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Wednesday, February 25, 2009
portals of the heart
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When your teen wants to talk to someone will it be you? If not
you, who, a friend, a school counselor, me, someone on MySpace or Face Book? My
hope it is always you and I want to give you a couple of clues on how to listen
to what I like to call open portals of the heart you can squeeze through to
peer and have a voice into your teens heart.
How many times have you asked your teen “how’d it go” or “what’s
going on”, and you receive a trite answer of “I dunno” “whatever” “nothing”. So
many you can’t count right, I get the same answers all the time. You need to
watch and listen for the clues that they are ready and want to talk to you. Most
of the time the clues are statements like “do you think I am pretty, what do
you think I am good at, did you like how I …, how about when I …, what did you
do when you were a teen…, what kind of friends did you have…, did you ever try
drugs or drinking, who was the first guy you had a crush on…???????? As soon as
your teen asks a question about them selves, or you, you are in. At that moment
you need to carefully squeeze through the portal too your teens heart. It will
not be easy at first, but as you navigate your way through, the payoff will be
huge. Your teen will begin to trust you. We have to be so careful not to give a
short or long answer. Ask lots of questions and stay interested, and try not to
use the time to teach. But rather guide the conversations.
About the clues, those statements will come at some of the
most inopportune times, like late at night, after a long day at work, or on a
quick drive to the store and when it happens you have to be ready in that
moment, not wait till tomorrow, because you will have lost the opportunity.
Be ready in and out of season, listen to the clues, and own their
hearts. Love you all. _pastor tim
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Wednesday, February 04, 2009
YouTube
I found this article.
We risk a lot when we give our kids an Internet connection. In
my own home, I treat every media type with great responsibility, because I know
the power it has to influence my son and two daughters. But the Internet is a
special case because in an instant, our kids can take it anywhere—from the most
innocent children’s game to the most vile adult content.
That’s why
YouTube is especially dangerous. It’s incredibly popular, and it bridges the gap
between innocent and insidious, making it so easy for pure intentions to wander
into temptations and sin.
A new study by the Parent’s Television Council
proved just that. It found that explicit content is many times only one click
away from children. Even sample searches on YouTube for child-friendly topics
like “Miley Cyrus” led to offensive content, and many blatantly pornographic
videos did not require any form of age verification.
In other words,
your kids can—and probably already have—gone on YouTube to watch a perfectly
innocent video, and without even trying, they were exposed to much more than you
wanted them to see.
We cannot be stand-offish about what our kids
are doing online. It is a cultural battleground and we too often let them wander
right into the middle of it!
Here are a few steps you can take to
protect your teens:
- Talk with your teens about the dangers of the Internet.
- Teach them to “run at first glance” if they ever come across something
questionable, even if they weren’t looking for it.
- Keep computers in open, public places, like the living room. This is the
easiest and best way to protect your entire family because it keeps everyone
accountable.
- Use an internet filtering service like Net
Nanny.
- Build open relationships with your teens by spending quality time with them
every day.
- If you’re a youth pastor or work with students, take time to talk with them
about the risks of YouTube and other websites.
Thank you for caring
enough to learn about the critical issues facing this generation today. And
please pray with me for God’s protection and blessing over our young people and
children. Love you all _pastor tim
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