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Saturday, December 7, 2013

Benefits of Parenthood

Children need parents, but perhaps just as much, we need children. 

This week in class we discussed the importance of being parents.  Having children opens new doors of learning for us. 

As children we were always exploring, learning about, and testing the world around us.  As we got older we kept learning but not to the same extent as children.  If marriage is a house of learning then raising children is the core curriculum.

The following is a basic list of benefits of parenthood:
  Belonging to something greater than oneself - participation in any group makes you a part of that group.  No other entity I can think of allows for closer more significant unity than family.
  Becoming selfless through service - The key to love is service and self-sacrifice.  Emotional investments required in a healthy parent-child relationship will pull you out for your own shallow need for excessive individualism and replace it with something real and rewarding.
  Learning to love more than ever before 
  An opportunity to re-parent yourself through your own parenting - Through parenting we can work to change things for the better from the way we were parented, keeping the good and weeding out the bad. As our parenting styles change we change.
  An increased sense of self-worth and significance - Sometimes we refuse to push ourselves unless others depend on us.  The great duty that comes with children will be the most fulfilling work we do!
  Coming to understand God better - For all His titles He has chosen for Himself the title of Father is the one He prefers us to address Him as.

Sunday, December 1, 2013

Fatherhood

"YOU'RE ONE OF THE GOOD GUYS!"

This is one of the things my father wrote in a birthday card to me some years ago that I will never forget.  Fathers impact the lives of their children, for good or for bad.

Have you taken the time recently to sit down and think about what your father or a father figure has meant to you?

I recently wrote a paper on fatherhood and the effects on fatherless homes -- it has left me feeling grateful for my own father.

I would list among his greatest accomplishments:  Giving his time to working very hard to provide food and shelter for our family.  Changing to become the type of man his family needed.  Teaching his children to love and serve others.  Dropping everything and taking no small amount of time to help fix a broken son who was in over his head, turning what might have been a painful memory into one that is full of sweetness because of his remarkable love. 

These were all choices where he didn't have to choose to do what he did.  I am grateful.

The other day in class we were discussing heroes.  The class seemed to grow still as my teacher took on a somber voice.  He spoke of the way we often think of heroes -- muscled bound hunks with long blonde beautiful hair who smash things with a hammer. -- He then told us that if we could look around us and know the heroes seated in that room we would be amazed. -- It is true. -- There those all around us who have overcome insurmountable odds, some who struggle everyday but never give up.  They may lose their battles but they are still focused on winning the war.

My father is my hero.  He seldom had it easy.  Like all of us, I am sure he felt he was, at times, his own worst enemy in becoming what he wanted to be.  He persevered.  He still does.  He does it for others.  What more makes up a hero I ask you? 





Let us all take time to think about what we have been given, then let us look to what we may do to become heroes for our families.  What are the specific things that you will do that will ring reverberating love in the minds and hearts of our children throughout their lives?

Quote: (I think you can apply it to anything that could take our time as fathers and husbands: Video games, Television, Sports, other relationships)
“Some of our most important choices concern family activities. Many breadwinners worry that their occupations leave too little time for their families. There is no easy formula for that contest of priorities. However, I have never known of a man who looked back on his working life and said, ‘I just didn’t spend enough time with my job’ ” (Dallin H. Oaks “Good, Better, Best” Oct. 2007 general conference).

Saturday, November 2, 2013

A Case for Maintaining the DEFINITION of Marriage

"Why a Good Person Can Vote Against Same-Sex Marriage" By Dennis Pragger

http://www.dennisprager.com/why-a-good-person-can-vote-against-same-sex-marriage/

The link above is to a short article that addresses the question "is marriage good for society".  It's a good article acknowledging that sometimes those on both sides are looking at different questions about this issue.

A few excerpts:

“Few on either side honestly address the question of the other side. Opponents of same-sex marriage rarely acknowledge how unfair the age-old man-woman definition is to gay couples. And proponents rarely, if ever, acknowledge that this unprecedented redefinition of marriage may not be good for society.”

“Catholic Charities, which operates the oldest ongoing adoption services in America, has had to end its adoption work in Illinois, Massachusetts and Washington, DC because the governments there regard placing children with married man-woman couples before same-sex couples as discriminatory.”


“The socialist French government has just announced that in the future no government issued document will be allowed to use the words “mother” or “father.” Only the gender-neutral term “parent” will be acceptable in France.”

