift” to their boyfriends. Girls trust it will just go to the one boy as he promised. They don’t get the power they just handed over to him or friends who have access to his computer.

What to do? Talk to your kids now!

  • Ask them to tell you about it. What do they know? How prevalent is it? Have they ever heard of it happening to one of their friends? What do they think about it?
  • Share your concerns. Teens might resist the idea at first and be very uncomfortable about the whole conversation, but they are listening. This is not a “Do what I say talk.” Your kids have incredible freedom on the Internet and cell phone and we need the screen to be between their ears, not external to themselves.
  • You could take this as an opportunity to be clear about your values. You could talk with them about the dividing line between public and private.
  • Talk about the concept of a “digital tattoo.” Nothing in cyberspace ever gets deleted. What if a future employer saw the photos?

References:

The Middle Ages: Young people, texting and sexting, Susan Reimer, The Baltimore Sun, 6 January 2009.

“Anatomy of a Child Pornographer,”‘What happens when adults catch teenagers “sexting” photos of each other? The death of common sense.’ Nancy Rommelmann, Reason Magazine, July 2009

Amanda Lenhart, Teens and Sexting: How and why minor teens are sending sexually suggestive nude or nearly nude images via text messaging, Pew Internet and American
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If I knew then what I know now,
I’d still find this hard to believe. Maybe in the future everyone will have a nude photo of themselves somewhere on the Web.
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What was your biggest take-away?
What action step do you plan to take?
What additional questions do you have about this topic?

For Effective Parenting: Put Your Oxygen Mask on First

Take Care of You

Erica noticed that last week she was calm and connected with her kids. This week it seems everything is driving her crazy and she feels like a raving maniac, yelling at her kids about everything.

Discussion:

What is it about parenting that makes it feel like such a roller coaster?

I say there are two big influences.

  • One is putting everyone else first and getting so run down it feels like screaming is the only option.
  • The second is the tendency to oscillate back and forth between being friendly and loose with the rules (permissive) until our kids push us to the brink. Then we become the drill-sergeant of rules and regulations (strict) to let our kids know we REALLY mean business.

The second influence here is big. We all want to have fun and ease in our parenting … if those kids would just cooperate. In the family chaos, as we are barking out the “rules and regulations” orders, we are exhausted. There has got to be a better way.

What I have found in my own parenting and as a parent coach, is that NOTHING productive can happen when I don’t take care of myself. When I live my life reacting to what happens, I am at the mercy of other people and situations that I have no control over. When I live my life proactively, I take care of myself first so I have the energy to plan ahead and set up systems for homework, chores, family meals, and extra-curricular activities that work for everyone.

How do you start?

First- decide that YOU do matter and taking care of you in important. That is by far the most important step. Then think about what would nurture you the most.

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If I knew then what I know now,
I would have scheduled “me time” on my crowded calendar.
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What are your tips?
Send in your ideas on how us busy parents can carve out time for ourselves.
We’ll share them next week.

Part 12 of 12—Raising Our Sons and Daughters Takes a Village

Deep and meaningful connections with extended family and friends: the glue that holds it all together.

“Joe and Sally did not have close family nearby, so they were delighted when a neighbor started a monthly parent and kid gathering. First the families all ate together. Then the kids played outside or in the game room while the parents chatted openly about monthly themes on the challenges of raising kids. Now Joe and Sally feel like they have “family” who care about them right in their neighborhood. “

Discussion:
Over the last two months we have explored many villages in the life of a family. Each of them can support our kids and our family in different ways. What is critical for these villages is to have close connections: people with whom we can be open, honest, and authentic and who accept and support us with unconditional love. What separates a village that just becomes another place to drive your kids to from a village that actually holds us dearly are these close connections. Close loved ones, both friends and extended family, are the glue that makes a village meaningful.

