Detective Mom - Afterthoughtssource: https://afterthoughtsblog.net/2022/12/detective-mom.html/I had a daughter once who refused to apologize. Not for everything, mind you, but for a very specific category of offenses: accidents. If she stepped on your toe, scared you so that you dropped something, or bumped your arm while you were underlining something in your book (and turned your underline into an unsightly scribble on the page), you knew you could expect nothing from her.No sign of remorse.Definitely no apology.As a Christian, I believe in man’s fallen nature. I believe my daughter is a born sinner (as am I myself). I think it’s easy to read the paragraph above and jump to the idea that she needs to be disciplined. I need to tell her what she should do — how to behave in this type of circumstance — and then make her do it.I get that. I really do. I won’t say that option didn’t float around in my mind while I was pondering what to do with her.You know what I think helps us in our mothering a whole big bunch, though? Christian charity. One aspect of charity is thinking the best of someone. If I saw my daughter acting this way and immediately assumed she was a sociopath, I’d be hitching my own train of uncharitableness to her little caboose of rudeness.My sin would then be greater than hers.One of the most horrific aspects of motherhood is when Mother one-ups the children with her own sin. They sin — possibly against Mother, even — and she turns around and repays them sevenfold.Look, we’ve all done it. Pretending that we haven’t gets us nowhere. Only confession begins repentance. So let’s clear the air and confess and then get on with the repenting part.I really think repenting of this sort of thing begins with becoming a detective.Being a good mom implies a number of things — there’s a collection of qualities, skills, and knowledge the ideal mother would have in order to be good at her job. As regular moms (not ideal moms), these things are life goals, qualities, skills, and knowledge that we chase after.The skill we’re discussing today is investigation and the knowledge we need is insight into the children.We want to walk in wisdom with our children. Wisdom shows itself in making good calls and giving wise counsel, and both of these things are impossible if we are ignorant. We need knowledge of God’s Word and how children are in general and how they grow and learn and so on and so forth, yes. But also, we need specific knowledge of specific children. Why are they doing what they are doing?The Story of the Little Deaf BoyLife can be very troublesome and so I once had a little toddler boy who seemed very defiant. This child just wouldn’t do anything I asked him to do, and he’d happily disobey with a smile on his face. I felt like I’d “tried everything.” By “everything,” I meant all the usual, normal stuff of consistent, healthy discipline and habit training.Word to the wise: there are two options when a mother says she’s “tried everything”. The first is that she has, in fact, not tried everything. She’s only tried what she prefers, and not gotten the results she’s looking for, but she believes the lie that her preferences are the sum total of the world of “everything.” The other is that her child is in fact and outlier and investigative work needs to be done.So I guess we’d say step one is honest evaluation: have we properly defined “everything”?If we have, and we’re in outlier territory, we need to start looking for why. This is why step two has to be prayer. Lord, please give me insight into what is going on with this child.Aforementioned defiant toddler was in rare form one afternoon while I was cooking dinner. Everyone had noticed. Someone said something to him.“What???” he replied.Someone else said something to him, and the same reply came again.“He sounds like a little old man!” I joked. “Check your battery!” I teased him.And in that moment it hit me: this child had a hearing problem.You know what is more devastating than realizing your child can’t hear? Recognizing that you have been guilty of character assassination for a long time. I had been calling him naughty.We mothers must repent often, mustn’t we?The Pre-Teen Who Forgot How to be RespectfulSometimes, you let something slide until it’s too late. Now, instead of a one-time infraction, you’re facing a mature bad habit in all its ugliness. The boy who, for example, toyed around with speaking to you disrespectfully at age 10 doesn’t seem to address you respectfully at all anymore at age 12.The solution for this, of course, is not so much punishment as it is habit training. Intense habit training, actually. Once you start to deal with it, you have to deal with it every single time it happens, no exceptions.Disrespectful speech is something that responds well to do-overs. It’s not rocket science. If you come to Mom and say something rude, she will ask you to say it in a better way, in a way that is respectful.But sometimes you say, “Hm. That was rude. Say it in a respectful way,” and their second attempt is worse than the first. And the third is by far worse than that!Is this a sign that I have forever lost my son’s heart? Should I mentally relegate him to the criminal class at the tender age of 11?If it’s really a habit, it’s much more likely that he’s forgotten what respectful sounds like. This is what my investigations have taught me time and again. (I have had many rude children. Ha.)This might sound dumb, but 11-12 year old boys are notoriously dumb, so actually it’s par for the course.Instead of assuming he has so little respect for you that he cannot muster right speech, assume he needs training. Show him what respectful sounds like. Exaggerate a disrespectful example and have him listen for the difference. Can he hear it? Ask him! Boys that age may be dumb, but they are still worth talking to.Then try the do-over again. Did he do much better? If so, it’s likely not deep resentment toward you harbored in his heart that came out in his multiple failed attempts at respectful speech. His just forgot what it was like to have good manners and needed you to train him. That’s what you’re for, after all.The Little Girl Who Wouldn’t ApologizeIt took quite the investigation to solve the Mystery of the Unapologetic Girl. This was one of my tougher cases, but one clue I had going in was that this child was extremely unconventional in how she thought about a lot of things. Possibly this was another thing to add to that list.And wow. The mental gymnastics some children are capable of are astounding at times.Do you know? This child believed that if she apologized for accidents, she was admitting that she purposely tried to hurt you. She wasn’t so much refusing to apologize as she was refusing to lie about herself and her motives. It took a lot of convincing and many multiple examples to help her understand that this was not what an apology for an accident was saying, that we could feel sorry for the harm that was done even though it was an accident.She was dubious, but eventually it clicked. Today, she (mostly) apologizes for such things.My First Example of Detective MomWhen my firstborn was an infant, I didn’t really know other people with children. We were the first of our friends to get married and the first to have a baby. I was flying blind and it showed. (Thankfully, I had a good mother as an example.)But it’s not my own mother I’m talking about. We were still in L.A. County, and there were a couple women at my church, much older than me, who had preschoolers. One of them was having quite the time getting hers potty trained. He just refused no matter what she did. She tried all the tricks. He was a very bright child, so I was surprised. I watched the drama unfold with intrigue. I didn’t know anything about potty training yet.Apparently, they hit a point of crisis one day. I don’t know what his mother asked him, but he finally cried out, “I DON’T WANNA GO TO SCHOOL!”Do you know what all the resistance was about? His little friend was potty trained and then promptly shipped off to preschool. This child believed if he refused, he wouldn’t have to go. He wanted to stay with his mother. She explained she wasn’t sending him anywhere, and he was potty trained almost immediately.Should a boy obey his mother, regardless of his feelings about what she’s asking? Yes, of course. But it was this situation that started me down the investigative road. There is usually a why worth knowing, and knowing it allows us to walk in wisdom with our children.How to InvestigateI already said that the first step of investigation is prayer. We need insight and it is God who opens eyes to see.After that, we use our five senses, just like every good detective. Watch, listen, smell, touch — and pray you don’t need to taste anything because it’s likely to be gross! Sometimes watching means keeping a journal and writing what you see every day until you finally notice a pattern. This means you have to be patient.And sometimes we bring in the professionals. Start is a good grandma if you have one on hand. Good grandmas make everything better.Investigations can be very brief, or the work of many months. Some children are onions and you end up peeling layers for years.This is why the theme verse for being a mother is Galatians 6:9Let us not grow weary of doing good…The post Detective Mom appeared first on Afterthoughts.
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