TLP 293: Parenting Angry Children, Part 7 | how to help our kids with their anger

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Are your kids angry? How can you know? What do you do if they are? Today AMBrewster discusses how to detect anger problems and learn to head them off. But it’s going to take work. Are you ready? Check out 5 Ways to Support TLP. Listen to the following episodes on Apple Podcasts by clicking the titles.“Is it okay to get mad?” (episode 153) Click here for our free Parenting Course!Click here for Today’s Episode Notes and Transcript. Like us on Facebook.Follow us on Twitter.Follow AMBrewster on Twitter.Follow us on Pinterest.Subscribe on YouTube. Need some help? Write to us at [email protected].

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TLP 294: Parenting Angry Children, Part 8 | how to help our kids with their wrath

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I'm pretty sure while I wrote these words, I stood staring blankly at my computer screen for a solid five minutes trying to figure out the best way to describe what
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I mean. As you can tell, I failed to come up with the best word. Welcome to Truth.
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Love. Parents. Where we use God's Word to become intentional, premeditated parents.
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Here's your host, A .M. Brewster. If you're just joining us today because the name of this episode caught your eye and you thought,
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I have angry kids, I'm very glad you're here. But I want to mention that this is part seven of a much longer series and each of the ones that have gone before are super important to being able to parent angry children.
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The first episode discussed why our kids get mad. The second and third episodes looked at the biblical categories for how our kids get mad.
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And then from episode four and on, we've been looking at the individual manifestations of anger and how we can parent our kids through them.
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So if you're just joining us, you're missing some really important information, including the fact that we're using the word angry in this episode to describe a very specific manifestation of what we may generally call anger and which may not describe your child at all.
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Again, if you've just stumbled onto this episode, please go back to episode 285 and take this journey with us.
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It's never really good enough to do duct tape parenting. We want to know, understand and be able to apply the biblical understanding of God, our kids and ourselves within our parenting.
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Now if you're returning and ready for this discussion, let me just take a moment to thank Josh and Heatherly for making this episode possible.
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And please allow me to encourage you to click on the five ways to support TLP link in the description of this episode to find out a little more about what it means to be a patron.
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But until then, let's talk about angry kids. If you remember from part two, we defined anger as that smoldering under the surface thought process where the child dwells on the perceived source of their anger.
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This is different than the non -intellectual explosion of raw emotion we see in wrathful responses. This involves reasoning and mulling.
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Now I say reasoning and mulling, but of course the child may be believing a lie or their logic could be very fallacious, but they're still thinking about it and they're stewing and that's the point.
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And we all know what this is like. We've all done this. We've all been obsessed and consumed with a situation we just wouldn't let go because we were so angry.
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In episode 153, we answered the question, is it okay to get mad? And we were able to put together a number of ways to judge our anger to determine if it were
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Christ -honoring or not. One of those criteria was that Christ -honoring anger has to end the right way.
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It ends when the person submits to truth. It ends when God judges the person. If God doesn't judge the person right away, it ends when we leave the person's presence.
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And if God doesn't judge the person right away, it ends when the evening comes, even if the person is still in our presence.
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If our anger continues beyond those boundaries, we can know our anger is sin. We're mulling.
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We're stewing. This is the anger we're discussing today. Let's say a bully broke your teen son's bike.
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Of course, there's no proof, but your son is certain that's how it happened. Your son confronts the bully. The bully admits it to your son, but refuses to admit it to an authority.
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So the bully refuses to submit to truth. And so far, it appears as if the bully's sin hasn't found him out.
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Now, your son has to make a very important decision. Is he going to give the situation over to God, or is he going to try to be
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God? If he's willing to trust God, then for the moment, there's nothing more he can do. And he's left school, and his head is on his pillow.
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He's trusting God, and it's not all hot and bothered. However, if he views himself as the only person who can quote -unquote make this right, then he'll likely fall asleep dwelling on how unfair it is, and how he can make the bully pay for what he did.
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This is sinful anger. That's what we're discussing today. And as we can see from our example, that's what can easily give way to clamor and slander and malice.
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The boy we've been describing is going to be hardcore tempted to lose his cool around the bully, tear him down around others, and potentially try to give him a dose of his own medicine.
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So, how do we help our angry child? Before I answer that today, I need to explain something to you.
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This series started as a three -part episode. We're currently on episode 7, and potentially going to end on episode 9.
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It's become one of, if not our longest series. There's so much information here, and there's so little time to talk about it.