How does one build close, meaningful connections with other parents? It is wonderful to hang out on the sidelines of a sports game and chat with parents or to hang out together at the school carnival. This can be relaxing and fun. How does a parent take it deeper? I believe getting together with other parents monthly focusing on the goal of supporting each other in our parenting it the single best way for us to be really open and honest about our struggles, to share what works and doesn’t work, and to explore new ideas to try. With these real discussions, each parent will not only connect with other parents, they will connect with each other’s kids as we share our stories. The next time we see that child in the school hallway, we naturally reach out and connect with them more deeply, becoming another set of caring eyes “making sure he/she turns out OK.” If a serious or troubling issue arises, there is built in support for you and your family through the tough times. When problems are addressed early, they can be managed with the help of extended family and friends and occasional help from professionals. If we let problems grow too large, the intervention needed and pain experienced by both parents and kids is so much bigger. With this support each of us can be become more effective, confident, and competent in our parenting.

The themes of these monthly meetings can be:

  • Topics that each parent volunteers to lead.
  • Monthly parent book club, selecting different parenting books or a few chapters from that book.
  • Webinars or videos that each parent takes turn finding on line or renting from the library.
  • Raising Our Daughters and Raising Our Sons Parenting Guides can be used as resource material for parent discussion groups. There are many ideas for strengthening each of our villages in every one of the ten chapters.

Your group can commit to: “Together my parent group can influence all the villages.” You can:

  • Organize a Girls Night Out and then a Boys Night Out for the incoming sixth graders at a middle school. The kids come for an evening of fun planned by the kids and then break up into small groups, lead by local high school teens, for real discussions about friendship, cliques, and the challenges of middle school.
  • Address alcohol use by hosting a “Not My Kid” presentation, sending a Safe Party Guideline to every family in the high school, and putting a star by every family that agrees to follow the guidelines in the school roster
  • Start a mother-daughter group that met every other month while the parents continued the Raising Our Daughter book every other month
  • Promote the 40 Developmental Assets in your community which involved school, church, non-profits, and city government.

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If I knew then what I know now,
I would have directed ALL of my energy toward the goal: “My family is supported by a tight-knit group of people who unconditionally love us.”
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What was your biggest take-away?
What action step do you plan to take?
What additional questions do you have about this topic?

What Is Love?

Kids Know Best!

I love kids for their honesty, openness, and mostly for being their authentic selves.  Nothing shows that better than this story about kids’ answers about the meaning of love.  A group of professional people posed this question to 4- to 8-year-olds: “What does love mean?”  The answers they got were broader and deeper than anyone could have imagined.  See what you think. 

·     “When my grandmother got arthritis, she couldn’t bend over and paint her toenails anymore.  So my grandfather does it for her all the time, even when his hands got arthritis, too. That’s love.”
Rebecca—age 8

·     “When someone loves you, the way they say your name is different.  You just know that your name is safe in their mouth.”
Billy—age 4

·     “Love is when you go out to eat and give somebody most of your French fries without making them give you any of theirs.”
Chrissy—age 6

·     “Love is when a girl puts on perfume and a boy puts on shaving cologne and they go out and smell each other.”
Karl—age 5

·     “Love is what makes you smile when you’re tired.”
Terri—age 4

·     “Love is when you kiss all the time.  Then when you get tired of kissing, you still want to be together and you talk more.  My Mommy and Daddy are like that.”
Emily—age 8

·     “Love is when you tell a guy you like his shirt, then he wears it everyday.”
Noelle—age 7

·     “Love is like a little old woman and a little old man who are still friends even after they know each other so well.”
Tommy—age 6

·     “During my piano recital, I was on a stage and I was scared.  I looked at all the people watching me and saw my daddy waving and smiling.  He was the only one doing that.  I wasn’t scared anymore.”
Cindy—age 8

·     “My mommy loves me more than anybody. You don’t see anyone else kissing me to sleep at night.”
Clare—age 6

·     “Love is when your puppy licks your face even after you left him alone all day.”
Mary Ann—age 4

·     “I know my older sister loves me because she gives me all her old clothes and has to go out and buy new ones.”
Lauren—age 4

·     “When you love somebody, your eyelashes go up and down and little stars come out of you.”
Karen—age 7

