Prayers from a Mommy of Three

June 2, 2011 under Childrearing, motherhood

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Here are thing that I pray for my three little ones as I go about my day.

Lord please give me the strength to make it through the many melt downs that are sure to happen today ( thankfully I have been able to deal with them in a different way so they are not as long and dramatic).

Show me ways that I can show you in our every day doings (like asking Sam who made the flowers or telling Buddy bibly stories)

Help me to be a fun mom and not one who is always trying to make things perfect.

Teach how to truly love these little ones you have placed in my care

Help me to keep my relationship with my husband over my relationship with them so they can feel secure in our home.

Help me to keep them safe and keep them safe for me when I cannot.

Teach me to be able to not react in a negative way for every little thing they do that bugs me and instead show grace to them.

Help me to remember to stop and get down to their level.

Help me to cherish each precious moment that I have with these little ones as I know time goes to fast (I have a three year old!!) and life its self is precious.

These are just few of the simple things that I pray for my children. There are many more though often times they are more pleads for help to get through a moment in time. I definitely could not do this mommy job without God by my side because each day He answers these prayers bit by bit and does so much more for me!!!

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Learning to Mother My Three Year Old

May 17, 2011 under Childrearing, motherhood

As you know from my past post I am struggling with the stage that my daughter Samantha is currently in. In past couple of weeks since that God has been speaking to me through a few people to show me that I am not the only one that struggles with my children and giving me ideas/resources to work with Samantha. Since implementing some of the things that I have been learning I have been enjoying working with Samantha more. Three years old don’t seem quite so bad ;)  I thought I would share a little bit of what I have been learning.

One of the first things that I came across was Jen’s blog Heligirl. She writes about using what she calls positive discipline on her two children. I have not gotten a chance to really read her blog but she had a post that really struck me. She wrote about a product called positive disciple tool cards. It wasn’t the cards that I was really interested in but the simple things that the cards said like asking for hugs. I went to find the app for my phone but sadly there is not one for the Android. But I started thinking about how I could have something similar. What I figured was why not just have reminders pop up for me on my phone for things like hugs, positive affirmation, and other things that Samantha needs so that I was sure not to forget to do them during the day.

Funny thing about all that was that the very next weekend after deciding this I went to see a very dear friend of mine and she told me to do what I just figured out. My Mentor Mom Kathleen has been such an oasis for my in my marriage and parenting. Every time I come back from seeing her I feel a million times better about things and I am ready to take on the task of being mommy (BTW Kathleen, be expecting calls from me because I have decided that once a year advice is not enough ;) ).

I had decided that I was going to ask her about who her hardest child for her to work with was and if she had any advice for me. She told me that I should work on the things that I mentioned in my last post and that I should schedule them into my every day schedule. So God was obviously telling me that I need to make sure that I making these things a big part of my day which is so true because my day goes so much smoother when I do.

Then to top things off Thursday night’s Family Life radio broadcast was featuring Cynthia Tobias who wrote the book You Can’t Make Me (But I Can Be Persuaded). This is a book that I started awhile ago that I didn’t get to finishing but in it Cynthia talks about just the way that you use your authority on your strong willed child. In a nut shell sh e gives you ways of rephrasing things that would normally lead to a fight with your child and other ways of disciplining so that the child still feels like he/she is still in control which is what they want. After hearing this again I spent that evening watching how I said things to Samantha and just doing that made our night time battles so much less they they usually are.

So those are just a few things that I have been doing/working on when it comes to working with Samantha :)

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Confessions from a Mommy of an Almost Three Year old

April 27, 2011 under Childrearing, motherhood

Mommy and Samantha

You see that picture? It makes it look like everything is right in Samantha and Mommy world doesn’t it? Well I am here to confess that it is not.

You see I have found out in the last few months that being mommy to a two and a half year old is not my thing.

*Gasp* Did I just say I didn’t like being mommy to my two year old?!?! Yes I did :-/

I love newborns, babies, and older children (and don’t tell me that they will be the same way when they are older because I know this but right now I don’t have a kid in that stage so I am still enjoying them) but this stage where they push EVERY RULE and question EVERYTHING is something I am really struggling with. It makes me sad that I am enjoying my two little boys more then I am enjoying my daughter! I have been really been struggling being her mommy! But something that I figured out recently….its because she is different then me!

