Book Review: Take Back Your Family: How To Raise Respectful And Loving Kids In A Dysfunctional World
by Rev. Run, Justine Simmons and Chris Morrow
Knopf (Jul 01, 2009)
Nonfiction, Paperback, 288 pages
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Book Reviewed by Kam Williams
’If this book can serve any purpose in your life, hopefully it will be as a reminder that there’s truly nothing out there that you can't take your family back from. Drugs aren’t that strong. Drinking isn't that strong. The TV isn't that strong. The video games aren’t that strong.
The peer pressure isn't that strong. The rappers, the rock stars, and the cover girls aren’t that strong. The dudes on the corner aren’t that strong. Your family’s dysfunctional history isn't that strong’
You can take back your family from whatever or whoever has gotten too much control over it. And when you are finally back in the driver’s seat, and God’ is your navigator, there’s no limit to how far your family can go, and how much fun you can have along the way!’’
’Excerpted from the Introduction (pages 18-19)
Before he was Reverend Run, Joseph Simmons was better known as
the rap star Run of Run-DMC. But after the murder of fellow
group member Jam-Master Jay in 2002, he became Born Again and
studied to become an ordained minister.
A few years later, Rev Run and his second wife, Justine, first
allowed MTV into their home in Saddle River, NJ to shoot a
wholesome reality series revolving around them and their six
children.
That hit show, Run’s House, cuts a sharp contrast to those
slumming shows which delight in exploiting the ignorance of
trashy folks obviously plagued by some serious dysfunction.
Fortunately, the Simmons’ formula has worked in terms of
television ratings, as they will start taping their 7th season
in October, an indication that audiences are eager to see the
day-to-day life of a sane and respectable Cosby Show-type
family.
In Take Back Your Family: How to Raise Respectful and Loving
Kids in a Dysfunctional World, Rev Run and Justine have reduced
their tough love child-rearing philosophy into a handy tome
designed to help anyone who might feel overwhelmed by their
responsibility as parents. Laced with entertaining personal
anecdotes and asides, the book proves to be as entertaining as
it is enlightening.
The couple’s no-nonsense philosophy basically calls for you to
be your children’s #1 role model and to lead by example in order
to prevent the media, the street or other bad influences from
shaping your kids. They also believe that you can't correct what
you don't confront, so they say it is imperative that you have
rules, be involved, and not behave like an ostrich when you have
hints of serious issues simmering under the surface.
A sensible primer on pro-active parenting which puts an
appropriate emphasis on cultivating core values, discipline and
faith in these troubled times when impressionable young minds
can be so easily seduced by the culture’s shallow materialism.
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