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Parenting on the Same Page: Magical or Mythical?

Author
Ben Pugh
Published
Thu 24 Jun 2021
Episode Link
None

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The Myth of Parenting on The Same Page 

The myth of parenting on the same page is that it will "fix" all of your problems in your relationship and with your teens. 

The myth is that when you parent on the same page, you will magically agree with everything that your spouse does. Or even better yet, they will magically agree with everything that you do. 

The Problem with "Same Page" Parenting

I have many problems with same page parenting. 

I've seen spouses manipulate each other in name of "Parenting on the Same Page." I've seen one parent try to control, change, or fix the other parent, convinced that they are the whole problem. 

Oftentimes parents will both abandon their values and inner strengths in an effort to meet in the middle somewhere. Now you've got two parents parenting out of alignment with their personal values and strengths. 

When parents try to parent on the same page, one or both often begin to see themselves as a victim in the relationship, at the mercy of the other. 

Why It's Important to Parent on the Same Team, Not on the Same Page

By now I'm sure you've noticed that I love sports analogies. They make sense in my brain. 

Look at your parenting relationship with your spouse as being on a team. 

On teams, there are different members of the same team who have different strengths, skills, and values. 

When you parent from the mentality of being on the same team, you empower the other parent to embrace their values, strengths, and skills to be the best that they can be. 

You allow them to be them. 

You trust that what they bring to the team is exactly what is needed. You notice and appreciate what they bring to the table. 

How Parent on the Same Team (even when you're NOT on the same page)

  1. Define Your Own Values
    • If you're like most parents, you've never taken the time to define your own values. 
    • DO IT!
    • This will help you know what is truly important to you.
    • Look to your current reality and results. 
      • Some values you may want to ditch.
      • Some values you will want to double down on.
  2. Define Your Own Role and Purpose
    • It's no one's job but your own to tell you what your job is as a parent.
    • Clearly define who you want to be as a parent. 
    • This will help guide you in tough parenting moments. 
  3. Explore Your Own Strengths and Skills
    • Believe it or not you have strengths and skills that no one else has!
    • You are uniquely equipped to help your teen in ways that no one else can. 
    • Know your strengths and play to them. 
    • Develop and hone your skills as a parent. 
  4. Seek to Understand and Appreciate Your Spouse as They Are
    • Your spouse has their own values.
    • They have their own role and purpose.
    • They have their own strengths and skills. 
    • Appreciate that they bring things to the table that you simply can't do. 
  5. Find Ways to Be on THEIR Team!
    • You don't have to be the team captain. 
    • It's usually easier to join their team than to get them to join yours.
    • Find ways to support them and make them look good!
    • Protect them. 
    • Help them t

Are You Caught in the Parent Trap?

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https://benpughcoaching.com/parenttrapquiz




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