Why My Wife is Right More Often than I am! (Marriage/Communication Tip of Week)

Ever argued with your spouse over something stupid? Ever regretted having a long, stupid argument? But, you couldn’t let it go, you had to be right. So, you build your walls, sling your mud, and damage your relationship. Eventually, the walls are so high, you virtually stop communicating or stop communicating effectively.

I’m guilty of all the above. But, I want to do better. My problem is I hold unto stupid things when I should be listening or letting go. But, I do it because I think I am right…well, at least 99% of the time. In reality, my wife IS right about 90% of the time!

Alex & Julie Coleen
All the women just said a collectiveAmen!” It is a painful admission for me. But, I have come to realize after 15 years of marriage, that her first, instinctive answer almost always has the measure, the strain of “right” that I will eventually, through much struggle come to realize. Do you know why? because she is a good listener and she is humble. She remembers everything–exactly what I said, where I was standing when I said it, the tone of my voice, and where the sun was in the sky! I loose most arguments because of this.

Husbands (and I can only speak as a husband) wrestle with two major issues that cause their wives often be right when we think we are right: Pride & Poor Listening.

Another “amen!” from the women reading this…yes, I am writing this at my own peril (my wife, Julie does read my blogs). This blog will be used to “remind” me at key times of what I wrote, but I’m doing it for our marriages, our homes, and because, yes, she will be right at that time, as well. What has become more important to me in our marriage is not to “be right,” but, to “get it right.”

Problem #1 : Pride

Of course, she is not always right, she knows that, but men (husbands) have this great need to be right. I’m not validating the “need,” rather I am acknowledging that it exists.  What wives don’t understand, is it, I believe, comes out of a man’s need to be viewed with respect. Men are wired this way, a man needs to be respected. As my friend Jim says, he needs to know he’s your “Superman.” Except Superman had a weakness, and so to do most husbands.

In fact, one of, if not the most important, way that a wife can show her husband love is by respecting him, respecting his work, respecting his decisions, respecting his choices. But wait, wives, he’s often wrong. His decisions are often wrong, his choices are often wrong–thus the rub. Husbands, when you begin to escalate the communication, check your pride. If you can do this you can “catch” her stress, the strain by responding gently and softly the fire will go out. Your pride throws log after log on the fire, pretty soon you have a roaring inferno.

For lack of wood the fire goes out…” Proverbs 26:20

Problem #2 : Poor Listening

Face it men, you are bad listeners. Stephen Covey says, “Most people do not listen with the intent to understand; they listen with the intent to reply.”

There are about 12 of you that are actually good listeners, but the vast majority of men are naturally not good listeners. Men want to solve problems, conquer, claim territority and move forward. Long, detailed and emotional explanations slow the conquering and problem solving process down, so instead of listening well, men listen for what I deem to be the “critical success factors” and draw immediate problem-solving judgments from those. This poor listening creates problems…

The problem for wives: she most often just wants to connect with you her husband and the way she does it is through communication. Short-cutting her communication turns her off, shuts her down and locks him out.

The problem for husbands: often men see communication as the door to peace, problem-solving or passion (sex), which lead to umet expectations, a lack of fulfilment and frustration.
Real listening, good listening promotes understanding. The Apostle Peter (who was married) wrote, “...husbands, live with your wives in an understanding way, showing honor…” (1 Peter 3:7).  Think the accountability from Peter’s wife “uh, Peter, you’re not listening to me…an um, didn’t you just write that in the BIBLE!” Listening for understanding is a way a husband can demonstrate honor to his wife.

Men, your wife actually wants to hear you. You, most often, just want to be heard by her.

Two things that Julie and I learned to use in our communication that has helped promote understanding and aleviate tension:

1- What I hear you saying is…
2- When you say that, it makes me feel… (men, this creeps some of you out, but watch her light up when used effectively)

So, I must thank Julie for helping me to be a better husband, father, and man. I write this because I need it, men need it, marriages need it. She wants “us” to get it right, most often, I just want to be right. Which is why she is most often right!

Devotional of the Day: Victory

But thanks be to God, who gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ.”