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As I studied the Word, I couldn't justify trying to handle this very real parenting struggle in just a few episodes, but I also faced the huge task of making this material accessible and helpful.
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I'm trying hard, and I pray it's been helpful for you. A few of you have emailed me recently and lifted my heart as you shared how this has been beneficial for both you and your kids, and others of you have emailed me asking for help.
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So I praise God for that, and I soldier on in this task. What complicates this even more is the fact that each of these manifestations of anger are like concentric circles with bitterness at the center.
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To rightly deal with any of them is to eventually strike at the bitter heart, but we couldn't just do an episode about that and leave it all there because, as we've observed many times, most of the time you have to work through the angry onion layer by layer until you can reveal the heart.
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The malicious child is convinced it's the other person's fault. They're only doing what is right and equitable by getting back at them and making them feel the way they made the child feel in the first place.
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Even this angry boy from our example is convinced the bully is the problem. In his eyes, anyone who can't see that is blind to justice.
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How could anyone confront him about his anger when it's clear the bully who's the problem? In fact, the child could easily argue that if it were not for the bully, he wouldn't be angry in the first place.
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So it can be a very difficult task to work that child through the stages necessary to come to grips with the fact that the bully is not the problem, he's the problem.
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In the same way our disobedient kids aren't our problems, we are our problems. Our bitter heart is the issue every single time.
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So when it came to the malicious child, we focused primarily on managing the physical violence.
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The same was true for the slanderous child and their verbal violence. And our focus for the clamorous child was helping them communicate in a valuable way.
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Today we're going to look at the necessity of open, constant, quality, transparent communication as we deal with our angry children.
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Lord willing, next time we're going to discuss the emotional aspect of anger. And then on part nine,
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I pray we'll be able to put a glorious cap on the root issue that spawns all anger problems. So when you zoom out, even though I'm only making a few points per episode, if you're struggling with a malicious or slanderous child, there are many stages and points and directions from which you have to approach the subject.
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On one side, I'm not trying to oversimplify, and each episode by itself can seem that way.
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And on the other side, I'm not trying to bury you with material. And when you step back and look at all of it, it can feel that way.
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My friends, I just, I love you. I care deeply about your families. I'm dedicating this study and work to God and to you because I know how difficult it is to parent angry kids.
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Please, again, feel free to reach out to me with your questions. I want to help as much as I can or connect you with someone who can help better.
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And there are a lot of people who can do that. Now I know that was a very long intro, but it's important to keep in mind from where we've come and where we're going and what the point of all this is, especially as this series gets longer.
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So now let's turn our attention to our angry kids. The Greek word translated anger in Ephesians 4 31 shows up about 35 times in the
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New Testament and the vast, vast, vast majority of them refer to God's anger and are usually translated in the
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ESV as wrath. Now don't let that confuse you. I mentioned that because when you look through the scriptures for the verses about sinful anger, you're going to find comparatively few, especially if you focus your study to this one
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Greek word. And many of the instances you'll discover are like Ephesians 4 31. Anger is just one word in a list.
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So how can we fill our arsenal in order to meet the demands of this angry child? Well the first observations we need to make actually have nothing to do with the word anger.
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Remember this, your malicious or slanderous or clamorous child is that way because they're angry and they have been smoldering for a decent amount of time.
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And those manifestations are simply the external explosion of that building pressure. And much of this has probably gone unnoticed to you.
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You can't read your kid's mind. You're likely giving them the benefit of the doubt when they tell you everything's okay, but it's probably clear to you that at least something is not okay.
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And yet we so often misinterpret all the other verbal and physical cues that might communicate that our child is obsessing or dwelling.
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So here's our first point. Number one, angry children need to be unpacked.
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Now I'm pretty sure that while I wrote those words, I stood staring blankly at my computer screen for a solid five minutes trying to figure out the best way to describe what
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I mean. And as you can tell, I'm pretty sure I failed to come up with the best word. But there's a verse that's jumping to my mind.
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We've considered this before. Proverbs 25. The purpose in a man's heart is like a deep water, but a man of understanding will draw it out.
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The word translated purpose refers to a plan, advice, and counsel. It's something that is thought out, mauled over, and reasoned.
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This word perfectly refers to the process our angry kids undertake. This smoldering happens below the surface.
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It's a mental exercise to replay and replay again the offense and reimagine and reimagine again what you'll say when you see that person next.
