Harriet Connor

Author of Big Picture Parents

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Three Reasons Not to Blog

I started this website so that you can find out more about my new book, Big Picture Parents: Ancient Wisdom for Modern Life.

But there are few reasons why I am a very reluctant blogger:

1. I am not a parenting guru

I am a normal, human parent. I am often overwhelmed with fear, guilt, and confusion about my role. To my shame, I regularly yell at my kids and snap at my husband. I feel like my life – my house, my marriage, my kids, my heart – is too messy for social media.

But one of my key messages to modern parents is that we need to accept our human limitations – we are not perfect and we are not ultimately in control. All we can ever hope to be is “good enough”. In my book, I show how we can find freedom from the guilt and fear we experience as humans and as parents.

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The Heart of Marriage (Book Review)

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The Heart of Marriage: Loving Your Spouse with a Christian Mind

by Michael Hill, Aquila Press, Sydney, 2013.

It’s hard to stand firm as a Christian parent in the modern world; often we find ourselves being swept along by the sea of advice that swirls around us, and we lose touch with God’s vision for family life. A few years ago, I found myself being carried along by the idea that you should put your children first in everything. Every aspect of my daily life had begun to revolve entirely around our young sons; anything else was pushed to the periphery . . . including my husband.

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About the Book

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Being a parent in the modern world is tough. We are often overwhelmed with fear about damaging our children, guilt about our imperfections, and confusion about our role. Harriet Connor knows these feelings well. But hers is not just another parenting book full of “shoulds and shouldn’ts” to make you feel worse. Rather, she invites you to step back and consider the bigger picture:

What is the purpose of life and parenthood?

What are our human limitations?

How can we cope with our guilt and fear?

What are our family’s values and how do we pass them on?

What is our family’s structure and place within the wider community?

When she was desperate for answers, Harriet Connor turned to the ancient wisdom of her ancestors – the Bible. She went looking for little pieces of grandmotherly advice, but what she found was a grand vision – a big picture – that made sense of both life and parenthood.

Whether you are new to the Bible or have read it before, you will not regret taking time to reflect on its message, which has given comfort and guidance to generations of parents just like you.

Find out what people are saying about the book here.

For readers in Australia and NZ, the best way to buy a hard copy of my book is from The Wandering Bookseller or Koorong. If you plan to buy multiple copies for a book club or Bible study group, The Wandering Bookseller can offer you a 20% discount.

If you live in the USA, you can order the book here.

If you live in the UK, you can buy a copy here.

For readers in other countries, the cheapest way to buy my book is by emailing your order to the Customer Service department at Wipf and Stock (orders[at]wipfandstock[dot]com).

Big Picture Parents is also available worldwide on Amazon in Kindle and paperback formats.

20 Tips for Parents

The realistic parent’s guide to understanding and shaping your child’s behaviour

by Professor Kim Oates, Finch Publishing, Sydney, 2014.

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When we open up a parenting book, we make ourselves vulnerable. We begin cautiously, fearing that what we read might confirm our suspicions that we are fundamentally inadequate for the high calling of parenthood.

However, when I opened up 20 Tips for Parents, my fears were quickly relieved. Professor Kim Oates understands the pressures on modern parents – he balances advice with reassurance, and high ideals with a healthy dose of realism. Oates speaks with the voice of an experienced paediatrician, applying recent research to real life examples. In his introduction, Oates writes:

“Children need love, clear boundaries, consistent rules, positive stimulation, nurturing and respect for their own feelings. But if you don’t manage to supply these needs 100 per cent of the time, your children won’t be psychologically scarred for life … Early childhood is important, but because they have some resilience, children learn from experiences, bounce back, adapt and forgive.”

Professor Oates begins by addressing common parenting myths. On the one hand, he warns against being too tough on children – being authoritarian without showing love and understanding. But on the other hand, he warns against not being tough enough – being overprotective, overindulgent, and slack with boundaries. Oates encourages parents to find the middle ground.

As the book’s subtitle suggests, the 20 tips which follow are realistic and help parents to achieve a balance between understanding their children and shaping their behaviour. Each chapter is short enough to read in one sitting and the real life examples make it easy to understand. 20 Tips for Parents gives broad principles which could be applied to most family situations.

