Building a Strong Family
How do you build a strong family? By paying attention not only to
individual family members but to the family as a group. This is rarely
done in the American home. But your success as a parent may depend upon
it.
A cooperative and interdependent family will not usually come into
being if a parent centers most of his or her attention on individual
kids when part or all of the family is together. A collection of people
being herded in the same direction will not prosper and grow into the
powerful family it could be.
You may get surprising results if you apply the following
professional group work approach to your family life. It often yields
parents and children who help one another and look out for one another
throughout the rest of life. This kind of family enables individual
members to function and grow far stronger than in the usual home
setting.
Leading Your Family as a Group
Leading the family as a group is completely different from merely raising kids one-by-one, ignoring the family as a unit.
Think of the coach of a football team. He must focus on how the
various members of the team relate to one another, work together, carry
out the plays, etc. Whereas the quarterback coach is concerned with very
different things: an individual's performance and morale.
Parents must be both kinds of coaches. What usually happens is that
they just operate like the quarterback coaches, helping one individual
at a time and leaving out teaching their families to work together and
help one another.
Think of an orchestra conductor who must be concerned that each
musician is playing his or her part and that the whole orchestra is in
harmony. The flute instructor, on the other hand, is focused on the
individual. Parents must be both the conductor and the instructor — the
conductor when the family is together (which happens too rarely) and an
instructor with individual children.
Therefore, the successful parent has the family in mind, talks to the
family as a whole, analyzes how the family is developing and what it
needs to do together to go further, gives the family work to do, and
helps with a host of other family-centered concerns.
Suppose a child needs to do better in school. Let's look at three different ways of handling the situation.
In the usual approach, a parent talks to the child who needs to do
better. All the other children in the family probably know that their
brother or sister is doing poorly, but they are not brought into the
process. Often the reason is to prevent embarrassment. But the other
kids know — and they might not be acting kind to their sibling behind
the parents' backs.
In this approach, almost all communication occurs between the
parent(s) and the child, with occasional parental "side comments" to
other children. This approach rarely protects the poor student from
sibling cruelty. What it does is prevent the other children from
offering help and support to their struggling brother or sister. Many
other things might be being hindered as well, such as getting to the
root of the problem. The other children might know some reasons for
their brother's poor academic performance, such as teasing he's getting
at school.
A second approach has the parent carrying on a helpful discussion
with the child while the other kids are listening. This might seem like
an approach that involves the family, but really it does not. This
method asks for no true commitment from the other family members to help
rather than hinder the troubled brother or sister.
A third approach, the empowering model of family leadership, has many
advantages you might not have considered. In this model the parent
focuses on the family as the entity he or she is helping. The reason is
that the family as a whole can do the best job of helping a member of
the family overcome a problem. (I know. We tried this when one of our
older daughters was doing poorly in school.)
In the empowerment model, the parent talks to the family as a whole.
Everyone agrees together to help the brother or sister who is doing
poorly. Then the parent focuses on helping the family do all the things
necessary. Children and parents working together can pool their ideas
and efforts. The family decides how each family member can help, what
actions and attitudes will be truly helpful, what consequences should
follow if any family member knowingly does something harmful to the
process, which family members should spend extra time with the person,
and a host of other things that would not occur in either of the first
two approaches.
Besides helping the troubled family member, this approach builds the
family up and causes all its members to grow. Everyone makes decisions
together, works together to accomplish the family purpose and overcomes
barriers that block progress. Both the individuals and the family grow
and become stronger.
This empowering model of family leadership expects a lot of a family
and is very affirming. It is not the typical "let's see how comfortable
we can make the family." Instead, it is more like saying, "Let's show
the family members how much the family can accomplish by working
together."
Helping families thrive in partnership with you.
Copyright 2005, Dick Wulf. Used by Permission.
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