1 Corinthians 15:57

Let me teach many of you a new word today: Ephemeral. Ephemeral means “lasting for a day only.” It’s kind of like the expression “here today gone tomorrow.” Christians need to understand that their victory in Jesus Christ is not ephemeral, but, eternal.

Satan, the world and your flesh will all lead you to believe that your position, your ability to overcome, and your victory are all but for a moment. But they are wrong, it is rather our suffering and “afflictions that are but for a moment” (2 Corinthians 4:17). The Bible tells us that this victory has the eternal weight of glory bearing down on us. God is being revealed to and in you, that is part of the eternal glory.

 
Not all pressure is bad pressure. Pressure causes stress. Stress will either produce cracks or change. Change is transformation and God is in the transforming business. Sometimes the “pressure” you are experiencing is the pressure of a victor. Some food, in order to be prepared fully, needs to undergo the pressure cooker. I didn’t say it is fun or pleasurable. Often walking in victory can be difficult. But, perhaps it is needed. What in your life is putting you under pressure? What is causing it?

But, this victory is producing in us an eternal glory “that is beyond all comparison.” Don’t let the minor obstacles of life become major hinderances, for remember your faith is not ephemeral. Don’t let your thanksgiving be either! Make a commitment this day to express “thanks be to God” throughout the pressures of your day, remembering that is is our Lord Jesus Christ “who gives us the victory.”

Be encouraged dear brother or sister with these words,

So we do not lose heart. Though our outer selfc is wasting away, our inner self is being renewed day by day. For this light momentary affliction is preparing for us an eternal weight of glory beyond all comparison, as we look not to the things that are seen but to the things that are unseen. For the things that are seen are transient, but the things that are unseen are eternal.” 2 Corinthians 4:16-18, ESV

Why Waiting is Good for Your Child

“Mom, Dad, I really, really need it!” Ever heard those words, as your dress was being pulled, your arm tugged or your sleep interrupted?!

Really? Does your child know what they need best? No, of course not.  Most often they confuse their wants with their needs. We as humans are impulsive.

We see, we want. We want, we take.

Waiting

 

The end of a matter is better than its beginning, and patience is better than pride

Ecclesiastes 7:8 (NIV)

1. Waiting teaches your child patience. Impatient parents produce impatient children. Demanding parents produce demanding children. You are your child’s model. Children are by nature inquisitive, selfish, and rebellious.

The Recipe for Impatience 

Questioning + Self-Centered + Rebellious = Impatience & Demanding = I Want What I Want and I Want it Now!

An impatient and demanding child has the combination of behaviors that can lead to recklessness. A reckless child takes un-calculated, unnecessary risks that can produce disastrous consequences. Reckless behaviors destroy relationships, shirk personal responsibility, and bring out un-intended, painful results.  How many parents have experienced this in their own lives?

Waiting establishes a process by which greater thought can be exhibited by the child as to the immediacy of his/her perceived need. Waiting allows the child to gain control over their emotions and learn to restrain their spirit. Waiting allows your child the time to think about consequences, outcomes, and results. Waiting is good for your child.

 2. When to “Give In” and When Not to “Give In” — The Lesson of “What’s Appropriate?” 

Remember: don’t make them wait needlessly. Don’t make them wait to “prove a point.” If it is in your power and it is appropriate, then don’t hold back. The key is appropriate. My wife, Julie, describes appropriateness to our children by saying, “this is what the situation calls for.” The language is often above the child’s head, but it helps you reinforce that the time is not right and the circumstances are dictating the response. This way it does not become a personal authority challenge between you and your child. You can then explain what appropriate behavior, appropriate language, an appropriate attitude or an appropriate looks, sounds like.

Acquiescence destroys appropriateness. Acquiescence is the silent reluctance of acceptance. Too many parents have been worn down, aren’t engaged and have become disconnected from their children. Consequently, instead standing firm in their decision or, worse, the painful fighting that soon will ensue, the parent just rolls over with little to no resistance to give into the child’s demand. This behavior only gets worse as the child grows into adolescence. Pretty soon your child has become unknown and uncontrollable. Loving your child does not mean giving them everything they desire.

 

The Challenge: Does the Parent Know What is Appropriate?

