Bob: This is FamilyLife Today for Tuesday, October 13th. Our host is the president of FamilyLife, Dennis Rainey, and I am Bob Lepine. What can we do as parents to exalt a noble picture of authentic, biblical manhood for our sons? We are going to talk about that today.
And welcome to FamilyLife Today. Thanks for joining us! You hear what we are talking this week; this whole idea of boys being boys. You start to get a picture of boys growing up to be real men. It gets pretty exciting!
Dennis: It is!
Bob: Man! If that would happen… we could see some good things happen in the culture.
Dennis: I look back on my childhood after interacting with today’s guest, a little bit, and I think, “What a wise mother I had and what a great dad!” You know, those are incredible gifts to a boy.
Dr. Meeker: Huge gifts!
Dennis: Because a boy needs both! Now I know a lot of our listeners who are listening right now are in single parent families. They don’t have the privilege of both. But, there are things that can be done to help a boy grow up to become a man.
Bob: But, when you do have both, what you are saying is…….?
Dennis: It is powerful!
Bob: A boy can learn what it means to be all that God made him to be.
Dennis: No doubt about it! Dr. Meg Meeker joins us again on FamilyLife Today. She believes the same way. Meg welcome back!
Dr. Meeker: Thank you Dennis!
Dennis: Meg is a mom of four, she is a pediatrician, an author of six books, she has appeared on 60 Minutes – Dateline with Katie Curric, The Today Show, and even appeared on the O’Reilly Factor. …… And her eyes rolled back in her head on that one.
Dr. Meeker: You didn’t see that!
Dennis: She has written a book called, Boys Should be Boys – Seven Secrets to Raising Healthy Sons. I want to focus today on what a father needs to make sure he is doing, engaging, practicing and building into his son. Because you and I and Bob all agree on the same thing here; Fathers are indispensible if we are going to see boys become men. Right?
Dr. Meeker: Yes! Absolutely! Another thing I talk about in the book is virtues. We talk about virtues for girls, but we don’t talk about virtues for boys. Oh no! Virtues have sort of been feminized. Those are for girls, and those are for moms and those are particularly for Christian girls and Christian moms. Virtues help us live and this is something I feel very strongly that fathers should teach their sons.
You know, it is interesting if you look at teen boy behavior with mothers I see a number of teen boys with single mothers and the boys are out of control and often will get violent with their mothers. This can be a real problem! Boys don’t become violent with their mothers when dad is in the home. It is almost as sort of a muscle type of a thing. Big ‘T’ needs to hit little ‘T,’ and little ‘T’ needs to bang up against big ‘T’ - Dad, in order for him to realize this is what I can and cannot do. That is something that dad can teach that mom has a much harder time teaching.
Really when you think about virtues, that is really self control and it is so very important. Dad can teach it with a power and authority that mom can’t. However, granddad can teach it! A pastor can teach it! If mom has no good man that she can point to, to steer her son toward, you can read about good men in literature and paint a picture for your son.
Dennis: As you were talking about that, I was thinking about the number of times I came home when we had teenage sons to find mom, my wife, Barbara, wrapped up in a corner, tied up emotionally.
Dr. Meeker: Right!
Dennis: Do you know what I am talking about?
Dr. Meeker: I know it! I am a mother and I have a 17 year old, six foot 3” son. Yes!
Dennis: I honestly think that mothers have the most difficulty with sons because they outgrow them. You’re looking up at him, he is no longer your sweet little boy; he is becoming something that is kind of foreign to you as a mom and yet, my sons, at points needed me as a dad to step in to their lives put my arm around them with a grin on my face and say, “You will not treat your mom that way!”
Dr. Meeker: Exactly!
Dennis: “You’re not going to get away with it! Because, behind your mom, stands me!”
Dr. Meeker: Exactly!
Dennis: I love you enough not to let you get away with it.
Dr. Meeker: I will say that feels so good to a boy. That feels so good, for a man to look at a boy and say, “Stop it!” How many adult men do we have out of control because nobody ever came along to say, “Stop behaving this way! You can’t do that! ”
You know there are a lot of 50 – 60 year old adolescent men running around out there just out of control and they are miserable, because self-control has to be taught by someone that we admire and respect and who has authority to us.
Bob: Meg, talk about the transition that you have made as a parent from the first ten years of your son’s life, when you were primary and building into him and then you have talked about how he pushed away at a certain point. What have you had to consciously do as a mom and how has your husband stepped in and engaged in the process of raising him over the last seven years?
Dr. Meeker: Oh! Now this hurts! This hurts! You’re hitting home! You really put me to it!
Dennis: You’re forcing her to relive some painful moments.
Dr. Meeker: It is painful!
