When my kids were little, I used to lose my mind with frustration. I don’t have the garden variety type of
kids. Mine take extra patience and I
think that I wasn’t always forthcoming in that area.
I remember picking
those precious little pumpkins up at their after-school program when they were
in elementary school. I would always
have one dawdling and one pulling on me ready to go or begging for
something. I always had my super-calm
and patient Mom persona going. The
director, whom I loved and adored, would always comment on my great ability to
stay loving and patient. I always felt
guilty and would shake my head, because I knew it wasn’t true.
Along the road, I learned a few tricks. Getting upset doesn’t help anyone. My daughter is like a brick in the morning
and has a hard time getting up and moving.
My happy-go-lucky son has turned 13 and his body is requiring more
sleep. He wakes up, but you can bet he
is going to be in a foul mood. I could
lose my temper trying to get them moving, but it isn’t going to make them move
any faster. It is just going to cause
drama and slow the morning process down to an even slower crawl. Sometimes you have to take a deep breath and
work with them, rather than against them.
In our family, we have a saying… “taking a break.” This
means one or more family members need to cool off, before proceeding with any
conversation. It is easy to look at my
kids and husband and know when they need to “take a break.” It can be harder to look inside myself. My son has even set up a special place in his
closet for cooling off. He doesn’t need
it very often, but I will say that during the months that he was approaching
13, he used it often. Turning 13 can be
hard, and bring lots of emotions with it.
We are also trying to learn about the tone in our
voice. We have tried to coach Jonathan
into hearing himself when he talks. He
uses a tone that indicates that he is mad or frustrated, but gets defensive
when you point it out to him. On the other
hand, we’ve learned that he has very sensitive ears. I have to be careful how I approach him or
how I am having a conversation with him.
He perceives frustration if my voice gets louder. He doesn’t listen to how I’m talking – just how
loud. He also perceives my voice to be
louder than it really is. Now, there are
often times that I also use a frustrated or sarcastic tone in voice – not just
what Jonathan is misreading as frustrated.
Thankfully, I have a family that is honest and will call me out on it
when my voice slips into sarcastic, frustrated or defensive mode. I usually don’t realize that I have used that
tone or didn’t mean it. Sometimes, after
being called out, I completely realize it.
For instance, my daughter and I were running late and I sarcastically
said, “well, we are so late that we don’t have to worry about that school zone
this morning.” She felt like I was just
inserting the knife and twisting it after she already felt bad or had
consequences for being late.
The biggest thing that I’ve learned about losing my cool
is to just apologize. If I catch myself
losing my cool or if my kids have pointed out that I could have used a kinder
tone, I will apologize. If I can’t admit
when I make mistake, how will they ever learn to admit and fix their own
mistakes.
And, don't forget to pray... always! You can never pray, too much. Trust me.
And, don't forget to pray... always! You can never pray, too much. Trust me.
Now, please don’t think that I’ve figured out how to stay
cool and keep from losing my mind all of the time. I am raising teenagers, after all. The Fortenberry’s work well with a schedule,
and anything that changes that schedule can increase my stress. Running late, if Fred is out of town or at a
meeting, traveling and visiting other families all increase the pressure I feel. If I am not careful, I can start biting heads
off.
Luckily, I have gotten pretty good about keeping my
cool. Teenagers are beautiful
creatures. They can take patience, but
they are so precious and worth every bit of gray hair that they’ve given me.
1 comment:
I'm hoping that as my kids get older my patience will have grown up along with them :)
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