This is a biblically-based approach to solving a child's behavior problems. The premise is that behavior issues are generally rooted in an anger problem. This book explains how to change your parenting style to prevent and cure your child's anger problem. This usually involves dealing with your own anger problem. It's written by a Christian counselor and instructor.
Some techniques and examples seem unrealistic (I can't imagine them working for my child). The author mentions a few times that others have said the same, but that it's all possible if you do it correctly and consistently for long enough.
My wife recommended this to me after she read it. We're struggling with our nearly-3 daughter who ignores and defies us. In reading this, I realized that I'm committing several of the behaviors that provoke children to anger. I'm starting to work on eliminating those to see how it improves my daughter's behavior.
Provocative Parents
Ways parents provoke children to anger
• Modeling sinful anger. Child follows your example; don't model anger.
• Habitually disciplining while angry. Child perceives discipline as personal, vindictive attack. Discipline based on child's sin against God, not trouble they caused you.
• Scolding. Speak with self-control, with few words, calmly, gently.
• Inconsistent discipline. Both parents must use same standards and each parent must be consistent from one incident to the next.
• Having double standards. Live by the same standards you hold child to; don't be hypocrite.
• Not admitting you're wrong and not asking for forgiveness. When you offend your child, admit it to them and ask for forgiveness.
• Constantly finding fault. Praise with greater frequency than you reprove.
• Not praising or encouraging. Regularly praise, so child perceives correction as part of biblical love.
• Unrealistic expectations. Remember that children think and act as children.
Angry Attitudes
Parent and child must be biblical in all 3 aspects of communication: words, tone of voice, non-verbal communication.
Discipline: What It Really Means
Gumnazo Principle: biblical discipline involves correcting wrong behavior by practicing right behavior, with right attitude, for right reason, until it becomes habitual. Think of a master teaching an apprentice through hands-on mentorship.
Anger Journal
1. What happened to provoke me to anger?
2. What did I do/say when I became angry?
3. What does the Bible say about what I did/said?
4. What should I have done/said?
Heart Journal
1. What happened to provoke me to anger?
2. What did I say to myself? What did I want?
3. What does the Bible say about what I said to myself? About what I wanted?
4. What should I have said to myself? What should I have wanted more than my selfish desire?
Getting Anger Problems Right
"When children are taught before they are teenagers to desire the approval of God more than the approval of man, the problem of peer pressure can be eliminated."
Disrespect and Manipulation
Respond to disrespect and manipulation with 1) appeal to personal responsibility, and 2) appeal to God's will.
Think Room
Think Room: place in home for child to study for 5-15 minutes how to respond to parents in biblical manner.
Sending child to Think Room
Tell child:
1. Time (usually 5-15 minutes)
2. Purpose (e.g., "You're being disrespectful. Figure out a more respectful way to respond")
3. Assignment (e.g., "Be prepared to ask for my forgiveness and demonstrate at least 2 biblically better ways to respectfully make your point."
Think Room can be used before chastisement (preventive) or after.
Appeal Process
1. Child acknowledges your instruction
2. Child requests appeal
3. Child presents additional information for you to consider