Jennifer Lambert

A Sacred Balance

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31 Days of Servant Leadership

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September 30, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 3 Comments

Are you ready?

We’re spending a month discussing Servant Leadership.

Raising Royal Little Lambs.

Follow along: #RaisingServantLeaders

31 Days of Servant Leadership

Jesus came to be a servant.

Our Bible lesson hit home for me – and the girls really understood this one. And they understand that this is different than the way of the world. And it’s hard.

“Being a servant means not just looking at your own wants or desires, but looking to help others.” ~The Dig for Kids, Volume 2

The greatest among you should be like the youngest, and the one who rules like the one who serves. For who is greater, the one who is at the table or the one who serves? Is it not the one who is at the table? But I am among you as one who serves. Luke 22:26-27

Read all of Luke 22.

So, we’re looking for ways to serve, to help others. Even the smallest overlooked things can be so appreciated. I just want my kids to be courteous and thoughtful.

I want our family to be lights for Jesus.

Being counter-cultural is hard.

So, I let go and let God. It’s amazing what my kids do on their own without my nagging them. They’re serving joyfully.

List of posts in this series:

  1. What is Servant Leadership?

  2. Chivalry

  3. Honor

  4. Leaders Listen

  5. Heart Training Resources for Littles

  6. Sunday-no post

  7. Humility and Bible Studies for Kids

  8. Fun

  9. Youth part 1

  10. Youth part 2

  11. Seeking Counsel

  12. Prayer Resources

  13. Sunday-no post

  14. Fear

  15. Comparison

  16. Noble

  17. Truth

  18. Parent Resources

  19. Girl Resources

  20. Sunday-no post

  21. Admirable

  22. Lovely

  23. What is Right?

  24. The Purpose of Church

  25. Praiseworthy

  26. Excellent

  27. Sunday-no post

  28. Boy Resources

  29. Valor

  30. Heart Training Resources

  31. What is Purity?

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Filed Under: Leadership Tagged With: leadership, parenting

Ask Me Anything

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September 19, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

Questions.

Questions.

Questions.

It begins in toddlerhood: “Why?”

The point is never to discourage her so she stops asking you and starts seeking answers elsewhere.

While it often is so annoying and inconvenient, it is necessary and good for our children to ask questions to understand the world around them.

Take a moment and breathe a little prayer and formulate an answer for your child the next time she asks. Sometimes it’s hard. Sometimes it’s an interruption.

Kids will seek negative attention if they’re not getting positive attention. They prefer to be yelled at than be ignored.

My kids ask the greatest questions. Their questions remind me of their curious minds that God gave them. It also shows me how much they really do know based on the level of their questioning.

Alex is very curious about blood lately. He wants to know where it comes from, how it’s made, what’s in it, what it does. He’s three!

I am exhausted by all the questions.

Katie wants to visit a Native American tribe and learn their ways and language. Tori wants to watch bugs. Liz wants to know why Dad enjoys hot sauce on his food.

Their vocabulary, connections, and memory work help them to formulate very intelligent questions to get higher level information about whatever they’re learning about. I am often amazed.

I am so blessed by my children wanting to constantly know more, more, more.

God gave them such beautiful minds and hearts that I long to protect.

Katie is fascinated by animals. So, we encourage her by subscribing to NatGeo kids, Zoobooks, Ranger Rick, and her library account is full of animal books. She told me this morning that she wants to learn all the languages in the world. I pray that she finds her calling and focuses on her talents and gifts for Jesus.

Tori is analytical and domestic. She loves to help with chores and cook and I am more than happy to have her cheerful help. Her favorite subjects are math and physical science. I pray that she finds a way to use her gentle heart for the glory of God. I pray she is protected from mean people because I fear it would break her rather than make her stronger.

Alex is our only boy. He is a lover. He is a gentleman. He has a mind of his own. I pray he becomes a strong leader for God’s kingdom and does wonderful, world-changing things.

Liz loves language. She loves to read. She is also a blank slate. I really have to be careful assuming she knows something or has made a connection between two concepts. Often, she just doesn’t know and we get upset at one another. I know if she attended school, she would be labeled an “airhead” or other, uglier, names. I pray that I am patient with her and help her become discerning of the world.