·     “You really shouldn’t say ‘I love you’ unless you mean it.  But if you mean it, you should say it a lot.  People forget.”
Jessica—age 8

·     And the final one — Author and lecturer Leo Buscaglia once talked about a contest he was asked to judge.  The purpose of the contest was to find the most caring child.  The winner was a four-year-old child whose next door neighbor was an elderly gentleman who had recently lost his wife. Upon seeing the man cry, the little boy went into the old gentleman’s yard, climbed onto his lap, and just sat there.  When his Mother asked what he had said to the neighbor, the little boy said, “Nothing, I just helped him cry.”

Ask your sons and daughters, What Is Love?  Please share their answers with us.

Inspirations For Raising Our Sons and Raising Our Daughters

Reflections

We take a breather today from “Building Our Village” series for reflection.
Here are a few of my favorite inspirational quotes.

  • The most important thing she’d learned over the years
    was that there was no way to be a perfect mother
    and a million ways to be a good one.

    Jill Churchill
  • Courage doesn’t always roar.
    Sometimes courage is the quiet
    voice at the end of the day saying,
    “I will try again tomorrow.”

    Mary Anne Radmacher-Hershey
  • You find time for the things that are important to you.
    Anonymous

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If I knew then what I know now,
I would have rested and reflected more often and breathe…just breathe.
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Part 7 of 11—Raising Our Sons and Daughters Takes a Village

Fostering safe havens at school

“Mary volunteered regularly in the classroom all through grade school where she was able to be helpful and connected to the teachers, classmates and school climate. Now that both her kids are in middle school, the teachers don’t have activities for her to be helpful in classroom so she feels disconnected and can’t assess how her kids are doing as well.”

It was so fun to hang out in the school when my kids were there. For me there is no group of people living more fully than children. They live in the present moment and are so alive it is infectious. Plus of course, I got to see my kids in their school environment and get to know the other kids in the classroom and the school staff to boot. So figuring out ways to expand kids learning and have fun too was always a priority. I was always on the look-out for ideas to bring in. Here are some after-school activities I did in my kids school, even when my kids weren’t in them.

  • Baseball club in grade school: I was so discouraged by the amount of time a family gives up to baseball and I wanted to bring back the ease and love of the game I had growing up playing pick-up football every fall and pick-up baseball every spring and summer. Parents bought hats and snacks. We meet weekly and played a round robin game with 8-9 kids.
  • Girls Science Club: In middle school, I felt so useless in the classroom. When I found the AWSEM curriculum at the Saturday Academy in Portland, it was a way to share my love of science with girls. We met weekly doing science experiments, like collecting germs in the boy’s bathroom and drinking fountain and growing them on a culture, making GAK and Oobleck, and building and firing rocket ships. We also visited businesses where women mentored the girls and shared a hands-on-activity with them. This was so fun I did it over the four years my two kids were in middle school.
  • Girls Sports Club: I was discouraged by the drop out in physical activity by many kids, especially girls, by age 10. Why? Parental involvement in sports has brought in seriousness, fierceness, and winning at all cost. Kids just want to have fun. So I wanted to bring in fun, life-long, physical activity back. We choose: self-defense, yoga, kick-boxing, and Tai Chi. The girls had a blast.
  • Pottery Club: I wanted to involve the boys, so I came up with the idea of a pottery club. It worked. A few boys came to the first session and created some fantastic little sculptures. But they didn’t come back. I realize now I needed to make it more boy friendly by calling it Mud Club and having each session end by throwing a wad of clay at a target on the wall. That would have kept the boys there.

