Week
2 of September, Peaceability
In Partnership with Richard
and Linda Eyre
Editor’s Note: This month the Meridian Family Value of the month is Peaceability
(click here to read last week’s overview article). Each week during
the month we will post an update in Meridian, illustrating a couple of the Eyres’
favorite methods for teaching peaceability to each age group:
Methods
for Preschoolers
The “Calm Couch” and the “Repenting Bench”
These
methods combine a penalty for temper and hurtful conduct with
a way to get attention for improving. Have a hard bench or two
straight-backed chairs somewhere in the home where children who
fight are assigned to sit. Children who fight (physically or verbally)
are sent instantly to the bench. A child can get off only when
he can tell you what he (not the other child) did wrong
and when he “repents” to the other child with a hug and a request
for forgiveness.
Also
have a particular couch or softer chair designed as the “calm
couch” or “calm chair.” When a child is fussy or feisty or loses
his temper, have him sit in the calm chair until he is calm.
Don’t
treat the calm chair or the fighting bench as punishments — rather
as ways to avoid punishment. If children don’t wish
to sit on the repentance bench to think about what they did wrong
and apologize, then they get punished. If they don’t want to use
their calm chair to calm down, then they get sent to their room.
Stillness Contests
This
is a way to teach small children the feeling, as well as
the skill, of being peaceful, quiet, and calm. Have contests to
see who can go the longest without speaking, or without moving.
Afterward say, “It feels nice to be quiet and still sometimes,
doesn’t it?”
Methods
for Elementary School Age
The Peace Award
This
award is a good way to praise and recognize children for their
efforts to stay calm and peaceable. Make up a Peace Award by lettering
the word peace or the symbol on a card. Remember that awards
get posted on the bedroom door of the family member who wins it
for the week. Using the Sunday-award technique discussed previously,
say to children, “Who is in the running for the Peace Award?”
A child might be in the running if he has not lost his temper, has not retaliated
when someone hurt him, has counted to ten, or could explain why
someone might have done a hurtful thing.
Lavishly
praise every effort. Be in the running yourself, thinking of examples
of your own efforts to be peaceable during the week just passed.
Discuss each situation that anyone brings up.
Give
the award to the family member who has made the greatest effort
to be peaceable that week. Praise the winner profusely!
The “Two to Tangle” Concept
Help
children see that the opposite of peace is fighting and that since
one person can’t fight by himself, both sides of a fight must
be partly to blame.
Use
the “repenting bench” with elementary-age children as well as
with preschoolers. Explain to children that if they are peaceful
and refuse to retaliate (learn the definition of this word
together), then there can’t be a fight.
Methods
for Adolescents
The ”Analytical-or-Angry” Discussion
Help
young teenagers conceptualize the benefits of trying to
”understand” rather than trying to “win.” At dinner or
some other natural conversation time make the statement that we
have many situations in which there is a choice between two “A”
words — arguing or analyzing. In other words, when someone does
something to us or says something with which we disagree, we can
either fight back and argue or we can try to analyze
why he did or said that.
Point
out that the second choice is better because we learn something
whenever we try to figure out why, and we keep our cool and keep
our friends.