Chapter 1: The Wild & Woolly Will
One of Dr. Dobson’s key points is that adult leadership must be tested and found worthy before it is respected. Have you experienced this in your own life or observed it with your children?
After reading the descriptions of children’s temperaments, where on the curve do you think your children fall? What characteristics of each of these temperaments do your children display?
What do you hope to learn through reading this book? What issues in your own family do you want to gain insight about?
Chapter 2: Mothers Share Their Stories
This chapter includes in-depth stories from three women about their strong-willed children. Each mentioned one or two decisive moments when she realized her child was strong-willed. Have you had a similar realization? What led up to it?
How do you respond to the idea that no matter how we parent, there is no guarantee about the outcome? How might this encourage or discourage you as you raise your children?
Dr. Dobson notes that to be an effective parent, you must see the situation the way your child sees it. Consider a recent confrontation with one of your kids. What do you imagine he or she was thinking? If you took more time to consider your child’s perspective in the future, how might it help you?
How has your experience with a strong-willed child affected you emotionally? What hurts are you experiencing because of your situation?
Dr. Dobson comments that parents of strong-willed children should realize that God gave them those children for a reason and will help them through. Do you agree? How does this statement give you confidence?
Chapter 3: What Makes Them the Way They Are?
Where do you fall along the parenting continuum (from permissive to authoritarian)?
How do you think your discipline style is preparing your children for the real world?
What kind of advice were you given when you became a parent (from books, friends, relatives, etc.)? How has it helped you or hindered you?
Consider the three personality patterns described by psychiatrists Stella Chess and Alexander Thomas. How do you see your children reflected in each?
A key finding from Dr. Dobson’s study seems to be that strong-willed children have significantly lower self-esteem than compliant children. Do you see this reflected in your family? Why do you think this might be?
Dr. Dobson reports that many of our personality traits are inherited, and strong-willed parents are more likely to have a strong-willed child. Which of your characteristics do you see reflected in your children? Does that make you more or less sympathetic toward their struggles?