Monday, April 29, 2013
Screen Free Week
Today starts Screen Free week. I took the pledge to be off of screens for the next week. No computer, no tv (even though we just sold ours) and no text messaging.
See you back here on the 6th!
Thursday, April 18, 2013
Parent Education
"The more you are motivated by love, the more fearless and free your action will be" -Dalai Lama
As a parent, I feel the importance of educating one selves on the art of parenting. It's not an easy "job" and there are many peaks and valleys. I have recently found myself in a valley, actually a dungeon with my almost 5 year old. This happens. This time the conflict was eating at my core and I was starting to take everything from him personally. That he was needing distance from me to see all that I do for him. That I was not going to let him take advantage of everything that I give him. It was a week of battle. It was cold outside and we were going stir crazy. I saw him being angry. I felt my body become angry.
Once I came to the conclusion that I had officially had it, I told my husband that I was done! I needed a weekend away. I couldn't handle his new found attitude and complete sassy talk. I am a mother! I deserve respect for all that I do, doesn't he know how lucky he is that I stay home?
My husband agreed. "yes, you do need some time away, but for now Channel your Inner Waldorf."
It's all too easy to fall into a rut and a battleground with your child. It's hard to STOP. THINK. BREATHE. Especially when they are driving you to the end. I see that my son is anticipating his upcoming birthday. That there is a change happening in him. He is testing what is okay and what is not. I need to find a gentle way to redirect him into the way we speak, act, and the way we live. That's my job.
The transition for me was to take him into the garden. To leave the inside walls that seemed to be closing in on us. To take our hands and bury them in the dirt. To do manual labor where we talked and worked very hard. A blessing to me is that my son is a very hard worker. He will spend hours in the garden and will actually work very hard.
It is through this open walls of nature that I can talk to him, to reconnect, and to show him I am there for him. To welcome him into this safe place and letting him know that he can treat me with the respect I know he has for me. That we are connected in this task together. I am present with him and he present with me.
For this beauty is bountiful and it warrants the ability to breathe.
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