Shepherding a Child's Heart
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Shepherding a Child\'s Heart by Tedd Trip ( PDFDrive )
Signs of the Times
The benchmarks for this period of life are the onset of puberty and the time when the child leaves home to establish a home of his own. The teen years are years of monumental insecurity. The youth is neither a child nor an adult. He is unsure about how to act. If he acts like a child, he is chided to “act his age.” If he acts like an adult, he is told not to get “too big for his britches.” Sometimes, the whole world seems exciting and attractive—he loves being a teen. At other times, it seems frightening, demanding and foreboding—he wishes he never had to face it. One of our children loved being 17. For him, 17 was the perfect age. You weren’t a new driver anymore (you had a few accidents under your belt), but you weren’t a legal adult either. Our daughter, facing college and all the decisions that seemed so serious, would hug Mom and Dad and say she never wanted to leave home. She wanted to remain a girl—old enough to do things, young enough to enjoy the shelter and protection of home. Teens feel vulnerable about everything. They worry about their appearance. Do they have the right clothes? Are they wearing them right? What will their friends think about this shirt, dress, or new haircut? What if they get to wherever they are going and everyone is dressed differently? They feel anxiety about their understanding of life. Will they know the right thing to do or say in the restaurant? They worry about whether their fund of knowledge is big enough to see them through the situations that they long to experience. They are unstable in the world of ideas. We have made our dinner table a place for discussing politics, current events, and popular ideas in current discourse. No one has the teenager’s capacity to argue on all sides of an idea in a single conversation. Why is this? For the first time he is trying to formulate his independent identity in the world of thought. He knows enough to engage in the conversation, but his ideas are not fully cooked. Teens feel insecure about their bodies and their appearance. Teenagers spend fully half of their lives in front of a mirror. They worry about whether they are developing on schedule. Teenagers experience apprehension about their personality. They wonder whether they are serious enough, funny enough, creative enough, carefree enough. One of our children was very straightforward about these fears. He would announce at the breakfast table that he had decided to change his personality. Sometimes he changed personalities more often than he changed his shirts. He didn’t know yet that personality is resilient; what he was really reflecting was uncertainty about who he was. While this is a period of instability, anxiety, and vulnerability, it is also paradoxically a period when children are seeking to establish an independent persona. The teen wants to be his own person. While his need for direction has never been greater, he will resist overt attempts to corral him. Download 1.16 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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