Tag Archive for family

Working on “Us”

bookI’m about to share a very intimate moment that my husband and I had recently (with his permission of course). We started doing a book study on marriage together a few weeks ago to help reconnect us after having a new baby in the house. You parents know how a marriage can experience strain with the introduction of a child. The child gets most of the attention and well, spouses get very little from each other unless it is directly relating to the child. So we decided we needed to work on “us” again.

While studying one particular chapter on irreconcilable differences, I was reminded of how good a man my husband is and more importantly how godly he is. I admitted to him that at times in the past I have felt like he has put me on the back burner for other things like work and church. Of all the things I could complain about, there I was giving the man a hard time about two very important aspects of our lives. As I said it, I could hear how petty I sounded complaining about how he rushes out the door on his way to work (he has more than enough time to get there), which means that we don’t have time for the lingering goodbyes I’d prefer; and how adamant he is to get to church on time every Sunday that he doesn’t seem to mind if I miss breakfast in the process or leaving me behind to drive myself. Those things actually annoyed me until he shared some profound wisdom that made me feel extra foolish and extra proud to be his wife all at once.

“Being at church on time is important to me because I know that I need God’s help to take care of my family,” he said. “That’s where our blessings come from.”

It was simply put, but spoke volumes about his faith and the depths of his heart for me. His motivation is to be a provider for us, and he’s doing it by faith. As I’ve mentioned in Wait on God, I currently make more money than my husband does, but he is still a provider nonetheless. First and foremost, he is providing the spiritual covering that we need. As far as money goes, He knows that a job is just a resource, but God is THE source. He knows that the favor of God is worth more than any amount of money on a paycheck. He knows that he is accountable to God for the well-being of our family. He is standing on the promise that if we obey and serve Him we shall spend our days in prosperity and our years in pleasures, (Job 36:11) and that as the head of our family it starts with him. That also explained to me why he’s so determined to get to work early each day. He wants to insure that he honors God even on his job for the benefit of our family. And isn’t that what we want–a man who loves God more than he loves us, so that he can in fact love us the way the Father intends for us as wives to experience love according to Ephesians 5:25?

Husbands love your wives, even as Christ also loved the church, and gave himself for it.

So married ladies (especially those of us who are heavily involved in ministry), take it from me. Before you give your husband a hard time about his spiritual and natural convictions that you don’t understand, consider how those things communicate his commitment to and his sacrifice for you and your family. You just might be like me and fall in love all over again.

I’d like to hear from you. How have you and your spouse stayed emotionally connected after having children? Please share!

The Last Mani-Pedi

Today I went to tnailshe mall and had a mani-pedi. No big deal, right? It was only supposed to ensure that my feet would look decent when I went to the hospital to deliver my baby and as a way to relax before the big day, but it turned into something more–something more symbolic and meaningful to me. I realized that this would be the last mani-pedi I would have as a child-free woman. In essence, this would be the last time I would do something pleasurable just for me without having to consider the needs of a child. Instead of it being just another mani-pedi, it was a brief moment for me to relish in my non-mommy status before the very certain and soon arrival of my son, Gabriel.

Don’t misunderstand me. I am super excited to enter this new phase in my life, and I definitely count it an honor to be a mother because it is a blessing, but there’s no mistaking that my life will never ever be the same in Jesus name. Getting married at the age of 30 was the first transition into a less selfish me, where I would have another person’s needs to consider, and now at the age of 34 any remaining bits of selfishness will have to take a back seat to meeting my son’s every need and being totally responsible for his well-being. That’s not to be taken lightly. It comes with the territory–territory that I’ve been desiring to enter for the past three years. So I’m okay with that. Actually, I’m thrilled with it. That moment also reminded me how important it is to appreciate and find contentment in every phase of life, even as the Apostle Paul said in Philippians 4:11.

Not that I speak in respect of want: for I have learned, in whatsoever state I am, therewith to be content.

So will there be more mani-pedis in my future? Absolutely! But for at least the next 18 years, it won’t be before I make sure that my child has what he needs first.

 

I’d love to hear how any soon-to-be, first-time mothers are spending your final days of freedom or how any other mothers enjoyed yourselves before your babies arrived. Feel free to share.

