Dear family,

May I suggest the following rules for essay-writing????

1- One hour time limit. (5-minutes definitely fits under this time limit)

2- No guilt about not writing

3- When possible, hit the “reply to all” button when replying to an essay

Open for suggestions or additions….

Love, Holly

Link: Mifferules

Authors

Sunday, January 24, 2010

Assertiveness Training

When Oak had been in 1st grade for several months, his teacher sent me a note asking for a special interview. I was surprised and hoped that nothing serious was wrong. It turned out that her concern was how easily Oak broke into tears. She said that he broke into tears when he didn’t know the answer or when he felt confused. She didn’t know why he didn’t feel more comfortable asking for help. It happened often enough, and Oak was old enough, that she felt something was wrong. She assumed that Mike and I were demanding, disapproving parents, and wanted to convince us to be more kind to Oak.

I was not surprised to hear what Oak’s teacher said. I knew that Oak “choked up” easily – when he was frustrated with something new on the piano, when he couldn’t do part of his homework, etc. He’s quiet and doesn’t insist on getting his way. He puts up with bullying and bossing from his older brothers. This is how Danny put it in 2004, when Oak was three: “Mommy, Oak’s not very good at something. He can’t talk me into things. Noah can talk me into things, but Oaky can’t talk me into things very well.”

At the time, I thought this was because Oak was 3 and Danny was 4, but then Mercy came along, and she could definitely get what she wanted at the age of 3. . .especially from Oak. Mike and I started seeing visions of the future - sweet, mumbling Oak, married to a domineering, ungrateful wife - him loving her whole-heartedly all the while. This is how it was with Oak and Mercy.

He has gotten much better at asserting himself in the last year or so. Mercy no longer has unlimited control. His teachers say that he doesn’t cry at school. I had stopped noticing when he gets teary-eyed at home. I’d almost stopped thinking about it at all. . . until our last two Sunday interviews.

Two weeks ago, when we interviewed Oak, we asked him if there was anything he’d like to do differently in his life, and his response was a broken-up, very soft-spoken, “Well, I’ve been thinking about scouts….” It turns out, after some delicate probing, that he’s been feeling very left out for months because we take Danny and Noah to scouts, but we often skip his scouts because it’s at a difficult time of day.

This week, we had a nice interview, mostly one-word answers from Oak, but it felt comfortable. But right when we were about to excuse him, I asked him how his personal scripture study was going, and instantly he was fighting back tears, and said in anguish, “I would kind of like some scriptures of my own, because I don’t have any to read at night.”

All my previous worries about Oak came flooding back. We think it’s sweet, and it is sweet, but Oak has a very hard time communicating what he wants and needs. And when he does communicate what he wants or needs, he is often overcome with strong emotions. It happens every few days. After he left, Mike and I decided to do our next family home evening lesson on assertiveness training. Fortuitously, it was Oak’s turn to give the lesson, so I helped him get it ready while in the car on Monday. Here is how the lesson went:

Definition of Assertiveness: Speaking in a strong and direct way. One way to be assertive is to use “will you” at the beginning of your request.

Two examples given by Oak:

1) Non-assertive: Maybe could you sometime think about taking me to get some, you know, new scriptures?

Assertive: Will you help me get some new scriptures?

2) Non-assertive: I was thinking that you might like to, sometime, think about getting baptized.

Assertive: Will you follow the example of Jesus Christ and be baptized?

Everyone think of two examples: Then we went around the room, and everyone gave two examples of non-assertive/assertive speaking. The two examples were supposed to be in two different situations (home, school, friend’s house, church, etc.)

Mercy (doesn’t get the full picture. . . . ):

Can I have a drink?

May I have a drink, please?

Danny:

(at school) Would you think about letting me go to the bathroom sometime in the next couple of hours, when possible?

May I go to the bathroom?

I’d like to play with a friend sometime if you’d let me.

Will you help me plan a time to play with a friend after school?

Noah:

Please, if possible, somebody pass the water.

Water!

I’d kind of like that back.

Give it back!

Mike:

I feel FRUSTRATED when the living room is so messy!

Will you boys please pick up the living room right now?

Will someone make sure the chart for room three is ready?

Laurie, will you make sure the chart for room three is ready?

Holly:

Why am I the only one working on dinner?

Mercy, will you come help me get dinner ready?

I’m afraid there might be a mistake on my bill. Why don’t you look it over?

Will you please recheck my bill?

Think of the Example of Jesus

The best part of the lesson was when we asked everyone to think of ways that Jesus was assertive. Cleansing the temple. Commanding evil spirits. Telling the apostles to let the children come to him.

Then we all laughed in amazement at the alternative. Imagine Jesus saying, “I was thinking you could follow some of what I say,” instead of, “Come follow me!”

Or, try to picture Jesus saying “try to be kind of better because your Father in Heaven is perfect” instead of “Be ye therefore perfect, even as your Father in Heaven is perfect.” Or, “If you could please do a few nice things for other people, I would like it,” instead of “If you love me, feed my sheep.”

I don’t think this lesson will change everything for Oak. I’m not even sure this is the root of his issue – or if he even has an issue at all. (Although just as I was typing up this paragraph, he came to me, all choked up because he couldn’t find his scout book….) However, this family home evening was meaningful to me. It helped me glimpse the Savior in a new way, and also gave me insight into what it means to be more like him.

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