C is for Character
Pills used in the treatment of ADHD can be helpful, and we have seen
hundreds of lives changed by using stimulant medications such as
Ritalin, or alternative treatments such as Attend.
But pills cannot teach the important skills that are needed to be
successful in life. These skills have to be taught by us, the parents. One
of these skills is the development of our character.
Character involves all of these virtues. It is the living out of these virtues
in daily life by the habits that we form, the choices that we make – hour
by hour, day after day.
We are too occupied with our own whims and fancies, too taken up with
passing things. Rarely do we completely conquer even one vice, and we
are not inflamed with the desire to improve ourselves day by day;
hence we remain cold and indifferent. If we were to uproot even one
vice each year, we should soon become perfect. The contrary, however,
is often the case…
- Thomas a Kempis, c. 1500 AD.
The challenges of life don’t shape our character nearly as much as they
reveal it. They clarify and bring to light what we have tried to keep
private about ourselves – both the good and the bad of our natures.
Life’s challenges give us the opportunity to pause and take that moral
inventory. Then we can either take responsibility for our short-comings,
and work to improve ourselves, or we can blame others for our problems
and thereby avoid the need to ever work hard or to improve.
There are very few things about ourselves that we can actually choose.
We cannot choose our size or hair color. We cannot choose our parents,
or our native language. But one thing that we can choose is the quality
of our character.
Teaching our children these values, skills, and world-view takes time,
perhaps an enormous amount of time. It is a big investment. This is
where the “quality time” movement of the 1980s broke down and
created problems in families. Parents cannot successfully teach values,
skills, and proper world-view without an investment of “quantity time.”
Fifteen minutes of “quality time” is no substitute for four hours of
quantity time. Each of us as parents have to make the important
decisions in how we will spend each hour of our days, which reveals a
lot about our own character.
It takes time to build better relationships with your children and
teenagers, and quantity time invested is the key to having a more
successful family.
Losing is easy, and anyone can do it. But doing the hard work that it
takes to win, working both in season and in the off-season, every day,
being diligent and self-controlled, forming the habits that are necessary
to win, this is the classroom that teaches the great life-lessons of sport.
This is the classroom that molds character. But we have to choose
whether or not we will submit to the teacher and pay the price of
success.
The wise King Solomon lived over 2,500 years ago. He had 700 wives
and princesses, and 300 concubines in his harem, and who knows how
many children. He was wealthy and considered the wisest man of his
time, as well as an excellent businessman and ruler.
Being a king, and having all those children, it was in his best interest to
write down a training manual in “wisdom.” After all, he needed to train
his children to become leaders in the nation, from governors to bankers,
investment brokers to military officers. So he put together the classic
collection of wisdom that we now call “The Book of Proverbs.”
The Proverbs are not very religious at all, at least not in the way that we
usually think about religion. They are mostly secular in that they focus
on the principles of health, managing and earning money, integrity,
honor and honesty, making wise choices, and how to acquire further
wisdom. It teaches the fundamental principles of having a successful life
as an adult. It is sort of the “high school diploma” in wisdom.
Just spend ten minutes in Proverbs every day, discussing one important
concept from that one chapter that you are looking at on that day. Over
a period of time, as your child grows into a teenager, he or she will gain
in wisdom and understanding beyond that of their peers.
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