The Barbara Rainey Podcast

When your grown child marries, it can be difficult to find the right balance between under- and over-involvement in the new couple's life. Dennis and Barbara Rainey offer helpful advice in this conversation with Bob Lepine.

What is The Barbara Rainey Podcast?

Barbara Rainey mentors women in their most important relationships. She loves encouraging women to believe God and experience Him in every area of their lives.

Samantha Keller: Being the parent of an adult child can present some interesting challenges, relationally. Especially once they get married. Barbara Rainey has some advice.

Barbara Rainey: I think that the best course is to give your children as much freedom as you can, and then let them invite you back into their lives rather than showing up all the time and calling every day and there being a sense of "Leave us alone," you know, because sometimes parents are over-involved from the beginning when they – what that other person really needs is for them to step back and then be invited.
Samantha: Welcome to the Barbara Rainey Podcast from Ever Thine Home. We’re dedicated to helping you experience God in your home. Thanks for listening!

Today we’re bringing you a conversation that Dennis and Barbara Rainey had with their good friend Bob Lepine. It’s a helpful look at how parents can and should relate to their grown kids once they marry.

Bob Lepine: We're talking this week about adults dealing with adult children and how our relationship as parents changes with our children as they become adults. And I always think about having Stu Weber's wife Linda joining us on FamilyLife Today a number of years ago, and at that point her son had just gotten engaged. You remember this story.

Dennis: I do remember the illustration she used.

Bob: She gave a present to her daughter-in-law-to-be, and it was the night of the rehearsal dinner, right?

Dennis: Right.

Bob: And the daughter-in-law opened up the box and pulled out two strips of cloth.

Barbara: Apron strings.

Bob: Two apron strings, that's right.

Dennis: That had been clipped.

Bob: It was Linda's way of saying, "The relationship is changing, I acknowledge that, and the apron strings belong to you now."

Dennis: Uh-huh, and to talk about the apron strings, we bring Barbara back to the studio, my bride now since 1972.

Bob: Have you clipped off some apron strings?

Barbara: We have.

Dennis: No doubt about it. And, you know, contrast that with parents to lengthen the apron strings when their kids get married.

Bob: The tether, you mean?

Dennis: Oh, my goodness, and the problems that that brings. You know, in raising kids, you move from high control to ultimately no control. You move from total influence to – how should I say it? A minimal influence.

Bob: Limited influence?

Dennis: Limited influence, maybe that's the better way to state it.

Bob: Well, and that's what I'm wondering. Does the relationship between a parent and child change to the point where there is virtually no influence, where there is no control or, once they're married, do you still have some level of control?

Dennis: Yeah, it can move to that, Bob, at the decision of the child. It really does depend upon the adult child, if he or she is going to allow the parent or the parents to influence them.

Barbara: For us, we really wanted to be invited into our adult children's lives as opposed to assuming that we could have influence. We wanted to have some influence, we still wanted to keep the relationship going, and we hoped they would call and ask for advice on buying their first house or a job or some of those kinds of things, but we didn't assume that would be the case, and we didn't want to presuppose anything with them because we wanted them to want our involvement in their lives.

Bob: And you've gotten that invitation from your children, right?

Barbara: Mm-hm.

Bob: If you hadn't gotten it – let's assume for a moment that a child didn't call and ask for your opinion on buying a first house, changing a job, any of these things. There was still a cordial relationship but a clear signal of distance.

Dennis: Hands off.

Bob: Would you observe those boundaries and say, "That's the way it ought to be?"

Barbara: Well, yeah, because to do otherwise is to not really give them their freedom, it's to not give the apron strings, it's to say, "I still know better than you, and you need me," and all that's going to do is create resentment and hostility, and it's just not healthy for a relationship. So I think if any of our kids had made it clear that they didn't want our advice or our thoughts or our counsel, we wouldn't have given it.

Dennis: We're talking here about what adult children need when they get married, and I think they have some very specific needs. First, they need the blessing and the approval of their parents as they begin to establish this new relationship that they've never had before; that they'd never experienced before. And they need us to, I think, provide, if not in a ceremony, certainly through our words and our attitudes, a sense of sending them into the marriage and commissioning them in this new relationship.