Judging by behavior I see at the playground, at schools, at the soccer field, at the frozen yogurt shop, etc. (anywhere that parents and children are found) it is evident that a growing number of parents don’t know what is appropriate. Responsible parents don’t ignore the legitimate needs of their children. In fact, responsible parents anticipate their child’s needs and help them discern their wants.

Ask your child tugging at your arm, waking you from sleep: Is someone bleeding, broken, needing the bathroom or on fire? No. Then, you can wait a minute.

Teaching your child to wait, in one very real sense, can teach them to be more loving. And who in their right mind doesn’t want to raise a more loving child? We need more love in our homes, in our relationships, and in our world.

 

Love is patient...” 1 Corinthians 13:4

Why Your Vision Will Succeed or Fail – Leadership Thought of the Week

Not everyone has a vision. Not every leader is truly inspired.  However, there are three things that can be key indicators or key determinants that will bring your vision to a roaring success or a cold, lifeless failure.

Vision

The 3 Indicators of the Success or Failure of Your Vision:

1. Passion – a spark that kindles your desire toward success. The kind of vision that inspires you must come not from your head but from your heart. I’m not saying to follow your heart. John C. Maxwell says, “every vision starts with an emotional spark” (2011). The spark must be formed at the very center of who you are. It is foolishness to blindly follow your heart (the Bible warns against this). This spark is not something you imagine, but something you experience. For this passion is what will set you apart from everyone else.

Horst Schultze former COO of Ritz-Carlton says,

You are nothing unless it comes from your heart. Passion, caring, really looking to create excellence. If you perform functions only and go to work only to do processes, then you are effectively retired. And it scares me – most people I see, by age 28, are retired… If you go to work only to fulfill the processes and functions then you are a machine. You have to bring passion, commitment and caring – then you are a human being.”

It is a passion that drives you day after day. It is not wishful thinking or “pencil magic” on paper. It is not a “pie in the sky” goal designed to make you feel good for a moment, but tossed aside later. No, it is a fire that is lit inside of you, deep inside of you. It is a fire that is contagious. It is a fire that can be fanned by others, but not put out by others. It is ever-present. It is visible to others in your eyes, in your tone, and in the way you communicate. The fire will refine your dreams, your ideas, your thoughts, and your expectations. Without it your calculations will be cold and lifeless. You will retire and your vision will die.

2. Candor – a true version of reality. You will not succeed, you will fail if your passion isn’t combined with candor. Candor is the quality of being open, frank; speaking and facing reality and challenging those you lead to face it as well. Too many people are either duplicitous or guarded in their communication style with others. They live and communicate in a masked world—which is unhealthy, un-compelling, and false. Masked worlds don’t draw people, but rather repell them and isolate. You need the people you lead to get better–to grow. Vision does require your personal candor towards others or your ability to surround yourself with people that will speak frankly with you who will reveal the truth. The problem is many leaders don’t want to listen they only want to be heard or have those that follow aquiesce to their version of the truth.

Vision doesn’t mean you see everything. In fact, a vision can be blinding because you focus on the end result so much you fail to see what’s right in front of you. The vision was clear, the passion was present, but you stumbled and now you can’t understand why you are off track!

Jack Welch said at in the midst of his culture change at GE, he had too many business leaders that refused to change. They wanted to be left alone and refused to face reality (Tichy & Charan, 1998). Candor faces reality. Stop ignoring reality. Surround yourself with candorous truth-tellers.

A dreamer who becomes a fantasizer will never see vision fulfilled. Fantasies are not reality. A dream can become a reality through opportunity, circumstance, hard work, perseverance, and divine intervention. Leaders pursing vision must face reality. Get out of the bubble and get in the trenches. Talk to people lots of people, especially, your people.

3. Perseverance – the ability to press through when changes and challenges inevitably occur. Without it, your car runs out of gas and you sit and wait for a tow truck to just happen by. With it, your car runs out of gas and you start walking, waving folks down, walking, waving, praying, hoping, moving, you press on when no one else will.

The words of the Apostle Paul echo through my ears, “Not that I have already obtained all this, or have already arrived at my goal, but I press on to take hold of that for which Christ Jesus took hold of me” (Philippians 3:12, NIV).
Success is not easy. Maintaining success is not easy. Failure is often the easy way out. Quitting is easy. Fantasizing is easy. Perseverance is hard. Times will get tough. Your vision, your pursuit will encounter difficulties, unforeseen challenges, and setbacks. What defines you is not what happens, but how you respond to what happens.

