Conflict

How to Fight Fair

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Video Script

How to Fight Fair

I don’t know if you are a sports fan or not, but I’m just going to bank on the fact that at some point you’ve seen a football game or a basketball game, or something like that. Now, I want you to imagine what it would be like to play those games if you took out the referees, and you took out all of the boundaries. You wouldn’t be able to do it. It would end up in this huge chaotic fight, because in order for sports to work, you need to have someone there as a referee, and you need to have clear boundaries. You know, that works in family life too, and with your child, sometimes your family can get into chaos. I know it’s true, there’s not a home in this world that doesn’t at some point just go into chaos like a sports game without any officials, or without any boundaries, when your home is in chaos, and everyone is fighting. Well, I want to teach you just a few tips on how to fight fair.

The first thing is, draw the boundaries. Draw those boundaries. What I mean by that is, work with your child to make some very clear rules that they’ll respect in the house and that you will respect in the house. Please hear me, I told you to work with your child on this. If they are part of the process, they’ll respect these rules more. Let them make some suggestions. It may be humbling. They may say, “Well, I think the rules should be that you don’t yell at me.” Maybe that would be a good rule, to say no yelling in the house, and when we yell, that’s a penalty.

The second thing is, give authority to your child to call a penalty based on the rules. This is a little bit scary, but it helps keep everyone on the same playing field as far as fighting fair. Now, you are definitely the parent, I’m not suggesting you give that up, but if you break those rules, then the child should be able to respectfully tell you, “Hey, I thought that we weren’t doing that? We said we wouldn’t.” Just like you have the right to tell the child when they break those rules, “Hey,” respectfully, “Hey I thought we weren’t doing that? We said we said we wouldn’t.”

Third, they should be able to call a time out, so should you. Anybody in the family, at any moment, should be able to say, “This is too intense, I need a moment to calm down and think, I’ll be back. I need a time out.” The most important part of a time out though is to say, I’ll be back in 5 minutes, or I’ll be back 10 minutes.” What we don’t want to do is call a time out and then leave and never come back, that doesn’t build trust. When we call a time out, and we come back and want more calm. That gives a chance for us to fight fair, to talk about what really matters, to focus on the issues, not just the emotions that the issues are causing.

Now finally, you need a referee. I don’t know if you have someone that your family can go to, a counselor, or someone that’s trained to help bring both sides together when they are hurting. There’s going to be times in your family, it may be not now, but there’s going to be times in your family, and I would say in your marriage, where you have conflict that’s so deep that you just can’t work it out. Even if you are following the rules and nobody’s getting penalties called in it. Everybody’s staying within the boundaries. You might still get so stuck on an issue that you are facing, that you just need someone to come in as a referee, as that third party that will help guide the conversation and get you to a solution. I think, in my opinion, it’s important to have that person on speed dial so that you know and your family, no matter what you come across, you’ve got a way to find that solution.

Fighting fair is a beautiful way to live as a family. Everybody is going to fight, if you live that closely together in your home, at some point you are going to fight. It’s not bad to fight, as long as you fight fair.

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: Ask God for help when your child spins out of control! #fightinggodly

Tweet Two: You control how you behave, not your child. #fightinggodly

Tweet Three: Arguments are power struggles. Give yours up. #fightinggodly

Tweet Four: Seek God’s help before losing your temper with your child. #fightinggodly

Tweet Five: Fight with love, peace and patience. #fightinggodly

Tweet Six: Don’t engage in an argument before pulling yourself together. #fightinggodly

Tweet Seven: Put off all rage and anger; it’s the opposite of God’s nature. #fightinggodly

Tweet Eight: Conquer your child, your temporary opponent, with love. #fightinggodly

Tweet Nine: The Lord will fight for you. #fightinggodly

Tweet Ten: Victory is only found in the Lord! #fightinggodly