Mothers, Don’t Disable Your Daughters

chore-listI participated in a very enlightening discussion recently with some close friends of mine about the Virtuous Woman. The focus verse was Proverbs 31:14 which states, “She is like the merchants’ ships; she bringeth her food from afar” (KJV). What is interesting about this particular quality in our beloved forerunner is that she does not seek convenience or the fast and easy way out of anything. Instead she seeks to present her family with quality. The majority of us young women in the group, consisting of wives, mothers, and single ladies had to admit that in our day and age we do indeed often favor a lifestyle of convenience, which sometimes compromises the quality of what we bring to the table (literally and figuratively) and is a stark contrast to the habits of the women in generations preceding ours. We see this in the amount of money spent on eating out (not to mention the amount of fast food we feed our kids) and the state of disarray we find our homes in more often than not. What happened to us? What happened to women who cooked, cleaned, raised multiple children and worked jobs without skipping a beat? Well, life happened. Career demands, ministry responsibilities, high-maintenance children, household chores with little to no help from husbands, going back to school, and honestly speaking bouts of laziness happens. So what do we do about it?

The first step is to realize that the role of the woman and God’s expectations of us as clearly outlined in His Word have not changed despite what many new-agers would say. Is that to say that the woman’s role is limited to the home? Not at all. It is to say that while the man is to be the head of the house and the leader of the family, we as women are to be the head of our home, as one very wise sister stated. Well isn’t that a contradiction? Not really. As the head of the home, we are responsible to see to it that the home is managed efficiently. I have no qualms with that. I just need a little help getting it done with all the other duties and endeavors on my plate. Does it take being a super woman? Since super human abilities are restricted to super heroes, which none of us are I’d say a resounding “No!” Instead, I think it takes super strategy, skill, and a sho-nuff system to be as effective as the virtuous woman is, which is step number two.

Not everyone’s system will look the same. What works for me may not work for you, so it is important to really seek God for a strategy that will specifically suit you and your family. You may not think that God is concerned with the manner in which you run your home, but He is. And when he reveals the strategy to you be diligent to carry it out with the aid and in the strength of the Holy Spirit. Believe it or not, the state of affairs in your home will spill out into the state of your life. Others will be able to see it in the way you operate outside your home. God cares because He cares about you and He wants you to be the best representation of Him that you can be. God is not out of order. Nor does He neglect His responsibilities. As His daughters, we shouldn’t either.

The third step is to ensure that we keep the proper precedent of how the virtuous woman operates in front of our daughters so that these virtuous qualities won’t be lost on them. The way that my grandmother, my mother and I were raised is completely different. My grandmother grew up picking cotton, cooking family meals from scratch (down to killing chickens off the yard), and going on to raise four children with an abusive husband. Life was certainly not easy for her. When my mother was growing up she had to do everything around the house: cook, clean, and watch after her younger sister and brothers under the pressure of her very demanding father. No peaches and cream there either. I, on the other hand, did have it pretty easy growing up compared to the two of them. I had a few chores, but was never made to do the things that either of them did daily. In our discussion one sister said that our parents wanted our lives to be better than their lives were, so they didn’t put the same amount of demands on us. That makes sense on the surface. But underneath it all I think it disabled us to a degree.

As a former classroom teacher and current school counselor I know what it means to be an enabler. I’ve seen numerous parents over the years who can accurately be placed in this category. Enablers make it easy for children to misbehave and make poor choices by failing to nip problem behaviors in the bud when they first occur and by making excuses for their children when really those excuses don’t excuse. It’s a parenting predicament among more recent generations, and I would argue that disabling is also a problem on the rise.

To disable is to make unable or unfit; and to weaken or destroy the capability of. Because of the lack of demands, many of our children are missing the care for the home that was ingrained in our mothers and grandmothers. In my opinion, we don’t need to relax the standards for our children to make life easier for them. It is our responsibility to instill those characteristics in the way that we raise them. So give them jobs to do around the house and require that they be completed on a reasonable time table. Teach them how to do these things and hold them accountable. And although the title is gender specific, let me just add that boys are not exempt from learning to be responsible around the house. That expectation will help to turn our boys into more supportive husbands on the home front. If we fail to do that, we are making them unfit for future family life and weak in work ethic. Let’s work to preserve the tradition, honor, and dignity of the virtuous woman in our own lives and the lives of generations to come. 

Feel free to share any other insights on this topic or strategies that help you be the phenomenal, virtuous woman in your home. Shout out to Deaconess Cheryl Hayes for inspiring this topic. Thanks, girlie!