Dave Ramsey says, “Being in business isn’t easy…When you find yourself running out of spiritual and emotional energy, whenever you find yourself getting tired of doing what you do, don’t quit. If God gave it to you to do, don’t stop. Keep moving forward. You can do it.”

Simply put, for the Christian leader, if your vision is not ordained from God, you are merely flattering yourself and you have believed in the wrong vision that will lead towards frustration and disappointment. However, when your vision is ordained from above, these three things will most likely be compelling factors that drive you towards fulfillment.

Three things that will help to determine if your vision will succeed or fail: passion, candor and perseverance.

3 Minutes in the Deep (Devotional): Does Your Heart Speak?

Does your heart speak? Does your heart converse with God?

You have said, ‘Seek My face,’
My heart says to You,
‘Your face LORD, do I seek.”   Psalm 27:8

Bible

Truth is revealed in the innermost parts of a person–your heart. It is the seat of power, control and direction of your life. By it you love and you hate. From it there is great devotion or great division. Your heart is the seat of your life–the place where your spirit/soul/mind/will & strength come together.

David had heard The LORD say, “Seek My face.” That was it. He didn’t hear “work harder,” “give more,” “be more obedient,” or “try harder.” God spoke to David simply, “Seek My face.” For when you discover the face of God, you discover the Presence of God. It is a pursuit that involves all of you: mind, soul, will, strength, and heart.

His heart answered. Get it, from deep within him, his heart cry was his response to God. God speaks deep. Everything else is superficial. It is out of the depth of his love his speaks to your heart. Are you living a shallow life or a deep life in Christ?

Hear the LORD say to you, “Seek My face.”

How does your heart respond?

Does it say, “divided” or does it say, “Your face LORD, do I seek”? It is the heart of a person that reveals who that person is. Many believers simply go through the motions, living this superficial, shallow Christian life. Jesus Christ desires a deep life, a full life. Good roots go deep in good soil. Go deeper this year. Deeper in prayer, deeper in Bible study, deeper in sacrifice, deeper in the places you meet with Him. Seek Jesus with an unrelenting pursuit and a desperate devotion this year.

What says your heart?

Two Things that Could Change Your Kids Life — Parenting Tip of the Week

Does your child’s behavior ever make you want to pull out your hair, hide, or maybe even scream?! Don’t give up hope, you are not alone and, oh by the way, they are normal children!

But, you want better for them, better than you experienced, better than right now…yes! Me too, then, read on and be encouraged.

forgiveness

Parents can exhibit strange behavior! My mom used to break into a song when my siblings and I were fighting, and we fought a lot (there are six of us — 5 boys and 1 girl). It would actually stop us fighting, wrestling, hair pulling, punching, squeezing, and frogging each other. She’d be singing,

be ye kind one to another, tender-hearted forgiving…”

What? We thought, but it worked, she was changing our lives…

Two things that could change your kids’ lives:

1. Kindness. Is the home you are raising your children in kind? Kindness is more than being “nice.” Being nice is a good start. But, nice can sometimes be a cover for bitterness, ignorance or indifference. Nice is often just the path of least resistance and with so many passive-aggressive parents, it’s often easier to just “be nice” than being kind. (being nice is better than being rude!)

Kindness is an intentional act of the will. Kindness stems from your heart.  It is both a virtue and a value. To be kind is to demonstrate loving acts toward others because  they simply exist. Being kind is sharing the benevolence or generosity of your soul with another. Sadly, many parents/people are bankrupt in their souls and cannot pass what they don’t contain.

Teach your child to be kind to others. Teach them to willingly share what they possess (it’s easy to “share” something that doesn’t belong to you), to use kind words with kind tones, to smile, to laugh at appropriate times, to practice “random acts of kindness,” etc. Work to create a kind environment in your home. The “kind” home, the “kind” mom, etc. is the place your kids and their friends want to hang out. Your children will blossom with kindness towards others and towards you. But, you must practice it. Practice it while driving. Practice it while talking on the phone. Practice it while disagreeing with your spouse!

Kindness is more than a thought, kindness is action and you must model and instruct your children to do so.

