Boundaries
Your Child's Pain Should Not Control Your Actions
Deuteronomy 6:5 – 7 – “Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul   and with all your strength. These commandments that I give you today are   to be on your hearts. Impress them on your children. Talk about them   when you sit at home and when you walk along the road, when you lie down   and when you get up.”
  
  Boundaries with kids begins with   parents having good boundaries of their own. Purposeful parents stay in   control of themselves. If your child is controlling your decisions by   protesting your boundaries, you are no longer parenting with purpose.
  
  Terri   was having problems with her thirteen-year-old son Josh not doing his   homework. I helped her come up with a plan that would require Josh to   set aside a certain time each night to do homework. During this hour   Josh had to be in his study place with nothing else but his work, and he   was not to do anything else but study. Terri had no control over   whether or not Josh actually chose to study during that time. What she   could control was that he do nothing else during that time but sit with   his homework.
  
  When I saw her the next time, Terri looked   sheepish. She had not lived up to her end of the plan. “What happened?” I   asked. “Well, we were all set, and then he got invited to go to a   baseball game with his friend. I said no, that his hour was not up yet.   But he got so upset, I could not talk him out of it. He seemed so mad   and sad.”
  
  “So,” I said, “that’s what he’s supposed to do, remember? He hates discipline. So what did you do next?”
  
  “Well,   I could see that this requirement was just making him too sad, and I   could not stand it. So I let him go.” (Clue number one that a child will   not develop self-control is when the parent does not have self-control   in enforcing the rules.)
  
  “What happened the next night?” I asked, already knowing the answer.
  
  “He got upset again. It was a similar situation. He had an opportunity that would have been very sad to miss.”
  
  “So   let me get this straight. The way you are deciding what is right or not   is by how he feels when he is required to do something. If he is upset,   then you think it is the wrong thing to do. Is that right?”
  
  “I haven’t thought about it that way, but I guess you’re right. I just can’t stand for him to be sad.”
  
  “Then   you have got to come to grips with a few important truths. One, your   values are being set by the emotional reactions of an immature   thirteen-year-old. Your value system’s highest guiding principle is   whether or not Josh is upset. Two, you don’t value one of the most   important aspects of child rearing: Frustration is a key ingredient to   growth. The child who is never frustrated never develops frustration   tolerance. Three, you are teaching him that he is entitled to always be   happy and that all he has to do to get others to do what he wants is to   cry about it. Are these really your values?”
  
  She grew silent and   began to realize what she was doing. To change, she had to commit to an   important rule for setting boundaries with kids: A child’s protest does   not define reality, or right from wrong. Just because your child is in   pain does not mean that something bad is happening. 
  
  Something   good may be occurring, such as his coming to grips with reality for the   first time. And this encounter with reality is never a happy experience.   But if you can empathize with the pain and hold on to the limit, your   child will internalize the limit and ultimately get over the protest.
  
  This   is a law of the universe. Frustration and painful moments of discipline   help a child learn to delay gratification, one of the most important   character traits a person can have. If you are able to hold the limit   and empathize with the pain, then character will develop. But if you   don’t, you will have the same battle tomorrow. If you rescue your   children from their anger at your boundary, you can plan on more anger   at later limits. Remember, their protest or pain does not determine what   is good.
This devotional is drawn from Boundaries with Kids, by Dr. Henry Cloud and Dr. John Townsend.
The Boundaries devotions are drawn from the Boundaries book series, which has transformed marriages, families, organizations, and individuals around the world. The Boundaries series is written by Dr. Henry Cloud and Dr. John Townsend. Copyright 2015 by Zondervan; all rights reserved. Learn more at BoundariesBooks.com.