Dennis: We are laughing about this, but this is one of the tough things for moms. And some moms don’t make the turn.
Dr. Meeker: Yes! Exactly!
Dennis: Because they can’t let this happen.
Dr. Meeker: Exactly! Here is the key! And here was the key for me! I encourage dads when their daughters do this too. I was very close with our son until he was about ten or eleven. People would, kind of, joke about it. He was attached to my hip. He would like to go to the grocery store with me. I loved being with him!
And then as he matures and his body starts to change, and he is feeling uncomfortable around me and that first time you go to hug him and he bristles and pushes away and says, “Oh no!”, your heart breaks.
It gets worse, and worse, and worse, because he doesn’t want to talk, and then he just ‘grunts’ and you ask him questions and he doesn’t hear you, so you take him to an Audiologist. I think the thing that really helped me was to understand I couldn’t take him personally. That what was happening in him and his tearing away from me was extremely important and he was wired to do that. God designed him to do that; it didn’t have to do with me.
It wasn’t because I parented him poorly or because I was saying the wrong thing or because I was hugging him at the wrong time. It was what was meant go on inside of him and I wasn’t privy to it. So, I had to back away and say to his dad, Okay, as much as this pains me, you’re on! And I am off!
Of course I still pack his favorite meals and I pack his lunch even though he can. I do a lot of things I probably shouldn’t do to kind of spoil him. He is the baby in our family, but I really respect his masculinity! I am not part of that development right now! I had to reconcile that with myself. It is something that is very personal between him and his dad. I have to honor that and back away!
Dennis: I want to ask you to unpack how you communicate respect for his masculinity as a 17 – 18 year old boy, because that takes some wisdom and maturity.
Bob: That is a pivotal question, because you are going, “Now wait a second, I am still the mom, if there is respect flowing here it should flow from you to me.” So for a mom to think about respecting her son feels somewhat foreign and unparental.
Dr. Meeker: I feel it easy to respect my son and communicate that to him because I am his ally and the culture is his enemy. His dad and I and he are on the same team. So, when he goes off to prom as he did a couple of weekends ago I sit down and talk with him about how he should behave towards his date. That I fully expect him not to get drunk and not to leave prom and go have sex, because everybody else expects that, but I know he is bigger and stronger and he is wiser.
So, I talk up to him. That is what we need to do to our boys, because part of masculinity is respecting their sense of authority and imparting a sense of authority to them as a man. You are a man now!
Bob: You are calling that out of him, aren’t you?
Dr. Meeker: Yes! I am calling it out of him! As a woman I am saying I fully believe in your manhood, your masculinity, your ability to behave tonight and I will see you at one in the morning when you get home, because you are not going to some girl’s for a sleepover like everybody else in your class.
And then another part of it is speaking respectfully to my husband, who is pretty easy to respect. He is a good man! I think that confers a healthy sense of masculinity on my 17 year old son.
Bob: You are saying how you relate to your husband is a part of how you train your son to be a man?
Dr. Meeker: Exactly! How I show respect for my husband says that I respect masculinity which is very different than me because I am not masculine, I am feminine. That confers respect on my almost adult son.
Dennis: You said something else that I want to make sure we don’t want to run past.
You said that you and your husband are together.
Dr. Meeker: Yes!
Dennis: You are in agreement?
Dr. Meeker: Yes!
Dennis: You have got a game plan that, where you are headed as you raise your son?
Dr. Meeker: Yes!
Dennis: That is very important as well!
Dr. Meeker: Yes! Very much so! We are on the same page as far as our rules and expectations of our kids. Our expectations didn’t shift from girls to boys. We have 3 older girls and our son and they are the same. We expect excellent behavior and good character! Not necessarily performance based, you know, athletics and that kind of thing. But, we expect good solid character from all of our kids, and it works.
Bob: You talk about this issue of character and I think as we continue to unpack it I am just thinking of a boys being called to things like courage and bravery and noble strength. There is a lot of what we would think of as masculine character qualities. Not that girls shouldn’t be courageous or brave or noble; I am not saying that, but there is something about calling young men to a picture of nobility and manhood in their character that I think will resonate in the heart in the 16 and 17 year old boy.
Dr. Meeker: It absolutely does! I even go a little bolder in the book, and I talk about that the power that a man has, that a young man has that’s good. I think that we approach the power we see in boys and we put it down. We constantly put men down and we constantly put boys down.
But I tell boys that you have enormous emotional power, mental and intellectual power, sexual power, and I think that it can be very frightening for boys. But, if we say, “No, you don’t need to be afraid of it, let’s use it because it is who you are and it is part of your masculine package. Be proud of it! And now constrain it!” There’s where you help a boy start to feel noble, start to feel courageous, and start to feel meek. That’s when you see boys start to excel.