It occurred to me when Ashley married Michael; Benjamin, our son, married Marsha Kay; and Samuel married his wife Stephanie, that all three of these young men, at this life stage, needed an older man, a father figure, in their lives to bless them in their new role as a husband. And so what I gave each of those young men was a poem that I wrote called "Be The Man," be God's man, and I wrote three unique poems that were charges as well as a blessing to each of these young men as they got started as husbands. And to commemorate that, I not only framed that and read it to them, but I also gave them a sword.

We found the first one at the Army-Navy surplus and then went online to find additional swords, but these were the real deal. These were not toy swords; these were sharp as razors and made of finely honed steel. And today, in all three of these young men's lives, they have their charge to manhood, to be God's man in marriage and family, and their swords hanging in their homes. And I have to believe that it's more than just symbolic. I think it was a statement of a passage for a young man to say, "You know what? I have a sense of an identity. I know where I'm going. I know what I'm supposed to be," and, Bob, when you do this, as a parent, you're not only helping them establish their identity, you're also establishing how you're going to relate to them in their new assignment.

Bob: Barbara, the Scriptures say that in marriage we are to leave father and mother; we're to cleave to husband and wife. So there is a level of independence that is prescribed by the Scriptures for marriage. I think the question is how complete is that independence? That's where it gets fuzzy, you know?

Barbara: Yeah, it really does, and that's why I think that the best course is to give your children as much freedom as you can, and then let them invite you back into their lives. I would rather err on being less involved and have my kids say, "Why don't you call us more often," and "We want you to come visit more often," rather than showing up all the time and calling every day and there being a sense of "Just leave us alone," you know, because that can happen. And I think sometimes parents are so eager to continue that relationship and to get to know the new person in the family, the new spouse, that they are over-involved from the beginning, when they – what that other person really needs is for them to step back and be invited.

Bob: Yeah, but what if the invitation back in on the part of the child is really an invitation saying, "I want you to be my parent again."

Barbara: Yeah, that could happen.

Bob: Or, "I want you to" …

Barbara: Rescue me or help me out financially.

Bob: What about that?

Barbara: Well, I think parents just need to be discerning and understand what the request really is and not get sucked into rescuing this couple, because the young man needs to be the provider and the leader of the family, and for parents to step back in and assume that at any level is to undermine him as the husband.

Dennis: There is one other thing I want to point out here, too. Your children are constantly going to be going to looking into your face for approval. They looked into your face for 18, 20-plus years, and what you have to be careful, as parents, is that you give an appropriate amount of encouragement, cheering them on, putting your arm around them and telling them what a great job they've done, but then, at points, when they surprise you or they shock you or they make a wrong choice, tell your face to play poker. I mean, put on a poker face. Do not scowl at them, judge them, become critical of them and, for some of us, who tend to wear our feelings on our sleeves and are very open people, that becomes very difficult.

But I have, on more than one occasion, as I've related to our adult children, I've had to just kind of internally go, "Now, Dennis, keep your emotions. They are their own person. They are not a six-year-old." Even though they may be acting like they're a bit younger – maybe not like a six-year-old. And, of course, these would not be our children that would do this, but you will find, as you raise adult children who get married, their values will not be your values. They're going to have their own, and you have to give them freedom to have their own values.

Bob: Some of the best advice I remember hearing on this particular topic came as we were interviewing Carolyn Mahaney and her three daughters. And Carolyn said the girls would call regularly and say, "Mom, what do you think I should do about this? What's your advice here?" And I remember her saying that her first question back to them was always, "Well, what does your husband think?" And I thought now that's shrewd. That's a mom who understands that the loyalty and the allegiance needs to be transferred, and your daughters and daughters-in-law have invited you into their lives. Did they know they were supposed to do that?

Dennis: You know, Bob, before our children were married, we told them that up until the point where they tied the knot, we had a few things we …

Bob: You were still going to say.

Dennis: We were still going to say – and some coaching tips, and maybe some final shaping of even an adult child before they got married, where we felt like, you know what? Before you take on this commitment, this is fair game. This is a healthy discussion. We're going to talk to you about how you two come together in this thing called marriage and maybe some patterns in your life that we see will impact your marriage.

But we told them, after you get married, if you want our opinion, you're going to have to ask for it. That means if you want our help and our opinion about some issue between you and your spouse, you're going to have to ask for it. If you want some help about disciplining children after you start having children, you'll have to invite us back in to do that.

And, Bob, all of our children have done that. But I think it was the freedom we gave them to say, you know what? You've got to decide whether you want to invite us back in, and we'll come back in on your terms.