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It's in our dreams, both waking and sleeping. It's in our hearts, but a man of understanding will draw it out.
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The word translated understanding refers to someone with discretion, someone who's skilled, someone with wisdom.
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To draw out is exactly what you may imagine if you picture a bucket being lifted from a well. This is what we must do if we hope to prevent our children from becoming angry or to help them grapple with their anger that they're experiencing right now.
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Yes, the clamorous child needs to settle down as we attempt to communicate, but the angry child has to engage in communication in the first place.
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However, until they reach the clamor or slander stage, they're not really interested in this communicating. They're bottled up and brooding.
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That's why I chose to say unpacked. This child needs to be unpacked. A suitcase is not going to unpack itself.
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It's not going to ask to be unpacked. If there's any unpacking to be done, you have to engage it. Children with a bitter heart or fully in the throes of anger don't really want to be unpacked by you either, but you, the parent, absolutely need to get inside your kid.
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You have to know what they're thinking. You have to understand their struggles and interpretations. You have to listen to them.
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The single best way to prevent your child from becoming angry is to have a continual dialogue with them where you can draw out their hearts and help them interpret their experiences the way
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God does. And this is not a hobby for the faint of heart. Having transparent and open conversations with children can be uncomfortable, tedious, and even a little painful.
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I've repeatedly asked my kids to share with me ways I can be a better dad, to tell me how they think I may be sinning.
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And talking of awkward, both of my kids are going through puberty now, and I haven't simply relegated all the daughter conversations to my wife.
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I'm involved in those. I'm instigating them. My kids and I have talked about who they like, how they feel, what they're thinking, and what's going on in their lives.
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It takes time. It takes patience. It's often awkward and uncomfortable. It requires good conversational skills, the ability to ask valuable and probing questions, and being observant.
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And I'm not saying I do all of this well or perfect or anything like that. I'm just illustrating that I understand how challenging this is, especially if you grew up in a noncommunicative home or a home that didn't please the
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Lord in your family talk. But it has to be done nonetheless. If you can unpack your child, if you can instigate an ongoing dialogue where they are comfortable and happy to share their mind with you, then you have their heart.
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You should be able to tell when their thinking starts to go astray. You'll be able to head off poor interpretation in such a way that you can short -circuit anger before it's even annoyance.
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And for a child already on fire, eliciting their heart by asking the right questions will help you understand how they're justifying their anger.
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I wish I could give you an example of how this might sound, but we just don't have the time and my example could be helpful for some and not for others.
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The key is to draw out the purpose of their heart. Unpack them. Find out how they feel and think.
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This takes knowledge and wisdom and understanding, all founded on the fear of the Lord. But you can do it, and God wants to enable you to do it well.
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And in the same way angry children need communicative parents, number two, angry children need observant parents.
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Remember that anger is under the surface. It's like a shark or crocodile sliding under the water.
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If you pay close attention, you can probably see ripples and color changes and movements that aren't quite right.
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Well, we need to do that with our children. Yes, we need to keep an open and transparent dialogue, but often our kids may lie or not fully understand the situation themselves.
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I once spoke with an elderly man about what happened to be a clear -cut case of bitterness toward another individual, but he just didn't see it that way.
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He had all his reasons, his feelings were justified, and with every reason he gave, he further justified in my mind that he was very bitter toward this other individual, but he just didn't get it.
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The same will happen with our kids. So we need to listen to their word choices, but also pay close attention to their tone of voice and even their silence.
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We also need to consider their body language. For example, it's a cliche that high schoolers will get into the car after school and throw their earbuds in if they're not already in the ears.
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Does this seem okay to you? To me, that looks like behavior of a disgruntled child. Would they do that if they got into the car with the boy or girl on whom they had a crush?
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Would they do that if they enter the car of their favorite actor or musician? Would they even do that if they climbed into a car with one of their friends?
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Maybe, but I think in most cases they would keep the earbuds out so they could engage in conversation of one sort or another.
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But a child who enters your car with little more than a grunt and who immediately shuts you out is angry about something.
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It may not even be a something so much as some things. It's likely the annoyed tolerance of someone who would rather be somewhere else with someone else.
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Of course, perhaps they're not directly mad at you. Maybe they're upset about their day, their classes, their teachers, their work, or their life.
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My point is, when I look around an average school, I see hallways and classrooms and cafeterias full of angry kids.
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When I visit homes and watch families interact, I see anger seething below the surface in many of those relationships.
