Raising Positive Kids in a Negative World
By Zig Ziglar
4.5/5
()
Parenting
Positive Thinking
Personal Growth
Child Development
Family
Coming of Age
Parental Guidance
Power of Love
Overcoming Obstacles
Learning From Mistakes
Forbidden Love
Wise Mentor
Spiritual Journey
Absent Parent
Power of Forgiveness
Education
Love
Faith
Self-Improvement
Responsibility
About this ebook
Raising positive, drug-free kids in a negative world is not easy, but in the long run it's easier than raising negative ones. Now, the bestselling motivational author reveals his simple prescription for success with children, step by positive step.
Drawing on the most comprehensive measurable results ever made available to an author – his "I CAN" course, taught in more than five thousand schools with more than three million participants – and his own successes and failures as a parent, Zig Ziglar offers sensible guidelines on:
- Praise and encouragement: Children can hardly have too much of the right kinds. Look for the good in your children and you will find it.
- Drugs: The latest statistics and a winning approach to teaching kids to say no, starting with cigarettes.
- Time: Quality time is not enough. Kids need a lot of time with parents (and virtually none with TV).
- Discipline: The loving parent will not shirk it.
- Sex and romance: Be frank, be firm, be realistic.
And much more, in a book that is both refreshingly old-fashioned and startlingly new.
Zig Ziglar
Zig Ziglar was one of the most sought-after motivational speakers in the United States, and his messages offer humor, hope and enthusiasm for audiences around the world. Many of the books he authored have become worldwide bestsellers.
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Raising Positive Kids in a Negative World - Zig Ziglar
RAISING POSITIVE KIDS IN A NEGATIVE WORLD
© 1985 by Zig Ziglar
Revised edition published in 2002.
All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, scanning, or other—except for brief quotations in critical reviews or articles, without the prior written permission of the publisher.
Published in Nashville, Tennessee, by Thomas Nelson. Thomas Nelson is a registered trademark of Thomas Nelson, Inc.
Thomas Nelson, Inc. titles may be purchased in bulk for educational, business, fund-raising, or sales promotional use. For information, please e-mail [email protected].
Scripture quotations are from The New King James Version. © 1979, 1980, 1982, 1990, 1994 by Thomas Nelson, Inc.
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 96-96657
ISBN 978-0-7852-6478-1
Printed in the United States of America
08 09 10 11 12 QW 12 11 10 9 8
DEDICATION
To the four most positive kids I’ve ever known:
JEAN SUZANNE ZIGLAR WITMEYER
CINDY ANN ZIGLAR OATES
JULIE ANN ZIGLAR NORMAN
JOHN THOMAS ZIGLAR
CONTENTS
Preface
Introduction
1. Raising Positive Kids Is Simple—But Not Easy
2. We’ve Got Problems
3. Qualities of the Truly Successful
4. Motivation and Positive Thinking
5. Positive Steps to Developing Positive Kids
6. The Tridimensional Child
7. For a Child, Love Is Spelled T–I–M–E
8. Raising Positive Kids Is a Team Effort
9. Communicating with Family Members
10. Building a Healthy Self-Image
11. Sex
12. Sex Abuse and Harassment
13. Forgiveness—The Ultimate Positive
in Life
14. Discipline—The Key to a Positive Kid’s Greatness
15. Positive Persistence Produces Positive Kids
16. Real Love
Epilogue
Acknowledgments
Notes
About the Author
PREFACE
The story is told that in the days of yesteryear a bitter farmer, whose beautiful wheat crop had just been completely destroyed by a hailstorm, lamented that if he could just control the weather for one year, he would raise such a big crop and make so much money he could retire. If God would just grant him the power to let the sun shine when he wanted it, let the snow fall at the appropriate time, let him completely control the rainfall, the dew, the frost, and the temperature, he would have the bumper crop of all time.
As you probably already suspect, the wish was granted, and the farmer was given the privilege of letting that rain fall when and where and at the rate he wanted it to fall. He was given complete control of the snow, the temperature, and the spring thaw. He was given the privilege of turning the sun on and off at his pleasure and setting it at exactly the temperature he wanted. Result: a total disaster. The worst crop the man ever had. When it was all over, a neighbor asked what happened, and the farmer said, I forgot to let the wind blow.
(For the uninitiated, that means no cross-pollination.)
In a way, that’s an ideal lead-in for Raising Positive Kids in a Negative World. I believe it is possible, with all the information we have at our disposal, to have every answer to every question, to know exactly what to do under all circumstances, and still end up with a crop failure
as far as our children are concerned. The reason is very simple: Children are human beings and not crops or computers.
