Friday, October 7, 2011

Parenting Support - Balance













Think of an old-fashioned scale. The tall pointy metal bar in the middle (fulcrum) holds the horizontal bar to which is attached two swinging plates at either end. The plates hold the weights and balance is the purpose.

The school year is in full swing. Routine is truly a helpful discipline not only in the classroom but also at home. Kids thrive under reasonable boundaries. But play and imagination are equally valuable for your child's optimal development. For yours, too. Do you have any idea how much money "imagination consultants" or "creativity specialists" make in business and industry settings?

Why not have a "sing-at-the-top-of-your-lungs" period every day (every day!). It's a great contrast to your usual keep the house calm, quiet, and uncluttered routine. Go ahead and have a "wiggle-every-muscle-in-your-body" exercise time once a day (every day!).

Why not take a flashlight walk at midnight once a month...if only in your own backyard? Watch and listen to everything that's awake! You know... the moon, the stars, the breeze in trees, the owls and even the little creepers under the crackling leaves.

Why not have a sleepover for just your family in the living room occasionally? Think sleeping bags, lights out, round-robin stories, soft old songs and no one has to go to sleep until s/he falls alseep.

Why not surprise your best friends with a carry-in breakfast one hour before sunrise...everyone in funny, cozy pjs? Why not?

Well...you get the idea. PLAY! and let there be only a couple rules:

1. Don't hurt anyone in all the exurberance (look up that word!) and
2. Parents MUST participate!

So, Dear Parents, if you are too busy or too tired or too sophisticated, bring the kids to Mimi's. I know how to play!

I'm praying for you because those precious kids need YOU more than anything or anyone else in the whole world!

Mimi
(Yes, that big one is MY kid and the two little ones are MY grans - I know - gorgeous!)

Friday, August 26, 2011

Look around, read the news, sit in a classroom, worst of all, read comments anonymously posted on the web. Is it just me...or does it seem there is a lot of anger, quickly erupting anger, vicious anger in the air nowadays? The lack of a sense of cooperation and civility, let alone personal centeredness or peace, is nearly palpable.
When do these youth, even these children begin to believe that life is about fighting (killing?) your way to the top?
God, we need You.

I love you, Dear Parent - each and every one!
Mimi



Parenting Blog - Talking When You’re Angry – Don’t!

When I worked at a court-ordered neutral exchange house to provide visitation services for divorced and uncooperative parents, I was stunned by the inappropriate communication the parents used with their children, with the staff, and even in letters to be passed to the other parent:

Talking to the child: “Now, Honey, I'm sorry you HAVE to visit your dad for an hour here, but don't worry; I'll come right back here if he tries to do anything bad.” We called that “harmful coaching” and demanded families abstain from such conversations with their children. We tried hard to separate the parents' angry relationship with each other from the child's right to know and love each parent.

Talking to our staff: “You better tell her that if she can't bring these kids to visitation clean and well-fed, that I will turn her in...” Parents often watched for any small (and not so small) reason to berate the other...and usually, in front of the kids. The policies of most visitation and exchange houses provide for snacks and a clean up area, but the parents had to be told over and over (and we had to continually remind ourselves) that we cannot force our own standards on others. Safety was our guiding rationale for any action or policy. And respectful communication, at least for the sake of the child, was the standard of behavior within the house.

Passing letters, some hidden! Occasionally a parent wanted us to pass along a doctor bill that the other parent was legally obligated to pay. If the paying parent welcomed such “pass-throughs,” we tolerated the exchange. But some parents barked back at us that the parent with the bill “can just send it to the lawyer, ‘cause I ain’t payin’ it!” Likewise, if there were parents that wished to communicate with each other neutral or unemotional things about the child, such as the Little League spring schedule, we would pass these things along; but, unfortunately, these parents would often then try to fight (trap) the other parent with…”you had the kids' schedule; why couldn’t you spend your precious evening coming to the ballgame?”

Some parents even tried to “continue their divorce” by hiding hateful notes in the children's back pack or diaper bags. When we insisted on opening such “mail” or searching the bags, the staff was at risk of the ire of the sending parent.

Here's a few tips we gave angry parents at the visitation house to try to communicate more effectively with the other parent:

  • The only goal or mission of communication between angry parents is to relay necessary information concerning the child or to secure the necessary cooperation that promotes (only) the child’s welfare.

  • Writing a note is a permanent document which can be submitted to courts and legal authorities. Write responsibly. And...consider your verbal communication the same.

  • Give only facts of information and ask for only facts. Completely strip your sentences of emotion or manipulation. No threats allowed.

