Saturday, March 17, 2007

Smart Single Parents Speak #2: Set A Good Example

#2 Set A Good Example

Nothing teaches children better than a good example. A good example is is something that measures the consistency of the parent.

Here is what I mean: Parents usually give good advice. Their words of wisdom flow and take on feel of truth and sense. When the parent does, in his or her life, the very things that he or she says for the child to do, their is the power of consistency behind their words.

When direction communication (words) and indirect communication (actions) are parallel, the message is very strong. When there is this sense of parallel communication, the influence of the parent is more likely to bein the desired direction. Conversely, if direct communication (words) and the indirect communication (actions) are not parallel, there is a much lower chance of getting the desired result.

Non-parallel communication is likely to produce non-parallel communication in the child. This comes out in the form of lying, deception, say-one-thing-do-another behavior - the very thing we're trying to avoid.

Now, there are some things an adult can do that a child should not. However, it is important not to abuse that reality. It is going to be unconvincing to the child to say, "Don't drink, smoke and have sex," if the parent happens to be doing those things.

Live your life as a con sistent person and you will reap the rewards in your children.

Thursday, March 08, 2007

Smart Single Parents Speak #1: Lower your Expectations

Last month I asked for your collective wisdom and you did not disappoint. Click here for a list of everything you said.

This month we are going to give each of these great pieces of advice some attention. These are not presented in any order.

#1: Lower your Expectations

There is a difference between being optimistic and having unattainable expectations. Generally speaking, optimism is a good thing and predicts good results. However, having impossibly high expectations predicts just the opposite.
When a person expects something that is very hard to be very easy, disappointment or feelings of failure are not far behind. Ths disappointment or feelings of failure almost always leads to misplaced blame. Blame is placed on the difficulty of the situation or the inability of the person. The real culprit here is niether. The villian is expectation that does not match the situation.
Expectations are subjective and really amount to a sort of fortune telling on the part of the expector. There is often a whole lot less information or evidence supporting the expectation than is believed or that most people would admit.
The biggest problems occur when people base their expectation on their wishes or absolute best case scenario. The higher the requirement for an expectation to be satisfied the higher the chance of dissatisfaction or disillusionment.
The converse is also a problem. Expectations that are too low might all a person to be satisfied with much less than was possible.
What yo might want to try is taking stock of your expectations and ask yourself if they are likely to result. If they are, then go for them. However, if you find that they are based on your best wished scenario, then you'd better ratchet is down a coupld notches.

Friday, February 23, 2007

What is wisdom and who can grasp it? Where can one go to purchase this thing called wisdom? Does one ever have enough of it? Once you get some of it, does it remain with you always?

I would say there are few people who would argue against the idea that wisdom is a good thing to pursue. And yet, there is so little space for wisdom in our culture that finding space for it is a daunting task. "Yes, wisdom is a good thing, but who has time for it?"

Here are a few foolish musings on wisdom:

1. There are two sources of wisdom. Personal experience and other people's experience.

Personal experience is often times pretty straight forward. If you do something, you know that it is like to do it. Then you choose whether or not to do it again. Or you choose to modify the way in which you did it in order to alter the outcome.

The experiences of others is not as straight forward nor are they as easily to internalize. Who the "others" are matters. Is it friends, family and co-workers and that's it? What about historical figures? What about Biblical figures? The storehouses of historical and sacred wisdom are so vast, so expansive that we hardly notice them. They are like intricate and highly detailed wall paper that you might notice at a glance, but seldom look at for it deep design or message.

2. There are pre-wisdom steps that are necessary in order to gain wisdom.
A. Acknowledge that there is such a thing as wisdom.
B. Assess its value relative to your life and find yourself lacking.
C. Decide that it is worth pursuing.
D. Pursue it in the course of daily life, not merely as a cognitive exercise outside of daily life.

3. Practice all the wisdom you gain.

4. When you fail to do number three, reflect on those times and assess what it is about you that wars against wisdom. If this becomes an exercise in guilt, then you're not doing it. In failure, wisdom transcends guilt toward a more wholesome and less toxic motivation.

5. Pass along your wisdom, but only when it has become part of who you are. Resist the temptation to immediately tell everyone about the great new thing you learned before it is really who you are. Sharing gained wisdom too quickly, before it is who you are, will result in embarrassment and hypocrisy.

6. When you fail to do number 5, reflect on those times understanding that guilt may be a temptation.

7. Develop relationships with people younger and less experienced than you are and live your wisdom in their presence. You do this for them, but you do this for you, too. If you have gained a sense of wisdom, being in relationship with someone who perhaps thinks you are wise raises the bar for you and challenges you to be persist in your wisdom.