2. Forgiveness. Possibly and probably more powerful than kindness is forgiveness. Forgiveness is the intentional release of another from a grievance, offense or injury. You must teach your children to be forgiving. A parent’s lack of forgiveness creates an insurmountable wall for a child to cross. Unforgiveness creates barriers in a child’s life that can become great hinderances in their relationships later in life–even potentially your relationship with them.

Forgiveness is the key to healing. Without forgiveness, healing and reconciliation are often impossible. When your child offends, disobeys, and rebels, it is important that the parent model forgiveness.

Parents, be responsible and take the initiative. Don’t exile your kids to the never-ending black hole of consequence. It is important that the parent say to the child, “I forgive you.” I am not saying to wash out all consequence of behavior, but it is the parent’s responsibility to engage the child and teach the child how to reconcile. Your child does need to recognize the “wrong” in their behavior, etc. Sadly, many parents further punish and damage their relationship with the child by not reconciling. Children need the security of reconciliation and forgiveness. It creates a secure and healthy emotional environment for your child to grow in.

Forgiveness is the path to healing and a key in maintaining healthy relationships.

My mother’s song was a Bible verse,

And be ye kind one to another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, even as God for Christ’s sake hath forgiven you” Ephesians 4:32

How has forgiveness and kindness changed your life?

Before You Make Next Year’s Resolutions, Remember This Year’s Blessings – Life Tip of the Week

As I contemplate the coming new year, I am reminded to review the happenings of the past year. The words of an old hymn come to mind…

Count your blessings, name them one by one,
Count your blessings, see what God has done!
Count your blessings, name them one by one,
And it will surprise you what the Lord has done.*

Charcoal

Our culture grows increasingly more and more ungrateful. If we are not careful, we, too, will live always wanting more. We will live and not be thankful for what we do have.

We are discontent because we have never discovered how to be content! Don’t miss this: more means “not enough.”

Perspective

I am reminded of a homeless man that hangs out at my business (I got tired of running him off for panhandling so I “hired” him. He picks up the trash in the parking lot to “earn” his keep). I asked him what he’d like for Christmas, he replied “coal…” I know him well enough to know he wasn’t being funny. He explained, “I am stocking up to keep warm this winter.” Perspective.

I went to Sam’s Club and bought the “double bag” of charcoal. Merry Christmas, right? “How long will this last you?” I said, thinking how benevolent this must be…

Several days,” he said smiling. He was happy and serious. “Thank you,” he went back to work picking up trash in the parking lot, the double bag of charcoal sitting in his shopping cart.

Count your blessings, name them one by onePerspective.

No one is guaranteed a long life. No one is guaranteed a happy life. No one is guaranteed much life at all. I’d challenge you to make a list of the little things. Does your heart grow thankful? These little things are the often-ignored blessings. Health, family, a roof over your head, indoor plubming, HVAC, a car that runs, a cup of coffee, a sunrise, etc. You get the picture, it could be your child’s laughter while they are sleeping (we have a daughter who does this), a get-well soon note from your seven year old or a hug from your teenage child (who’s not into giving hugs!). So simple, yet, so often over-looked. What blessings of life are you overlooking?

How much life can we expect? the Psalmist writes…

The years of our life are seventy, or even by reason of strength eighty;

yet their span is but toil and trouble;

they are soon gone, and we fly away” Psalm 90:10

Count your blessings, see what God has done. Did you ask for something more than coal for last year? Did you receive it? I challenge you to make a list of your blessings, before you make a list of your resolutions!

 

 

 

*Johnson, Oatman Jr., in Songs for Young Peo­ple, by Ed­win Ex­cell (Chi­ca­go, Il­li­nois: 1897

 

How to Teach Your Kids Not to Be Greedy — Parenting Tip of the Week

One of the things that attracted me to my wife, Julie (besides her radiant beauty and emerald, green eyeswas her stewardship! What you say?

When we met, she was going to college and waiting tables. I was impressed every night that the first thing she did with her tips was to record the exact amount and take 10% out of it for her tithe and put it in an envelope. I thought, “wow…she’s beautiful and she knows how to manage money…she’s the one for me!”

