Just the other night at bedtime our nearly four-year-old son told me his favorite part of the day was when his mom threw a dirty diaper and hit me in the face. He said, “Dad, it really made me laugh.”
Getting our kids ready for bed, Christi and I got into a little battle with our daughter’s diaper. Before you judge us, it wasn’t a number two, and yes, it was wrapped. It ended in the playroom with me covering my head in fear of it actually coming unwrapped. The laughter filled our house.
To be fair, many nights are not like this. If you were to walk into our home during the bath / bedtime routine, you’d likely hear more frustrated end-of-the-day nagging than laughing. If you’re a parent, I’m sure you understand. Especially right now.
School is back. So is football. Soccer. Field hockey. Homework. Practices. Concerts. Performances. Church programs. More practices. Even more homework. Oh yeah, and stress. Lots of stress.
So much stress that you may even be growing a bit angry right now—either at me for posing this irresponsible idea of having more fun, or at yourself for still reading the blog. I get it.
One—if not both of you—works outside the home. If the other is home with preschool or homeschooled kids, your work is uncompromising. Once you’re all finally at home together at the end of the day…oh wait, there’s homework. And dinner. Do we have to feed the kids again?
Friends, the daily grind is real. But doggone it; lying in bed with my son the other night reminded me that if we’re not laughing, we’re not living. We need to laugh more. Our kids need to us laugh more.
Here are three reasons why.
1. We’re teaching our kids how to manage stress
Though it’s rarely discussed in parenting circles, one research study found that the second most effective parenting strategy behind love and affection was how we—parents—manage our stress. And by the way, behavior management (i.e. time-outs, etc.) was found to be a “poor predictor of good outcomes with children,” turning up seventh on that list.
In other words, the quality of our relationship with our kids, and how happy and healthy they become, begins not by how well we reward positive behaviors or use time-outs, but by how well we control ourselves.
Please don’t misunderstand me when I say this. Our child’s behavior matters. But I’m willing to guess there are more parents who, just like me, need to stop worrying so much about our child’s behavior, and start focusing on our own. Stressed parents raise stressed children.
As Landon reminded me the other night, they’re watching us.
2. We’re teaching our kids how to relate well
As soon as Landon told me his favorite part of the day involved Christi and I chasing each other through the house with a soiled diaper, I went and got her so she could come hear it too. We sat on his bed together and legit belly-laughed.
I write often about the power of the marital relationship on our kids. Turns out, how well we get along with the other parent is the third most effective parenting practice. Yet, of the ten practices studied, it ranked eighth in parents’ list of actual abilities. How parents manage stress ranked dead last.
If how we manage stress and treat our spouse have more influence on our kids’ outcomes than even their education, behavior management, life skills, and safety then perhaps it’s time we prioritize ourselves as parents. Prioritizing our kids over our marriage will wreak havoc on both.
Christi and I go on a date every week. Sometimes, we have to be super creative to make it happen. But it’s when we don’t that we’re tempted to use the wet diaper more as a weapon than a toy.
As our mentors Dave and Claudia Arp tell us, “Your kids will wait while you grab a few moments to work on your marriage; but your marriage won’t wait until your kids grow up.”
3. We’re teaching our kids what really matters
Picture yourself sitting around the dinner table 25-30 years from now with your kids’ family, your grandchildren begging for stories. What we won’t hear from our own kids is how well we kept the kitchen clean. How we successfully had them in bed by 7:30 pm every night. How we taught them to never splash the water out of the bathtub. In fact, I don’t even think they’re going to mention the 105% they got on the spelling test.
Instead, we’ll hear about the moments that brought laughter. Mom and Dad’s diaper fight through the house. The time the whole family got caught out on a walk and decided to just dance in the rain. The time we stayed up past bedtime to play games as a family. The camping trip. The pancake dates. The leaf piles in the fall.
Jesus said, “Do not be anxious about your life…which of you by being anxious can add a single hour to his life?”
And if I may, parents, “Which of you by being anxious can add more joy to the moments he shares with his kids?”
Let’s worry less and laugh more.
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