Bob: And you think, in general, Barbara, that parents ought to take the responder role rather than the initiator role once marriage has taken place – let them initiate, you respond, don't you initiate and start offering advice.

Barbara: Yeah, I would really agree with that, because then that gives them the freedom to make their own choices and to create their own life and to work out their marriage the way they want to, and I just think it keeps parents from intruding and coming across parental.

Bob: When your daughters or your daughters-in-law have invited you in and sought your counsel, what kinds of things have they asked you about?

Barbara: Well, I had some conversations with Ashley, I think, from time to time because she married first. She was about four years ahead of the boys. Both of the boys married in the same summer of '01, and after Samuel's wedding, we were still all together, the rest of the family, we hadn't all left and gone back to our respective homes, and we were talking with Ben and Marsha Kay, who were engaged and were to be married six weeks later. And Marsha Kay was so sweet and so kind and said to me as we were just sitting around having a conversation, she said, "You know, I'd really like for you to give me some tips on being a wife," and I remember feeling so honored, first of all, because I really didn't know her that well. She was kind of the new kid on the block in the family, so to speak …

Bob: Well, and she's marrying Barbara Rainey's son, I mean, you've got a chance to get Barbara Rainey's advice. Every young woman wants that, don't they?

Barbara: Well, not necessarily. I sure wasn't going to give it without being asked, and I didn't expect that, actually. I had no intention of giving her any advice, or Stephanie, either, for that matter, but Marsha Kay said, "You know, I'd really like to have you give me some tips on being a wife. I've never been a wife before, and I just would like for you to do that." And I remember – I just remember feeling such an incredible sense of honor that she would ask. And so I asked the other two girls, I asked Ashley and Stephanie both if they would be interested, and they said they would, and so I began to write them periodically. I intended to do it more regularly than I did, but I've written them probably about a dozen times in the last three years just on topics that I remember learning about in our years of marriage, and I started out by writing things that I remember learning those first few years, and then I broadened it to things that I've continued to learn over the course of our marriage.

Bob: For example, what's one of the things that you've shared with them?

Barbara: Well, the first letter that I wrote, I just wrote some things that I remember learning those very early months of our marriage, and I wrote about how I learned how to pray and how not to pray for my husband. And so that was the topic of the first letter, and would you like for me to read it?

Bob: I'd like to know what you learned about how to pray and how not to pray, yeah.

Barbara: Okay.

Dennis: Well, it was hard to pray for me, because …

Barbara: There wasn't much that needed to be picked, right?

Bob: No, no, it was kind of boring there in the early years.

Barbara: All right, now let me read then what really happened.

Bob: A truth check coming up here.

Dennis: And now the rest of the story.

Barbara: Well, here is one of the paragraphs that I wrote. "One of the very first lessons I learned as a new wife was how to pray and how not to pray for my husband, even though we'd been good friends for three years before we married, I quickly discovered, just a few short months into the marriage, that there were some habits, tendencies, and weaknesses …

Dennis: Rewind the tape, hurry.

Bob: Habits, tendencies, and weaknesses …

Dennis: Bob, Bob, Bob, you don't have to repeat. The listeners heard it the first time.

Bob: Keep going, keep going, I'm loving this.

Dennis: We're calling Mary Ann next.

Barbara: Anyway, there were some of those things, I won't repeat them, in my husband that were not so pleasant. We were living in Boulder, Colorado, that first year of marriage, and neither of us had any friends locally, much less a mentor. Mentoring was not even a concept then. I had a good model of faithfulness and loyalty and servanthood in my mother, but I have no idea if she prayed for my father. I only assumed that, as a Christian wife, and I was going to be the best wife that ever lived, I should pray for my husband, and so I began a page for him in my quiet time notebook.

I don't remember the details now, only what I learned. Being conscientious, I began to record the things that I started seeing that I thought needed to be changed. I was sure God would agree with me."

Dennis: Could we now have some music that begins to play over her voice?

Bob: No, no, no, no, we're enjoying this too much.

Dennis: How about "Amazing Grace?"

Barbara: There you go – that applies to me, too. Let's see, "I was sure God would agree with me. I added to my list slowly, but it didn't take long for the list to grow to 10 or more weaknesses. I felt it my duty to pray faithfully for Dennis and to do it every day. I was surprised, however, to discover that my praying for God to change all those areas only caused me to focus every day on what was wrong, in my opinion" …

Bob: So you were meditating with your …

Barbara: with my husband, I was.