However, despite the apparent gloom of the opening story, let me hasten to add that I’m convinced there are definite steps we can take to put the odds in our favor. The more solid, sensible, common-sense, loving steps we take, the greater the chances of helping our children become the kind of children we want them to be and wish we had been when we were growing up.
For those of you who know me already, you are aware that I am an optimist. My choice to be positive and optimistic is not made blindly or irrationally. It’s my belief that the very creative center of all nature and all life is positive, optimistic, and hopeful. That’s why I’m truly an optimist when it comes to our kids, because they are our only hope for America’s future, just as we, the parents, are their only hope for their present and immediate future. Unfortunately, too many parents still haven’t learned that an optimistic outlook on life is a result of a choice we all must make. We choose our basic attitudes about life and in the process help choose our children’s attitudes. I’m convinced that the best and maybe the only way to raise positive kids is to start by becoming a positive parent. For that reason, I will devote a substantial part of this book to showing you, the parent, how to become a winner
in life.
YOUR UNASKED QUESTIONS
In answer to your unasked questions, no, my wife and I did not do all the things I’m suggesting when we were raising our three daughters and our son. (Anyone can tell it like it is. I want to tell it like it should be.) We did follow most of the principles mentioned in this book and were, we feel, successful in raising four happy, healthy, productive, well-adjusted, morally sound, positive kids. If I did not firmly believe the validity of that last statement, you can rest assured this book would never have been written—at least, not by me.
INTRODUCTION
When the proud new mama and daddy hold their seven-pound bundle of joy in their arms, it’s difficult to imagine that someday that little package of helplessness could be a six-foot, two-hundred-pounder or a five-foot beauty who will make major contributions to the world.
Positive parents, however, have the capacity to see the future,
to use their imaginations, to visualize that baby growing up to be a successful, creative, positive adult. Just as Michelangelo saw the mighty Moses in that block of granite before he struck the first blow, so we parents (1) can confidently project an image of the fine young man or young woman who will emerge from that tiny block
of humanity and (2) can nurture that helpless babe through successive growing stages into positive adulthood. Of course, the nurturing process is not exactly a piece of cake. Remember, a well-baked cake consists of various ingredients subjected to just the right amount of blending and heat for the proper length of time. The result? A finished delicacy. To raise positive kids we’ve got to use many essential ingredients—love, discipline, forgiveness, and many other qualities all wrapped in an abundance of care and commitment for our children’s eventual well-being. Raising positive kids is not an easy trip by any stretch of the imagination, but it can be fun, exciting, and tremendously rewarding. So buckle your seat belt, because whether you have old
kids or young ’uns,
there is some exciting information in the pages ahead.
ONE
Raising Positive Kids Is Simple—But Not Easy
NEW GLASSES FOR A CHALLENGING OPPORTUNITY
Several years ago I went to see my optometrist friend, Bob Vodvarka, to be examined for some bifocals. Bob took advantage of modern technology in the form of his computer and was able to write the ideal prescription for my glasses. Ten days later he fitted me with the glasses, pronounced me ready to see everything I needed to see, and bade me farewell.
My car was parked about fifty feet from the door of his office. As I walked out with those new bifocals, I picked my feet up extremely high. I was unaware of this until I got to the curb next to my car and saw the reflection in the window. My foot was up in the air about two feet. I quickly looked around to see if anybody was watching. (You know how you feel when you do something that is not overly bright!) When I saw that nobody was looking, I laughed, thinking how ridiculous I must have looked.
Then a sobering thought hit me. I, too, am an optometrist. I travel our country on a regular basis, fitting people with a very special custom-made pair of glasses—not rose-colored glasses, neither are they woes-colored. But these glasses are unique in that they magnify your potential as a parent. These glasses do even more than that—they turn outward to help you see the love, hope, intelligence, personality, genius, integrity, and all the other positive qualities that your child possesses. In other words, these glasses will help you see the tremendous potential represented in your child. That’s where this book begins—by urging you parents to look again and see what that special child of yours can be in the future. This will also help you to look at yourself and your opportunity to help your child develop and reach his/her potential.
TWO PRINCIPLES FOR RAISING POSITIVE KIDS
Throughout Raising Positive Kids I state two principles a number of times. I do this because they are so important that if we can own them, they will simplify our entire educational and parenting process.
The Way You Think Is the Way You Perform
The first principle is, You are what you are and where you are because of what has gone into your mind, and you can change what you are and where you are by changing what goes into your mind. In other words, your thinking directly affects your performance.
