Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Eight Characteristics of a Healthy Family

Written by Charles R. Swindoll
This article is courtesy of ParentLife.

Having studied the work of a number of respected sources, I put together a list of eight characteristics that describe a healthy family. This is a composite of characteristics that consistently appear on the lists of those who have spent half of their lives working in the trenches with families — counselors, psychologists, psychiatrists, researchers, and authors. This certainly is not an exhaustive list, but it includes the most significant traits of a healthy household common to the cross section of experts I studied.

1. The members of the household are committed to one another. The family, therefore, is a unit with members dedicated to living their lives in support of one another with unquestioned loyalty.

2. A healthy family spends time together. A wholesome, healthy family believes that time together cannot have quality without sufficient quantity.

3. A healthy family enjoys open, frequent communication. No question is inappropriate, no opinion is disrespected, and no subject is considered off limits. Important, life-determining subjects are naturally intermingled with the mundane.

4. The healthy family turns inward during times of crisis. Members of wholesome, healthy families work through difficulties together. A crisis brings them closer because they look within the family for strength rather than looking to something outside.

5. Members of a healthy family express affirmation and encouragement often. “Good job!” “I admire you for that!” “You mean a lot to me!” Notice that affirmation and encouragement are different. You affirm who people are, while you encourage what people do. Both are necessary to help others discover who they are and what they do well, which builds a strong sense of personal security. You are not born with a well-defined sense of self; you discover yourself through the influence of those important to you.

6. The members of a healthy family share a spiritual commitment. The family members are bound in unity by their shared relationship with God, and they learn to nurture it as a result of mutual encouragement.

7. Each person in a healthy household trusts the others and values the trust he has earned. This trust is built upon mutual respect and a dedication to truth.

8. The members of a healthy family enjoy freedom and grace. Each has the freedom to try new things, think different thoughts, embrace values and perspectives that may be new to the family, and even challenge old ways of doing things. All of this is built upon grace. Everyone has the freedom to fail, to be wrong, and to have faults and weaknesses without fear of rejection or condemnation. In a grace-based environment, failure is kept in perspective so that members of the family have enough confidence to recover, grow, and achieve.

Family Appraisal
As you look back, how well did your original family prepare you to have a family with these eight characteristics? Do not look to blame anyone, but simply take a realistic inventory of the training you received in the art of marriage building. No family is perfect. You can look back and find at least one characteristic that will not come naturally because you never saw it modeled or you saw it modeled poorly.

Looking at your household now, what healthy and unhealthy characteristics have you brought along without realizing it? Every family has some good to build upon as well as some things they need to change. Honestly appraise your marriage as it is today. What responsibility can you take for those characteristics that are lacking in your marriage?

As you look to the future, keep your focus on your marriage. Whatever you do to restore your marriage will restore what is broken among the other relationships. The changes you make in your marriage will affect the rest of the household more quickly and dramatically than you think.

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Who's Job is it anyway

As a parent what exactly is your job? What's your responsibility? Are you and your spouse on the same page on parental issues? Do you support each other when it comes to dealing with your children?

Friday, January 9, 2009

Who to turn to

Wow, being a parent can be so overwhelming!! There's so many opinions out there on what to do, how do we decide which advice to follow? Our decisions on how to handle parenting issues can have a lifetime effect on our children. That can be an incredible weight to bear! I'd love to hear from ya on this either with a post or take the poll>