Bob: You're meditating on your husband's weaknesses.

Barbara: I was meditating on all these things every day as I thought that was what I was supposed to do as a wife was bring this before God. I thought it was the right thing to do.

Dennis: (hums "Amazing Grace")

Bob: In the process of that meditation, did the Lord begin to tweak your thinking?

Barbara: He did.

Bob: Please, cut the music here, give our listeners a little grace, will you?

Barbara: So the question was …

Bob: Over time, did the Lord begin to adjust your thinking?

Barbara: He did, and quickly, I might add, too. I'll pick it back up from the letter that I wrote to the girls. I wrote, "I felt it my duty to pray faithfully for Dennis. I was surprised, however, to discover that my praying for God to change all those things only caused me to focus every day on what was wrong. My prayers made me see him negatively, especially since God wasn't answering quickly. I didn't like the result. It may have been a spiritual exercise, but it wasn't fun.

I remember clearly one day deciding to quit praying my list. I told the Lord that it was His business to change my husband's life, and I wasn't going to remind Him anymore what He needed to work on. I said, 'Lord, I give my husband to you, and I give you all these things that I think need to be change. If You want to change any of those, it's up to you. I'm not praying about it anymore.' Perhaps it was that day or maybe a few days later, but my shift in focus made a big difference in my perspective. I didn't notice the things that were wrong nearly as often. They didn't bother me as much, anymore, and it was a great relief."

Dennis: Could we have the "Hallelujah Chorus" instead of "Amazing Grace" now?

Bob: Actually, the thing I want to know is can you remember just one or two things from the list?

[laughter]

Barbara: Actually, I can.

Bob: Yeah?

Barbara: Well, what it was is that I just began to see how different we were.

Dennis: (hums "Amazing Grace")

Barbara: Here we go.

Bob: Full of grace.

Barbara: Because I was organized and more disciplined, and I thought he should be that way, too, and I didn't realize how good it was for me that we were so different, and I just was very immature and very young, and I didn't know how to be a wife.

Bob: And that's the reality for our kids when they get married, and that's why it's hard for us, as parents, not to want to intervene and help them grow up.

Dennis: Man, I'm telling you.

Bob: But you're saying don't go there unless they invite you.

Barbara: That's correct.

Dennis: I know of one pair of parents who have an adult daughter and son-in-law, where the son-in-law and the daughter made some choices that were just unwise and didn't wait to get the counsel, went ahead and rushed ahead to make a major purchase and, you know, you can make some pretty colossal mistakes in your early months and years of marriage – like purchasing a house, when you're overstepping your ability, and then you begin to find out you're way over-extended, and then you've got bigger issues like credit reports. Well, I know, in this pair of parents' lives that was hard for them to sit back, to watch, and to say nothing. I mean, if you're not invited in, and they are about to make a colossal mistake, sometimes it takes a mistake for the lesson to be learned.

And, you know, the discipline, the discipline for parents – I thought raising little ones was difficult but, truthfully, saying nothing many times was more difficult as we've related to our adult children who have done remarkably well, but saying nothing is far more difficult than what you used to say when you were raising little ones and teenagers.
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Samantha: We’ve been listening to a fun and thoughtful conversation on parents’ relationships with their grown children. That was Bob Lepine and Dennis and Barbara Rainey, talking about a few of the challenges you might face as you interact with your married adult child.

Now, Mother’s Day is coming up on May 12th. And I want to let you know about a beautiful Mother’s Day card that we’d love for you to have. Barbara helped design it. It has a lovely floral design, and it says, “A gracious woman attains honor,” Proverbs 11:16.

There’s a link in the description of this episode where you can see a photo of the card. And here are the details on how you can get it. You can print it out for yourself for a donation of only $5 or more. Your gift will help us continue bringing practical, Biblical content and resources to people just like you. Just find the description of this episode of the Barbara Rainey Podcast, click on the link there, and you can see the card and make a donation right there. We’d love to hear from you.

Next time on the Barbara Rainey podcast, Barbara talks about some days in the church calendar we don’t hear much about. She explains Ascension day and Pentecost, when the Holy Spirit inaugurated the Church. And she’ll tell us why they matter to us now. I hope you’ll join us for that.

I’m Samantha Keller, thanking you for listening today, and inviting you back next time, for the Barbara Rainey Podcast, from Ever Thine Home.