Taking A Break A Technique for Addressing the Heart
The Scriptures emphasize that God’s primary interest
is the heart. The wise parent looks beyond behavior to what’s going on
at a deeper level. This involves the child’s attitudes and motivations.
As you begin to use the secret of teaching children to
focus on their hearts, you will see them make attitude adjustments, not
just behavior changes. You will find yourself getting to the root of
disobedience or immaturity and helping children make lifelong changes.
Taking a Break removes a child from a situation or
activity immediately following misbehavior. A reminder of the rule may be
helpful and the child is instructed to Take a Break to change the heart.
The location for Taking a Break is a place away from any activity or
stimulation. The child shouldn’t talk to anyone until ready to return to
the parent. The parent also
shouldn’t dialog with the child until the child is ready to come back.
Other benefits of family life are suspended while the child is working on
the heart. Taking a Break allows the child, under the guidance of the
parent, to determine when to come back and talk about the problem. When
used correctly, Taking a Break can help children look deeper than behavior
and see the need to allow God to work on their hearts.
Taking a Break is not the same as time out. Many
Christians have a hard time with time out, and for good reasons.
Typically, time out is a term used for isolating a child as a punishment
for doing wrong by simply sending that child away for a set period of
time. This is “punishment by isolation” and can be counterproductive
to the discipline process. Expecting children to solve problems alone is
unrealistic. Furthermore, the isolation can appear to force children away
from the love of the parent. Taking a Break is a much more valuable
technique because, if done correctly, it focuses on the heart.
The goal of Taking a Break is repentance. Taking a
Break teaches children a more accurate picture of reality. There is a
loving God who hates sin. When His children disobey Him, they experience
separation as a natural consequence of disobedience. God lovingly waits
for them to return to Him with confession and repentance.
Taking a Break provides the motivation to repent by
allowing the child to experience the feeling of missing out on involvement
in family life. Parents can force a child to change actions but they
can’t force a change of heart. Parents can, however, motivate children
to change. Because separation can motivate repentance, Taking a Break can
be helpful as part of the discipline process rather than being viewed
simply as a consequence.
Through the principle of separation, children learn
that a person cannot enjoy the benefits of the family without also abiding
by the principles which make it work. Parents, while communicating
unconditional love, teach their children that separation is the natural
consequence of disobedience.
One important aspect of Taking a Break is that the
child helps determine the length of time spent in the break location.
Since repentance is the goal, it’s hard for a parent to tell when a
child is ready to return. To come back from Taking a Break too soon may
short-circuit what God wants to do. To remain too long may cause
unnecessary discouragement. The wise parent will be able to discern from
the child’s face, posture, and tone of voice whether repentance has
taken place, or at least that the emotions have settled down so the child
can move on in the discipline process.
When Taking a Break the child stays in the break place
until he or she has calmed down and is ready to talk about the problem.
The child then initiates returning to the parent for the Positive
Conclusion, a discussion about what went wrong and what should be done
differently next time. This is a primary difference between the Godly
model of Taking a Break and that which is often practiced in time out. The
length of time a child chooses for Taking a Break isn’t important except
as it relates to the child’s needs. Frequently all that’s needed is a
reminder and the child is ready to change the heart and try again. In this
case, Taking a Break would be short, lasting only a few seconds. Other
times, because of stubbornness, a change of heart may take longer, twenty
minutes or several hours. Either way, the child is encouraged to initiate
when Taking a Break is over.
Taking
a Break Can Be Used In Your Family
From a very practical standpoint, Taking a Break can
be an excellent way to deal with much of the day-to-day correction
children need. It can become the primary discipline technique used in a
family to help children change. The three-year-old who screams out of
frustration, the seven-year-old who continually interrupts, and the
thirteen-year-old who teases relentlessly all need to understand why their
actions are wrong and see the need to change the heart as well as their
habits of behavior.
At first, children may resist Taking a Break. Some may
not want to lengthen the discipline process; they’ll try to get it over
with too quickly. These children are especially in danger of modifying
behavior without repentance. It’s important for children to learn how to
Take a Break and make sure their heart is responding properly before they
move to the solution.
Children may try to come out before they are ready or
they may defiantly move out of the place where they were told to sit. The
parent’s responsibility is to teach children that they must obey. A
parent may restrain a child by holding them or by firmly returning
the child to the correct spot. These actions are best accomplished with as few
words as possible so as not to encourage the rebellion by giving attention
to it. The parent must win in these situations in order to make Taking a
Break an effective discipline in the future.
Even children as young as three-
or four-years-old,
although not able to understand the word “repentance,” can understand
having a soft heart or removing rebellion from the heart. The first step
of repentance is simply that the child settles down, stops fighting, and
is ready to work on the problem. Older children are able to process some
of what went wrong and come back to the parent with a specific plan for
what to do right next time. In essence children can use Taking a Break to
settle down, realize they’ve done something wrong and be willing to
change.
Sometimes children, especially those who are just
learning to Take a Break, want to come back before they are ready, or they
choose to stay there longer than necessary. The parent then must help
these children to process their emotions and learn to initiate the
conclusion of the discipline appropriately.
In these cases it might be appropriate to have a child sit in the
break place for at least five minutes. The emphasis on “at least” is
important because it may take longer than that. The child needs to
evaluate his or her readiness to return.
It is most beneficial to follow Taking a Break with a Positive
Conclusion, which not only helps to determine genuine readiness to
return but also helps the child process the offense in a wise way. As you
teach your children to Take a Break and to understand repentance, you are
giving them a valuable gift that will last a lifetime.
This material is taken from the book, Home
Improvement, The Parenting Book You Can Read to Your Kids. The book
contains many practical ideas for helping children change their hearts,
not just their behavior. |