My middle girls are night and day different from other, but they complement each other. I pray they stay close to each other. I know that school would kill their love of learning and creativity.

I pray for communication to always be open with my kids.

I pray they always feel comfortable coming to me to discuss anything.

If I don’t know the answer or the question makes me uncomfortable, I pray I have the strength to tell my kids, “Let’s look that up together.”

I don’t want my kids looking up sex questions on Google. I don’t want them being discipled by pop music and Hollywood.

I want them to be different.

I pray there is never a time when they seek answers in the world for the important questions.

I pray that I am always available and God provides the answers through me.

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Filed Under: Family Tagged With: communication, parenting, prayer, relationships

Bible Resources for Families

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July 16, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 17 Comments

I’ve compiled a list of Bible study resources for families.

For Parents:

1.We Make the Road by Walking: A Year-Long Quest for Spiritual Formation, Reorientation, and Activation by Brian D. McLaren

This book offers everything you need to explore what a difference an honest, living, growing faith can make in our world today. It also puts tools in your hands to create a life-changing learning community in any home, restaurant, or other welcoming space.

The fifty-two (plus a few) weekly readings can each be read aloud in 10 to 12 minutes and offer a simple curriculum of insightful reflections and transformative practices. Organized around the traditional church year, these readings give an overview of the whole Bible and guide an individual or a group of friends through a year of rich study, interactive learning, and personal growth.

Perfect for home churches, congregations, classes, or individual study, each reading invites you to

  • Cultivate an honest, intelligent understanding of the Bible and of Christian faith in 21st century
  • Engage with discussion questions designed to challenge, stimulate, and encourage
  • Reimagine what it means to live joyfully and responsibly in today’s world as agents of God’s justice, creativity, and peace

If you’re seeking a fresh way to experience and practice your faith, if you’re a long-term Christian seeking new vitality, or if you feel out of place in traditional church circles, this book will inspire and activate you in your spiritual journey.

2. Jesus, the Gentle Parent

Explains how to gently parent our kids and refutes some harsh Christian parenting manuals.

3. Lead Your Family Like Jesus
This is a great leadership book on how to raise your family to love Jesus. It uses Biblical teaching and leadership models. My husband and I taught our Sunday school class with this book last year and it was great!


4. You Can’t Make Me
A revolutionary book for our household. We used the methods laid out to change our communication and saw immediate results. We have strong-willed children and we don’t want to break those spirits because we know they will be leaders for Christ someday. A great help for taming the will and helping everyone appreciate differences in a positive way.

5. The Child Training Bible is a great resource.

As parents, I firmly believe that we should actively disciple our children and read along with kids even when they’re older and can read for themselves.

Keep the discussion open and always be available for the hard questions.

If you’re not open for conversation, where will your kids will turn?

For the Whole Family:

1. Our Place in Space and Glow in the Dark Fish by BJ Reinhard

These are delightful sciency books that teach lesson and Biblical truths. We all love the short devotionals and science facts each day.

2. Grapevine Studies

Lessons so the whole family can do the same study. Available: OT, NT, Birth of Jesus, Resurrection, Esther, Ruth, Joseph

Different levels: Traceables, Beginner, Levels 1-5, Multi-Level

3. We Choose Virtues

Great character education program.

4. Bible Study Guide

We reviewed the primary and intermediate levels. The girls love it. You can get complementary pages so the whole family does the same lessons together – preschool through adults.

5. Scripture memory system

A great meal time memory work and discussion tool.

Amanda has a printable to make pretty dividers for your memory box.

6. Inductive Bible Kids studies and All inductive Bible studies by Kay Arthur

These are great in-depth studies.

For Homeschool:

1. What We Believe Series by Apologia

The girls loved these and the notebooking journals. It’s a good foundation series.

2. Studying God’s Word series

We all love the simplicity of learning the Catechism and Bible stories and doing activities. Books for each level K-8th.

3. Hero Tales

A great study on missionaries from history. 4 volumes. Be sure to get this copywork!

4. My ABC Bible Verses: Hiding God’s Word in Little Hearts by Susan Hunt

Cute printables for ABC Bible Verses here.