Talking about performance, several years ago I agreed to buy a computer because I was convinced it would be a key ingredient in helping our company grow and better achieve our objectives. I was tremendously excited about this computer. As a matter of fact, when you understand that I’m from a small town in Mississippi and that I get excited about buying anything new, you can understand my enthusiasm for something as significant as a computer. I went all over the country telling audiences about that marvelous computer and all of the wonderful things it was going to do—check the payroll, take care of the inventory, do the mail-outs, make the coffee, clean the kitchen. I mean, that computer was going to do everything!
Six months after I bought the computer, I put it on the market and tried to sell it for a lot less than I had originally paid for it. You talk about a fouled-up affair; we really had one! Here’s an example. At that time we did a bimonthly mail-out to all the people on our mailing list. It was a free motivational bulletin that served the purpose of keeping our customers inspired while introducing them to our new products. We had a Dr. and Mrs. William B. Jones on our mailing list, and they got one of the bulletins. So did Dr. and Mrs. William Jones, and so did Dr. and Mrs. Jones. Additionally, Mr. and Mrs. William B. Jones got a bulletin; Mr. and Mrs. William Jones got one; and so did Mr. and Mrs. Jones. Not only that, but Mrs. William B. Jones got one! Well, I think you get the picture. We were overbilling, underbilling, late-billing, and early-billing customers; and you cannot believe how upset some of them got when we tried to collect the same bill the third time! I mean, they were simply unreasonable about it!
Now you readers who’ve had an encounter with a computer won’t have any difficulty relating to what I’m saying. When the full impact of what it was doing to us hit me, I really was up in the air. I told our people, Sell it! Get rid of it! Move it out!
It was ruining us! Fortunately, we could not find a buyer. I say fortunately
because today, without a doubt, it is critical to the success of the Zig Ziglar Corporation.
Question: What is the difference between the computer we had and the computer we have? Answer: None, except that the first two groups we had running it could have fouled up a two-car parade. Then one day Dave and Marilyn Bauer walked in our front door and said to me, Mr. Ziglar, we can make that computer of yours laugh and talk and whistle and sing. Why, we can even make it work!
I said, Come on in!
Just the other day I was back in the computer room talking to that thing, and I’ll tell you, it is the most excited computer I’ve ever seen. It was laughing and talking and whistling and singing and working! The natural question is, What in the world did we do? And the answer is simple! We changed the input. And when we changed the input, we changed the output. Yes, that simple principle works on people in the same way.
YOU ARE WHAT YOU ARE AND WHERE YOU ARE BECAUSE OF WHAT HAS GONE INTO YOUR MIND.
If You’re Tough on Yourself, Life Will Be Easier
The second principle is, Life is not easy—as a matter of fact, it’s tough, very tough. This is true whether you are a household executive or a corporate officer. It’s true whether you are an athlete or a coach. It’s true no matter what you do in life. To be winners, parents and children must survive in a tough world. And that requires learning to be self-disciplined.
Parents, I have found that if you are tough on yourself, life will be much easier on you. That’s why it’s so important for parents to train children at an early age to be self-controlled. Not to be disciplined is tantamount to disaster, because when a child gets out into the world, he will quickly discover that any discipline he has not been given by loving parents will be meted out to him by an unloving world. Developing self-control often requires painful learning experiences, but the result is well worth the effort.
SUCCESS DOESN’T COME EASILY
One example I often use to emphasize that life isn’t easy has to do with my speaking engagements. One day I met a woman who, with some reluctance and without looking me in the eye, asked me: You kinda make a nice little ol’ fee for the speeches you make, don’cha?
I smilingly looked at her and said, Oh no, ma’am. I don’t know where you got your information, but it simply is not true. I really make a great big ol’ fee for the speeches I make!
What I did not tell her, however, was that before I ever made a fee of any kind I had made hundreds of free speeches at Lions Clubs, Rotary Clubs, Jaycees, church groups, garden clubs, and various office and sales groups. On countless occasions I have driven many miles in an evening, at my own expense, to speak to a group of a dozen people and then returned home that night because I did not have enough money to pay a motel bill. Why did I do it? I hung in there because I believed I had something to say and knew that eventually I would be paid for saying it.
If I asked, What do you really want in life?
probably every parent reading this book would say, I want my children to succeed in life, to be the best they can be.
How can we get this kind of result? By utilizing those glasses I talked to you about—seeing your children with all their God-given potential; by preparing them to stick it out in the tough places of life, over the long haul; and by seeing that the daily input channeled into their minds will produce a strong, positive output.
In the next chapter we are going to look at some of the negative aspects of the world we live in because that’s where we will face many of our problems.