What does all of this have to do with being a single parent? Hopefully you see that it has quite a bit to do with being a single parent. If anyone needs to pursue wisdom it is people who find themselves in complex situations wherein the rules are not clear, the playing filed is not level, and the cultural context works against them. Single parent families, in large measure, fit this definition.

Pursue wisdom a little and you will find it a little. Pursue it a lot and you will find it a lot. Never stop pursuing it and you will never exhaust its vast storehouses.

Friday, February 16, 2007

The finalists

The ideas you all have shared are terrific. Let's do this: everyone vote for three and we'll see which ones move to the top. This is just for fun since different advice works better or worse for different people. But I do want to see which ideas work for the most people.

Go head and make three choices on the comments section.

A. Putting others needs ahead of your own
B. Set a good example
C. Consistent routines
D. Boundaries
E. Make time for yourself
F. Guard your kids
G. Family traditions
H. Routines
I. Lower your expectations
J. Know your limitations and accept your limitations

Thursday, February 01, 2007

What are the top 5 tips for single parents?

OK my friends, it is time for you to shine. We are going to spend February exploring the top 5 tips for single parents.

What I am most interested in this month is what you are doing that is working well. So, go ahead and make a comment here and brag a little. Share your success, no matter how big or small.

In later posts I will throw out a few suggestions, but I think we should start with you all and yor successes.

So please, brag a little.

Saturday, January 27, 2007

De-Parentification

One great challenge for single parents has to do with how they interact with their children. When there is no other parent with whom to share the parenting, conversations and responsibilites usally shared by parents are often shared by the parent and the child.

Some of these dynamics are nearly unavoidable. However, too much of them and you get a child acting more like a parent than a child. This process is called parentification - and it's not good.

Single parents need to be aware of how much they are asking their children to be parental in their behaviors.

This can be challenging.
  • In one sense, children can help with emotional support from time to time, however, too much of that is no good.

  • Children should help with chores around the house; that's a good thing. They should be given reasonable and age appropriate tasks.

  • Single parents must constantly be aware of boundaries, re-define those boundaries, and expand them as needed.

Certainly the dynamics for single parents are going to be different than in a two-parent hosehold, so don't expect them to be the same. However, being careful not to parentify your cildren is one of the important tasks of single parenting.

Sunday, January 21, 2007

Lots of single women

51% of all women are now not married. Read it here.

Monday, January 15, 2007

Single moms travel

Strollers, luggage, tickets, boarding passes, gates, terminals, maybe even a diaper bag and baby seat. Good grief, how do you travel with children?

It's tough to do single parenting in the airport and on the plane. I once saw a woman with 7, yes 7 children, on an airplane. She was African and seemed not to worry about her children. She wasn't worried because they were Behaving relatively well. That is until near the end fot he flight. They just couldn't take it anymore. The oldest couldn't have been 10 years old, by the way.

She held the youngest in the aisle, soothing her tears, barked out a couple of commands (is that what Swahili sounds like?) and managed the troops with words and love. I was so amazed I gave her $40. I don't know why I did that. When I gave it to her, she looked at me like I was crazy. I didn't know how else to show my amazement.

Anyway, you probably want to know some tips for air travel with kids. Well, click here to read more about doing single motherhood and traveling.

Monday, January 08, 2007

Let's Link

Hey, you read this blog. You might have a blog. Let's link to each other.

Upon your request, I will link to you from the Smart Single Parent Blog under Blogroll in my sidebar. Just leave a comment here requesting a link and show me where to link and I will. Your blog doesn't even need to be a single parent blog - it just needs to be yours.

I'd love it if you'd link to me as well.

Let's grow our cyber community so we can better support one another.

Saturday, January 06, 2007

Smart Single Moms and Time

You're a single mother, of course you don't have enough time. You're running double duty constantly and the there is never enough day left. Shove that pile of responsibilities off to the next day and hope nothing more piles up while you catch a bit of sleep each night.

Isn't there a better way?

Well, probably not. But there are some time saving tips that can help you.

1. Know when to multitask: Sometimes multitasking is a life saver, but sometimes it only puts off something that requires your full attention - and then takes up more time later. I recall a teenage girl's grip to her multitasking mother, "Mom, multitasking is fine unless I am one of your many tasks. I want you to listen to me." The point was well taken. At the same time, din't just give in to every request from your kids. Giving them undivded attention now will likely reduce their insistence on too much of it.

