It wasn't what I expected--to see him up on the cupboard like that. But when I turned around, that's exactly where he was, knee-deep in flour rolling the dough I had started to press.
Last Friday I was blessed once again when Nathaniel stood beside me at the sink asking if he could finish the dishes I had started to wash. Up to his elbows in water, he scrubbed pots and pans until the last one was dry and put back to rest in the cupboard. He's caring that way.
Each and every time I return home with groceries, he'll rush past me, load himself up like a pack mule and say, "It's okay, Mom. I got them!"
Some days I look at this little man growing before me and I see a gift in the future for just the right girl. All in God's time.
Last night I got to thinking about behavior and how children conduct themselves in one of three ways.
1. You have a child who plops down on the couch waiting for the world to serve his every need.
2. A child who will get up and help you or help themselves when they are instructed to do so.
3. A child who will take the initiative to live beyond themselves by helping others before they are asked.
While number two illustrates good behavior, we see how the third scenario depicts a child with excellent behavior. The question however that's been lingering with me for about fifteen years is How do we get our children there?
How do we get them to that place where they say, "Mom, do you want me to fold this laundry for you?" or "Dad, do you need some help with the drywall?"
When I say fifteen years I'm not exaggerating by any stretch of the imagination. I started thinking about this when Brendan was about five-years-old and he's almost twenty-one now. I knew that I wanted him to have a servants heart, but I didn't know how to instill that in him. What was I doing right? What was I doing wrong?
As youngsters, my sisters and I instinctively gave up our seats to elderly people. We said thank you when we were away from home and offered to help with the dishes if we were guests at their table. Servant-hood was ingrained in our soul. Again, I'm not just talking about girls here. I know plenty of men who respect others, who cherish them, and who are willing to serve them without being asked.
Unfortunately there's this modern mindset that tells women that if they serve their husbands their sons will grow up to be self-centered, chauvinistic pigs because that's the example we're setting for them.
That couldn't be farther from the truth. The Bible tells us to,"Train up a child in the way he should go: and when he is old, he will not depart from it." - Proberbs 22:6, KJV
So the answer to the question that lingered with me for the past fifteen years? An exemplified life. If you want a child to grow up with the attitude of going the extra mile for others you must be willing to model that behavior while they are growing under your care.
To think that serving your husband would cause him to take advantage of you is unreasonable. If you're married to someone that's self-centered it's not because your tender loving care has made him that way. In fact people are more likely to mirror your behavior than they are to swing the opposite way.
The perfect scenario for growing children is to see two parents who are willing to go the extra mile for each other. A family who is serving one another other in each their own way.
For even the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give His life a ransom for many. Mark 10:45, NIV
You are loved by an almighty God,
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This is beautiful and I totally agree! We wanted our children to have servant hearts too and we tried to give them opportunities to serve, whether at church, in the neighborhood, or helping out at their grandparents.
ReplyDeleteBut as you said, the best thing is to be an example!
I loved this post and totally agree! We as moms have to model Christ-likeness. Be an example and serve others...that is how our children will learn to be more like HIM!
ReplyDeleteChosen by Him,
Trisha
www.unamujerelegida.wordpress.com
Love this! Thanks for the reminder! Whole-heartedly agree and passing on!!! Blessings today and for a peaceful holiday season to you and to your readers.
ReplyDelete~Sherri, blessed mom of one precious girl (age 8), who has a servants heart that i'd really like to encourage to continue!!!
This is so timely for me. I have a soon to be 6 year old daughter who used to be a #2 in your example. She is quickly becoming a #1, not a #3. I have been looking for guidance and praying about the situation. I think setting an example is a good start for me. But, I would love any other advise from you or your readers. Thank you for sharing your wisdom.
ReplyDeleteAnother thing I can add to this is that appreciation goes a long way. For example, I read this post to Nathaniel this morning and I could just tell that the gears were moving in his head as he was asking himself, "What can I do next? How can I step this up a level!" So cute!
DeleteI've also shown appreciation to them by picking up little things like their own potato peelers or an apron for my daughter.
My daughter LOVES cooking and has from a young age. But what I've always done in the kitchen is allowed freedom for imperfection. She's made us dinner before which might be nachos for dinner and bean dip for dessert. LOL! But I accept with with open arms and encouragement. Hope that helps!
I remember growing up that I was never good enough for my mom when it came to cooking. There was always complaints. To this day I don't love it. But one thing that sticks with me is that when I was helping her move furniture she commented at how strong I was. After that I started moving things around the house with a happy heart. I still do it as an adult. I'll bring heavy stuff up from the basement for her. Wow--I didn't realize I did this until this moment. How funny! LOL
Darlene - so much wisdom here in this one response. A lot of take aways. Thank you for this.