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So we must become masters of interpretation. We have to be able to detect anomalous behavior and then investigate that in order to draw out their heart.
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And speaking of annoyance, number three, angry children need low -level accountability. What do
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I mean by that? I love the English language. I love all of our synonyms. I love that we can choose from a panoply of ideas to give our thoughts and emotions life.
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But we often get ourselves in trouble with our linguistic gymnastics. I'm not angry.
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I'm just annoyed. Oh, I'm not angry. I'm agitated, aggravated, irritated, frustrated.
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If we're only going to probe our children's hearts when they say they're angry and our kids know that saying they're annoyed or aggravated will keep you from probing any further, they'll start using those words instead.
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Now, I'm not suggesting we oversimplify our language, that we're only ever using the word angry. I'm the guy who wishes we all still talked like Shakespeare, and I believe those other words do allow us shades of meaning that help us communicate better.
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But I also know that it's too easy to use those words as a smokescreen for a different issue.
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So if our kids are going to use words like annoyed, irritated, frustrated, aggravated or irritated, especially if we know they're already prone to brood and anger, we need to handle those situations the exact same way we would if they said they were really angry about something.
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Whether they're telling the truth about how they feel or not, annoyance and all those other descriptors are the gateway to anger.
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What starts as a sliver in our minds can quickly and easily fester and become infected by anger. The longer we don't deal with it, the bigger the problem will become.
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So when I say angry children need low -level accountability, I'm suggesting that we deal with things for what they really are.
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Don't wait for it to become full -blown anger. Keep them accountable for the seeds that may become anger later on.
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Now you may find that your kids stop using those words and just start telling you that they're fine. If that's the case, you need to redouble your efforts to drawing out their heart because it's become very clear they don't want to open up to you.
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Now I know we're probably going to go long today, but don't forget about our episode notes linked below. Okay, let's review.
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Number one, angry children need to be unpacked. We can't help our kids if we don't know what they're experiencing, how they're interpreting it, and the conclusions they're formulating about it.
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Two, angry children need observant parents. Because angry lives just under the surface, we need to be vigilant to discover signs that there may be an issue.
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It's better to catch anger before it's clamor and slander and malice. And three, angry children need low -level accountability.
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Don't be okay with perpetually annoyed kids. They're smoking the gateway drug. They're entering the mindset that will, with time, develop into full -fledged anger.
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But before we end, we must end with the same point we've made the other three times. Number four, angry children need
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Bible, not pragmatism. It doesn't matter that Benjamin Franklin said, a man in a passion rides a mad horse.
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And it doesn't matter that Eleanor Roosevelt said, anger is one letter short of danger. What matters is what
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God says. What matters is that in James 1, 19 -21, the Lord tells us that every person must be quick to hear, slow to speak, slow to anger, for the anger of man does not produce the righteousness of God.
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And then he tells us how to do this. He says, Put away all filthiness and rampant wickedness, and receive with meekness the implanted word, which is able to save your souls.
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Sinful anger is a filthy, bitter creature that does not produce the righteousness of God. Instead, our children must humbly submit to and accept
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God's inscripturated word. That is the only thing that will help our kids. Yeah, but Aaron, you're lacking the pithy advice.
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The Mayo Clinic says we should take a time out or stick with I statements or, or use humor to release tension or practice relaxation skills.
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Yeah, I know they do. And I know that countless pages have been written trying to describe magic bullets that are guaranteed to help our angry kids.
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But there's no method or habit or plan that's going to actually fix the situation. Our children need to see their lives through God's eyes.
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They need to truly believe what he says about the people and situations that tempt us to anger, and they need to faithfully mature in humble, submissive obedience.
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That's the only hope. I know it's not catchy, but it's truth that will save our souls.
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Thank you as always for your patience today. I'm going to close in the same way I opened. There is so much more that needs to be said.
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It's not easy to draw out your child's heart, and sometimes that's easier than knowing what to do once you've drawn it out. Please seek counsel.
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Get help from people who know God's word. No matter how hard it is, the answer is simple. To control anger, we must know, understand, and believe what
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God says about trials and tribulations. On our next episode, we're going to peel back yet another layer and discuss the emotional facet of wrathful kids.
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I love you guys. I'm enjoying taking this journey with you, and I pray the Lord will be glorified in your homes.
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Truth. Love. Parents. Is part of the Evermind Ministries family and is dedicated to helping you become an intentional premeditated parent.
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Join us next time as we search God's word for the truth your family needs today.