5. Leading Little Ones to God

A study for parents to do with kids. Some of the hymns were difficult to find though.

For Teens:

By the time our kids hit their teenage years, the hope is that they have a firm understanding of the Word and Christian living. Parents need to model this while kids are young so we can release responsible young adults into the world to be radical world changers for Jesus.

1. Leading God’s Generation journals

My eldest daughter really likes these simple Bible study and prayer journals. 4 to choose from.

2. I Don’t Have Enough Faith to Be an Atheist By: Norman L. Geisler, Frank Turek

Be sure to get the to answer the tough questions “about absolute truth, postmodernism, and moral relativism” and train in apologetics.

3. Journey to Freedom by Elisa Pulliam

Identity study for teen girls.

4. Beauty in the Heart by Pam Forster

My eldest loved this study. My middle girls thought it was a lot of busy work.

5. Creed by Adam Hamilton

I also like The Call (which can be done as a whole family!) and Unafraid. This looks great for teens to examine faith.

What are your favorite Bible tools?

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Grace

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May 5, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 6 Comments

Do you offer the “grace of presence” to your children?

Are you an intentional parent?

We Christians hear lots about grace, but do we offer it to our children? Do we model Christ’s grace in a way that they understand it?

Grace-filled family leadership is all about turning mistakes into opportunities for growth.

~Lead Your Family Like Jesus

I know there are too many times that I am “too busy” for my children. I get frustrated, tired, lazy, overwhelmed. I homeschool all four of them and I feel I deserve a break every now and then.

I must remind myself to rely on His strength.

When the devil baits me with my children’s disobedience {or because of my own lack of diligence and consistency as a parent}, I must respond with grace. I must trust in God to speak the right words and show the right actions.

It takes so much more effort to answer my children {and their behavior} patiently and kindly and seize the teachable moment, but it really pays off in the end.

I am too often reminded by gentle nudgings from my Father…I sometimes try too hard. I sometimes forget. I sometimes stop trusting.

When I stray from His path, then I get tired and lazy and full of self.

By trusting my God for answers in everything, especially parenting – because that is my number one priority – I am modeling for my children to trust me. I want them to trust that I have their best interests at heart, just as Jesus has our best interests in His heart. Children don’t always understand the why’s, and we don’t always understand His will, but we must trust and model that trust for our children.

We also must model grace.

If I am constantly harsh and unyielding, then it’s going to inspire rebellion and not obedience. I have to be a “yes mom” sometimes. I have to offer grace sometimes. I have to realize that sometimes natural consequences are more than sufficient for teaching a lesson. They don’t further need me to heap coals on their heads.

I want to be a fun mom who does the fun things and not the mean mom who always says no.

To extend grace, I must be intentional. I must be present. {Present means undivided attention – not on the computer while in the same room.}

I must know my children. I must know their hearts and desires and likes and dislikes. I must teach by example.

Only Jesus can fill us, but surely parents {more than anyone else} guide the way and help children accept Him. I want to witness my kids’ spiritual growth, as well as their intellectual and physical growth. I want to grow leaders for Jesus.

This is why we homeschool.

Grace.

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Filed Under: Faith Tagged With: grace, parenting

Dealing with Defiance

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April 11, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

He just turned three.

And with this birthday comes an undesirable.

Defiance.

I plan to nip it in the bud.

tough guy

I noticed the defiance and feared it when we were potty training a month or so ago.

We took the Pull-Ups away during the day. We bought cute Diego and Cars underwear.

It was time, I said.

I didn’t want a three year old still in diapers.

Yet he still wet his pants.

He had tantrums about sitting on the toilet, with a little Cars potty seat insert, even going toward the bathroom. We even bought a plastic urinal. Yes, we did. He wouldn’t use that either.

He understood the whole concept of where the waste goes: in the toilet.

When questioned about why he still wet his pants, he answered defiantly:

“’Cuz I said yes. ‘Cuz I want to.”

OK, little boy.

I prayed. I cajoled. I bribed. Nothing doing.

Then, a couple successes and the cheers and hugs and kisses.

He seemed embarrassed by the attention.

But he decided it was better than the previous battle.

Whew!

And now, this defiance last week…

Me: “We keep our shoes on at church. Say ‘yes, ma’am.’”

