Responsibility

Helping Around the House

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Video Script

Helping Around the House

We all want to raise children that will someday become responsible and independent adults, right? The Biblical goal of parenting is to disciple our children through their years with us getting them ready to be launched into adulthood. The process is not just a spiritual one, but also one of teaching responsibility.

This does not happen overnight. It starts when children are young. Even toddlers can be taught to clean up their toys. As children get older they certainly should be expected to help around the house. Being responsible adults begins by being taught simple responsibilities during childhood.

If we want to see our children leave our home, to have a home of their home, we need teach them how to take care of the home the live in now. If we pray for our children to have a successful life with a great job, we need to give them little jobs now.

We however fall in to the trap of doing thing for our kids, instead of teaching them to do things for themselves. It is easier and even faster to clean up the mess ourselves. It is more convenient not to have to redo something, instead of letting a child give it their best try.

Here are some ways to begin to allow your young children to help around the house.

1. Think Age Appropriate. Pre-school age children as early as 2 and 3 years old can learn 2-3 step tasks: putting away toys, throwing away trash, or even feeding a pet. Early elementary children can begin to do next level 3-4 step tasks, with a bit more responsibility: making beds, emptying waste cans, and serving themselves by making simple foods like a bowl of cereal. During the mid to late elementary years children can take on bigger and more significant roles helping around the home through doing dishes, cleaning, and helping with meal preparation.

The key to each age and responsibility is feeling successful and receiving praise. Children, even young children, want to feel like they did something right, they were able to contribute and got to do something “grown up”. Taking responsibility is a normal part of growing up.

2. Be Patient and Be Okay with Imperfect. Your schedule is packed and your time is tight, so having to slow down and allow your children to help is actually more of an effort. Waiting on something to be done, instead of quickly doing it yourself is a conscious choice. It is important to know up front to brace yourself for the wait and be patient. Slowing down and letting your children do, is more valuable than rushing to the next thing on your schedule.

The other challenge for you is allow things to be done but your way. Children helping and taking on responsibility means a bit of imperfection in the end result and that is okay. The process is more important than the end result during these years. Your child is learning, so take a breath. If you really have to, re-do it when they are not around.

3. Make it a Life Lesson. Children helping around the house and taking responsibility is a wealth of life lesson waiting to happen. Make sure to not only assign tasks but also apply wisdom. When your child does something right, encourage them. When your child forgets to do something, lovingly remind them and take time to make it a time of instruction.

A child helping around the house is a simple way of applying Godly truths about hard work and responsibility. Don’t miss out on these great discipleship moments.

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: Create a team atmosphere in your home. #teamwork #workhardplayhard

Tweet Two: Praise your kids for working together to get jobs done. #teamwork #workhardplayhard

Tweet Three: The earth does not revolve around your kids. #teamwork #workhardplayhard

Tweet Four: Work for God with all your heart. #teamwork #workhardplayhard

Tweet Five: Our family is a team. #teamwork #workhardplayhard

Tweet Six: Work hard, play hard. #teamwork #workhardplayhard

Tweet Seven: Teach kids to work for something bigger than themselves. #teamwork #workhardplayhard

Tweet Eight: We don’t work for human masters. #teamwork #workhardplayhard

Tweet Nine: Remind your kids of something fun ahead when doing chores. #teamwork #workhardplayhard

Tweet Ten: Remember the end goal; train your children up in the way they should go. #teamwork #workhardplayhard