DeleteI am in the midst of at home IV's. My son has gone beyond the call of duty. He unloads and loads the dishwashers, does a load of laundry and mops the floor so that I don't have to.
ReplyDeleteI taught him to do simple chores at an early age... I am so glad that I did.
What a blessing! If you plant, you will reap the harvest. Hearing the word "IVs" I pray that you are doing well. May God keep you in His care and continue to pour blessings upon you.
DeleteGreat post! My kiddos are still young...and impressionable! I think mom and dad modeling self-donative love (as we call it in the Catholic church) to each other and toward children is exactly what you are talking about. Serving each other...with a joyful heart!
ReplyDeleteOh Darlene, I needed this. I'm having such a hard time with my 10 year old right now. I can't get him to behave, and I've tried so many things. The lying is non-stop, the quarrelling, mischief, refusal to follow directions, intentionally ignoring us... He's very much the first child you mentioned who wants to sit down, be the center of attention, and have everyone serve him. I have 5 children and am just...struggling with this. We've come such a long ways (he is a step child, but he's mine and has been for 5 years.) There was a lot of lying and negative, destructive behaviors that he is coming from, but he's been here for five of his precious ten years, with primarily our influence on his young life. I am so frustrated with the continued behavior - it now influences our two year old as well. We have been trying to ingrain personal responsibility, (everything is everyone else's fault) but I am beginning to try to let go of my anger and frustration and focus solely on forgiveness and serving - and I've been trying for a couple of months to simply cherish his personality, which I think is key. We've focused on personal accountability, but that has just led to him bullying his siblings, or being bullied "You're doing it wrong, YOU were told to..." (back to the blame game - who was supposed to do it, who told who) Instead of just loving, helping etc. I know I'm not cherishing his sweet, precious heart enough because of my frustration with his continued antics. (I'm a teacher and we've attended parenting classes - I'm not a newbie and usually extremely good at getting very good behavior out of my kids.) I think this is the answer, but it require such a paradigm shift for me. I will pray for knowledge to be a better mom, to love him with our Father's heart and grace, and instead of correction, to bite my tongue and focus on serving him instead. Wish me luck.
ReplyDeleteA friend shared this verse with me last night, "The king's heart is in the hand of the LORD; he directs it like a watercourse wherever he pleases." Proverbs 21:1. Imagine that if God can direct the heart of a king, he can soften a little boy too.
DeleteAs I'm reading your words, I'm thinking "That sounds like Nathaniel." and "Nathaniel was like that." But then I look up to my post and realize that this guy who's been giving me so much grief over the years has changed so much in the past year. I hardly recognize him.
"Nathaniel" means gift from God. I'd joke with my husband (in private) and say, this has to be a gift of patience!
If I was at the park and it was time to go. I'd say, come on kids, time to go! Three kids would follow me and one would run in the opposite direction. I'd have to chase him down daily. Shopping was a nightmare. He'd climb on the shelves, roll on the floor, and tug on the cart. 24 hour frustration.
But sticking with it day after day with a patient heart made a huge difference. Showing him how proud I am of him often and loving the great things about him has drawn him close to me.
I can definitely see why he's my gift from God. :D
Oh my....This was so timely. I needed to read this so much today. I grew up being taught by my mother, who grew up during the beginning of the women's lib era of the 60's and 70's, that a woman was supposed to stand up for her rights and not "serve" a man because it just perpetuated male chauvinism (as you mentioned above) and conditioned them to always expect the "little woman" to serve him. What a lie I believed and and still am having a hard time moving away from. I even tend to take up for my daughter more than my son when my husband corrects her and I know this is WRONG. I pray that God will help me to overcome this deeply ingrained almost habitual way of thinking and feeling. This post is so eye-opening. Thank you so much for it. ~M
ReplyDeleteMy mom who is now 80 went through that era. Dad would come home from work, get washed up in the basement and my mom would get the food ready and put it on the table for him. Mind you she was a stay-at-home mom for the most part not counting the Tupperware phase--LOL. She did his laundry, would mend his socks, bake for him on the weekends, and make his bed. Either she or us girls would make his lunch at night and we'd wash out his thermos for the next day.
DeleteWhen he retired at the age of 65. He took on the housework. Mom did the cooking and he was the cleaner. He loved it. I remember going for a visit once and he was holding a basket. He said, "Another brassiere, my dear?" I had to laugh because he was so sweet doing her laundry.
He did the cleaning until he got sick with cancer and then she was there to take care of him again. He died in his bed at home and she was the best nurse he could have had.