There are an infinite variety of things you could do with kids. Just think about what you and your kids like to do. Think of what would provide a safe, inclusive feeling for kids and talk to the school about it. Other “safe havens” ideas for school

  • Lunch fun room: help create a safe space for kids who don’t feel comfortable on the playground or in the library. It could have a foosball table, board games, puzzles …
  • Girls and Boys Night Out: great for breaking down cliques and building new friendships, like all the girls in 6th grade spend the night at the school, with teen mentors, friendship discussions, and FUN. Dads run the boys’ event.
  • Girls/ Boys Support Groups: kids who are marginalized or frequently in conflict with others can benefit tremendously with facilitated discussions with their peers. An excellent source is www.girlscircle.com and www.boyscouncil.com for resource guides and for training. School counselors are excellent at running these and selecting the kids. PTA can pay for it. It can markedly reduce bullying, as well as empowering each kid.
  • Running Club: a PE teacher offered this during recess at school. The kids had a big graph hung conspicuously that they posted their progress on. It ended by running together in the Starlight Parade Run in June.

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If I knew then what I know now,
I would have encouraged the formation of clubs during lunch recess, a tough time for excluded kids.
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Part 6 of 11—It Does Take a Village to Raise Our Sons and Daughters

Finding a caring school environment.

“Mary volunteered regularly in the classroom all through grade school where she was able to be helpful and connected to the teachers, classmates and school climate. Now that both her kids are in middle school, the teachers don’t have activities for her to be helpful in classroom so she feels disconnected and can’t assess how her kids are doing as well.”

Discussion:
When you think about your school experience growing up, what would you say were the most important take-aways? Having a teacher that really believed in you, getting involved in an extra-curricular activity that made your heart sing, a time you really had good friends, and eventually when you developed a love of learning? Now think about what your parents focused on: homework, homework and homework and were you “good” (as in obedient; not hearing from the principal).

Now let’s look at what the research shows about school and long-term, well-being of our kids. First the JAMA study from the blog on February 5 shows that a “caring school climate” is number two in importance for our teens avoiding risky behaviors (after being connected to your parents). Another resource is what Developmental Assets are important. I was impressed with the variety and sheer number of ways school is important.

…………………………..DEVELOPMENTAL ASSETS…………………………

SUPPORT

  • Caring school climate – School provides a caring, encouraging environment.
  • Parent involvement in schooling – Parent(s) are actively involved in helping young person succeed in school.

EMPOWERMENT

  • Community values youth – Young person perceives that adults in the community value youth.
  • Youth as resources – Young people are given useful roles in the community.
  • Safety – Young person feels safe at home, school, and in the neighborhood.

CLEAR BOUNDARIES AND EXPECTATIONS

  • School boundaries – School provides clear rules and consequences.
  • Adult role models – Parent(s) and other adults model positive, responsible behavior.
  • Positive peer influence – Young person’s best friends model responsible behavior.
  • High expectations – Both parent(s) and teachers encourage the young person to do well.

CONSTRUCTIVE USE OF TIME

  • Creative activities – Young person spends three or more hours per week in lessons or practice in music, theater, or other arts.

COMMITMENT TO LEARNING

  • Achievement motivation – Young person is motivated to do well in school.
  • School engagement – Young person is actively engaged in learning.
  • Homework – Young person reports doing at least one hour of homework every school day.
  • Bonding to school – Young person cares about her or his school.
  • Reading for Pleasure – Young person reads for pleasure three or more hours per week.

Finding a nurturing environment is clearly important. When a kid feels accepted, appreciated, and engaged with school activities, it makes sense that it is easier for them to then find learning fun and be committed to it. I know when I was growing up; the focus on homework and grades over my experience of learning and connection at school was backward in my opinion.

Most of these assets are present in a “school village” that cares about the whole kid and makes it fun to learn. What can we do to promote these qualities? In addition to the list below, is my 5 part blog series in November, 2009 on “Supporting School Success.”

Value learning and show it

  • Know the teachers and communicate regularly. Let your kids know you talked.
  • Support their child to be ready for school each day (sleep, meals, homework).
  • Model learning in everyday life by reading, taking classes, going to seminars …
  • Encourage a Parent-Resource Committee on the PTA whose function is to bring educational materials to parent by buying parent books for the parent section of the library and bringing speakers for an evening seminar or staff training.

Be involved: There are many ways parents can be involved with school activities

  • Volunteer in the classroom.
  • Be involved with PTA, even if you do activities from home, like baking or phone calls.
  • Start an after-school club as an alternative to classroom volunteering.

