Wednesday, May 30, 2012

The ultimate example in parenting


Sorry to be rude, but this blog is for me. The message moved me so much that I want it written down and easily able to be referenced and re-referenced. But because this message was so profound to me, I want to be able to share it with anyone who might "stumble" upon it, much like I stumbled upon this message by being in the right place at the right time. But that's often the way God works...

This past Sunday, for a variety of reasons, we did not go to our "regular" church, instead we visited a church a few miles up the road. I have wanted to visit on several occasions when we knew we wouldn't be making the 45-minute trip to our regular church, but my husband has never really been interested in giving it a try. Sunday, I woke up to him looking up service times on the iPad. He said we should go, we we went. And when we walked out of the church doors when the service was over, we both knew that was exactly where we needed to be. The message was important for us to hear. The message will shape who we will be as parents (hello...we become parents within a few short days!) and how we will act/react to our child in the near future. God truly is amazing.

The message was about parenting. And if you've read my previous posts, I hope it's evident that the desire of my heart is for my husband and me to be great parents. One aspect of parenting that has scared me the most (where my biggest fears of failure and "doing it wrong") is discipline and punishment. John and I both had different experiences as children and have had differing views on how we would handle things in our hypothetical discussions on child-rearing. But ultimately we both want the same outcome. So back to church...I started with taking some notes here and there in the beginning, but once things started "clicking" with me, I started writing feverishly. I filled up the front and back of my note paper, so I pulled out my trusty iPhone (yes, in church!) and started typing out an email to myself with the rest of the sermon notes. Some of this may only make sense to me since I know the stories/intentions behind my scribbling, but I'll do my best.

The main idea was that God teaches us how to be great parents. He gives us examples and pictures of how he parents, so we should strive to emulate Him.

First, God understands me, therefore I must understand my child. This went into understanding what makes him tick, what motivates him, what moves him. Proverbs 22:6 says, "Train up a child in the way he should go, and when he is old he will not depart from it." This verse was broken up into two parts. Part one is "Train up a child..."

  • Are we training him in the Spirit, or in the world? (I will reference "him" throughout since I am about to have a son)
  • How do we train him to communicate? By yelling and screaming, by cursing and throwing things, by speaking down to him and/or my spouse? By speaking harshly about others and gossiping? Do we avoid conflict, burying our heads in the sand and pretending everything is going to be alright if we don't talk about it?
  • Do we train him to have quiet time? To stop going and doing for a few moments, take some time to be quiet. Talk to God. Clear our heads. Be thankful. Pray for others. Reflect. Read the Word.
  • To develop work ethic? Am I the living example of what I will ask of my son?
  • To be a Godly spouse? Are we showing our son what it means to have a happy, healthy marriage? Setting aside date nights and special times for "mom and dad" to illustrate the importance our marriage plays in our lives? Working as a cohesive parenting unit where each parent has the other person's back and supports one anotherr?
  • To have a healthy lifestyle?
  • To have a Godly view on sex and dating? (Referenced a conference to take pre-teens to called "Passport to Purity" and a book called Raising a Modern Day Knight). 
Part two of the verse is: "in the way he should go."
  • The emphasis here is on HE should go. Not me. Not we. He.
  • Not the way I wish I was raised.
  • Give him the freedom to choose and follow God's plan/purpose. Let him follow how God created him.
  • God gives us all individual talents and gifts. Just because I may want him to be an athlete does not mean that fulfils God's plan and purpose for his life. He needs the freedom to choose music, or art, or serving others, or sports, or computers, or whatever God has laid on his heart.
  • Whatever he does, do it for the glory of God. Bring his gifts to the church. If he is gifted with computers and technology, let him put his talents to work in the sound booth. If he is made with a heart for children and teaching, let him glorify God in the children's programs. If he works well with his hands, let him build to the glory of God.
  • He can also use these gifts to glorify God at school, at home, at baseball practice, in the band room, etc.

God accepts me, so I must accept my child.
Psalm 127:3 tells us, "Children are a gift from the Lord, they are a reward from Him."
  • If I reject my child, I am rejecting God and His work.