A couple of weeks ago I decided that I was really going to work hard on our relationship so that I was not struggling with her so much. This lead me to plan a mommy daughter date. This date did not turn out very well and I came home crying to Mathew that I was not going to be able to make anything work out between us.

Thankfully due to my wise husband and some time to reflect and think on the day I realized why that day and many things with our relationship were not working.

Its because I was trying to make her do things my way or what I wanted to do but my child is clearly not me!

When we went on the date, instead of sticking to my instincts to take her to the park or the book store I took her shopping. Sure Samantha like to go shopping sometimes but I have a tomboy/toddler on my hands who gets antsy if we are in a store to long. Especially a store that has clothes that mommy wants to try on and not fun things for Samantha to see or play with. So needless to say I got frustrated with her which made her frustrated with me.

On thinking back on this trip I realized that I did much of everything with Samantha this way. Instead of stopping to see things Samantha’s way I would get angry that Samantha was not seeing things my way. Obviously in forcing Samantha to do and see things my way it was just leading to us both being in this tug-a-war of which had the most power.

My daughter is different then me!

In learning this I have really really tried hard the last couple of weeks to work on seeing things Samantha’s way. This means that instead of criticizing her for everything that she does that drives me insane I try and remember to stop and try and see it from her perspective. This means that when we are out doing something and she is getting upset and making me upset I try and remember to stop and think and see if this is something she dislikes doing or maybe its just because its pass her nap time/bedtime. This means that when she has climbed over the baby gate and made a mess or is hiding eating something that instead of immediately yelling at her that I try and remember to stop and think and see if there is a reason like she is bored or hungry. This means that if I am tired and all I want to do is sit for a few minutes and do something mindless like check facebook or snuggle with Isaac and Samantha is climbing up the walls and driving me insane that I don’t get upset with her and I try and remember to stop and think about why she is doing this such as maybe she wants some mommy time or again maybe she is bored.

So how have I been doing with this challenge?

I have noticed that I am yelling at her less but I still fail maybe two times out of five. Its hard work being a mommy of a two year old!

Something that I have found that help both of us are spending time in prayer over my relationship with her and making sure that instead of criticizing her for everything that she does wrong I really focus on letting her know when she is doing a good job. Easy things right? Not so much when you have been doing it the wrong for to long. But I am learning and things have been getting better.

So yes my daughter is different then me but I am learning that when it comes to my daughter different is good!!

What mommy confessions do you have?

 

 

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Dailyness – My Motherhood Confession

July 19, 2010 under Childrearing, motherhood, Uncategorized

This was such a great reminder to me.

The Dailyness by Ariel Allison Lawhon, She Reads Co-Director

“Blessed is the man who listens to me, watching daily at my doors, waiting at my doorway.” Proverbs 8:34 (NIV)

Life wouldn’t be so hard if it wasn’t so daily. As I sit here surrounded by laundry and dishes piled high in the sink, I see more than ever how life wears us down one day at a time.

Crumbs litter the floor and dirty smudges cover the windows. And I have yet to discover where that smell is coming from. For this mother of four, a simple trip to the grocery store requires an act of God and Congress – attempted only when we are down to powdered milk and Ramen noodles. Not thirty minutes ago a little one-year-old boy clung to my legs, belting out that scream – you know the one, bats can hear it. And I felt my co ping skills slipping away. Not because he was crying but because he cries every day.

The daily-ness.

The job of motherhood feels so vast, and frightening, and unending. I am called to raise these children in the fear and admonition of the Lord and yet there are days that I can’t seem to get out of my pajamas much less lead them in a time of prayer. I think anyone could endure the temper tantrums of a small child or the rebellion of a teenager or the constant needs of another if they lasted just one day. But the truth is that these things are the stuff of daily life. And when I am honest with myself, they grind down the rough edges of this woman. Because parenting can not be all about me when diapers must be changed, noses wiped and beds made.

In those moments I force myself to take a deep breath and thank God for this season of life. These children. The privilege of wiping noses and bottoms and countertops. A privilege many women wou ld love to have, but don’t. I remind myself that the days are long but the years are short. And one day I will look in the rear-view mirror and see empty seats. The cup that is overflowing right now will slowly drain. The stretch marks will fade. And I will find that a new set of daily struggles has overtaken me. When that day comes I will find the strength to face them as well because God gives the grace, daily.

