• Teaching Kids Repentance: The Spiritual Disciplines pt 3
    Jun 2 2026

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    Repentance can sound like a harsh word, especially when you’re parenting a child who already carries shame. We reframe it as metanoia, a change of mind and heart that moves your family from self-defeating patterns toward real flourishing. Along the way, we talk about why kids don’t just need “better behavior,” they need a safe relationship with caring adults and a clearer picture of what God is actually like.

    We talk about what healthy repentance looks like for kids: awareness, confession, making repairs, and growing empathy. We get concrete about parenting skills that support honesty, like responding instead of reacting, avoiding catastrophizing, and making amends when we overreact. We also dig into the difference between a quick “I’m sorry” script and a real apology that names the harm, takes ownership, and respects that forgiveness can’t be demanded.

    Then we shift to fasting and sacrifice in a way that fits real family life. We explain fasting as giving something up to depend on God and give Him your full attention, and we explore age-appropriate options like screen fasts, shared prayer, and simple Sabbath rhythms that don’t turn into a performance. If you’re looking for Christian parenting guidance that blends spiritual formation with practical, relationship-centered tools, this conversation is for you.

    Contact:
    podcasts@calfarley.org

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    https://www.calfarley.org/

    Music:
    "Shine" -Newsboys
    CCS License No. 9402

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    41 mins
  • Teaching Kids Faith Through Fellowship Worship And Service: The Spiritual Disciplines pt 2
    May 26 2026

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    Faith can feel like a set of ideas kids are supposed to agree with, until real life hits and the beliefs don’t have roots. We sit down with our chapel team to talk about how children actually develop a lived, resilient faith through three interconnected practices: serving others, building healthy relationships, and learning what worship really is. We move into the bigger question of how belief becomes something a child can practice on a normal Tuesday.

    We explore why faith formation is more than spiritual education, and why the Gospel of John treats believing like a verb. Obedience, trust, and “try it and see” moments help kids discover God in action, not just in theory. We share what we’ve noticed on service projects: kids almost never regret going, groups come back bonded, and serving makes the whole God thing feel more believable. You’ll also hear practical, age-appropriate ideas, from chores as service, to plugging into church roles, to “adopting” a senior neighbor who needs small help and real connection.

    Finally, we zoom out to what healthy Christian community looks like for kids: a judge-free space for hard questions, leaders who are warm but firm, shared meals, intergenerational friendships, and parents who model positive relationships. We also unpack worship beyond singing, including gratitude at home and intentional time in nature that opens kids up to wonder. If you’re busy or unsure where to start, we give a simple next step you can take this week. Subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review, then tell us what small practice your family is trying next.

    Contact:
    podcasts@calfarley.org

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    https://secure.calfarley.org/site/Donation2?3358.donation=form1&df_id=3358&mfc_pref=T

    To Apply:
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    For More Information about Cal Farley's Boys Ranch:
    https://www.calfarley.org/

    Music:
    "Shine" -Newsboys
    CCS License No. 9402

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    36 mins
  • Teaching Kids Spiritual Disciplines: Reading the Bible and Prayer
    May 19 2026

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    If your family’s Bible time feels like a chore chart and prayer feels like a performance, you’re not alone and you’re not stuck. We sit down with our Boys Ranch ministry team to get brutally practical about spiritual disciplines for kids and how to teach them without turning faith into pressure.We discuss: spiritual disciplines are practices that shape a real relationship with God, not hoops that earn love.

    We walk through what age-appropriate family Bible reading can look like from pre-K to high school. For little ones, we talk picture Bibles, story-driven rhythms like Advent, and making a child’s first Bible a big deal. For elementary and middle school, we lean into narratives and curiosity with two prompts that change everything: “I notice” and “I wonder.” For teens, we name the temptation to chase “relevance” and instead encourage you to stay the course, let the Bible be central, and create a safe place for real questions.

    Then we shift to teaching children to pray. We break down healthy, real prayer as a conversation with God, including listening, not just talking. We share easy frameworks like the Taco Prayer acronym (Thanksgiving, Adoration, Confession, Others, Self) and a simple three-part prayer any family can use. Along the way, we tackle common misconceptions like treating God as a genie, assuming silence means God is absent, and trying to force consistency through guilt instead of grace.

