Jennifer Lambert

A Sacred Balance

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Showing Love to My Children

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February 10, 2015 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

How can I show my children I love them? How do they really know? How can I do more than a perfunctory kiss on the forehead and “I love you” before bed? How can I comfort them in the absolute knowledge of our unconditional love?

Do I speak my child’s love language?

Chances are, we might have trouble communicating love to each other.

Showing Unconditional Love to My Children

How I can show unconditional love to my children:

Positive Words

Kids need to hear positive words from their parents. We all need affirmation. Recently, I was accosted by a mom of one of my daughter’s friends. She sang her daughter’s praises but condemned her son. They stood right beside her. I was so uncomfortable. Her daughter beamed and tossed her hair while her son stared at the floor. I felt so sorry for him. He doesn’t feel loved, good enough, worthwhile. That family is all performance-based and it’s so sad. I don’t think empty praise is useful, but finding ways to point out something good makes our kids feel good about themselves and their accomplishments.

Death and life are in the power of the tongue: and they that love it shall eat the fruit thereof. Proverbs 18:21

Do I have a child who is struggling with motivation? I should look to my words.

A person who feels appreciated will always do more than what is expected.

A child who feels appreciated will always do more than what is expected.

How I Can Offer Affirming Words to My Children:

  • Thank You Notes in lunchboxes, in drawers, on pillows, on desks, on mirror
  • Specific praise for a job well done or great effort or lesson learned
  • Boasting about their overcoming a struggle or accomplishing a difficult task
  • Thanking God for my children and their talents, gifts, abilities, strengths
  • Being courteous and respectful, not raising my voice, and always saying “Thank you” and “Please” and “I’m sorry” when it’s needed

Loving Touch

Kids need hugs and kisses and snuggles. My children thrive on affection and I know I am stingy with it. Children who are spanked, hit, or slapped will come to mistrust touch and get confused or flinch away from it. Ask me how I know. It is the simplest thing in the world (and free!) to love a child with hugs, kisses, pats, holding hands, or any of the myriad ways a child will strive to touch.

Most people need about thirteen loving touches per day to feel loved and appreciated.

My son is a snuggler and I know when his tank is full on physical affection, he is happy and content. He’s a great example to me of how to use loving touch more.

How I Will Practice Affection with My Children

  • Kiss every morning and before bed
  • Hug every time I leave and arrive
  • Hold hands when I walk together
  • Pat, squeeze, ruffle hair, or something similar when I walk by
  • Snuggle more during reading or quiet time

Service

As a mom, I serve our kids all the time. But am I gracious about it? Do I grumble or make my kids feel guilty? I love to do things for my children and I struggle with doing too much sometimes. It pleases me to make their favorite muffins or mend a hole in their favorite pants or help them with a learning concept. When I start to feel grumbly, I’m being selfish. I’m expecting too much of my young children to do for themselves. I try to include my kids in everything I can. We do the dishes together and make breakfast together and hang the laundry together. They’re learning and we’re interacting and they see me serve them by caring for them. And I make sure I thank them for helping me. I model the behaviors I wish to see in them.

Unique Ways I Can Serve My Children

  • Pray for and with them
  • Teach them useful life skills whenever they’re ready and interested
  • Random acts of kindness
  • Tell them stories of your life growing up and about their grandparents or other family members
  • Respect them and what they feel is important

Time

My kids want to spend time with me. We hear too much lately: “Mama, look at me and not your phone!” “Dad, can your put your phone down and play a game with me?” My kids want my attention. This often goes along with service. I need to put aside the distractions and slow down and just be with my children. They grow up so quickly. Do I want to have regrets? Do I want our kids to have memories of my being too busy?

How I Will Spend Quality Time with My Kids:

  • Play a game
  • Color or draw or do art journals together
  • Go on a walk
  • Make milkshakes and talk
  • Watch a sunset (or sunrise!)

Gifts

Of course I want to give good gifts to our children. I love my kids and it’s natural to want to give them gifts.

You parents—if your children ask for a loaf of bread, do you give them a stone instead? Or if they ask for a fish, do you give them a snake? Of course not! So if you sinful people know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your heavenly Father give good gifts to those who ask him. Matthew 7:9-11

I needn’t think of gifts as things I buy from a store. In this era and society of too much stuff, I should look to give my children gifts that money can’t necessarily buy. It often pains me that I can’t give them what I think they deserve or what I think I should give them. Then guilt sets in.

Guilt-free Gifts to Give My Children:

  • Classes or Lessons
  • Travel Experiences
  • Field trips
  • Books, journals, diaries, art supplies
  • Love notes on their pillow, in their lunch box, in a drawer, on the mirror

I certainly want my children to know that I love them. I don’t want them guessing or wondering. I want them to be secure in that knowledge. I want a healthy, loving relationship with my kids.