“One gives freely, yet grows all the richer; another withholds what he should give and only suffers want

Proverbs 11:24

image

Parents, grandparents, or future parents…our culture is becoming so greedy and self-centered that we are now trying to legislate generosity.

Generosity must begin in the home as a foundational value. The following tips are designed to inspire, rebuke, and correct your thinking as needed…

1. They are watching you. Children are great observers. When you think they are not listening, they often are. You are the greatest example in your child’s life. They see when you choose your friends, your job, your hobbies, and yes, even your “me” time over them (Let me clarify–your spouse comes first!). I’m not saying some “recharge” time is not necessary (everyone needs rest), but sometimes the recharge time is a cover for being greedy with your time. Parents who demonstrate “time greed” raise children who are selfish with their time. Be generous with your time.

2. They are modeling you. The natural extension is that they emulate you. Children learn through imitation. So, when you gripe about giving, complain about helping someone out, and dissect the motives and intentions of generosity in front of your children, you are modeling un-generous/greedy behavior. (Some of these conversations may need to take place “behind closed doors.”). Be generous with your words.

3. Teach them stewardship. Stewardship is management. If you are not a good manager of the resources you have, most likely, your children will follow suit to an even greater degree of poor management. Good stewards/managers understand the principle of value. They don’t over-value or under-value the resources they’ve been entrusted with. Good stewards live at their means, not above. Too many families with easy access to credit, overextend themselves in debt and revoke their ability toward generosity because they are deeply indebted.

4. Teach them generosity. By the way, it’s hard to teach if you don’t practice it! Notice, my points build to being generous. Yes, generosity is a heart condition. Any parent knows that little children have great difficulty sharing. Sharing is the foundation for generosity. As the child grows, giving and generosity should be taught systemically, freely, and with joy. Pastor Johnny Hunt (First Baptist Church Woodstock, Georgia) says, “you are never more like Jesus than when you give!”

5. Teach them the joy that exists in giving. There is a transcendent principle in giving that moves the heart and will and mind upward. This is where the joy comes in. Let giving be wihout compulsion, but rather with excitement. There are invisible impulses of joy that radiate through your heart when you are generous! (the generous people know what I am talking about). Truett Cathy, founder of Chick-fil-A says that generosity is the cure for greed!

 

How does your family do at modeling generosity? Do you even like to give? I love hearing from you!

How to Avoid the “Holiday Fight”

Disclaimer: I have (to borrow an expression from the South) “acted the fool” in my own life, so I do not speak from moral high ground, just personal experience and what I glean from Words of Wisdom.

Do you have people that you will interact with at a party, gathering or social setting that are antagonistic, incendiary or stubborn as a blind mule? Is there someone this holiday season that you will be forced into interpersonal communication with? Is there someone that your spouse has warned you to be on your “best behavior” with?

image

Of course there is?! There is always that one person that has a personal agenda that annoys you, chaps your hide or downright gets you angry. They open their mouth and out spews every form of what sounds like “nails on the chalkboard” to you. (Remember: you probably sound the same way to them!)

You want to respond. Your blood pressure builds. The person has NOOO idea what they are talking about, yet they keep blabbering on. What they say, the way they say it, or when they say it affects you as crass, unintelligent, rude, annoying or downright offensive. You are a volcano about to errupt….

Let me help you–Don’t waste your words on them. What?! Be rude? Often in the Deep South, we equate silence to rudeness. So we’ll say “nice” things, but have venom in our heart, mind or tone. However, you can be polite without having to engage in conversation.

Do not speak in the hearing of a fool, for he will despise the good sense of your words”

(Proverbs 23:9)

This holiday season take this proverb to heart and avoid even allowing the fool in your sphere of influence to hear the good sense or prudence of your words. Dealing with such people is a perpetual mine-field of offensive-given, offensive-taken, and attack.

A “fool” is the Hebrew word “kesil” which, literally means, the dull, stolid, stupid man who cannot be moved from his own narrow groove.

A fool is hard-hearted, often steeped in sin and self-absorption that sees no truth but their own. A fool will receive no wisdom but their own. You cannot convince a fool of anything. And when you speak that which is righteous, noble, pure and true before heaven to a fool, they will despise you for it! They will malign your name, criticize your motives, and say all wicked things about you.

