Past

The Importance of a Childhood Inventory

Email 1

Copy/Paste the following email:

Email 2

Copy/Paste the following email:

Video Script

The Importance of a Childhood Inventory

You know, it is really hard sometimes to understand where you are going unless you can think through where you have been. I know that was a deep statement, but you need to be able to unpack that as a parent. Because I promise you this, as you are going to help your child spiritually and lead them spiritually and just really, to just be honest, to lead through life itself, sometimes you are going to find difficulty in this whole parenting journey.

I want to give you some hope today that maybe, just maybe, underneath that difficulty it might be connecting back to your past. You see all of us have a past, and we were raised by somebody. I mean, unless you are like the dude in the Jungle Book and you were raised in the jungle, somebody raised you. It may have been a parent, it may have been a grandparent, a step-parent, an uncle, an aunt, an adopted parent, a foster parent, somebody was a parental figure in your life growing up. The fact is, the just pure truth is, they left a mark on your life.

Now that mark might be something that has propelled you into life successfully, or that mark might be a scar of a painful thing that they did to you. All of us have our own stories of how we were brought up, and the reality is, the truth for most of us, that we have good and bad from those experiences. That is what is important today.

I want to encourage you to do something that I am calling a childhood inventory. I want you to take a sheet of paper and just simply write at the top good and bad. Write a line down the middle, and just take maybe five minutes today, just as an easy little exercise, and think to yourself what are the things that I got growing up that are good. On the other side, I want you to write what are the things that I got growing up that were bad. Then when you fill that out and take the time to do it, you are going to begin to start to take that childhood inventory and you are going to see possibly why you are struggling in your own parenting journey. Because the reality is you can’t give what you weren’t given.

When you go to that bad column, these are deposits, withdrawals that the parental figure in your life made in your life. You need to find someone or someway and pray really to God and ask him please, God, these are voids in my life that I didn’t get growing up, and in order for me to give this to my child I need to go get help. I need a good book, or I need a good counselor, or I need something in my life, true scripture, a word from you, whatever it is, I need this to fill this hole in my life so that I am ready as a parent to give this to my kids.

One of my favorite stories about this is when I talked to a father about giving his son a blessing, a spiritual blessing. There is a lot of neat things to learn about spiritual blessings. But as I began to teach him what giving the blessing is, he began to be in tears and he said well, I can’t do that because I have never experienced it, and I don’t want to give a blessing to my son when I have never gotten a blessing myself. He threw his own little blessing party, and he asked people who were significant in his life to come and give him a spiritual blessing. Once that was done, he then went and blessed his son. I think that is so powerful because he understood an important concept.

This childhood inventory is going to help you discover the places where you need to go seek help and get encouragement so that you can then turn and give that encouragement to your child.

Texts/Tweets

TIP: Choose a hashtag for your tweets and use it consistently. That will tell Twitter to store a list of your tweets on one place for later reference.

Tweet One: Affirm your kids opinions and feelings. #parentinggodsway

Tweet Two: Let God lead your parenting. #parentinggodsway

Tweet Three: Difficult pasts often impact the type of parent you are. Don’t be afraid to deal with them. #parentinggodsway

Tweet Four: Guard your words; they are powerful instruments. #parentinggodsway

Tweet Five: Love God, and love your kids. #parentinggodsway

Tweet Six: You won’t always agree with your kids; love them anyway. #parentinggodsway

Tweet Seven: Speak life into your kids! #parentinggodsway

Tweet Eight: Don’t be afraid of dealing with your past to parent better in the future. #parentinggodsway

Tweet Nine: If necessary, seek help from others to heal. #parentinggodsway

Tweet Ten: Don’t exasperate your children—build them up! #parentinggodsway