Friday, August 30, 2013
Divine Appointments
If you look you will find appointments in your day that God planned for you in advance. Today while waiting in my daughter's hospital room (she is with the nurse in another room) I decided to act upon the urging of the Holy Spirit and started a friendly conversation with the hospital housecleaner who came into our room. Long story short I ended up asking her if I could pray for her and I wrapped my arms around her and prayed. The tears poured down her face and she kept thanking me. Her husband committed suicide 17 months ago and she is truly heartbroken and trying to take care of her 10 year old son. I'm glad I didn't ignore that prompting to engage her in a conversation. God did the rest. Take the time and look around, step outside your comfort zone and connect with people in your path. Let God use you today!
Thursday, August 15, 2013
30 Year High School Reunion
Finally home from a fast paced week in Oregon. It was so great to see old friends at my reunion and catch up with many names I remembered but didn't know well. The benefit of outgrowing awkward social skills of high school is taking the opportunity to get to know those you didn't know well before. There is beauty in the discovery. I really enjoyed the evening and our girls night out slumber party in the hotel. The highlight however of this trip was spending time with family members I don't get to see often and the time we spent with our adopted grandparents. These precious moments hold so much meaning in my heart. Life is too short. Learning to be present and truly engaged in each relationship and conversation is a gift that is received on both sides. Time should be listed on the endangered species list. It's a valuable commodity that can either drain you or fill you up. Use your time wisely. You could be the blessing someone is waiting for.
Above all, love each other deeply, because love covers over a multitude of sins. 1 Peter 4:8
Friday, August 2, 2013
Teachable Moments
Teach your children the difference between right and wrong or someone else will teach them wrong is right. It seems when our kids were young teachable moments were a constant daily necessity to achieve routine and harmony raising twins. Consequences were immediate and our umbrella as parents gave me a great sense of control for training up well behaved, respectful children who would one day be launched out into the world to conquer their dreams. Fast forward to today...our twins have been teenagers for 13 days and it seems we've jumped into that old familiar feeling of needing our umbrella again. Why you ask??? One word...Instagram! Many of their friends were allowed an Instagram account at a young age. We however chose the magical age of 13 to allow that privilege. After locking down their accounts on privacy settings and explaining this is the beginning of their social media footprint and comments they make and photos they post all send a message about who they are and what they stand for, they were off and running. Within 8 hours they had 60 friends and lots of likes on photos. After searching through their activity and friends lists it became clear this was going to get out of control really fast! The years of building their self esteem through character and integrity seemed to be going right down the drain because of how many likes someone gets on a photo. This launched our dissertation about how if you allow your self worth to depend on how many likes you get that road to your future will take you down a very different path.
We surfed through their friends pages and couldn't believe what we were seeing. Many are not on private settings and some have 500 plus followers and 2 had over 3000! Why on earth does a young teenager need that kind of false security of friendship. After this discovery we all decided what our family boundaries will be with Instagram, friending, posting and comments. Our girls came to the decision that they will not be that girl that chases their acceptance through numbers. Social media and technology are growing at such a fast pace and will continue to provide many opportunities for us as parents to help navigate our kids through the pros and cons.
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