Dennis: You say in your book, that it takes a man to raise a man. Now I want you to reflect on your husband for a second. What does he reflect to your son?
Dr. Meeker: You guys just don’t let up do you? My husband reflects a lot to my son. My husband is a man of few words, but he is a man of tremendous amount of action. He doesn’t talk about prayer, he prays! The kids catch him praying. My son has caught him praying at midnight. My husband is extremely respectful to me. My kids pick up on that. That makes them feel more valuable. He has really exercised self-control to my son a lot. And my son really mimics a lot of my husband’s behavior.
When my son was probably nine he started opening the door for me and for his sisters, without even thinking. I never heard my husband say that is what you are to do, but that’s what you do. My husband is a very, very humble man. A tremendous amount of humility and honors others above himself all the time. I’ve never heard him say that to our kids but they do it. You can tell who the talker is in our family and it isn’t him! That is one of the great things that dads do that women don’t, is that you talk less. And kids like it that you talk less!
Dennis: There is less lessons coming from dad?
Dr. Meeker: Less! We mothers lecture all the time! Dads just do it! My daughters will tell me that. We feel like we need to jump in and correct all the time. So that is a strength that my husband does so when he is just doing it I try not to jump in and lecture. I let him show the kids how to do it.
Dennis: Underline the word, “try.”
Dr. Meeker: That’s right, “try.”
Dennis: I have been in some of those situations even as a dad, where I wanted to be able to lecture as well, but what I hear you saying is the character of a man, determines the man and so as a father who you are is constantly speaking to your children. They are like little radar units that lock on you, especially the boys. They lock on their dad and they go, “this is how you do life.”
Dr. Meeker: Do we have time for one little story?
Dennis: Sure.
Dr. Meeker: How my husband taught my son how to serve and do ministry. We run a soup kitchen in our town. Many years ago, my son was about eight, and he was driving home from somewhere, I think they had picked up some Chinese food, and my husband pulled his truck into a parking lot.
My son said, “What are you doing, dad?” And he jumped out of the car and he saw an elderly man, a homeless man, rummaging through a garbage can. My husband took all of our Chinese food and he showed it to the man and he said, “What would you like, what do you need?” And the man picked a few things and he jumped back in the car and came home and when I went to serve the take-out Chinese-food, I was upset because my eggrolls were missing. I got very upset and I said, “You forgot the eggrolls! I can’t believe it!” I sent him off to do this, I should have done it myself and I would have gotten my eggrolls.” And my son looked at me
Dennis: Barbara likes eggrolls.
Dr. Meeker: Have you heard it?
Dennis: I am sorry.
Dr. Meeker: You know, I really was and I was blaming this man …
Dennis: Sure!
Dr. Meeker: …and I was just ready to let it rip!
Dennis: Sure!
Dr. Meeker: We do that pretty well too. And my son spoke up and said, “Mom, dad gave your eggrolls away.” I said, “What do you talking about? He gave my eggrolls away?” He said, “Dad didn’t say anything, but there was a man in the park and he was rummaging through the trash can and dad just asked him to take whatever he wanted. And he wanted those eggrolls.” Now, how large do you think I felt standing in my kitchen?
Bob: Little bitty!
Dr. Meeker: Little, little, little, little bitty person. My husband never told me. He didn’t come home and say, “Oh honey, I had to give your eggrolls away, because there was a man who needed them more than you.” He didn’t say a word. He just pulled the car over and offered the man all of the food. He did that kind of stuff routinely.
He took the girls to South America and he ministered to the people who didn’t have shoes and they didn’t have health care and he just brought them along as he brought the medicine. And he gave them coats and he loved them. That is who my son is. While I write the books on how to raise boys, my husband really does it.
Dennis: I am listening to the story, Bob, and I am thinking he makes house calls, he takes his daughters to South America, I mean…
Bob: Runs a soup kitchen. Does he wear a cape, too?
Dr. Meeker: You are talking to the wrong person here. He doesn’t, but I will tell you, his dad did the same thing. His dad was a small town GP who drove around town with a trunk full of Bibles.
Dennis: Your husband gives away Bibles today, too?
Dr. Meeker: He gives away Bibles too, with his dad’s name stamped in the front. And this is the way he honors his dad is he gives away Bibles. Whatever money we have, you know have some extra cash at the end of a month, he buys more Bibles. His dad used to go to prisons and he would just do this. He was very, very quiet man and my husband does the same thing.
Interestingly, after his dad died, I saw my husband become so much more like his dad. And I adored his dad. I hope and pray that my son, now will become more like my husband is. He is a great man! I don’t want to sound ‘PollyAnn-ish’, he makes a lot of mistakes and he drives me crazy.