The daily-ness.

As C.S. Lewis once said, “The thing is to rely on God… Meanwhile, the trouble is that relying on God has to begin all over again every day as if nothing has yet been done.”

Your daily-ness is probably different than mine, but it is nonetheless God-ordained. It is exactly what we need to live dependent on His grace instead of our own strength. The One who knows us best, who knit us together in our mother’s womb, has allotted these days that are equal parts trial and triumph. And He knows that we will see Him most clearl y from a place of dependence.

So today I embrace the normal things. The daily things. Another round of laundry. The ring in my toilet. The dust on my dresser so thick a child could write his name. But even more than that I want to celebrate the important things. A child slowly learning to read. A husband that finds his comfort in my arms. A baby who learns to walk and talk. Because all these are the things of life: some mundane and some holy. And all of them must be received daily.

The dailyness of motherhood is one of the things that I struggle with the most right now. I am always tell people that the hardest part about being a parent is that is a 24/7 job. Don’t get me wrong, I love being a mommy and love my children more then I can put into words but there are some days when I just am tired of being there for them, of putting my daughter in her room every five minutes, having to let my son nurse again when I don’t want to be touched, of cleaning the same mess up that I cleaned yesterday, and so on and so forth. I miss the times before I had children where Mathew and I could run out at random times (read 11 or 12 at night) and do something fun, not having to clean my house once a week if that, being able to be totally selfish, of not having to decided between diapers and the cute dress I found, and other such things of that nature.

So right now my biggest struggle being a mommy is that its a 24/7 job but lately I have been reminded over and over again that this is where I wanted so desperately to be before I got married. Also that this is a season that will pass and I will miss it as muh as I complain about it now.

So I am learning (very very slowly) to be content and to look past the next load of laundry, the constant discipline, the screaming baby, and tiredness that never goes away. The thing I want to focus on are the precious moment that I do have like when my daughter leans up against me and says she likes me, when my son gives me the biggest smiles and giggles, when I feel accomplished after getting the sticky floor clean again, and when my husband comes home after a long day and he gives me his undivided attention so I can unwind.

God has given me the desires of my heart by giving me my family!!! So many women have not been bless with children like me or they have it so much harder then me. I need to remember this when I am in the thick of things!! I need to give Him back the glory by meeting every need that my family has and being content in where he has placed me!!

Are you struggling with the 24/7 ness of motherhood? What are the things that get you through this season in our lives?

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Advice for Motherhood

September 8, 2009 under motherhood

Today I wanted to share some advice for motherhood that I found from Above Rubies

 
Moanhood Or Motherhood


“Who can find a virtuous woman for her price is far above rubies.” Proverbs 31:10
I am often drawn to this text as I pray for God to mold me into the woman He desires me to be, no matter how much against the stream of normalcy it seems.
My Interlinear Bible, which is translated directly from the Hebrew, inspires me when I read, “Who can find an able woman? For her value is far above jewels.” The word “able” hit me with a giant thud. I wasn’t as pricked by the word “virtuous” as virtues seem to abound in the feminine sex! I’m only being slightly sarcastic! But “able”! “Able”?
As mothers and wives we often spend wasted brain space mulling over just the opposite. Do these words sound familiar? “I can’t do it anymore!” “I don’t have the energy!” “I’m drained! I have nothing more to give.” “I’m too tired! I’m completely exhausted and wasted. I can’t do one more thing!” We talk ourselves out of any last vestige of energy, and by the power of our minds we feel even more tired than we really are!
“Honey, not tonight! Actually I’ve got a headache. No, it’s a migraine.” “Oh, I just need some time for myself.” “I feel so used. Nobody appreciates what I do around here.” “I’ve got to get out. I’ve got cabin fever.” “I didn’t get a good sleep last night. Come to think of it, I never get a good sleep. It’s all making me old before my time. I found a new wrinkle this morning.”
Ugh! This is putting me in the doldrums just writing about it!

How can our husband value us more than jewels when our lives are one big complaint?

