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How do we talk with children about difficult realities?

August 23, 2016 By Rachel Jones 2 Comments

There is a deep desire to keep our little ones from hurt and harm—both their physical bodies and their growing hearts. We protect them with our whole selves, being careful about what they see and hear from radio, television, the Internet, or that one relative who seems to not understand the difference between table-talk and grown-up talk. We lower our voices when we talk about death and dying, war and disaster, politics and politicians, asking them to go play in another room or waiting until they go to bed to talk about grown-up things. And these are good and right measures to take.  But at what point do we confront the hard things about life, our families, and the world with our children? And how do we do that?

In my own life, I look to the example set by my parents. From an early age, they included my brother and me in fairly adult-themed conversations. When we ate meat-free dinners one night a week, and dropped the money we would have normally spent on animal protein into the little box shaped like a loaf of bread, Momma and Daddy would remind us that the money we were saving was going to help our babysitter Pam buy books for college. When the family of Vietnamese refugees sponsored by our church became fixtures at our family gatherings, they talked to us about why the Trans had left their home, how far they had to travel to come to us, and how we always had enough love to share with others. When my dad had to have extensive and repeated testing done because of several platelet transfusions he received during treatment for leukemia in the late 1980’s, they talked to us openly, honestly, and age-appropriately about HIV and AIDS.  When a classmate of mine was killed in a gun accident, my parents and some other loving, caring adults (with our priest’s permission) opened our church up for my classmates and I to grieve and process what was happening.

None of those conversations were easy for them to have, and none of that information was particularly fun or exciting for young eyes and ears and heart to process. But all of those conversations, and all the other conversations we had about hard things came with my parents explaining that the root of our response, the way in dealing with these hard things, was rooted in the steadfast love and example of Jesus.

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I am sure they spent many hours talking together, preparing a plan for how to talk to their children about things that honestly scared and challenged their own grown-up hearts and minds. I am sure they would have much preferred talking to us about other things. But they had the hard conversations with us, alongside us. And when it came time for us to share the hard things in our own lives with them, we never doubted their capacity to sit with and understand us.

We live in a world that is often hard to explain to ourselves. It is scary to try and figure out ways to explain it to our children. But to wrap them in cotton and insulate them from reality, from the hard and jagged edges of life, is to do them a deep disservice—because Jesus shows up in those hard places. He shows up when we show up; when we climb between the rock and the hard place, and like Elijah, see the glory of the Lord pass by.  We are his hands and feet in this world.

Our children deserve to see and know that, and they deserve to see and know that even in their littleness, they can act like Jesus and love like Jesus, too. That kind of honesty and bravery on the part of parents instills honestly and bravery in the hearts of the children they are raising, and that, my dear friends, brings the Kingdom. It is hard work, and it will break our hearts. But God shows up to fill in those cracks with light and love beyond our wildest dreams, beyond what we could ask or imagine.

Be brave. Be honest. And know that God meets you and your family in the midst of those hard conversations, empowering you to find new ways to love and learn. The Holy Spirit will guide you, helping you to find the right words and examples to discuss difficult things with your tenderhearted children. And Jesus, our brother, friend, and King, shows us with his very life how to respond.

You are doing amazing things, mommas and daddies and grannys and papas and aunties and uncles and other folks who love their littles. You are bringing the Kingdom of God to live between us, sharing the Good News of Jesus every single time you have one of these hard talks with your children. You are. Good job. May you be deeply blessed and comforted along the way, and find joy and peace in the hard places.

 

[Image credit: By Nheyob (Own work) [CC BY-SA 4.0], via Wikimedia Commons]


How do you handle hard conversations with little ones?

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Filed Under: Parenting Tagged With: courage, discipleship, honesty, Jesus, pain, sin

About Rachel Jones

Rachel Jones loves Jesus, her husband, their respective families, barbecue, breakfast tacos, Bob Dylan, baseball, the Book of Jeremiah, trips to the beach, finding money in a jacket pocket, and snagging the shadiest parking spot in the lot—in that exact order. Rachel and Mr. Jones live in Cincinnati with three neurotic cats and a new kitten named Carrie Fisher. Rachel is the Associate Editor for Forward Movement. When she’s not working on Forward Day by Day, she’s usually looking for her car keys or putting up preserves, but should probably be updating her blog at https://makeshiftfarms.wordpress.com

Comments

  1. Barb says

    August 23, 2016 at 8:50 am

    LOVE this Rachel – thanks for sharing from your wonderful heart!

    Reply
  2. Martha Richars says

    August 23, 2016 at 9:47 am

    I believe its really important to let children know from a young age that things don’t always happen the way we want them to but God will give us the strength to get through the hard times. When my husband (construction worker) would be laid off, I would let them know that we had to tighten our belts but times would get better. I don’t believe its good to shield them from everything otherwise when something really tragic comes they won’t understand or be able to cope with it.

    Reply

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