Dennis: Could you just give us one? You made him sound so perfect here.
Dr. Meeker: I got on this band wagon that many of us women,…..
Bob: The fix-your-husband-bandwagon?
Dr. Meeker: The fix-your-husband-bandwagon! You are never home, you are never attending my needs, you are just working all the time, and I can’t stand it and why don’t you be here for me?
Dennis: I am glad you mentioned that because, Bob and I have designed a fix-your-husband-kit. That we are offering at the end of today’s broadcast.
Bob: We have?
Dennis: No, I’m kidding! This is a universal need!
Dr. Meeker: Yes!
Bob: This is wives who are always trying to fix the man in their life. But you came to the point where you said, “I have got to give up this quest.”
Dr. Meeker: But only after 15 or 18 years. I have been married 28. The first 10 I figured out what needed to be fixed, and the second 10 I tried to fix it, and then I just gave up. But I really think as women, what we do, and I think our culture feeds into this, we look at our husband and go, “Okay, I need you to do this and I need you to do that, and I need you to fill all this need, and, Oh-by-the-way, I want a really nice house and two cars and all this kind of stuff, too!”
It really hit me hard several years ago, I was talking to a family member with four children in her home and her husband works extremely hard. She was complaining about how he was never home and he never cooked, and he didn’t ever think….
I said, “Stop! How can you expect him to attend to those needs when he’s providing all of this for you? Your kids need to see that his provision is a noble thing and it is a good thing, and by you constantly criticizing it, you are tearing him down in your kid’s eyes. Stop it! I have caught myself on that. Stop criticizing all that stupid little stuff in him! He is a good enough man! No! He is not home enough!
Bob: He’s not perfect!
Dr. Meeker: He’s not perfect! Sometimes I wish he were more protective of the girls and that kind of thing, because he believes they can do anything and everything and at anytime. Sometimes it drives me a little bit crazy,
Dennis: But you had a father like that!
Dr. Meeker: Yes! I did!
Dennis: I mean, he expected a lot of you and had high standards for you. That’s a part of why you are doing what you are doing today.
Dr. Meeker: Exactly!
Dennis: We will find out about that story a little later, but I have an assignment for you before we are done here, I want you to speak to the moms about the single best piece of advice of raising sons for moms and the same thing for father’s raising boys. I want you to wrap things up in just a moment with that.
Bob: And while you pull your thoughts together on that I am going to let listeners know how they can get a copy of your book, Boys Should be Boys. And for those dads who have daughters, a copy of your book, Strong Fathers, Strong Daughters.
These books by Dr. Meg Meeker ought to be in every parent’s library. These are really outstanding volumes, helpful resources as parents to raise boys to become young men and daughters to become, young women who have a healthy sense of their femininity. We are going to talk more about that subject this week with Meg Meeker.
But, in the meantime, go online at FamilyLifeToday.com, get a copy of either or both of Dr. Meeker’s books and if you do order both books, we will send along at no additional costs, the CD’s of the conversations we are having this week.
Again, our web site is FamilyLifeToday.com, or call us, toll-free, 1-800-FL_TODAY, 1-800-358-6329. That’s 1-800 F as in “family” L as in “life” and then the word TODAY. When you get in touch with us just let us know what you are interested in and someone on our team will make arrangements to have it sent to you.
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We very much appreciate your partnership with us this month, if you are able to support this ministry with a donation of any amount; we have a ‘thank you gift we’d like to send you.
It is two CD’s that feature a conversation we had not long ago with our friend Dr. Tim Kimmel. Tim has written a book called, Grace-Based Parenting. We talked with him about an approach to parenting that reflects or mirrors the way God parents us. We’d love to send you those CD’s as our way of saying ‘Thank You’ again when you make a donation for any amount this month for the ministry of FamilyLife Today.
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Dennis: We have talked today with Dr. Meg Meeker about her book, all about raising boys and helping them grow up to become men. And I kind of, threw the gauntlet down to the doctor,
Bob: Boil it all down into one thing, right?
Dennis: Boil it down to a piece of advice for moms. I am actually thinking of my daughter, Ashley, who has 5 sons. Okay? And I am thinking of her husband, who obviously has the 5 sons as well. What is the single best piece of advice to moms and dads as they raise boys, today?
Dr. Meeker: I would have to say for mothers to respect and honor the men in their lives…. Their Dad! Respect and honor their dad and your boys will turn out well.
I will say for fathers who are raising sons, that just when you feel like pulling away, during those teen years, move in. Because he needs you during the teen years more than ever, he needs to watch you. So, let him watch you be a good man and he will be a good man.
Bob: FamilyLife Today is a production of FamilyLife of Little Rock, Arkansas. Help for today. Hope for tomorrow!
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