It is true that we talk ourselves into more than half of our problems. How can we be “able” women and how can our husbands and children truly value us above jewels when our lives are one big complaint? I think the key to being “able” is more about being positive than it is about all the talent and intellect we can possess. There are many gifted people who never accomplish half of what the mere motivated and persevering achieve.

How can we be positive mothers when we have made a career of being professional moaners?

Have we embraced moanhood instead of motherhood? Just as negativity is a habit, so is a positive and happy heart. The more we think on the good things, the more they become naturally part of our nature. The negative muscles become floppy, weak and slowly deteriorate when we don’t use them. Philippians 4:8 tells us to think on things that are pure and lovely. If we make a habit of thinking about the lovely things, in turn, our lives will be a lot lovelier.
We can become negative by worrying about the future. We may dwell today on all the work we have to do tomorrow or even in the months to come. Again, the wisdom of the Bible frees our minds and makes for a happy mother when it says, Sufficient for the day is its own trouble.” (Matthew 6:34)
God is very interested in our thought-life and in the confessions of our lips. Here are just a few quotes:
A merry heart does good like medicine.” (Proverbs 17:22)
Death and life are in the power of the tongue.” (Proverbs 18:21)
Gird up the loins of your mind.” (1 Peter 1:13)
A positive attitude breathes life into our soul and body and actually gives us energy.

A positive attitude breathes life into our souls and bodies and actually gives us energy. Satan is all to eager to plant seeds of negativity into our minds because he knows they are seeds of death and make us unable. Negativity is based upon fear, which chokes the very life out of its victims and renders them practically immobile. Negativity holds us captive in a prison of gloom. Being positive frees us to succeed and thrive. Some people see their negative outlook as being realistic. This is another trap of the enemy; a smoke screen to blind us to the truth that will set us free to really live and enjoy life.
There are always two ways to look at things. I exercise everyday as part of my job description as a fit, healthy and happy wife and mother. Many times while on the treadmill in my kitchen I start thinking, “I feel awful. My legs are burning. I can hardly breath. I feel like pulling the plug.” With every second I grow more tired and soon feel completely drained. The fact is everything I’m feeling is truth. However, when I “gird up my mind” I remember how good I’ll feel afterwards and that 30 minutes isn’t that long. “I’ve only got 15 more minutes to go. I’m breathing really well now, and hey, this is easy. I feel great. I’ll race anyone. I’m going to pick up my pace. Wow, look at me go!” There is as much truth in this second thought process and I injected myself with a bunch of energy and ended up with a full tank.
You may get up in the morning, sigh and drag yourself to the coffee pot confessing, “I was up with the baby for four solid hours last night. I can’t make it through today.” This may be true, but the other side of the story is that you had four good hours of sleep. We can feel just as good as we can feel bad.
Thinking negatively involves the “me” word. It makes one too introspective. My mother always says, “If you are feeling depressed, go and do something for someone else. You’ll soon forget about your own problems.”
The negative “so called” facts are not truth at all. They are the enemy’s poisonous darts. To contemplate them digs their venom deeper into your mind. The truth is: we are new creatures in Christ. We are to crucify the “flesh man” and live by the Spirit. The fruit of the Holy Spirit such as patience and longsuffering are now our new character traits. In Christ we can bear way more than the level the devil deceives us into thinking we can handle.
The second line of Proverbs 31:10 reads, The heart of her husband trusts in her so that he has no lack of gain.” The New Living Translation reads, She will greatly enrich his life.” How can we enrich our husbands when our own lives are anything but enriched? We can’t give from a drained pot. Often we feel empty and exhausted, not because of our tedious workload so much as the state of our mental reflections.

How can a husband feel enriched if his wife is not contended and happy?