Alex: shakes head. sticks lip out and tucks chin on his chest.

Me: “Say ‘yes, ma’am,’ please.”

Alex: “I don’t want to.”

Me: “Say ‘yes, ma’am’ so we can go eat and play.”

Alex: shakes head. lip out. “I don’t want to!”

So, I take him into the sanctuary. I ask him questions.

Me: “Do you love Jesus?”

He shakes his head.

Me: “Do you see that up on the wall?”

He nods.

Me: “Do you know what it is?”

He nods. “Cross.”

Me: “Do you know Who was on it?”

Alex: “Jesus.”

Me: “Do you know why Jesus was on the cross?”

He shakes his head. (and apparently I need to step up his Christian education!)

So I explain the Gospel to Alex.

I know it must be difficult for him to understand because many adults struggle to comprehend.

We hold hands. I pray aloud in the dark sanctuary, alone, with Alex and Jesus. I pray for His help to soften Alex’s heart, to help him be obedient, to love Jesus. I pray for His help in parenting, for patience and for me not to crush this little boy’s spirit over a pair of shoes.

He still won’t say “yes ma’am” to me.

My husband comes in and admonishes Alex and offers to take over, but this is a battle about shoes for Alex’s soul and I will win it.

He still won’t say “yes ma’am.”

I ask my husband to please carry Alex to the van.

On the way out, I tell Elizabeth to go to the van too, since she lied about completing her daily assignments. Oh, I’m working out everything tonight! No one is getting away with defiance anymore!

We get home and Liz and Alex change into their pajamas. I lay out the dinner that my husband quickly had packed up for us from the church.

We sit in silence.

Alex still won’t say “yes ma’am.”

At least Elizabeth is contrite about the assignments. She completed one the second she walked in the door. She finished another two after we ate. {Then I realize she lied about other assignments. No more trust. This is another story.}

I can see Alex itching to pick up his fork. I calmly watch him. He tucks his chin and mumbles, “yes ma’am.”

We may eat.

Hallelujah!

hungry-boy.jpg

He was so compliant and cheerful the rest of the evening!

I am glad I didn’t get angry.

I remained calm to teach him this lesson. I won’t have rebellious children. I am fighting a spiritual battle.

“I am the true vine, and my Father is the gardener. He cuts off every branch in me that bears no fruit, while every branch that does bear fruit he prunes so that it will be even more fruitful. You are already clean because of the word I have spoken to you. Remain in me, as I also remain in you. No branch can bear fruit by itself; it must remain in the vine. Neither can you bear fruit unless you remain in me.

“I am the vine; you are the branches. If you remain in me and I in you, you will bear much fruit; apart from me you can do nothing. If you do not remain in me, you are like a branch that is thrown away and withers; such branches are picked up, thrown into the fire and burned. If you remain in me and my words remain in you, ask whatever you wish, and it will be done for you. This is to my Father’s glory, that you bear much fruit, showing yourselves to be my disciples.

“As the Father has loved me, so have I loved you. Now remain in my love. If you keep my commands, you will remain in my love, just as I have kept my Father’s commands and remain in his love. I have told you this so that my joy may be in you and that your joy may be complete. My command is this: Love each other as I have loved you. Greater love has no one than this: to lay down one’s life for one’s friends. You are my friends if you do what I command. I no longer call you servants, because a servant does not know his master’s business. Instead, I have called you friends, for everything that I learned from my Father I have made known to you. You did not choose me, but I chose you and appointed you so that you might go and bear fruit—fruit that will last—and so that whatever you ask in my name the Father will give you. This is my command: Love each other.

~John 15:1-17

Some of you may disagree with my parenting methods.

But I realize that my leniency with Elizabeth when she was younger is coming back to bite me now.

I also know that training Alex while he is young will make everyone happier later on. He’s just a little boy.

He will soon be a big boy, and then a man.

I don’t want him to be disrespectful or a slacker. I want him to grow up and do radical things for God and he needs to learn a love for Jesus and obedience to his parents now. Something told my spirit that the silly little battle over his taking off his shoes was a milestone in his behavior training. I do pick and choose my battles. Often things don’t matter, but absolute defiance is inappropriate and needs to be pruned.

