Friday, September 15, 2006

on the move

For those of you who don't know, Carl and I are moving to Louisville, KY for one year where he will be on staff at Southeast as a Church Planting Pastor. After that year, we are planting a church somewhere in the northeast...(Boston, DC, NYC)...not sure exactly where yet. It's exciting and scary all at once.

I started packing boxes this week...ugh...I have a lot of work ahead of me. We are moving on Sept. 27 and he starts work on Oct. 2. I don't have a job yet, but am sending my resumes out and am hoping to find one quickly. Keep us in your prayers as it will be a big transition...not really the move to Louisville since we will both be closer to family and good friends, but the move to the ne in a year will be big. I'll keep you posted!

Saturday, July 29, 2006

Just felt like doing a list...of my favorite preachers...but I'm doing 11 because I wanted it to be better than a Top 10...

1. Carl Kuhl...(I may be bias on this one)
2. Billiam (aka. Bill Hybels..The Creek)
3. Ed Young Jr. (Fellowship Church)
4.Mike Breaux (The Creek)
5. Jon Weece (Southland)
6. Dave Stone (Southeast)
7. Bob Russell (retired Southeast)
8. Erwin McManus (Mosaic)
9. Rob Bell (Mars Hill)
10. Kyle Idleman (Southeast)
11. Dick Alexander (Clovernook)

Tuesday, July 25, 2006

"Ignore the lie, not the child..."

So I’ve recently been introduced to this clinician named Brian Post (www.post institute.com) through my work who has done a ton of research on parenting and also the human brain. I have listened to some of his seminars on cd and read some of his materials, but yesterday in supervision, I was exposed to him on DVD. He introduced a concept that was fascinating to me in working with kids (as a professional or a parent)…the concept was, “ignore the lie, not the child”. He explained that children, and adults as well, only lie when they feel scared or when they feel like there is no way out. So, instead of scolding the child and punishing them for lying, he suggests that the parent should do everything in their power to make sure the child knows you love them and that the child is in a safe place. The result is that the child automatically stops lying. He claims that if parents do this consistently for 2 weeks, that they will see huge results and he has research to back this up. So, the scenario goes like this…
Traditionally, parents respond this way…
Dad: “Did you eat all the cookies out of the jar?”
Child: “No, I haven’t touched it.”
Dad: “Well, you are the only one home and there were cookies in there 2 hours ago, and I didn’t eat them.”
Child: “I don’t know what happened to them, but I didn’t eat them.”
Dad: (yelling) “I don’t know why you are lying to me about this, but go to your room and think about what type of punishment you think you should have.”

Post claims it should occur like this…
Dad: “Did you eat all the cookies out of the jar?”
Child: “No, I haven’t touched it.”
Dad: “Honey, you know I love you right? You know that no matter what happened, I will always love you and nothing can change that.” (Dad leaves it at that and comes back a few hours later).
Dad: “Honey, you know that when you lie to me, it really scares me and hurts my feelings because it makes me think that you don’t trust me and that you feel like I am going to hurt you in some way? I just want you to know that I love you, but when you lie, it really hurts me.”
Post says after 2 weeks of responding gently this way to the child, the lies reduce by at least 50%.
Interesting huh?