Oates’ first tip is revolutionary: you only need to be a good-enough parent. While 20 Tips for Parents is not a Christian book, its approach is entirely consistent with our worldview. Christians struggle with perfectionism too; but our imperfections should not come as a shock. Instead of trying to maintain a façade of perfection, we can be honest about our sin and our need for grace. We trust that God has our children’s future in his hands – he can work all things for their good, even our parenting mistakes.

Oates’ second tip also resonates with a Christian worldview: love your children unconditionally. This is the kind of love that God has shown us: “But God demonstrates his own love for us in this: While we were still sinners, Christ died for us.” (Romans 5:8). In Tips 7 and 11, Oates further explains how to love your child and respect their feelings, even when you disapprove of their behaviour. While I generally agreed with what Oates said on this topic, I would have appreciated a more thorough definition of love.

A number of tips focus on understanding your child and their needs. Tips 4, 8, and 9 provide useful information about different developmental stages, from birth to the teenage years, so that parents can set realistic expectations. Tip 6 sets out to inform parents about three common personality types, and how to respond to each. However, I found this classification too simplistic – Oates himself admits that only 65 per cent of children fit into these three categories.

Parenting is not just about understanding your child, but also shaping their behaviour. In Tip 5, Oates describes the ideal parenting style as “authoritative” – balancing kindness with firmness. This sits well with the Bible’s view of parents. “Children, obey your parents in everything” is quickly followed by “Fathers, do not embitter your children” (Colossians 3:20-21). The Bible expects parents to exercise authority, but with sacrificial, Christ-like love.

Tips 15 and 16 bring us to the issue of discipline. Oates begins with an excellent description of discipline – it is not just about punishment, but about guiding our children towards appropriate behaviour by modelling, teaching, encouraging, acknowledging good behaviour, and setting clear and realistic standards.

Oates counts physical punishment as a form of discipline that does not work, and one that has negative long-term effects on children. This conclusion will not please everyone. Some Christians believe that God’s Word requires parents to use physical discipline; others believe that the Bible permits it; while a third group follows the lead of experts such as Professor Oates.

According to Oates, authoritative parents also “let their children go” at the right rate. So tips 13 and 19 discuss how to gradually let children take responsibility for themselves, their emotions, and their problems.

Professor Oates also gives some good advice about the issues of “screen time”, praise, conflict between siblings, and the role of play.

In conclusion, I would highly recommend this book to anyone who is raising children. It gives plenty of useful information and advice, but without making parents feel guilty for their mistakes. Professor Oates gives parents the encouragement and skills they need to find a middle way – to be parents who are kind AND firm.

This article originally appeared on Growing Faith

Contact

Would you like to give me some feedback about Big Picture Parents?

Would you like me to come to your event to speak or run a seminar?

I would love to hear from you! Contact me using the form below:

About

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Welcome to my website!

I am an Australian, a Christian, a linguist, a wife, and a mother. I write about modern parenthood and the Bible. Here’s the story of how that came to be:

I was born in London, but grew up in the leafy suburbs of Sydney, Australia, with my parents and younger sister.

After school, I completed a Bachelor of International Studies, majoring in Spanish and German. This included an unforgettable year of study in Europe. Learning and speaking other languages is still one of my favourite things to do.

Having become a Christian at a young age (independently of my family), I decided to deepen my knowledge of God and the Bible by completing a Master of Divinity at Sydney Missionary and Bible College. During that time I met and married my husband, Daniel.

After college, we moved to the Central Coast of New South Wales, where my husband has had various roles as an Anglican church leader and chaplain. I have been involved in church life – pastoring and teaching – in both a paid and voluntary capacity.

The arrival of our four sons has thrown our lives into a beautiful kind of chaos. It has also confronted us with some searching questions about our life and faith.

In 2013, I was feeling overwhelmed by feelings of fear, guilt, and confusion about my role as a mother. In my desperation, I decided to re-read the whole Bible from start to finish to find out what it had to say to parents like me. I went looking for little pieces of grandmotherly advice, but I found something much greater. I found a grand, timeless vision – a “big picture” – that has made sense of both life and parenthood.

My personal quest eventually gave birth to a book, Big Picture Parents: Ancient Wisdom for Modern Life.

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