I recently
looked up top resolutions for the new year—and saw some interesting lists. They
were the typical ones you would expect—lose weight, exercise, get out of debt,
eat more healthfully, spend time with family, etc.
But what struck
me most was the recurring use of the word MORE.
+Exercise
MORE
+Spend MORE
time with family
+Get MORE organized
+Pay off
MORE bills
+Cook MORE
healthy foods
What
exactly does a resolution that has the word MORE in it even mean?
MORE than
what? By what measuring stick? How will you know when you have achieved it?
Resolutions
that contain the word MORE will likely not be realized simply because they are
too general, too abstract, too non-checkable—if that were a word.
Any change—be
it a New Year’s resolution or a beginning of the school year plan or a new
family schedule must be quantitative in order to be met. In other words, there
has to be some sort of method by which the resolver can see whether or not the
resolution, plan, habit, or schedule has been met.
My husband and
I are problem solvers—both of us. Sometimes we butt heads because he has an
idea to solve a problem at the same time that I have another, albeit superior,
idea. Smile... More often than not, though, the fact that we are both
problem solvers has not been a negative but rather an amazing way to propel us
to accomplish goals for our family.
In our
problem solving, we have had to be extremely specific in what the steps to
success were—no use of the words MORE, better, less, fewer etc.
Rather than
saying that we would read the Bible or worship with the kids MORE, we said that
we would have devotions more often than we didn’t. (This was one of our favorite benchmarks for many good things with our kids through the year--more often than not!)
Rather than
saying that Ray would meet with our boys MORE to mentor them, we said that he
would meet once a week per boy—or once a month per boy—or whatever the goal
was.
Rather than
saying that I would read with a new reader MORE, I said that I would read two
times a day with the new reader—right after breakfast while the olders cleaned
the kitchen and right before I began dinner preparations (with another older!).
The other
thing we have found in our quest to be problem solvers is that we can’t solve
too many problems all at the same time! In our parenting seminar, Raising Kids With Character,” we encourage parents to choose one or two things from
each session that really spoke to them—one or two things that they want to
implement or utilize right away in their homes. This keeps parents who have
just sat through six hours of parenting lectures from being so overwhelmed that
they are unable to implement any of the tips and strategies.
Throughout
our thirty-one years of parenting, we
have tried to tackle one problem or aspect of our family that needed changed
per week (and later one per month or so). We sat down together and decided what
one thing we would work on—and exactly how we would work on it (without using
those taboo words of MORE, better, etc.!).
Sometimes
we want lots of changes immediately! We are so quick to see the areas in our
family that need work—and maybe there are many areas that we need to work on
(we could always think of many!)….but if we set out to change everything all at
one time, we will seldom change anything.
If you have
a dozen things you would like to work on this year, consider doing one per
month—and really dedicate a month to making that one thing happen…with a plan
of attack that is measurable and concrete and doable. Then when that one is
realized, add another the following month and so on.
Too many
resolutions and too many vague words are both enemies of real change and
problem solving. So try to make FEWER resolutions and keep them BETTER! Smile….
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