9 Ways to Prepare our Children for Suffering

9 Ways to Prepare our Children for Suffering October 25, 2016

9 Ways to Prepare Children for Suffering

Image: Pixabay

How do we prepare our children for suffering? John Piper answers in a three point audio cast which I find to be in violation of a child’s autonomy. Today, I’d like to offer better alternatives in hopes of navigating with my fellow unfundamentalist parents, the vulnerable job of raising our children to face the daunting yet inevitable task: to suffer. Here I propose 9 ways to prepare our children for suffering.

  1. You can’t. I’m sorry to begin this list with such a downer. But I always choose to be true and real over false promises. If we can adequately prepare any of ourselves for life’s suffering, well then, life wouldn’t be so life-y, as Anne Lamott eloquently says. My mother tells me, the thing you worry about never happens, it’s always the curveballs you can’t predict that life throws at you. This is reality, but it is also what makes life wild and interesting and filled with potential for us to show up and overcome. Now that we’ve established we can never be 100% prepared for suffering, we can get to work on being oh, say, 68% prepared.
  2. Be present for your kids. Yes, I know we can’t guarantee even our own survival to be there for our kids, but remember, we’re going for 68% prepared. And I don’t mean for us to become helicopter parents and hover over our children’s every move. What I mean is to show up for our children so that when their bodies ache with a fever, or their hearts are wounded by friends, or their souls are parched for depth and longing that they have experience of us walking alongside them. If their memory banks are full of their parents snuggling with them when they cry out from a nightmare, they will know where to find us when the boogeyman in their dreams become real life monsters. Suzanne Tucker from Generation Mindful says beautifully, “What if instead of stop crying, people said, ‘I’m here?’” What if we responded to our children’s distress with our loving presence?
  3. Affirm their goodness. Nothing compounds the suffering of life more than heaping additional self-hatred. We’ve all been there. When something bad happens, we are inclined to blame ourselves, or allow others to blame us, which makes our suffering worse. Our kids are going to receive many negative messages from the world, we cannot overemphasize their worthiness as the foundation of their self image. This is a tough one for many Christian parents because they don’t want to disregard the teachings on sinful nature in Scripture. A robust understanding of the theological doctrine of sin can wait until children are secure of their self-affirmation. As theologian Danielle Shroyer says, “belief in a sin nature begets sinning.” We cannot hope for our children to rise to goodness when we falsely insist they are bad. God is good. Our children are made in the image of a good God. They are good and loved and worthy. Self affirmation leads to self compassion. When the trials of life inevitably intrudes in their tender lives, they will need the assurance of the importance of taking care of themselves. This will help them weather those storms.
  4. Trust their instincts. Life can get overwhelming, especially as our children are raised in a generation of smartphones where information is readily accessible. Sometimes when circumstances are tough, we reflexively grab at the first rope we see as a lifeline, but sometimes those ropes are flimsy and we fall further instead of pulling up. When the suffering of life disorients our children, they will need to cut through the noise and allow their inner voice, their God-given conscience, their gut to carry them into the next right step. We can help them prepare for that time by trusting their instincts even when they are very young. Listen to their arguments even when they aren’t yet pronouncing words precisely. Observe their ways of solving problems in their play and honor that. Let them make their own decisions as much as possible as soon as possible so they learn early on that their ideas matter. Their voices count.
  5. Be trustworthy. Children learn to build healthy social relationships from their first experiences in the home. And having a strong social support structure is a safety net for when hard times fall. Model a healthy relationship for them so they expect the same standard as they begin forging friendships outside the home. Be a trustworthy person who treats them with respect. Give and take from each other to teach healthy reciprocity. Draw good boundaries by caring for one another while respecting each family member’s privacy and limitations.
  6. Work their vulnerability muscle. Our children will build emotional resilience if they learn how to take risks, be vulnerable, and make mistakes. Please note that exercising the vulnerability muscle is NOT the same as exposing our children to hardship in order to toughen them up. “Training” children by forcing them to “do hard things” is sometimes hailed as “tough love” from some Christian circles and I find it to be toxic. Love is never tough, that’s an oxymoron. On the contrary, we should train our children to become soft. Help them to feel their emotions and express their pain. Follow their intuitive compassion for themselves and others and give them space to work that out in their unique ways. Developing the vulnerability muscle means even though our children are aware of their imperfections and possibilities of failure, they forge ahead into life with courage anyway. Setbacks are ahead of them. Life is hard. But they will be empowered knowing they have failed and have survived and thrived.
  7. Cultivate their spirituality. Contrary to John Piper’s indoctrination of worldview, cultivating our children’s spirituality is to make space for their connection to God without forcing them into counter-intuitive dogma. It’s to let go of our own theological agendas and let our children take the lead in taking charge of their own spirituality. Don’t shut down our children’s curiosities about life, death, and suffering with cookie cutter answers, but talk with them with open ended questions. Help them know if there is a God, that God is loving and is present with them and would never harm them. Being able to fall into the arms of an unconditionally loving God will be a powerful asset when they encounter deep suffering.
  8. Be kind to one another. Why does Mr. Rogers tell us to look for the helpers in times of great suffering? It’s because love and kindness brings beauty out of suffering. It bonds us in our distress and declares that evil cannot have the last word. That even in our suffering love wins and always will. Make kindness and other virtues a high priority in your family value. Read stories to your children so they develop empathy. Practice hospitality and generosity so they internalize a spirit of kindness. Be kind to our children so they can pay it forward. Shaping our children’s character will help them face suffering with dignity and grace and authenticity.
  9. Make a better world for our children. We are facing some daunting threats as a civilization, but we are also making tremendous strides in overcoming suffering. There is less disease and less violence today than there were in antiquity. Unfundamentalist parenting is about striving for more justice, equality, and extending dignity to all so that our environment fosters less suffering for the upcoming generations. This is our responsibility: to leave the world better than when we came into it. May it be so.

Bonus: Carpe Diem. I wish none of us have to do this hardest of things—watch our children go through suffering. But because anyone paying any attention knows life is riddled with pain, we must do our damnedest best to grasp hold of the moments of joy that infiltrate our life if only we look for them. Those peals of baby laughter, the wide-eyed wander at their first Christmas, those snarky teenage jokes when we finally don’t have to fake-laugh at—apprehend those memories and keep it without parole in your memory banks. Let them enlarge our hearts, better to love our children back some more. As much as possible, say yes to your kids because who knows what tomorrow holds. Darkness will come—but for now, we dance in the light.


 

 

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