These are things that are happening, individuals and organizations being sued at the law for not supporting something they do not believe in.  I remember learning as a child that people may believe and practice as they wish as long as it doesn't harm another.  Well people are now being harmed, disallowed to make a living, or help longing parents to have families if they will not deny their personal beliefs.  I would say that yes, discrimination and confusion, a lack of kindness was shown to same gender relationships and in some cases still are.  But now we are doing the same thing in the other direction.  We aren't getting rid of discrimination and persecution, but changing who the target is.  Taking away the freedom of churches and their members to believe and practice as they will.  Persecution is already on our doorstep and many are rushing to open up.  We need to be thoughtful, non of us should be too eager to leap.  Such a change is unprecedented and the consequences may certainly be wide and unforeseeable.  Whether it is homes with more than two parents, eliminating laws inhibiting sexual relations between minors and adults (a notable organization in favor of changing the marriage definition has already declared that sexual abuse from men towards young boys may not be as bad as we thought), or whatever else many various things may happen, we need to ask ourselves, "are we unwittingly opening a flood gate we will not be able to shut?"

I am reminded of the fallen Roman Empire, where it was socially acceptable for men to court young adolescent boys.  The people were purposefully constantly distracted so as not to notice the moral climate change.  It is sad, but we are not far off in some ways from such atrocities, for falling happens fast and fall that once great Empire did.  It is not a question of love for our brother, most religions teach that to their followers.  The question is what are we leaving for future generations as we endeavor to change a definition that is as old as man, being declared and instituted in the beginning by God for a wise and good purpose for all of us, his children.

The only thing I can say for certain is that those with the attitude that "it is not a big deal" are not thinking it through. I plead with all not to be lax on this issue.  Some things are abominable to the Lord.  He is understanding, He loves all of His children.  He has given marriage between a man and woman to help us, but it is hard to help someone who will not be helped.

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Topics to Discuss Before Marriage

We live in a world where (I have heard it put) we often spend more time planning the wedding and not enough planning the marriage. In class yesterday we were going of some important questions to ask during dating, courtship, and engagement (AKA things you might want to talk about before marriage).  It seems more and more people aren't as comfortable asking deep questions of their intended.  Well you'd better start because it's a lot better than the alternative!

We refer to the list as a "marriage contract", not the legal kind of contract, but an agreement or consensus of plans for married life.  You may want to come up with a list of things that are important to resolve for you personally before you make those vows!  Following is an example list, but feel free to put them on your own list if they are important to you!

***Remember, consensus on important marriage topics is more favorable than concessions (it is better to agree than to compromise)
The Marriage Contract
  1. Last Name - Will she take his, keep her own, or hyphenate? If the latter 2, what is the last name the children will have?
  2. Division of Labor - Who will have which jobs, which will be shared? (IE dishes, cleaning the windows, maintaining the cars, making dinner, maintaining the budget) - Take in to account your different strengths and preferences, not everything has to be the way you have seen your parents or other couples organize tasks.
  3. Children - Do we want children?  How many? When? 
  4. Care of Children - Another question of division of labor.  Who will: read them bedtime stories, feed them, help with homework, etc. - Keep in mind that it has been noted time and again that it is important for both parents' involvement in the rearing of children.  One example is that mother's tend to draw the child in with "face time" and familial relationships, while fathers tend to introduce children to the world more.  Think of how you might see father's and mother's holding babies differently, fathers with them facing outward or over the shoulder - mothers cradling them face-to-face.
  5. Discipline - When? What? How? - Remember that there is more than just spanking and not spanking. Get creative.
  6. Housing - What can we afford? What do we need/want? What will we have to sacrifice for that?  Will we use both incomes to finance our housing (if both are working) or just one spouses and put aside the other's for savings, rainy-day fund, or other?
  7. Who Will be the Bread Winner? Will it change when children come along? 
  8. Financial Dreams - Goals, retirement, planning for children's futures. - Note that this can be a difficult topic and the help of a professional financial planner may be needed if neither spouse is well-versed in planning.  It doesn't have to be all planned out right now, but get educated and start making plans when appropriate.
  9. Will you live close to family? - Who's family? Is it smart? This can have benefits and detriments.  It is healthy to talk things over with each other rather than either individually with a source outside the marriage, even well meaning family members.  Family can help out, but they can also keep the couple from forming new patterns and graduate from child to spouse.  It can be healthy to spend the first few years further from family until you have a strong connection with your spouse.  Be smart and know what your own circumstances are.
  10. Holidays - With extended family? Rotation Schedule? Pros/Cons - Remember to discuss things before making up your mind, you may be surprised how your ideas change when taking each other's views under consideration.
  11. Address Frustrations and Concerns - It is good to be aware of the things that we can and can't live with early.  They are not likely to change because you are now married.  Patterns set early in marriage naturally persist throughout the entire marriage unless someone speaks up and efforts are made to change.
  12. Who's Opinion Will Prevail? - Is one of you an expert in the matter?  Does the breadwinner get more say in finances?  Will one opinion prevail? - It is better to agree, if you cannot, then perhaps it is time for both to go to God in prayer to find His will that will best move you forward.  There are certain circumstances where one spouse may have a better understanding and the other spouse can choose to support their decisions concerning certain matters.  It never hurts to keep your spouse "in the loop" if this is the case.
  13. How will you change the terms of this contract over the course of the Marriage? - What might necessitate change?  How will you bring it up?  What methods will you use? - One Idea I had was a yearly "Marriage in Review" session, going over successes, hardships, difficulties overcome, favorite moments, concerns, etc.  Make sure to keep plenty of positive things in there, and end on a good not, a treat of some sort wouldn't be a bad thing.  It needs to be something that you look forward to for the good it does and the happy memories it brings.