2. Taming the paper tiger. Deal with paperwork now and you won't have to deal with it twice or worry about it when you need it. Investing time in paper management is jst that, an investment that cost time up front, but please, pleas,e believe me that when the time comes to need it, you won't have the luxury of time to go looking for it all over the place.

3. Time tasks. Gat a kitchen timer use it. Allot time to tasks and do them in that time allotted.

4. Sleep healthy. You are more productive when you are well rested. Get 8 hours as often as you can. Fewer efficient awake hours are better then more inefficient awake hours. Plus, you run the risk of heath issues when you do not get enough sleep. Then you're really "wasting" time.

5. Live within your circle of influence. When you spend time trying to do soemthing that is outside of your control, you are wasting time - period. Learn to decide what you can and cannot do and spend time doing what you can.

Your time is valuable; use it well.

Tuesday, January 02, 2007

Single Does Not Mean Solo

Smart single moms get past the idea that asking for help is admitting failure. Being single does not mean being alone or isolated as a parent.
Finding and utilizing help is one of the best things a single mother can do.

Click here to read more about smart single mom.
Below is a recommended resource.

Saturday, December 30, 2006

To Own A Dragon

I am reading a book right now that every single mother who is raising a son should read. It is called, To Own A Dragon. It is the story of a man who grew up without a father. His insights are terrific and somewhat unexpected.

For most single mothers, raising boys can be a mystery. Having never been a boy, she's going to have to guess. Reading this book can give insight into what your son is going through or will go through at some point in his life. The book also gives hope as to what it might mean to be fathered by God.

A point of comfort for single moms should be that she can know God is determined to father her children. Fathering is so important and it is not something a mother can do. So, when single mothers are working their rear off to fill in the gaps left by the absent father, it is nice to know that God is in the details.

Being aware of how God fathers (albeit piecemeal sometimes) will help the single mother to allow that process to play itself out.

Please read this book if you are a single mother raising a son.

Tuesday, December 26, 2006

New Year's Resolutions

The new year comes Monday. I hope it brings with it hope. Lots of people use the new year as a time to mark a clean slate, a new beginning, a time to make a change. It's not a bad idea. Just be careful of making unwinnable resolutions.

Make a little resolution, or perhaps a thematic resolution. Commit to a direction rather than an arrival point.

For example, a friend of mine said she wanted to put some more whimsy in her life. That's a direction, not a solid promise. At the same time, she knew when she was doing it and counted it to her credit every time she did it.

Capture a theme and go with it in 2007. I think you're going to like where you get with it by the end of 2007.

Saturday, December 23, 2006

Merry Christmas

Merry Christmas to all of you out there. I hope that this Christmas arrives with joy, hope, and love.

The meaning of Christmas can be taken from many different angles. I like to think of Christmas as a time of newness. Christmas brings about change that will make a difference forever. I hope that this Christmas can be good and make a positive change in your life.

Peace.

Tuesday, December 19, 2006

Questions To Ask Before Getting Married


There is much to know beofre getting married. My savvy readership knows this. The New York Times ives us a little healp toward that end.


Read the NYT list of questions to know the answers to to before getting married.

Monday, December 18, 2006

Childhood Obesity Underdiagnosed

Only about half of obese children are recognized and treated for their condition by their health care providers, according to a new study that shows childhood obesity is often overlooked by pediatricians.

Read more here on WebMD.

Friday, December 15, 2006

Single Dads on TV


Click here to see the TV Dads Hall of Fam website.

Tuesday, December 12, 2006

Don't Do It

It's the holidays. For many people, Christmas and New Years are so romantic. And yet, as romance floods the season as we hear the countdown to the New Year, ohers feel left out and lonely.

At times like these, people sometimes long for the best of the old relationships, and consequently forget the worst of those old relationships. It can be tempting to make a call that should not be made, send an e-mail that shouldn't be sent, make a forbidden text message. If this is you, then

Don't Do It!!!!!!

Seriouly, you'll hate yourself in the morning. That old relationship ended for a reason. Romantic feelings are not what is going to make that old relationship work. Trust your common sense.

Sunday, December 10, 2006

Successful Single Mother

What makes a single mom successful?

Financially making ends meet? Being a good role model for her children? Spending time with her children? Keeping up with the laundry? Making sure her children are getting the best education? Nutritious means? Meaningful connections with technology?

How do you measure success for a single mother?

Thursday, December 07, 2006

Holidays and going broke? Make memories


Holidays can be the best time of the year. At the same time, with all of the marketing and consumerism, it seems that one has to spend a thousand dollars in order to have a happy holiday season. Well, it's not true. Money is not the key to holiday happiness.

Instead, spend time making memories.

Click here to read about accumulating memories rather than going in the hole financially.