God disciplines me with love, so I must discipline my children.
Hebrews 12:6 "For the Lord disciplines the one he loves, and chastises every son whom he receives."
  • If we don't discipline, it proves we don't love our children.
  • We would be participating in their destruction.
Proverbs 13:24 says, "Whoever spares the rod hates their children, but the one who loves their children is careful to discipline them."
  • This is commonly referenced as "spare the rod, spoil the child." Many people think "spoil the child" in the sense of "well little Billy has too many toys and always gets whatever he wants" but the intention of this "spoil" is literally to spoil like garbage, rotten meat, stinky waste.
  • If their behavior isn't "cute" when you add 10 years to it, then it isn't cute now and the action needs correction. If you wouldn't want to see your 14-year-old poking out his bottom lip, pouting and stomping his feet, then it isn't "cute" when a 4-year-old does it either. The uncorrected actions developed as a child will manifest later when it's likely too late for correction.
God doesn't punish us, he disciplines us.
Romans 8:1 says, "There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ.
  • Jesus took our punishment on the cross. We are no longer condemned. God punishes the wicked, but disciplines His children (because He loves us).
  • Punishment is to inflict a penalty (nagging, screaming, harshness). Punishment has an attitude of anger (beating vs spanking, being out of control, sin). Then the parent ends up wallowing in the remorse of their behavior, and often reverses any meaning in the punishment. Example: the child lies about eating his Halloween candy before bed after he was told not to. The parent blows up and screams in his face, chastising him, rips the bucket of candy away from him and storms out. This leads to feeling guilty and remorseful for how things were handled, so the parent walk back in there and give the kid his candy back. What have we taught him??
  • Discipline is not looking backward like punishment does ("you always blah blah blah" or "haven't I told you 100 times..." or "you never blah blah blah...). Instead, discipline promotes growth and moving forward. There is hope in discipline. The same example as above if handled with discipline looks differently. The parent asks "did you eat your candy after I told you not to?" The child lies and says no. "Then how did these candy wrappers end up under your bed? Would you like to tell me the truth this time?" He still denies it. So the parent calmly says, "since you have disobeyed me when I told you that we would not eat this candy before bed, and you have not told me the truth, you will not have anymore of this candy. Do you understand?" The parent walks to the trashcan and dumps the contents of the bucket. The child can have a meltdown now, but the parent has nothing to feel remorseful of. The issues needed to be addressed and corrected, and it was done with calmness and swift action.  
So how do we discipline and not punish?
  • Never spank out of anger. Send the child to his room until I can calm down and pray for guidance. Sometimes the answer is not spanking - God gives creative solutions (see example above). (Recommended book: Creative Correction).
  • Go talk about what they did wrong. Give the corrective action, then we pray and ask God to forgive him. Discipline gives boundaries and security.
Ephesians 6:4 says, "And you, fathers, do not provoke your children to wrath, but bring them up in the training and admonition of the Lord."
  • Spankings should lead to correction from a child, not anger. If it leads to an angry, rebellious child, it's time to try something new. (Recommended book: Don't Make Me Count to 3).
Proverbs 29:11 says, "Fools give full vent to their rage, but the wise bring calm in the end."
  • Temper tantrums: a child in the throes of a temper tantrum is like a drunk person. Let them sober up. Deal with it calmly. The least helpful thing is to throw fire on fire and a child in a temper tantrum can quickly push you over the edge. Put them in their room immediately. When they come back to reality, we deal with the issues. If it's in public, remove them. Handle it quickly and work together with your spouse as a partnership.
  • Choose your battles. Sometimes kids don't need discipline, they just need parenting.
Colossians 3:21 says, "Fathers, do not provoke your children, lest they become discouraged."
  • As parents, we must admit when we are wrong. Be honest with our children - we expect honesty out of them. When we admit our wrong-doings, it increases us in their eyes. Honor comes before humility. Apologize when we don't handle things in the right way,
Malachi 4:6 says, "He will turn the hearts of the parents to their children, and the hearts of the children to their parents; or else I will come and strike the land with total destruction."
  • If we can change our homes, we can change our community. If we can change our community, we can change our city, etc. etc...
I hope this post reaches someone who needs to hear it. I pray God will bring this message to my mind as many times as it takes over the years. I pray these words of wisdom will seep into my mind and that my actions will reflect the heart of a parent who is seeking God's example.

Saturday, May 12, 2012

Dear diary...

I wanted to share my initial journal entry on the day we found out that we would be parents. I love all of these scriptures and I referenced them many times over the past few years, but the one that I wanted to shout from the rooftops that day and every day since is the verse from 1 Samuel...I have prayed for this child, and the Lord has granted me what I ask of Him. HALLELUJAH!  


Wednesday, October 5th, 2011

For you created my inmost being; you knit me together in my mother's womb
Psalm 139:13

I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made
Psalm 139:14

I knew you before I formed you in your mother's womb
Jeremiah 1:5

I prayed for this child, and the Lord has granted me what I asked of Him
1 Samuel 1:27

Today is a great day! Praise be to God! I am so humbled and excited and nervous and happy because....we found out that we are going to be parents! Baby on board!! Pregnant!!!

Thank you so much God for this gift, for this blessing, this amazing responsibility. I ask that you protect and shield our little one, help him or her to grow and develop properly, and be happy in his/her new temporary home. I pray for us as parents - that we will be strong, trusting, patient and always remember to keep you in the center of our family. We will need you now more than ever. Thank you for your faithfulness, as promised. And please forgive me for any anger or doubt or impatience I've had in my heart.