I can’t offer them empty praise without being inauthentic. I can’t assume they know that I’m proud of them. And I don’t want them to think it’s only about performance.

Linking up: Arabah Joy, Raising Homemakers, My JoyFilled Life, The Fairy and the Frog, Hip Homeschool Moms, Golden Reflections, Los Gringos Locos, Milk&Cuddles, True Aim, The Life of Jennifer Dawn, Blessed Learners, Peaklepie, 123Homeschool4Me, Jenny Evolution,
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Filed Under: Family Tagged With: love

Love Distortion

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October 22, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

It’s almost impossible to self-heal from a distorted perception of love.

Ten years of seeking, reading, praying, forgetting, moving on, learning.

The past still seeps in.

Growing up isolated, feeling less-than, lost, confused.

That child is still in there, frightened and anxious, peering out from wary adult eyes.

Broken relationships – friendships, marriages, acquaintances.

Leaving first, before the chance of pain.

The strong façade covers the pain and fear. The show must go on.

Academics replace anything messy and real.

Love is messy.

31DaysofDyingtoSelf.jpg

Breaking the cycle of fear and disorder.

Learning to let real love in.

Like Pandora’s box spilling out the ugly before it can be refilled with beauty.

It’s difficult to accept love from others, even God, when you don’t know what real love is.

Love isn’t a Disney movie. Love isn’t a happily ever after. Love isn’t easy. Love isn’t temporary.

Love is work.

As a parent, I owe it to my family to learn to love well. Despite my past. Despite my feelings. Despite my brokenness.

Let the work begin.

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Filed Under: Faith Tagged With: 31Days, love

To Sit With An Empty Lap

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July 28, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

Motherhood is not a joy.

I haven’t gotten to that place where I can feel comfortable having a filthy house and clean hearts. I want both. I want it all. I want the spotless magazine-home and obedient, grateful children.

The expectations are too much. The ones I carry with me, the ones I perceive my husband has. All the ones I’ve picked up from various relationships, the media, church denominations.

I still struggle to tell the difference between anger and hatred.

I study other parents to learn what works…and what not to do.

I analyze the happy parents and study the miserable ones. Often, the happiest parents have the unruliest children and messiest houses.

Perhaps my priorities are all wrong.

The work overwhelms me.

The constant battling over dust and sand, dirty looks, and hateful comments thrown like darts from around corners. The lying and deceit. The laziness and shirking of duty.

It’s exhausting. I get bogged down in the checklists of laundry, meal planning and preparation, dishes, school lesson planning and implementation, flossing.

I don’t have time or energy to dance or sing…or sit with an empty lap.

To Sit With An Empty Lap

I don’t have time for my husband. The relationship that was tenuous is slowly slipping away.

Between the teeth brushing and baths and bedtimes and early risers and second breakfast, there is all but nothing left over.

And the blogging and the home business? I am such a poser. You see only a glimpse of the best: the fairy tale, photoshopped, magazine-pretty version of my reality.

The thankful journals, the hymn-singing, the chore charts, the Bible studies, worldview notebooking, the scripture memorization and copywork. The church and Sunday school attendance. VBS. All the checklists that don’t matter to Jesus or to anyone else, not really.

If they’re not hiding it in their hearts. Just going through the motions of learning lessons at face value isn’t enough.

If they’re not pouring out love, then they’re not being filled up properly.

When the stresses of the world weigh me down. When I have to walk away, biting my lip, sucking back tears, holding my breath.

I haven’t yet reached that place where motherhood is a joy, where I can laugh at spills and smile at mistakes.

The busyness is a defense mechanism. To just be still is scary, requires too much of the soft, fleshy insides to be revealed, exposed, examined. {Click to tweet this!}

And I dread being found wanting.

Even after thirteen years of motherhood and ten years of marriage, I’m not comfortable enough with myself to allow God, my husband, or my children in.

If I don’t accept love, I cannot offer it. If I don’t receive love, I cannot give it.

I struggle to find a balance of teaching the hard lessons well and stepping back to not take it personally when the children misbehave.

So, I must pray and find new ways to fill myself up with Love so I can pour it into my little ones. So I can teach them well and love them well. So there is something leftover.

Love is a verb.

Joy is a choice.