  • Look for cooperation rather than agreement. The focus is your child's welfare not your satisfaction or triumph over the other parent.

  • Write or speak with respect, as to someone your child loves. Respect yourself by behaving civilly.

  • Be open to the possibility that the other parent may not agree with your suggestion or proposal. Be willing to negotiate or consider a Plan B or C.

My message to recently divorced, angry, hurting parents...and to all of us is...

Your child will certainly be affected (ie: shaped!) by grudges, ongoing animosity, and disrespect, even if he/she cannot verbalize it. Remember your child holds equal DNA from both parents.

Psalm 19:14, Psalm 141:3, Matthew 5:44-45, Colossians 4:6


Friday, August 19, 2011

Hey! It's the Great Darke County Fair time! If you are not from this county in Ohio, google it! Yes, our town (Greenville) nearly shuts down for the fair. Most of us have grown up spending every August dreaming about the fair, saving money for the fair, preparing our animals or crafts or art or cakes for the fair, and finally... finally, on that first Friday, we must go to the fair!
As I've gotten older, most of the year I think, "What is the big, stinkin' deal? Really, now?" And then on Thursday night before the fair opens, I can nearly smell the cotton candy and taste the sausages; I hear the cacophany of sounds unique to this fair and I can see the million lights. So, in spite of myself, I'll go again this year!
But, when I was single...it was a bit painful...


Parenting Blog - Single with Kids

Single parenting is not the ideal, as any truthful single parent will tell you. Single parenting is not just tiring, but exhausting! Single parenting is lonely; single parenting is sad and confusing. There are innumerable daily questions and concerns about the home and kids that couples often resolve together or at least have a mutual interest in. Facing all this as a single parent can feel overwhelming. However, being single with kids is not a reason to hurry into another relationship.

When I divorced after 18 years of marriage and with six children, my first fear (besides where would the next meal come from) was that my children might lose hope in the love of a spouse when they grew up. I always deeply wanted, and still do, that my children recognize the absolute sacredness of the institution of marriage between a man and a woman (yes, I put that in print).

My second fear after divorcing was that my kids would like their dad better than me! True confession! My struggles are just like yours! And although I was mad and tired and lonely, I knew I could not be responsible to my children's wellbeing nor to my own future if I immediately “hooked up.”

For parents who divorce, the negative emotions generated make it difficult to consider the children's welfare above their own pain. However, it is critical to find the self-discipline needed to manage this life change as “the adult.” The children should not have to suffer needlessly by an angry, spiteful parent (although there will be some suffering for everyone involved in a divorce). The children should not have to choose one parent over the other because children NEED both a mom and a dad. On this note, a divorced parent must try to respect the role of the other parent, if not the person. Neither should a child from divorcing parents have to play the parent role by taking care of an emotionally damaged parent. Adding another romantic adult to the mix is fuel to fire.

Rather than desperately looking for another man or woman to take away my pain, I held the pain briefly, that is, I let myself experience it. I respected it as my thermometer for the fire in my life, but, as a believer, I knew it was not the final word about my life. No one can do this alone. I could not do it without God. And, I found that focusing on my children's needs as they journeyed through the divorce helped to drain away some of the negative energy of my own frustrations, sadness and loneliness.

When I teach single parents, I always ask them to name the people in their personal network (or to dream with me in establishing such a network): safe people with whom the parent might discuss parenting goals and challenges; positive people who will offer support in redefining family traditions; fun people with whom the parent can create newness and freshness in the home (new curtains, clean out the cupboards and fill with YOUR favorite foods, etc.). A personal network should also include wise people who might help the parent in reinventing or revitalizing his/her career; healthy people who will influence the family in building good health into everyday routine; and very importantly, godly people who will pray for the family and help bring God’s presence as an anchor into the family's life. Do you have such a network?

Building such relationships takes time. Time – you need it; your kids need it. Time itself does not heal all things, rather time may be the only commodity you have under your own control. And you may spend it to heal all things.

Ephesians 6:1-4, II Corinthians 6:14-18, Luke 17:3-5, Psalm 86:6, Matthew 6:12, I John 1:9, James 5:16

And if you just gotta go to the fair, go with the kids!

Love you,

Mimi



Friday, August 5, 2011

The news has reported recently in my small rural mid-western community an undressed 4-year-old walking the street alone all afternoon while dad napped, a 9-month-old near drowning in a bathtub when mom stepped out of the room, and a 10-year-old fatally shot, no details of where were the parents.