Evaluate the goodness of fit of your child in their school: A caring school climate is so important; it is worth ongoing monitoring and adjusting,

  • If a program you kid loves is cut, find a way to replace it or substitute it elsewhere.
  • If there is fighting and bullying on the playground, work with the school on developing a program that addresses that.
  • Stay connected with the teacher, counselor, principal, PTA and others involved in the school.
  • Catch problems early.

Create Safe Havens: Creating safe spaces at school where our kids can be themselves is so important we are elaborating on it next week.

What are the “safe spaces” at school that you had growing up? Send them to us and we will include them on our list.

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If I knew then what I know now,
I would have sought learning environments that fit my kids rather than push my kids to fit in.
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Part 5 of 11—Raising Our Sons and Raising Our Daughters Takes a Village

Don’t forget about the “peer” village

“For the most part, Caroline used to be pleased with Sofie’s choice of friends. Now there is this girl, Molly, who she worried about. Molly dresses in all black, smells like cigarette smoke, and swears a lot when she doesn’t think adults are around. Sofie spends most of her free time with Molly. Caroline is worried some of Molly’s bad habits might be rubbing off on Sofie. “

Discussion:

Before we talk about the “peer” village, what do you think are the potential villages/communities that influence a family’s life? Some ideas we contemplated are:

  • School Village
  • Activities Village: sports, scouts, drama, music, arts
  • Neighborhood Village
  • Congregational Village
  • Greater Community Village: city and government
  • Peer Village

We will be talking about each of these, one at a time, for the next few weeks, starting with the “peer” village. Let us know about other influential groups you thought of.

Whether we like it or not, we all know the “peer village” is powerful. This is especially true for kids not connected at home. When kids don’t have a “family village” to unconditionally accept and love them, they will turn to peers to find it, even dangerous ones. Longing for a place to belong and be respected, these kids are easily brought into “unhealthy” groups, even gangs. Here they may receive kindness and special attention upon initiation, but soon find out that it was a false front. Even kids connected at home but who long to be cool and popular, may lose themselves to groups that lead to trouble.

So what is really important to see in our kids relationships? We can look to the Social Competencies list from 40 Developmental Assets for ideas:

  • Interpersonal competence: Young person has empathy, sensitivity, and friendship skills.
  • Resistance skills: Young person can resist negative peer pressure and dangerous situations.
  • Peaceful conflict resolution: Young person seeks to resolve conflict nonviolently.
  • Planning and decision making: Young person knows how to plan ahead and make choices.
  • Cultural competence: Young person is comfortable with people of different cultural, racial, and ethnic backgrounds.

Parents sometimes have a strong, negative opinion about a certain friend. They may ask or even demand that their kid stop hanging out with that friend. We all know that not only is it hard to enforce this rule when your kid is out of your sight most of the day, it might become a case of “moth to a flame” where your kid is even MORE attracted to this friend. Yikes!

So what can a parent do to foster the skills listed about in this village we probably have the least influence over, especially as our kids get older. Here is a list of ideas that you can control

  • Let your child choose their friends- they will anyway.
  • Get to know his/her friends. You might find out positive qualities that explain why your kid likes them. Or you might influence that friend in a powerfully, positive way.
  • Consider a rule that any kid can come over to your house for an evening, but your kids are not allowed to go over to a home where you don’t know the family.
  • Be the home where kids hang out, even if it means having junk food around.
  • Find groups or safe havens for healthy, accepting friends where your kid can be their authentic selves. Nurture these groups early, when they are easier to find and your kid can grow into them. You might even start up a group- like a book, art, or an ultimate frisbee club. For me, one place I felt unconditionally accepted was in my youth group at church.
  • Model being a good friend. When your kid sees you resolve conflicts peacefully and show empathy and kindness, they soak it up.

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If I knew then what I know now,
I would have invested more energy in being the home where kids liked to hang out, so I could get to know my kids’ friends well.
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