Amen!

Friday, May 11, 2012

Another letter to my child

I wrote this letter a few months before we found out we would be parents.

July 4th, 2011

    Dear sweet one,
It's been eight months since I to you for the first time. With each month that passes I learn more about trusting in God's timing. Jeremiah 1:5 says, "Before I made you in your mother's womb, I chose you. Before you were born, I set you apart for a special work" and Matthew 10:30 says, "God even knows how many hairs are on your head." This reminds me that God has chosen you to be mine - He has set you apart. He knows you personally, and He loves you. So I don't have to worry. God will put you right where you belong, right when you are supposed to be there. Until I can tell you face-to-face, I love you.

Mom

Friday, May 4, 2012

that moment when every cell in a woman's body is transformed

It is safe to say that I want to be great mom. I have smiled and laughed at those little flutters in my belly that have now become full-blown kung-fu sessions, hiccup fits, and hard lumps of body parts trying to find a bit more room in a quickly shrinking space. Arrangements have been made to prepare for his impending arrival...we have prepared a precious, special space for him with freshly washed linens, the mattress that had to be "just right", cute decals on the wall, everything in its proper place. I have wept looking at an ultrasound picture of his little feet, and I could weep just imagining his little face. Life is full of random moments/images/objects/words/ideas that remind me that I will soon have my own sweet, precious child in my arms...and that I will soon get to see that sweet precious baby in his daddy's strong arms. The man who has been my love and my life for ten years will soon be a daddy, and we will have the honor and gift of raising a human being that is made up of ourselves...the best of me and the best of him, sewn together with love by the Creator...amazing. I am preparing to bring him into this world safely with as much calmness and peace as I can find within myself with God's help.

I have tried not to panic when I see my changing body on a daily basis and I realize things will never be the same...but I try to remind myself that it's okay...I will be a mother from this point forward, and I will have new things to love about my figure because the physical reminders bear witness to the most amazing thing I will have the privilege of doing and being.

I remember watching an episode of the TV show "Private Practice" before I was pregnant, but I was definitely ready to be. Addison says, "Every day I deliver a baby, and every day I see that moment of change - that moment when every cell in a woman's body is transformed. And whatever happens, whether the baby is sick or happy, unhealthy or healthy, lives or dies - whatever happens, that woman will never be just a woman again. She will always be a mother."  And I wept because I knew it was true.

I said all that to say this. I know that being a mother only just begins when my baby boy takes his first breath and utters that first cry, and I know that labor and delivery is just the tiny first taste of the hard work that is to come. The primary responsibility of shaping and molding a human life from birth through childhood, into becoming a productive and beautiful-hearted adult - it's a huge undertaking and I'm not afraid to say that it's a bit (or more than a bit) scary. I have started too many things in my life with the best of intentions, but I never saw them through to fruition...that is not an option here. I want to teach and show my child that he is loved, he is special, he is wonderful...so he, in turn, will learn to be kind to others and show them through his life and actions that they are special, they are wonderful and they are loved. That is my hope for my child and any future children I may be blessed with.
And I smile, because I will never be just a woman again...I will always be a mother.

My Mommy List

This is a list I started sometime in 2007, loooong before actually becoming a mother was to be. I've added a bit here and there and I'm sure more will come with time, experience and Pinterest (gotta love it) but I wanted this list to encourage me once I became a mom and serve to hold me to my pre-mama standards. I fear getting wrapped-up in the day-to-day grind and the struggles that come along with parenthood...that I will stop remembering to cherish the joy. I want to remember to live in the moment and leave my children with positive lasting memories and joyful times that will shape who they will be as more than wee people.

I am interested in what special things other moms to do celebrate parenthood, celebrate your child's personality, encourage and motivate your wee one, establish tradition, etc. So here is what I have so far:
  • Make Mickey Mouse pancakes
  • Leave love notes and words of encouragement on the bathroom mirror, lunchbox, pockets, etc.
  • Have picnics on blankets
  • Put on legendary sock-puppet shows
  • Pick strawberries straight from the field
  • Go fishing from the pier on the sound at the beach (a memory I have with my granddaddy before he passed away)
  • Engrave his/her initials in a tree
  • Plant a tree for each child and watch it grow through the years. Come back and take pictures with the tree each year as they grow up.
  • Have a select "mommy & me" day each year that we devote to doing something special together
  • Make sure there is a special "daddy & me" day, too.
  • Travel frequently and make it educational
  • Catch fireflies in a mason jar
  • Read "Twas the Night Before Christmas" each year on Christmas Eve
  • Have a special Santa tradition
  • Pray together every morning and every night
  • Read together before bed, every night (Goodnight Moon will be a staple...so many happy memories curled up under my Nana's arm while we read this book together)
  • Sing at the top of our lungs
  • Go on a scavenger hunt
  • Have a watermelon eating contest in the backyard, and a seed spitting contest
  • Play board games and card games around the family table (many of our best family nights were spent around the table with a deck of cards)
  • Have a camp-out in the backyard. S'mores, a campfire and stories are a necessity
  • Stay up and watch a meteor shower or solar eclipse in sleeping bags in the back of daddy's truck
  • Dance in our pajamas
  • Be okay with being messy sometimes, like drawing faces on marshmallows and blowing them up in the microwave
  • Teach them how to cook
  • Make homemade ice cream together several times per summer
  • Kiss before bed, every night
  • Eat around the dinner table as a family as often as possible
  • Teach them to have a heart for charity, to serve others, to have empathy and sacrifice (our time, toys, talents...)for those less fortunate