If some of the branches have been broken off, and you, though a wild olive shoot, have been grafted in among the others and now share in the nourishing sap from the olive root, do not consider yourself to be superior to those other branches. If you do, consider this: You do not support the root, but the root supports you. You will say then, “Branches were broken off so that I could be grafted in.” Granted. But they were broken off because of unbelief, and you stand by faith. Do not be arrogant, but tremble. For if God did not spare the natural branches, he will not spare you either.

Consider therefore the kindness and sternness of God: sternness to those who fell, but kindness to you, provided that you continue in his kindness. Otherwise, you also will be cut off. And if they do not persist in unbelief, they will be grafted in, for God is able to graft them in again. After all, if you were cut out of an olive tree that is wild by nature, and contrary to nature were grafted into a cultivated olive tree, how much more readily will these, the natural branches, be grafted into their own olive tree!

~Romans 11:17-24

I want to lead my family like Jesus. I recommend this book. I teach it to my Sunday school class. It’s full of great stories from real Godly parents who desire to teach their kids Godly values just like us. There is but one priority: to glorify God.

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Toilet Training

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February 28, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

Ah, the joys and fun of potty-training.

Great memories, yeah?

Nah, not so much for me either.

Day care trained my eldest daughter whilst I was away at work, oblivious, and happily teaching critical thinking, and sometimes literature, grammar, and writing, to middle school students.

My eldest, for the most part, trained her two sisters. I really cannot take much of the credit. She was amazing at it. I don’t think it took more than a couple days of diligence, along with some M&M’s and bubble gum.

And then there is Alex. The Boy. Boys are different, they say.

Over these last few months, I have read numerous articles and blog posts about potty-training. I’ve pinned some brilliant wisdom on how to boot-camp potty-train toddlers in one day with stickers, candy, junk food, Kool-Aid, nudity, running around and cheering, and pretending with dolls and teddy bears.

One blogger had this nugget which I do agree with whole-heartedly (paraphrased): “Readiness and interest are not the same things. Don’t wait for the child to be ready. Wait for signs of readiness, but make sure it’s before age 3 or he’ll get set in his ways. Then it’s harder.” All this sums up what I now know.

The children don’t necessarily need “training.” The parents are being trained to be absolute clowns.

I thought it was high time that Alex quit wearing Pull-Ups and used the toilet. He turns 3 on April 1.

We experienced fierce resistance. Alex had no desire whatsoever to transition to “big boy” status. When we put the idea to him, he gave an adamant “No.” He did not want to use The Bathroom, The Toilet, The Potty, or any other allusion to That Place under any circumstances. There were tantrums if we even suggested it.

He completely intellectually understood the concept of urinating into a toilet. He had watched me, his father, and all three sisters use the toilet numerous times in almost three years. He “got” it. He could tell anyone who asked where certain bodily functions should take place: The Bathroom. The Toilet. Not The Pants.

But he refused.

When questioned why he wouldn’t use The Toilet…His epic answer: “Cuz I said: I don’t want to.”

And there you have it.

The Bathroom was enemy territory.

I persevered. I had packs and packs of cute and colorful boy underwear at the ready. He liked those and didn’t want to wear Pull-Ups anymore. But he wouldn’t use The Toilet.

For several weeks (my husband claims an entire month of the ordeal – and it feels like years), Alex just wet himself.

It was like having a puppy.

A puppy who wore Diego and Cars underpants and swishy pants who needed changing 10 times a day. And lots of Kids n Pets carpet cleaner. That created lots of extra laundry.

We have a little plastic Cars toilet seat that’s toddler-butt-sized and fits over a standard toilet seat. We even bought a plastic stand alone urinal.

Yes, you read that right.

It remains unused and is now rather dusty.

We got over the tantrums about The Toilet sometime last week. We have 4 bathrooms. He would only consider using the one near the kitchen. We placed his Cars toilet seat in there. He would occasionally acquiesce and sit on the thing and even released an occasional drop of urine to appease us – or fool us.

Then five minutes later, he would be standing in a puddle. On carpet.