Resources:

  • Motherwhelmed by Beth Berry
  • Jesus, the Gentle Parent by LR Knost
  • Adult Children of Emotionally Immature Parents by Lindsay Gibson
  • The Highly Sensitive Parent: Be Brilliant in Your Role, Even When the World Overwhelms You by Elaine N. Aron, Ph.D
  • Raising An Emotionally Intelligent Child by John Gottman
  • The Mother Dance: How Children Change Your Life by Harriet Lerner
  • I’m So Effing Tired: A Proven Plan to Beat Burnout, Boost Your Energy, and Reclaim Your Life by Dr. Amy Shah, MD
  • Hold On to Your Kids: Why Parents Need to Matter More Than Peers by Gordon Neufeld
  • Originals: How Non-Conformists Move the World by Adam Grant
  • Good-Enough Mother: The Perfectly Imperfect Book of Parenting by René Syler and Karen Moline
  • The Mom Gap by Karen Gurney

You might also like:

  • How much is a mom worth?
  • A Mother’s Résumé
  • Mommy Guilt
  • Celebrating Holidays
  • Birthday Unit Study
  • Healing Mother
  • Standing Alone
  • Balancing Blogging and Mothering
  • Navigating Motherhood During Deployment
  • Childcare Crisis
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Learning to Love

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July 8, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

Jesus calls us to more than just rest; He calls us to an entirely different way of living.

Are you a reed swayed by the wind? Do you just live your life to please others? to make them more comfortable? to tell them what they want to hear?

I’ve struggled with this. And it pains me when my kids ask me why people lie or tell them something and never follow through.

Idle words.

“Every one of these careless words is going to come back to haunt you. There will be a time of Reckoning. Words are powerful; take them seriously. Words can be your salvation. Words can also be your damnation.” Matthew 12:36-37 The Message

It really just all comes down to Love.

All We Need is Love

Liz asked me today why all the songs and movies and books are about Love.

The truth is that humans need Love and most of modern first world society has everything we need, everything that money can buy, but we can’t buy Love, and we seek after it, pursuing it, idolizing it, craving it in all its impure and fleshly perversions.

I explained that people long for Love, but modern society has twisted it to be perverted and unhealthy and the media doesn’t portray real Love.

The teen books, shows, and music teach that everyone needs a boyfriend or girlfriend to be accepted and worthy in our society.

The Bible teaches a different Love and it’s my job as a mother to revitalize that education and make sure my kids understand the difference.

Am I modeling Love? Am I practicing hospitality? Am I lovely? Do my words portray Love? Do my actions show Love?

We’re all so worried about competition that we overlook Love. We compete for the attention and recognition of others in all we do. We even compete to appear more Christian than others.

Does my home look like something from HGTV before I can invite others over so I can love on them? Do my kids have to dress like Gap models before we can go out to witness? Does my hair and makeup look like that of the supermodel on the cover of a magazine before I can be charitable?

Why do we deny the Exodus? God tried to teach us that things don’t matter. People matter.

Why do we thwart the Gospel? Jesus teaches Love. Love before anything else.

How can I minister to others with where I am right now?

Jesus sent His apostles out with nothing. Why must we hide behind our stuff? We are of so little faith that we can’t offer Love to anyone since we don’t trust Him or accept Love ourselves.

Love your neighbor for real and the world can change.

Shake up your status quo.

Loving others isn’t supposed to be comfortable.

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Love Your Neighbor

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April 16, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

We are commanded to love.

Who?

All of us. Each and every one. To love.

To love.

To love whom?

Everyone.

Love Everyone.

It’s real simple, y’all.

Let all that you do be done in love. 1 Corinthians 16:14

http://www.etsy.com/shop/TrulyLoveThyNeighbor/

So now I am giving you a new commandment: Love each other. Just as I have loved you, you should love each other.Your love for one another will prove to the world that you are my disciples.

John 13:34-35

Love is a decision.

I read posts all the time about loving our spouses and children. If we need to be admonished to do that, how much more must we be reminded to love everyone else?

In light of everything in the news lately, I am disheartened. So much hate.

But Christians must not compromise. We must love.

We are the examples.

Little eyes and ears are always present.

What example are you setting if you love one and not the other?

What do your children think if they are confused by unforgiveness or bitterness?

We’ve traveled and moved all over and seen many different peoples and cultures.

We learn about them and their history. This is how we learn not to fear differences.

This is how we learn to love.

How can you love your neighbor today?

We are called to Love Everyone.

Resources:

  • Same, Same But Different by Jenny Sue Kostecki-Shaw
  • All Are Welcome by Alexandra Penfold
  • People by Peter Spier
  • Whoever You Are by MEm Fox
  • It’s Okay To Be Different by Todd Parr
  • The Skin You Live In by Michael Tyler
  • Our Skin: A First Conversation About Race by Isabel Roxas and Meghan Madison
  • The Colors of Us by Karen Katz
  • The Hundred Dresses by Eleanor Estes
  • Max Lucado’s Wemmicks (9 books)
  • The Sneetches and Other Stories by Dr. Seuss
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Filed Under: Faith Tagged With: civil rights, Jesus, leadership, love, MLK

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