Looking in one might have thought she did everything for him. But there he was behind the scenes unplugging toilets, cleaning out drains, mowing the lawn, shoveling the walk, repairing things around the house and building a family room in the basement.
I think that the men of the 50s and 60s often get the short end of the stick.
Thanks for your thoughts!!
Thank you for this excellent post! I m challenged to persevere in exemplifying true servanthood to my dear children by continuously, unconditionally, and sacrificially serving my husband.
ReplyDeleteGod bless you!
What a wonderful post! I spent this past weekend with a group of Girl Guides and I was shocked to see how unwilling some of the girls were to pitch in! And I was also thrilled to see how helpful others were! I agree that it comes down to the example set at home. I am reminded to keep plugging away with my own children so that they will have a servant's heart. Thank you!
ReplyDeletelove this Friend. Working it. :)
ReplyDeleteI love this!! Thank you for the inspiration!
ReplyDeleteDoes this subject has to do with your professional status or is it more about your hobbies and types of spending your free time?
ReplyDeleteGreat piece. It's so encouraging to read articles like this.
ReplyDeleteWe have a 4yr. old daughter and she always wants to help anyone do anything....last night she climbed up on the kitchen counter while i was outta the room for a bit (supper was in oven) and she got out plates, cups, silverware and she set the table...I was very surprised she did it all on her own but not surprised that she had the want to do it.......she is a hands on girl and willing to help anytime. When children are young we need to let them know how thankful we are when they do even the smallest thing for us, just praising them for helping is enough reward for them. I teach both my daughters ( I have a 17yr. old too) that helping others and especially your spouse is very important.......a pastor friend of mines wife always said, even when you fighting or mad at your husband ....you still gotta cook his supper.........because of my eternal love for my husband, even when I am mad, I cook.....not easy sometimes but I always feel good after. God Bless.
ReplyDeleteMy 13 year old son is #2, but I would love it if he willingly pitches in without being asked every time. My husband is a great model because he always helps me around the house without me asking.
ReplyDeleteI try to do this but I know I could be better at it. Our life is so unscheduled right now due to my husband is under a lot of pressure at work and working a lot of hours and at strange times. I find I need to throw together a meal quickly because he just got a call that they need him at work. The kids want to help, but I just don't have the time. And being on duty by myself so much of the time I'm exhausted and don't want to take the extra time and effort of teaching/helping the kids help me. I keep telling myself once my husband's job slows down I can do better, but we've been living this way for several months now and I'm starting to think I'm going to have to just start acting like this is my normal life, as opposed to approaching it in "survival mode". The trouble is I hate it, and I don't want it to be my normal life. :(
ReplyDeleteBut what happens when you do model and expect that behavior from your child and they still don't follow through? That's where I'm at...
ReplyDeleteJust saying doesn't matter sometimes you can give and give and serve and serve and that behavior isn't always given back to you so you really can't expect it. I do it for the Lord. I try to set good habits for my kids to follow. I see good behavior in my kids because I'm the one teaching them. If he sees something he doesn't like he complains to me about it rather than showing the children the proper way to do something. My husband was waited on hand and foot and he still needs a cattle prod to get him to do any chores even if it's just cleaning up after himself. He isn't the kind of father that bathes the children or even taking out the trash. For some your theory may be true but not all. :)
ReplyDeleteWenddie, I'm in the same situation you are, and I would say that for most healthy Christian couples this article is spot on.
Delete"To think that serving your husband would cause him to take advantage of you is unreasonable." Unfortunately, this statement is not true for my marriage, either. My husband has Narcissistic Personality Disorder, which means that he will suck everyone else dry without any thought of giving back. :(
HOWEVER -- with boundaries in place, we can still give our children a great example of serving as though we are serving Christ, regardless of how our spouse does/does not reciprocate. Just like you are doing!
So hang in there!
I often think that my children are fatherless b/c of their Dad's selfishness -- and that makes me even more grateful that they are not forgotten by their Heavenly Father!
Wenddie, I had the same experience. He would do just about anything for his job, but once his work day was over it was time to sit back and relax -- never giving a thought to the fact that I had been working hard all day, too, and that until the children were in bed I was still working. Even on Saturday and Sunday food still had to be prepared, the kitchen cleaned and the kids taken care of and then bathed and put to bed.
DeleteMy husband's mother helped him to be a number 3 and he inspires me daily to follow in his footsteps. Thank you for sharing this post.
ReplyDeleteI am gonna be totally honest with you.. I don't model those qualities.. They are totally foreign to me.
ReplyDeleteNot only do I not have the first clue on how to live like that.. I have never watched anyone live like that...