Not even the quip of “Pants are a privilege!” prevailed. Can’t imagine where he gets that stubborn streak…{whistling and looking away}

At about the time his sisters, his father, and I were at our wits’ end…and I was ready to give up and just go back to Pull-Ups, something just “clicked.”

He was playing on the floor in the basement Monday evening and he just looked up at me. He said, very calmly, “I gotta go pee.”

I looked at his father and we both jumped up lightning fast (which we regretted later, being old and decrepit) and rushed Alex excitedly upstairs to where The Toilet was.

Magic.

And there has not been a single accident since. He even woke up this morning at 6:41, dry, and needing to run to The Toilet.

Thank You, God, I say.

Now, #2 is a whole different story.

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Keep Calm

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December 27, 2012 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

I’ve had many friends and acquaintances ask me recently about how calm my children are.

Is that a good thing?

Calm is not the point. Connected to self during any and every experience is the point. Can a child learn to be with themselves when they are anxious, happy, angry sad…? That’s the point. That’s emotional intelligence.

Lisa Dion

I know that my kids do get rambunctious, but they always seem to be calm and collected when it really counts. When other kids are ricocheting off the walls and their parents are embarrassedly hushing them and stage whispering threats, I am usually inwardly smiling at my kids’ stellar behavior.

See my Pinterest board on parenting. I am constantly learning. I am certainly no expert!

Whereas I find my friends’ compliments a great affirmation, I can’t take all the credit here.

I think most of us have intelligent, active kids. Society often teaches that we have to stifle their natural exuberance or break their wills.

I strive to have a great relationship with my children. They trust me. They know I want what’s best for them. I seek their opinion and strive to satisfy their needs and desires.

We’ve run the gamut with making sure our kids are healthy and productive.

Elizabeth was “off the charts” for ADHD when she was about 5-7. We went the medication route for about a year. She stopped eating. She is super skinny anyway, so that didn’t work for me at all. I looked into more natural ways to manage her moods and focus abilities. We changed our diet and started eating more naturally. If it has lots of unpronounceable ingredients, we rarely eat it.

Now, we do have healthier treats (without a lot of sugar and additives and dye!) but we occasionally eat things we shouldn’t. We use Annie’s mac and cheese rather than Kraft. We eat lots of fruits and vegetables. We buy the best meat, dairy, and eggs that we can afford. I limit the prepared snack items we keep on hand.

I rely on essential oils and dietary supplements for brain health.

Then, in my research, I discovered cod liver oil. I cannot praise its properties enough! The kids are calmer, more focused and attentive, complete their school work quicker than before. Some of this is that they are maturing and growing up these last few months, but I know the cod liver oil helps. Our kids love the Cinnamon Tingle flavor. I take the orange capsules. There’s no flavor, no aftertaste, and no reflux or burps.

We’ve taken this liquid multivitamin for years. I highly recommend a multivitamin since our diets are just never good enough. The kids have so much more energy when they take this daily. It’s worth the expense.

I also take Evening Primrose oil capsules and a multi-B complex in addition to cod liver oil every day. I try to take a multivitamin too, but I find if I remember to take my oils and B, I’m energetic enough.

Also? Our skin looks radiant.

We go outside lots for fresh air and sunshine. I think it helps the kids to be active and loud and act like children in the freedom of our back yard or the park. Daily walks help me too.

These essential oils are the ones we use daily.

Thieves oil maintains our immune systems. We rub it on our feet before bed. We rarely get infections now!  When Tori recently got a cold, it was much less than previous years.

Lavender works wonders on the little cuts and scrapes and skin abrasions so common in kids. Alex and Tori have dry, sensitive skin and break out around their mouths periodically, but after a couple days of lavender oil, it’s all gone. Tori knows to dab it on herself when she starts breaking out. We also limit her milk intake.

Frankincense helps brain development and heightens spiritual awareness. There’s a reason it was a gift to Jesus and it is a precious substance. I put it on my face Sunday mornings before church. Tori loves the scent and often asks me to massage her face with it. It helps moisturize skin better than commercial products!

I use several happy oil blends like perfume every day to help me conquer negativity and moodiness. I have suffered from low grade depression since I was about 12. I can’t tell you how much better I feel since using these oils. I sometimes put oil blends on Tori to help her if she’s going to be experiencing a tough situation, like our church Christmas pageant. She’s painfully shy and it gives her strength to get through it.