    If you want practical Christian parenting tools for faith formation that actually work on busy days, press play. Subscribe, share this with a parent who needs it, and leave us a review so more families can find the show.

    Contact:
    podcasts@calfarley.org

    To Donate:
    https://secure.calfarley.org/site/Donation2?3358.donation=form1&df_id=3358&mfc_pref=T

    To Apply:
    https://apply.workable.com/cal-farleys-boys-ranch/j/25E1226091/

    For More Information about Cal Farley's Boys Ranch:
    https://www.calfarley.org/

    Music:
    "Shine" -Newsboys
    CCS License No. 9402

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    50 mins
  • Respect Without The Power Struggle: Practical Ways to Teach Respect At Home.
    May 12 2026

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    The fastest way to lose a relationship with your kid is to treat disrespect like a fight you have to win. We’d rather treat it like a skill that can be taught, practiced, and repaired, especially when emotions run hot and everyone’s patience is thin.

    We dig into the most practical building blocks of teaching respect at home: modeling what we want to see, creating small daily rituals, and showing kids how to treat people well in real situations like restaurants, school frustrations, and family routines. We also get specific about consistency, because a “no” that turns into a “yes” after enough whining trains the exact behavior you’re trying to stop. You’ll hear how “let me think about it” and the “yes when” approach can reduce power struggles while still keeping strong boundaries and teaching time and place.

    Finally, we unpack what to do when disrespect is intense or out of character, using trauma-informed curiosity and emotional regulation tools like stop, breathe, choose. Sometimes the blowup isn’t about you at all, and staying calm is what helps a child find that insight.

    If you found this helpful, subscribe, share it with another parent, and leave a review so more families can find Brain-Based Parenting.

    Contact:
    podcasts@calfarley.org

    To Donate:
    https://secure.calfarley.org/site/Donation2?3358.donation=form1&df_id=3358&mfc_pref=T

    To Apply:
    https://apply.workable.com/cal-farleys-boys-ranch/j/25E1226091/

    For More Information about Cal Farley's Boys Ranch:
    https://www.calfarley.org/

    Music:
    "Shine" -Newsboys
    CCS License No. 9402

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    23 mins
  • Handling Disrespect: Respect Grows When We Build Trust
    May 5 2026

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    Disrespect can show up in a thousand tiny ways a blunt “you’re not very smart, are you?” a dismissive “I know” a joke that lands like a punch. We wanted to get past the lectures and punishments and talk about what actually builds respect inside a child’s brain over time. we talk about what respect is, what it is not, and why the hardest moments are often the most teachable.

    We break respect into two clear categories: the respect tied to positional authority and the respect every person deserves because of basic human dignity. From there, we dig into a common parenting trap: expecting respect as the foundation instead of treating relationship as the foundation. We connect the dots to attachment and trust, why classrooms can be tough places for respect, and why teenagers are wired to push for independence. If you’ve ever felt pulled into a power struggle, you’ll hear practical language that keeps correction focused on behavior rather than attacking the child.

    One of the biggest takeaways is the “emotional piggy bank” model: connection and meeting needs create deposits, while redirections create withdrawals. When the account is empty, disrespect comes fast. We also talk about self-respect versus entitlement, how sports can teach empathy, and how social media and “kid content” can quietly train kids to mock adults. If you want brain-based parenting strategies to teach respect, handle disrespect, and stay regulated under pressure, subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more families can find the show.

    Contact:
    podcasts@calfarley.org

    To Donate:
    https://secure.calfarley.org/site/Donation2?3358.donation=form1&df_id=3358&mfc_pref=T

    To Apply:
    https://apply.workable.com/cal-farleys-boys-ranch/j/25E1226091/

    For More Information about Cal Farley's Boys Ranch:
    https://www.calfarley.org/

    Music:
    "Shine" -Newsboys
    CCS License No. 9402

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    27 mins
  • Grief Does Not End Quickly And Kids Need Us To Stay
    Apr 28 2026

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    Grief can make even confident parents feel helpless, because there isn’t a “right” thing to say that fixes what happened. We talk about how kids experience grief and loss, and why our first job is not solving the pain but staying connected through it. Along the way, we share personal stories that remind us grief is real whether it’s death, distance in relationships, miscarriage, a major life change, or even the losses adults are tempted to call “small.”