Friday, October 11, 2013

Deminishing Negative Thoughts and Getting a Hold on a Happier Reality

   Can I just say that there is so much info out in the world today that it's dang dizzying looking for and deciphering what will be of good use?  Well in my commitment to bring you only the shiniest most precious gems, I introduce my most recent discovery!
 
    I myself have recently been introduced to something so simple yet so helpful in my Family Stress and Coping class.  We've been reading a book by David D. Burns, M.D. called When Panic Attacks, The New Drug-Free Anxiety Therapy That Can Change Your Life.

    In this book he talks about something called Cognitive Behavior Therapy (CBT).  Burns claims that with CBT we may:
"learn to change negative thoughts, or "cognitions," that cause depression, as well as the self-defeating behavior patterns that keep you stuck."1  
The best part is that it doesn't use medications (which have, at times, been known to bless you with side effects that make life just as uncomfortable as the problem you were trying to solve).

How often does this happen to us? We have negative thoughts passing through our head, we might even know they are false, yet our brains seem to believe them and it affects our bodies and moods accordingly. We start to stress, panic, or feel overwhelmed. 

Well I have a tried a simple exercise with the use of a Mood Log© & Worksheet attached with a Checklist of Cognitive Distortions ©.  These are basically two tools that will help you realize where you are going wrong, and replace those unhelpful negative thoughts and feelings with ones that are more positive and accurate. I really wish I had known about this so long ago, It has helped me so much that I just have to share it with all of you!

Following are an example worksheet to walk you through the simple process and a blank worksheet to fill out yourself.  The nice thing is that once you get used to these steps you won't need the worksheets anymore!  You will be thinking more positively as a natural reaction!  Please try it for yourself and see what comes of it!

Mood Log Example
Mood Log Worksheet

I am not the owner of the above Copyrighted materials.

1.Burns, D. (2007). When panic attacks. (p. 2). New York: Doubleday Broadway Publishing Group.

Friday, September 27, 2013

Repercussions of a Decline in The Family

There are far reaching consequences of the disappearing of the family.  Here are some eye-opening videos to educate us on the affect of declining families on the current and future world population and economy.  These videos contain a variety of experts - that's good

New Economic Reality: Demographic Winter

[Part 1] 56min Study the declining fertility rate in many areas of the world, learn how it may affect the world economy in the present and future, and examine how governments are taking steps to stabilize it.
[Part 2] 55min 

Monday, September 23, 2013

Hi Everyone!

Thanks for joining me on this journey.  I will be coming up with questions about marriage and the family as related to individual lives and society. Then I will be giving my take on these questions as I learn more and more about about the American family through recent studies.  There are so many studies and statistics out there, so i will be selective and choose those with sound research behind them.  My goal in doing all this is to make things simple to learn for the average reader.  Additionally I may add a quote here or there that I really like.  I mean, it's my blog, so it will probably reflect the things I like and find inspiring.  Don't worry though, I won't make it into my personal Pinterest page...

So a little about me.  I am a student at Brigham Young University Idaho in the Marriage and Family Program to become a Counselor.  Many have shared variations of the thought, "The more I learn, the less I know".  More and more lately I have come to understand this idea.  If anyone is expecting me to know more than the smallest fraction of almost any concept, they will be disappointed.  No one person I have met has all the answers, but many together have many answers.  I just hope to be able to provide some of those answers, or even at least to spark some good questioning in myself and others. It's taken me 3 colleges and 10 years to find out what I want to do, where I want to make my mark.  I've always known I want to have a good, strong and happy family, be a provider, and help others.  Now that I've found what I want to do, I'm not sitting still.  

A few quotes that stir my soul:

"If you were all alone in the universe with no one to talk to, no one with which to share the beauty of the stars, to laugh with, to touch, what would be your purpose in life? It is other life, it is love, which gives your life meaning. This is harmony. We must discover the joy of each other, the joy of challenge, the joy of growth." - Mitsugi Saotome

"The longing of the human heart is often for someone who will treat tenderly the devotion one has to give" -Barbara B. Smith

"Don't demand things that are unreasonable, but demand of yourself improvement" Russell M Nelson

"Never let a problem to be solved become more important than a person to be loved."  -Thomas S. Monson