PERSONAL EVALUATON
1. What is the first major principle that will help you raise a positive kid?
2. Think of a specific instance in your life that illustrates how your thinking has affected your performance.
3. What is the second principle that is equally important in raising positive kids?
4. Do you protect your child from life’s tough places?
5. List some ways you can change your discipline and instruction so that your child will be prepared to stick it out in life’s tough places.
6. Did your parents teach you to persevere? How did they do it?
TWO
We’ve Got Problems
SO WHAT DOES A NEGATIVE WORLD LOOK LIKE?
Chances are excellent that people who open Raising Positive Kids to this chapter and read the next few pages will close the book convinced I’ve got to be the most negative man they’ve ever read—especially if they don’t read the last few paragraphs in the chapter. However, I want to tell you in advance that, despite the fact that I’m going to provide a considerable amount of input as far as identifying what our negative world is really like, I positively and emphatically believe there is a solution to these problems.
I feel I would be remiss if I tried to gloss over these problems and make them appear to be simple. They’re not. I believe the first, most logical, and most sensible step to solving a problem is to carefully identify that problem and then positively work to solve it. Now, let’s look at some specific problems.
The first problem is negative conversation and negative self-talk. For example, a parent sends a child off to school with the instruction, Don’t get run over!
An overweight person sits down to eat and says, Everything I eat turns to fat!
If anyone has a wreck, within a matter of minutes a wrecker
will be called, which is ridiculous, because the wreck
has already happened. A tow
truck is needed.
Most people wake up with the aid of an electronic rooster they call an alarm clock.
This is about as negative as you can get. When someone’s robbing a bank, an alarm is sounded. That scares people. When a building is on fire, an alarm is sounded. That, too, scares people. If you wake up to an alarm clock, that will scare you. Actually, it’s an opportunity
clock, because if you can hear it you have an opportunity to get up and go. If you can’t hear it, that might mean you’ve gotten up and gone.
Even our terminology is negative. We take a loaf of bread and label the very first slice either the end or the heel,
when in reality every loaf of bread has two beginnings.
Recently when coming into Dallas, the captain of the aircraft himself—the man in charge, the head honcho,
or, as we would say down home, the daddy rabbit
—came over the intercom with these ominous words: We are now making our final approach.
It almost frightened me out of my seat! I said to the flight attendant, Ma’am, would you please tell him to make it his next-to-final approach? I still have many things I’d like to do!
As a golfer I have frequently played in foursomes and watched one team member hit a ball into the lake, then turn to the rest of us, and say, I knew I was going to do that!
The question is obvious: If he knew he was going to do it, why in the world would he go ahead and hit the ball into the lake? That is not the object of the game! It does not improve the score. A positive individual would have backed away, reprogrammed his thinking, declared his intentions to hit it over the lake and into the fairway, and done exactly that.
Traditionally, when the average person is up late and has to arise early the next morning, the last thing he says to himself is, Boy, I’ll bet I’m going to be tired tomorrow!
Too many times we look at a difficult task and say, I can’t do that.
Or if a lot is involved, we say, I’ll never finish this.
How negative can we get?
THINGS HAVE CHANGED
To accentuate the comparative difficulty of raising a positive child in the twenty-first century versus just two generations ago, let’s look at some more negative and frightening information.
According to Dr. Marvin Watson, former president of Dallas Baptist University, in 1940 the top offenses in public schools were as follows: running in hallways, chewing gum, wearing improper clothing (which included leaving a shirttail out), making noise, and not putting paper in wastebaskets.
Today the top offenses in public schools are as follows (not in order of occurrence): murder, rape, robbery, assault, personal theft, burglary, drug abuse, arson, bombings, alcohol abuse, carrying weapons, absenteeism, vandalism, and extortion. Since thirteen of these are felonies, not a great deal of comment is necessary, except to say that times and conditions have changed. Anyone who says these changes are good is simply not thinking. With your child possibly facing these problems at school and in the rest of society, it’s obvious that your job at home with your child is increasing in difficulty and importance.
Here is an interesting phenomenon of American life. If I were to stand in front of an audience of virtually any kind in America, whether it was a sales organization, educators, a patriotic group, or athletes, and advocate drunken orgies, getting high on cocaine, pot, or any of the other mind-bending drugs, they would look at me in stunned astonishment. If I gave them a sales talk on incest, adultery, homosexuality, necrophilia, bestiality, and even suicide, while generously sprinkling four-letter words throughout the presentation, there isn’t one group in a thousand that would sit still and listen. I’m confident the parents in the audience who knew I was going to be making the same speech to their sons and daughters at the local school the next day would move heaven and earth to get my speaking engagement canceled.
MUSIC
An interesting fact is that these same parents, knowingly or unknowingly, provide their children with