by Randy Hain | November 2, 2023 1:00 am
“Dad, can we throw the football?” Years ago, when the fall football season was in full swing, this was an almost daily request from my youngest son during the week when I got home from work. It was repeated throughout the weekend, especially at commercial breaks when our favorite teams were playing. Depending on the sports season, weather, and the whims of my children, the requests could morph into “Can we throw the baseball?” or “Can we shoot some hoops?” or “Dad, wanna play Stratego?”
Translation: My son was really saying, “Dad, will you spend some quality time with me?”
Like many of you, I lead a rather hectic life. I run a small business, have a son with high-functioning autism, and am blessed to have a loving wife who needs me as well. Since converting to Catholicism, I have been very involved in various ministries and serve on non-profit boards in my community. I spend time writing books and articles, speaking, and fulfilling my duties as the senior editor of Integrated Catholic Life eMagazine. I do my best to get all of these things done throughout the day and before my wife and children wake up in the morning, so our evenings and weekends are reserved for family time.
While I would love to tell you that it all works out beautifully and I have it all figured out… I do not. It is a daily struggle. But my sons needed me, especially when they were teens. I simply had to do better.
Although my sons are older now, I look back on the difficult, ever-challenging middle school and high school years. Although blessed to be in a private Catholic school, my youngest son still faced the awkward pre-teen and teenage years, exposure to bad cultural influences, and peer pressure. Most parents likely face the same choices that me and my wife did:
We can relinquish our parenting responsibilities to others. We can allow peers, TV, the Internet, video games and a godless materialistic culture to raise our sons and just hope for the best.
OR
We can live up to our responsibilities and our vocation as parents. Our clear vocation is to help our family get to Heaven. That is a tall order and requires courage, hard work, difficult choices and lots of prayer.
How often do we say we want the second choice, but lose focus, get busy and allow the first option to occur? If we are honest with ourselves, I am afraid it happens all too often.
What can we do to make the second option the automatic choice? None of us are perfect, but perhaps we can follow these five basic steps to stay on course:
I feel like being a better parent is a wrestling match that never ends! This subject often comes up in my daily prayers as I seek discernment and courage to do the right things. The alternative to my daily struggle is to be apathetic – which will virtually guarantee my children, especially my youngest son, will grow up drifting without a good foundation of faith, values and a sense of what is truly important in life. Kids are like clay looking to be formed and developed. In our absence, those who only see our children as consumers or who seek to do them harm will step into the vacuum.
Children are God’s gift to us. Taking excellent care of His creation is our gift back to Him.
Photo by Juliane Liebermann[1] on Unsplash[2]
Source URL: https://integratedcatholiclife.org/2023/11/hain-five-steps-to-better-parenting/
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