It is easy to cast blame. We all know, because of our own failures, that no parent is ever completely free from mistakes or selfishness. However, as heartbroken as I am today for these local families, I must ask all of us to consider...

Why is it so hard to protect our children?
What are we so busy doing that children's safety is not an absolute priority?
When did we become so full of ourselves, so distracted by things, and so careless with our own children who are precious gifts come to us straight from heaven? Psalm 127:3

God, please help us.
Amen,
Mimi

Parenting Blog -Begin and End with Safety

Because doting new parents are often overwhelmed with adoration of their newborns, safety is usually a top priority: safety from too much cold, too much sun, safety from bumps, from germs, from loud noises and on and on. Usually, the STATE is a couple steps ahead insisting on ultra-padded, multi-buckled car seats, cribs du jour, and warnings that tummy naps are now a sin.

Then, when infants begin to crawl, good parents lay on their own tummies on the floor and look all around to get a “child's eye view” of their home to correct the dangers of dangling cords, plug-ins, sharp objects, etc. When the crawlers begin to toddle, careful parents try to protect their little explorers from falling hazards. Regardless, we find that most toddlers sport a shiner or a goose-egg occasionally, learning the balance thing.

We should want to protect the pre-schoolers from strangers, the school-agers from evil on the web, and the high-schoolers from drugs. These dark possibilities are so fearsome, in fact, to many parents, that their strategies to protect their children often overwhelm their trust in God.

As parents, do we make prayer and faith one of our parenting strategies? Do we take time to bow on our knees or lay on our own tummies (prostrate) to pray for our children and our neighbors' children, our schools and cities? Understanding God's Word and devotion to prayer is where there is divine wisdom and strength to build protection over our families and to develop self-protection within our children. Parenting strategies without God's input are rather frail fences, indeed.

As they mature, our children may sport a shiner or two, but a family's trust, support, and love provide a safety net for human beings that nothing else can. And, of course, there are things in life from which we cannot protect our children: true accidents, some health disorders, random violence, mental struggles. Christian parents will strategically build respect, honor, love, and trust in God which provide not only a critical reserve within ourselves to face eventualities of life, but also such reserves are built within our children, offering them protection for their souls. Life's worst dangers may assault us but may not destroy us. II Corinthians 4:7-18. This is the stuff of eternity – salvation (safety), no matter what. Psalm 127, Matthew 10:28; Hebrews 13:5.

Friday, July 29, 2011

Ownership vs. Stewardship

~~EUM Church in Greenville, Ohio hosts a Parent Support Group on Wednesday evenings. One of the topics we discuss is the concept of being a steward for God over our children, rather than the prevailing cultural attitude of parental ownership. When understood and embraced, the mindset of stewardship changes everything!

Respectfully and honestly praying for you, Dear Parents,
Mimi

Parenting Blog Ownership vs. Stewardship

One summer after lunch, I was walking back to the Children's Services office where I worked. I passed a block of apartments and heard some rowdy menacing voices. In the yard, not ten feet from the sidewalk were two young couples, men growling and waving their arms at each other; the women each with a baby on the hip and a toddler by the hand – the women both yelling and egging on the men.

I was quite surprised to see this unusual scene in our quiet middle-class town. I felt immediate concern for the safety of the children. I knew it was traumatic for young children to even witness abuse or violence, let alone, the physical danger, should this argument escalate.

Yes, of course, I stuck my nose in their business! I asked the women to consider taking the kids inside until everyone cooled down. One of the young women approached me with defiance spitting from her eyes, “This kid is mine. I'm the one who takes care of her, not you! I pay for whatever she needs; you don't! I can do whatever I want and you can't tell me what to do – I own her!” I said quietly, “You do not own her; she belongs to God, but you would do well to protect her for Him.” She cursed me, threw up her head and grabbed the arm of her gal friend and growled, “Let's go inside.”

As I walked away, it occurred to me that I have seen many people act as if their children were their property, but I had not heard such an admission before. Psalm 127:3; Exodus 13:2; Luke 2:23 and chapter 18:16

Ownership of a person (husband, wife, friend, or even your own child) is slavery. Slavery, in this country, was condemned and outlawed many years ago. However, stewardship is a position of trust. A steward is authorized and responsible to care for the highest valuables of another. Matthew 25:14-30.

When we parents purposefully consider our children as precious gifts from God and we understand that His will for them is to be “reared in the nurture and admonition of the Lord” (Ephesians 6:4), then we will sense His leading and support in every child-rearing question or challenge we have. ~~

Friday, July 22, 2011

I attended a funeral today. :( An older couple; car accident; killed instantly. Tragedy. Children, grans, great-grans, friends, neighbors, the home church - everyone together to cry and say good-bye. But the stories told at the funeral were all about "Mom and Dad." Funny stories, endearing, hopeful, silly, satisfying stories. Stories that said, "we'll miss you terribly but you did your jobs - we are grown and healthy and established in your love and in God's."