    We get practical about what helps children grieve in a healthy way: validating emotions without judgment, resisting the urge to rush a timeline, and understanding that a child’s grief can resurface months or years later as their brain develops and their meaning-making grows. We also talk about why adults often minimize grief to ease our own discomfort, and how that can shut down emotional growth and create long-term patterns kids carry into adulthood.

    Contact:
    podcasts@calfarley.org

    To Donate:
    https://secure.calfarley.org/site/Donation2?3358.donation=form1&df_id=3358&mfc_pref=T

    To Apply:
    https://apply.workable.com/cal-farleys-boys-ranch/j/25E1226091/

    For More Information about Cal Farley's Boys Ranch:
    https://www.calfarley.org/

    Music:
    "Shine" -Newsboys
    CCS License No. 9402

    Show More Show Less
    30 mins
  • Raising Young Leaders: If you Don' Shape Their Leadership, Who Will? pt 2
    Apr 21 2026

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    Kids don’t wake up one day and magically know how to lead. They practice leadership in the messy places first: the toddler who insists on doing it “my way,” the grade-schooler who wants to run the game, the teen who’s testing independence while still needing structure. We dig into what healthy leadership looks like at different ages and how brain-based parenting helps us guide that drive without turning every moment into a power struggle.

    We spend time on skills that make leadership sustainable: listening, empathy, teamwork, and conflict resolution. That includes the hard parenting choice to let kids work some conflicts out on their own when it’s safe, then processing what helped and what didn’t. We also tackle resilience and responsibility, including why kids need chances to fail successfully, push through when something stops being fun, and learn that finishing matters. And we close with a reminder that hits home: our job isn’t to create a better version of us, it’s to help our kids become a strong, grounded version of themselves.

    Subscribe to Brain-Based Parenting, share this with another parent, and leave a five-star review so more families can find these tools. What’s one leadership skill you want your child to grow next?

    Contact:
    podcasts@calfarley.org

    To Donate:
    https://secure.calfarley.org/site/Donation2?3358.donation=form1&df_id=3358&mfc_pref=T

    To Apply:
    https://apply.workable.com/cal-farleys-boys-ranch/j/25E1226091/

    For More Information about Cal Farley's Boys Ranch:
    https://www.calfarley.org/

    Music:
    "Shine" -Newsboys
    CCS License No. 9402

    Show More Show Less
    25 mins
  • How Parents Can Build Real Leadership Skills In Kids-pt 1
    Apr 14 2026

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    Bossy isn’t the same thing as bold and loud isn’t the same thing as leadership. We get practical about how kids actually develop leadership skills and what parents can do at home to shape it. Along the way we start with a fun warm-up on fictional leaders, then get serious about what makes someone worth following: honesty, dependability, healthy boundaries, and the courage to do the right thing even when it isn’t popular.

    One of the biggest takeaways is that strong leadership is built on self-evaluation. We talk about how to process conflict with kids so they learn to think critically, own their part, and try a better approach next time. That “coachability” becomes real confidence, the kind that doesn’t need to blame others or prove anything. We also unpack the question every parent asks: are leaders born or made? Our answer is both, because some kids have natural pull, but every kid can practice leadership through small moments in sports, school, chores, and friendships.

    We also draw a sharp line between being a boss and being a leader. A boss chases control, while a leader uses influence and helps other people feel respected and capable. If your child tends to be bossy, we share simple ways to redirect that energy into healthy leadership by naming intent, teaching empathy, and focusing on how their words land. We wrap with core character traits that support leadership for children, including hard work ethic, perspective, humility, and learning to collaborate instead of going it alone.

    Subscribe to Brain-Based Parenting, share this with a parent who needs it, and leave a five-star review. What’s one leadership trait you most want your child to grow this year?

    Contact:
    podcasts@calfarley.org

    To Donate:
    https://secure.calfarley.org/site/Donation2?3358.donation=form1&df_id=3358&mfc_pref=T

    To Apply:
    https://apply.workable.com/cal-farleys-boys-ranch/j/25E1226091/

    For More Information about Cal Farley's Boys Ranch:
    https://www.calfarley.org/

    Music:
    "Shine" -Newsboys
    CCS License No. 9402

    Show More Show Less
    22 mins