I'm sure the list is full of endlessly great ideas...I'd love to hear some.

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Bucket List

I've been thinking a lot about goals and dreams for the future. Being a mom has definitely been a dream of mine for a long time. Not only being a mother, but being a great mom. As I start to think of my goals and my dreams and my proverbial to-do list, it seems that there is a lot of overlap for the life I want for my marriage, my family, my child(ren). So I want to start my bucket list that I can come back to and update and edit along this journey we call life. And mark things off as I go.

Everyone knows someone (or multiple someones) who have died to soon with too many things left unsaid or undone, or people who have dreams that they will never fulfill simply because of fear (of an assorted variety), or lack of motivation, or a crippling shortage of self-worth...or whatever the reason. So, part of reaching goals and achieving dreams is to define what you want. Put it on paper (or the Internet!). So here is mine -

In no particular order:
  1. Meet the love of my life and get married (completed, June 2004)
  2. Become a mom (the countdown is ticking)
  3. Own our own home (completed, April 2006)
  4. Visit Italy, ideally for at least a month, and cook authentic food with locals
  5. Take a family vacation to Disney World
  6. Train for and complete a half marathon
  7. Eat an authentic meal in Mexico (completed, June 2009)
  8. Eat at a James Beard award-winning restaurant
  9. Go white-water rafting down the Upper and Lower Gauley River in West Virginia
  10. Go to an ACC Duke basketball game in Cameron Indoor
  11. Swim with the dolphins (completed, June 2009)
  12. Touch a shark (completed, June 2004)
  13. See Niagara Falls (completed, April 2012)
  14. Drive up the east coast and stop in DC, Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York, and Boston, eating at amazing local restaurants and "dives"
  15. Go on a cruise
  16. Go on a special trip/vacation with just me and the Hubby at least every five years (so far so good over the past ten years, ongoing for the future)
  17. Perform anonymous, random acts of kindness (ongoing)
  18. A whole list of things I want to teach my child(ren) - to be added. Maybe a separate bucket lists of goals and ideas I want to complete as a parent?
  19. Read the Bible and pray daily (currently not ongoing as planned, note to self: correct that!)
  20. Hear Wynton Marsalis in concert (completed 2001, 2002 but want to do it again and again)
  21. See a play on Broadway
  22. Take horseback riding lessons with the kids
  23. Learn to play Parable for Solo Trumpet by Persichetti
  24. Get the guts to sing jazz on a stage in front of people
  25. Transcribe the entire "Kind of Blue" album by Miles Davis (1 song down, 4 to go)
  26. Go parasailing (completed, June 2004, disaster and hilarity...but that's another story)
  27. Go on a helicopter ride (completed, April 2012)
  28. Swim with Great White sharks
  29. Learn to fly a plane
  30. Go to the National Cherry Blossom Festival in Washington, DC
  31. Snorkel in the Great Barrier Reef
  32. Hear a concert in the Sydney Opera House, Sydney Australia
  33. Hear concerts in Carnegie Hall and the Metropolitan Opera in New York City
  34. Eat pizza in Naples
  35. See the Basilica di San Marco in Venice and The Coliseum in Rome
  36. Visit The Smithsonian Museums in Washington, DC (completed, January 2003)
  37. See Mount Rushmore
  38. Get Certified as a Financial Planner (started January 2012, want to see it come to completion)
  39. Take an acting class
  40. Volunteer at a soup kitchen with my child(ren)
  41. Have a beautiful space with a hammock
  42. Sleep in a castle
  43. Start my own business/start my own restaurant
  44. See the Eiffel Tower, the Louvre, and Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris
  45. Adopt a pet from the animal shelter (completed, July 2006)
  46. Travel to California (and visit the San Diego Zoo)


WOW! What a list! I'll be back to update (and hopefully mark more things complete!), and probably split the list into a "Mommy List" and a "My List". I thought about scaling this list back, but dreaming big is the whole point, right?!

Chao!