parents – Author Kandi J Wyatt https://kandijwyatt.com Mother of Dragons Mon, 04 Apr 2016 03:48:25 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.1 https://i0.wp.com/kandijwyatt.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/cropped-kandy_wyatt-logo_purple.png?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 parents – Author Kandi J Wyatt https://kandijwyatt.com 32 32 111918409 How to Connect with Your Teen and Pre-Teen https://kandijwyatt.com/how-to-connect-with-your-teen-and-pre-teen/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=how-to-connect-with-your-teen-and-pre-teen Mon, 04 Apr 2016 03:48:25 +0000 https://kandijwyatt.wordpress.com/?p=1307 As parents, we wonder how to stay in touch with our kids as they grow older. When our children are young, we do everything with and for them, but as they mature and develop, they begin to move out on their own. It begins with friends; then their preferences change. Trying to keep up with them can be work. If we aren’t careful, we’ll wake up one day and not know what our son’s favorite color is or what our daughter’s favorite music is.

Knowing your child is key to keeping those teen year challenges down to a minimum. The question is how do we do this in an ever increasing busy schedule and world. Our family has discovered several ways to stay connected to our kids as they grew.

Play Games with them

The first came about when our twenty-two-year-old was in middle school. My husband, Eric, and I had attended a Weekend to Remember marriage getaway from Family Life. The speaker told about playing Halo with his teens and their friends. It gave him insights into the kids’ lives. We didn’t want to allow our kids to play that mature of a game, but when our son purchased a PSII system and several games, Eric sat down and learned how to play Final Fantasy XII. The whole family would gather around when the little video clips would come on. To this day, I can distinguish the Estersand from Rabanastre and Alchadia from the Lhusu Mines just by the music. I spent numerous hours quilting, drawing, and just watching as the boys played. The sound of the victory dance is echoing through my mind as I write.

Board games also played a role in our family’s ability to know each other. Scrabble was a way we connected with our younger two sons. Our now eighteen-year-old became adept at using words like qi, za, and other random strange words that are in the Scrabble dictionary. He also grew his vocabulary in the process. The whole family enjoys playing Settlers of Catan, an ever changing monopoly style board game. Many Sunday afternoons and evenings were spent bargaining over trades of wool for wheat or brick for ore.

Watch Movies or Shows Together

From the time the kids were little, we would have family movie nights. Often pillow fights erupted as the credits rolled. As the kids got older, we let them choose the movies and watched with them. Hayao Miyazaki became a favorite in the house. At first we weren’t too sure about ones like Spirited Away or Princes Mononoke, but when we actually sat down and watched them, we found a lot of things to discuss with the kids. Castle in the Sky and Howl’s Moving Castle are among my favorite movies.

A year and a half ago, our now nineteen-year-old returned from a year of Rotary Youth Exchange in Finland. She brought back with her a love for anime. She hooked our eighteen-year-old on the genre and our fourteen-year-old. One night last year, our eighteen-year-old asked us to watch some with him. That began our introduction to anime. We’ve enjoyed watching Sword Art Online (SAO), Angel Beats, Anohana, and began watching Rwby. All of these are excellent stories with good discussion points for teens. I would not watch these with younger children. There are some sexual connotations in the beginning episodes of Angel Beats and Anohana, and SAO has violence in it. I’ve found knowing these things has given me the ability to speak with my children’s friends and my students as well.

Read Books Together

This is something parents do with their little ones because it develops reading readiness. We rarely think to read to our teens. However, I’ve enjoyed reading to our family after dinner. When our daughter was away in Finland, we wrote a letter to her in the style of Pendragon writing to Mark and Courtney. It was fun to try to think of ways to tell her news about home in the words of the flumes and territories. This worked because we had been reading the books when she left. Trying to find the right kinds of books to read for the age group will be the issue. Listen to what your kids say. Some of the best books I’ve read have been the ones my kids have said, “Mom, you’ve got to read this.” The Inkheart series would be good for teens and pre-teens, as well as the Dragonback series. You can also explore my pick of books from Children’s Book Week in 2015. Besides reading out loud to your kids, you can choose audio books. These offer a good resource for long car rides.

Have Family Time

Our kids’ love for anime turned into a love for Japan. So, when our friends who are missionaries in Japan came for a visit to the area, we contacted them about having a meal with us. The evening became a highlight of the kids’ year. Our youngest invited three of his friends who love Japan and anime to join us. Our friends brought fun souvenirs, a game of “what are these things?”, and tops for the kids. We learned some Japanese words, and the kids sat around the table talking with adults. Yes, middle school students mingled with adults and a nineteen-year-old for a whole evening.

 

So, as you consider your own kids, think of what things you can do to stay connected to them. Maybe you’ll find books that they enjoy and read them, or you’ll watch anime or some TV show of their choosing. Whatever you do, unplug from the electronic world long enough to do something together. Learn who your kids are and who their friends are. You’ll be glad you did.

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Which Road Will They Take? https://kandijwyatt.com/which-road-will-they-take/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=which-road-will-they-take Sun, 31 May 2015 15:56:34 +0000 https://kandijwyatt.wordpress.com/?p=222 Continue reading →]]> Robin and Dawnya's graduation (3 of 4)

What is it about a graduation that inspires so much emotions? There is the feeling of freedom, excitement, and relief that the students feel. Whereas parents are full of a mix of sadness, pride, and reflection. The fact that everyone can relate makes a graduation ceremony a special time. Young students look forward to the moment when they can toss their cap and be free of school. The graduates themselves are in the midst of the event, and parents and family members remember their own graduation.

Graduates look forward with trepidation and excitement to the new road set before them. They are like the traveler mentioned by Robert Frost in The Road Not Taken:

Two roads diverged in a yellow wood,
And sorry I could not travel both
And be one traveler, long I stood
And looked down one as far as I could
To where it bent in the undergrowth;
They eagerly wonder what will it be like. Will their dreams come true? Where will they be in two, five, ten, even twenty years from now? They long for the freedom that is granted to them when they graduate. They are seen now as an adult–or almost. They get a new set of responsibilities and with it the ability to choose their own way. Which road will they select?
Parents, however, see the accomplishment. They know the work that went into the years of raising these children from baby, to toddler, to elementary age, to teenager. They see the potential stretched out before their child and long for him or her to make the right choices. Parents also realize that a commencement ceremony is in some ways an ending. No longer will their child sit at the dinner table on a regular basis. The late night chats will give way to facebook chats. The struggles of following the family rules will be exchanged for agonizing over how much money to loan them.
So, a graduation is a time of many emotions. The feelings rage war for a day or two and then life goes on. Years later, many may be able to say with Frost:
I shall be telling this with a sigh
Somewhere ages and ages hence:
Two roads diverged in a wood, and I—
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.

My two seniors. The oldest graduated after the younger one.

My first graduate on Saturday, May 30.

My first graduate on Saturday, May 30.

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