How can a husband have “no need of gain” if his wife isn’t happy and contented? If we greet him at the door with a tired expression, a list of complaints, and quickly pass off all the children to him, his welcome home will not be very enriching. It may make him want to retreat! Home should be a solace from the worry and stress with which the world assails him. It should be a place of enriching, a gas station to fill his tank before venturing back into his world of business and stress. Our homes should be an oasis where our husband can take a cool drink of the water of peace, love and laughter. We should meet him at the door with a bright smile, a warm welcome, and with a cheery atmosphere pervading the home.
If he asks how our day was, and we remember how Suzie cut off her little sister’s hair, how Johnny peed on the clean folded clothes, or how the baby spread the surprise in his diaper like peanut butter around the crib, we might feel compelled to say it was a “bad day”. But wait a second! Let’s get out of our negative tunnel vision and see the big picture. There were no major accidents. We are all still alive and breathing. Suzie did really well at her reading lesson and Johnny picked some weeds from the garden and said I was a “beaubibul laby.” It was a lovely day. Come to think of it, it was a great day!
When the atmosphere of our home is filled with optimism, our husband and children will feel they can do anything.
The Proverbs 31 woman “opens her mouth with wisdom and the law of kindness is on her tongue.” As hormonal creatures, we women can sometimes become so emotionally pent up that when our husbands come home we vomit our feelings all over them before they have a chance to take off their coats. We were made to be our husbands’ helpmeets. We were made to complete them and enrich their lives. God did not create man to be the woman’s emotional counselor or hormonal dartboard. The more we press into God and become positive-thinking women, the less we will be inclined to emotionally regurgitate. Spurting out a bunch of negative goo gah is not opening our mouths in wisdom. Nor is it kind. It is like serving our husbands a glass of gravel instead of giving them a refreshing drink of happiness.
Men are not emotional sorts and just don’t get the problem. My friend told me how she told her husband that she was feeling “out of sorts.” He replied, “Don’t feel out of sorts.” This reply was the right answer but not the one she wanted to hear. Men are wired differently so when our skies look gray we need to go to God first and then maybe call a close girlfriend who will lend a listening ear.
Proverbs 31 continues with its description of the able woman. She girds herself with strength, and strengthens her arms… she extends her hand to the poor. Yes, she reaches out her hands to the needy…strength and dignity are her clothing; she shall rejoice in time to come… she watches over the ways of her household, and does not eat the bread of idleness.”
A hardworking woman doesn’t have time to waste in negative contemplation. She has more important things pressing on her mind. If we are truly busy we won’t have time to stop and moan. I can’t picture Mother Theresa complaining about how tired she was or turning away another child.
I love the way the curtains draw on the “able” woman. Her children rise up and call her blessed; her husband also, and he praises her.” The Hebrew word for “praises” is “halal”. It means “to shine, to make a show, to boast, to rave, to glorify, to make renown. The root of this word has the idea of radiance.” Are we worthy of such acclamation?
Let us take on a spirit of rejoicing and do away with negative gloom. We will then be free to be ‘able’ women whose value is above jewels.

SERENE ALLISON

Primm Springs, Tennessee, USA
If you have not been over to Above Rubies then I suggest that you go and check them out! They are an amazing resource for motherhood, child rearing, marriage , and so much more. I have been getting their magazine for a couple of years now and they always seem to show up in the mail right when I need them. I will also be getting some of their teachings on CD to add to my stuff for battling spiritual dryness.
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Ways of Battling Spiritual Dryness – Quick Tips for Moms

September 4, 2009 under motherhood, womanhood

Today I want to share some of the ways that I have been battling the spiritual dryness that I have been facing.

A couple of weeks ago I was really struggling with being a mom but I realized when talking to my husband that just being a mom 24/7 was not all that I was having a hard time with but rather it was more that my relationship with my heavenly father was not quite right. Ever since moving to Flagstaff I have been suffering from spiritual dryness because I was not being fed in the way that I needed from the church that we attend here. I was seriously missing my old church in Mesa (City Of Grace) but I realized that I cannot always rely on a church to feed me. There will be places that I live that I do not have access to a good church that meets all my needs like now and in the future if Mathew and I end up becoming missionaries. Talking with Mathew I learned that I really never learned to feed myself and this was becoming a problem.  So with this knowledge I have been turning to a couple of different places to change this.

One of the first things that I did was send off an email to a older mom friend of mine. I asked her how she found time to feed herself when she had younger children running around. Here is her response:

Your deduction of the correlation between your spiritual walk and journey of motherhood is very well perceived Felicia.  The older I get, now 44, the more I realize  that the health of my personal spiritual walk has a direct correlation with my perception and management on motherhood.  I could also easily add my marriage, my friendships and my outook on life. The last five years have been the richest I have ever experienced  in my walk with my Lord.  It has been in my deepest valleys and struggles that I have come to know my Lord  with a sweet degree of intimacy. This relationship did not develop through church as that that is not where you will mature.  I do think it is often far too easy to attend church and rely on someone else’s study to feed you.  So, here are just a few ideas to get you going.  

