Kids in Crisis: A Workable
Plan for Successful Parenting
Ross Wright with
Dean Merrill
B&H
Publishing Group
978-0-8054-4399-8
How did this get
categorized as a book about religion?
All right, I see
it. I went to the publisher’s website and this is what it says:
“From
its original core of Bibles, textbooks, and reference titles, B&H has
blossomed into a major publisher of Christian living, fiction, homeschool,
youth, history, and other categories.”
I’m sorry to
tell you B&H Publishing (and even sorrier to inform the author), that you’re
shooting yourself in the foot with this knee-jerk categorizing based first and
foremost on religion. Just because someone mentions a Psalm, does that make it
a Christian book? Because someone doesn’t mention a Psalm, does that make it a
non-Christian book? Just because a book is labeled Christian, does that make it
acceptable to ALL Christians. How about books (the vast majority, to put it
mildly) that don’t carry the Christian stamp of approval… Are they to be
considered, by Christians, as bad or corrupting or simply off topic. As a
non-Christian, is it impossible to gain understanding about, say, parenting,
from a book found on the Religion shelf of a library or bookstore.
Of course not.
However, I’m not
going to find a book about parenting on the Religion shelf of a library or a
bookstore because I’m not going to look there. I’m going to look on the
Parenting shelf, or as BISAC calls it, “Family & Relationships.”
And that’s what
I mean about shooting yourself in the foot. Kids
in Crisis is an interesting, thoughtful, and useful book based on
experience, no matter what your thoughts on faith, and it’s destined for a
quiet and uncommented death unless someone, like me, picks it up and reads it
for the title instead of shelving it according to a rigid category stamped on
its backside.
So, got that out
of my system. Let’s talk about the book. As the parent of two ex-teens, believe
me, I’ve been to the Parenting section of my library looking for hints on how
to deal with -- even understand -- crisis. Theirs and mine.
Here’s a
question for you, then. Say your teenager comes home, alcohol on his breath,
car keys in his hand. He’s left the headlights on, so you go out to turn them
off, and discover the front fender smashed in. You march back inside, only to
find him passed out and insensible to your calls. In the morning, to make
matters worse, he won’t get up to go to school. He’s too tired.
Honestly, what’s
your first reaction?
Honestly, mine
was to shout and threaten, followed closely by slam, rattle, bang, etcetera.
It was almost
always completely useless.
So right, say
the authors. There is no quick fix (i.e. drugs and beatings won’t help). “If
force could solve our issues with difficult kids, we would have achieved family
peace a long time ago.”
The authors
liken a child in crisis to a steel bar, and they note some of the different “hammers”
families use -- like grounding and time-outs -- to reshape the steel bar. The
problem is, that to shape steel, you need heat and pressure and time. Bashing
the bar on the door isn’t going to do anything but create dents.
“Discipline only works when you have total
power and control,” say Wright and Merrill. And after a kid is about two years
old, you do not have total power and control unless you’re willing to maim,
imprison, or kill you kid for his misbehavior. Rules alone don’t work, they
say; your job isn’t to beat the child
at his own game, it’s to “organize the match and keep it flowing within proper
boundaries.” To do this you need relationship
and rules.
The authors
quote Josh McDowell, a youth speaker. “Rules without relationship is a jail.
Relationship without rules is a zoo. Relationship with rules if a home.”
And here’s the gist
of the argument in Kids in Crisis:
that discipline in the sense of overpowering a child does not have any real
goal in sight beyond the immediate one of obedience. That a farsighted goal,
and one that most parents truly desire for their children, is “emancipation”
not rank obedience. Parents want their children to be able to be in control of
themselves when they grow up -- to do the right thing because they want to not because they’ve been told to.
How do you
achieve that? Read the book. Wright and Merrill have some very interesting
things to say about what works, what doesn’t, and signs to watch out for.
Ross Wright is
CEO and executive director of Hope & Home, a Christian foster care agency.
Dean Merrill is a child psychologist and author.