Fools, in turn, actually will want to harm you. This is illogical, but a fool does not work, think or act from any area that resembles wisdom, rationality or logic. Fools seek vengeance, retribution, and retaliation. Engaging a fool is like trying to catch a rabid pit-bull by his tail (or lack there of).

  • My counsel: don’t waste your breathe, thought or emotions on the fool. Commit them to prayer and love the ones they affect the most, do your best to avoid them, and certainly don’t engage them in conversation. Forgive them, truly. Smile and move on. 

We do well to remember what Jesus said, “Do not give dogs what is holy, and do not throw your pearls before pigs, lest they trample them underfoot and turn to attack you” (Matthew 7:6, ESV).

Remember: You nor I are perfect. Forgiveness is one of the greatest acts of love you will ever demonstrate. Forgiveness does not mean blind acceptance, but rather the removal of the penalty. Conseqences remain and relationships change. Forgive foolish people, try not to “act the fool” yourself, and live accountable for your actions and behavior!

 
Do you have any stories that this counsel could have helped you in? I love hearing from you!
Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!

 

 

Parenting Tip – Want More Peace at Bedtime?

Can’t Get Your Kids to Settle Down at Bedtime and Sleep?

Ever wished you could just flip a switch and turn your kids off at bed time? Does putting your kids to bed exhaust you?

My mother used to stand at the door and say, “Alex, time to turn your brain off?”

I’m sure she wished she had a switch to turn my brain off and to switch my active body functions into “sleep state”, but she didn’t. So what did she do?

Solution: Try Bedtime prayers.

image

But how are you supposed to pray?

Very simply!

God the Father is a loving and completely understanding Father so He would have that you prayed poorly and simply rather than not pray at all! Don’t measure your prayers or your children’s by eloquence (i.e. the old man who prays with Thee’s and Thoust’s as if Jesus only speaks the King’s Old English),

I believe prayer is very natural to little children. As they get older, prayer gets made into something too formal. The best prayers are simple, from the heart and full of faith.

Remember this…

Now I lay me down to sleep,
I pray The Lord, my soul to keep,
If I should die before I wake,
I pray The Lord, my soul to take,
God bless…Mommy, Daddy, brother, sister….

1. Get a Children’s Bible and read them the Bible stories at bedtime. Most children’s Bibles have very simple life application principles included in them or they are very easy to draw out. Briefly discuss the story with your kids and then get on your knees beside their bed and pray about what you just read.

2. Alternate between you and your kids praying. You don’t have to do the same thing every night, but pray every night. I suggest leading until they are ready to lead. When our children were very young, I always led in prayer. Don’t be afraid to let your kids hear you pour your heart out to God, especially on their behalf. One of the most touching times of prayer of my entire life, was when my then three-year old son and I prayed for his wife (brought me to tears!).

3. Dad needs to be involved. Sadly, many dad’s check out at bed time, although in recent years, I certainly hear of more dads getting involved at bed time.

4. Pray with lots of thankfulness. I mean teach them to be thankful for everyone and everything, you will get tired of them thanking God for the grass, the trees, the stray dog down the street, the sun, etc. Don’t cut them off unless they get lost repeating the same thing over and over again. It is important for the child to be cognizant of what they are praying about.

5. Talk to Jesus like he’s your best and most powerful friend. Teach them that you trust in God’s ability to answer prayers. Teach them that you truly believe (have faith) that Christ will answer your prayers. Teach them that praying is simply talking to Jesus.

6. Use standard prayers as starters or finishers. I will often pray “Now I Lay Me” or “The Lord’s Prayer” with my kids to start our bedtime prayers. I try not to use them as the only prayer. Children, quickly adhere to the discipline of prayer.

7. Pray for other people. Ask your child, “who should we pray for tonight?” or “do you have any prayer requests?” It will amaze you the things they have picked up on during the day.

The simple of act of bedtime prayer serves to instill the discipline of prayer, bring you and your child before the Throne of God, and invoke a powerful evening blessing of peace upon their impending hours of sleep. Many children suffer a fear of the dark and bedtime evokes a growing fearfulness. I find that Bedtime Prayers but a period on one day and turn the page to start the next day a new and a fresh!

 

What works for your kids at bedtime?