Today, I pray for you, young parents, :) that when you are grandmas and grandpas
, your families will be firmly established in your wise discipline, your expressed love and in God's love.
Amen from Mimi
Parenting Blog What Child is This?

As parents, we soon learn that we certainly don't have Baby Jesus on our lap! However, our respect and curiosity for the common stages and ages our children will pass through may highlight the mystery, beauty, and challenges that even the Lord Jesus, as a child, lived in this life.

Too many parents expect that a three-foot-tall walking, talking personality should understand and respond to life events the way adults do. However, the expectation of adult rationale and behaviors from a young child or even from a teenager, is profoundly unrealistic.

When you got your first car or home or computer or whatever newest techno-communicator is advertised today, you probably treated it with some level of wonder and respect. You probably tried to figure it out, learn about the capabilities of the item or it's peculiarities. You probably learned some things by trial and error. You may even have secretly read a manual. Hopefully, you cared for your items and they benefited you. Of course, a child is so much more than the things you own (another blog will be about “ownership vs. stewardship”), but you see the necessity of building understanding into nearly any relationship.

I learned in a human services course once that “a lack of understanding of child development is one of the top three triggers of child abuse.” That is sobering! We certainly do not have to study college courses on child development to be able to become good parents, as much as we must take the time to study our own children. Be assured, your child is constantly studying you; will you also study him?

Discipline comes from the word “disciple” which means “one who studies; one who is a follower, a believer.” When you discipline your children does it come from reactive anger or from a strategic corrective plan? Do you prayerfully study the situation and your child's role in it as part of your discipline?

Observe, listen, learn, love, guide, correct, protect, enjoy and pray – all keystones to great parenting. Ephesians 5:1-2 and 1 Thessalonians 2:7-8.


Friday, July 15, 2011

This is the very first-ever blog of this 50-something grandma! (see, I don't even know yet how to turn off the underline!!) Perhaps, I'll learn how to fancy-up this blog with pictures and links and such...or maybe not! I am not on Facebook or Twitter to my daughter-in-law's chagrin; I don't text and don't miss it. And, I only use my old flip phone for...well, a phone!

But, I know parenting and I know children and I know God's will is to bless families. I have written (with pen and paper!!) parenting curriculum and taught parenting classes for courts and churches for many years. I have a passion and an annointing for families, even yours.

Now, I'll share a bit with you per this new-fangled blog. Thanks to EUM Church, Greenville, Ohio for helping me get started.

Be assured that I pray for every reader, so today, I'm praying for you!

Love You (yes, I do),

Mimi (Grandkids call me this treasured name!)

Parenting Blog - No Whining


Good parents know the difference between a cry of pain or fear and the maddening whine!

Most of us get irritated, some too easily, at the sound of a whining child. Have you ever heard (or said), “Stop that whining or I'll give you something to whine about.” Of course, this is usually just a parent's tired effort to warn the child we are weary of that mode of communication.

Here's a couple tactics may help avoid or cut off whining quickly: Stop what you are doing, get eye level with the child, quietly ask her to use her words and explain her discomfort. If she's too young to speak, calmly check the friction points of most humans: temperature, wet or dry, tired, hungry, thirsty, sad or mad. And here's one: uncomfortable clothing. You may be surprised how straightening that wrinkled and “biting” sock may relieve a toddler!

But this blog isn't about a whining child, but the whining parent. (Where do you think kids hear whining in the first place?) Since parental authority seems to be out of style these days, you often hear an exasperated and exaggerated sigh, “Da-a-a-arlin' will you pleaeaease listen to me!” You can almost hear the parents' eyeballs rolling in their heads! How many times do you beg your child to obey before you expect her to?

A variation of whining is asking a child's permission to give parental direction.

“Go brush your teeth, OK?”

“Stop hitting your sister, OK?”

“Why don't you buckle your seat belt for daddy?”

“Do you feel like... is it on your schedule... may I interrupt your important little life to implore...???”

Parents, give up the whining! Give wise instructions to your children with calm authority. Expect her obedience. Your kids need your leadership not your friendship! Time enough for that when the kids are 30!

“Children, obey your parents in the Lord for this is right and you shall have a long life on the earth.”

Ephesians 6:1-3; Colossians 3:30