I use my i-touch  in my personal quiet time often to listen to music that stirs my soul.  This is how I often start out.  When I had little one like you, I FEASTED on lots of tapes by Elisabeth Elliot.  You may think she is OLD but spiritual principles are not dated.  I have hundreds of her tapes.  I listened to those probable for five years solid when my children were all babies and toddlers.  

In this day of the world-wide web, you have before you a feast of information and I am firmly convince that one can be spiritually fed and voraciously grow in the lord if you are not in fellowship. I am pretty constantly listening to sermons I have downloaded.  When I had babies, I would walk with a tape cassette on my hip and buds in my ears.  I would even listen to my tapes when I was ironing.  Purpose to place in you mind  excellent and challenging material Felicia.  Do not be content with mediocrity.  R. C. Sproul said “Life changes when the mind changes.”  Daily be in the word, even in snippets.  If  I can’t sleep at night, even now I might just stay in bed and listen to something encouraging.  It was difficult to sometimes accept the small amounts of time I had.  That is why the tapes, cd’s and now podcasts have been such a blessing.  Maybe all you can do is plan 30 minutes a day to try and listen to something.

Ah the wisdom of older women!! This email was such a blessing to me because I immediately went in search of sermons (I started with my old church City Of Grace) and other things to listen to and ever since then even when I can only list to a few minutes I have been blessed by my spiritual dryness turning to spiritual growing in the way that I was craving before.  
 
 
 Though I still have rough days they have not been as bad as they were before I was given these tips! 
 
What ways do you have of feeding yourself spiritually even when each day seems more busy then the last?

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Bringing Out The Best in Our Children

August 14, 2009 under Childrearing, motherhood

Today another email from Proverbs 31 Ministries struck a cord that I had to share…

Bring Out The Best in Our Children by Glynnis Witwer

I threw up my hands in despair, and sighed with a dramatic and disgusted exhale of breath. At that moment, all five of my children were the focus of my frustration. I was tired of correcting the same behaviors, the same tones of voices, and the same irresponsibility from the same children. It had not been a good day, and I told them so –individually and collectively – in not-so-nice terms.

The lecture ended and they all went their own way, as upset and annoyed as me. Instead of changing their behaviors and attitudes, the negativity went underground. We were like a simmering pot, ready to blow its lid. My angry response only exacerbated the problem, not helped it. What I wanted was for them to get along, speak kindly to each other and do their chores respectfully. What I got was more of the same.

As I returned to my own chores, I realized how ineffective my tirade had been in achieving my true goals. While I got them to stop bickering momentarily, I hadn’t really made an impact on their hearts. In fact, I’d done more harm than good by not modeling gentle and respectful words. The rest of the day confirmed the truth: I’d not brought out the best in my children. I just stamped down the bad for a while. My children are not so different from me. I know how I feel when someone speaks in an angry tone to me. It certainly doesn’t spur me on to show kindness to them. In fact, I tend to take my frustration out on someone else. That’s just what happened in my family that day. We had a domino effect of irritation.

In Hebrews 10, verse 24, the Bible encourages us to “spur one another on toward love and good de eds.” In my experience personally and with my children, showing love and good deeds spurs others on to show more love and good deeds. The Bible also tells us that we reap in greater measure than what we sow (Hosea 8:7). Which means love multiplies more love, and kindness multiplies more kindness.

As a mom, I have an opportunity to bring out the best in my children. But it consistently means I have to bring out the best in me. I can’t model impatient behavior and expect my kids to learn patience. I can’t model a self-focused lifestyle and expect my kids to learn how to serve others. Nor can I model an ultra-busy schedule and expect my kids to find time for God in theirs. Spurring my children on to greater love and good deeds means they need to learn it by watching and listening to me.

How many times have I gotten upset with Samantha and instead of showing her the right way to handle the frustration I chose to be not-so-nice. This is something that I definitely want to work on so that as my children get older and are watching and learning from me I am showing the Godly life that I want to portray to those around me. I know that I will fail in this area many more times to come but thankfully I also know that I have a second chance to start over again and do things the right way.


What about you? What additudes and heart responses are you portraying to your children?

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