I use a peaceful blend often on Kate to keep her from bouncing off the walls. I often use it in my bath water after a tough week (before you think: “Ew”…I shower daily, but I only get to lay in a bath weekly, if I’m lucky!).

Liz has come such a long way from when we were at our wits’ end with her lack of focus and hyperactivity. She is learning how to manage on her own and recognize her mood triggers and find memory helps to learn better. She is learning that when her blood sugar plummets, she needs to eat. Her attitude is affected.

Tori isn’t quite so much the space cadet with her supplements and oils. We’re learning what works best as she grows and matures.

Of course, prayer and mindfulness are also extremely important.

The things we do work well for our family. I don’t know what issues you may have with moods, behaviors, allergies, etc. I am not a doctor. I’m just a mom. These are just our experiences.

The kids often watch me and take my lead. If I stay calm and teach peace, they learn this and will practice it.

Calm is not the same as regulated.

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You Can’t Make Me Book Review

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December 10, 2012 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

This parenting book has been a game changer for my husband and me in communicating with our four children.

I cannot even begin to tell you about all the improvements in our family from communicating the way we learned in You Can’t Make Me: But I Can Be Persuaded by Cynthia Ulrich Tobias.

As a “strong-willed child” myself, everything written in this book made total sense to me. I have recognized the strong will in 3 of my 4 children. I usually can communicate with all of my children in a way that they do what I want. I get frustrated and it all falls apart at times, of course. Reading this book and applying its principles, I can now be so much more intentional about communicating to my SWC’s in better ways.

The author suggests asking questions since commands are confrontational. Bingo! Asking my two strong willed daughters, “Have you finished that writing assignment?” or “Have you taken out the trash?” or “Have you brushed your teeth?” is so much better than, “Get to your room and finish your work!” or “Go take out the trash right now!” or “Go brush your teeth!” Asking them the questions reminds them to complete the task in a non-threatening way and gives them responsibility for their chores or work rather than my nagging them. My five year old daughter gets irritated with herself when I ask her these questions (usually knowing the answer already or I wouldn’t bother asking). She does the face palm and runs to go do whatever it is that she forgot. It’s just easy!

We’re co-regulating.

I’m hoping this works soon with our two and a half year old son. Asking him any reminder questions just ends up with his yelling, “No!” and refusing to budge.  It’s kinda funny now, but won’t be in a year or two. or ten.

Cynthia Ulrich Tobias has a website about learning styles. I find that helpful as a home educator and parent. Of course, my kids all learn differently to keep me on my toes!

I highly recommend this book to parents or teachers who work with strong willed children. Don’t kill their spirits. Nurture them. Love them and learn to communicate with them. They are tomorrow’s leaders.

Download Strong-willed Child Top 10 Tips

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Love Hurts

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October 5, 2012 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

So, at Katie’s soccer practice, I’m sitting in my van, reading, and I see this mother of 4 boys walking to her van. Two school age, one in the preschool soccer, and a baby. She started screeching at the 2nd one, probably 5 years old or so, to not get dirty. She just berated him. It was really beyond scolding. Her tone was grating and mean. He was dressed neater than the others, so maybe he was going somewhere else afterwards and shouldn’t have gotten dirt on his clothes, shoes, or hands. Of course, I don’t know her circumstances. I don’t know her children. I don’t know what her day has been like. Is her husband deployed or working a late shift? She didn’t speak to her other 3 as far as I knew while loading the baby into his carseat and packing up the stroller. I felt sorry for her eldest. He glanced at me and I smiled forlornly at him. He didn’t return my smile. If she talks to those boys like this in public, what must it be like at home? They’re just little boys. My heart broke.

I know I’ve spoken harshly to my kids. I regret it. I’m sure there have been times I didn’t even apologize. My expectations might be misguided or I might not take into consideration their circumstances or my own. Is she hungry or tired? Does he just need some water? Does she need some alone time away from her siblings to recharge? I know I’m more snappish when I’m tired or hungry or hormonal. I’m a poor example to expect them to always be cheerfully obedient when I am not. I’m a poor example when I snap at my husband (whether or not they witness it). It’s the failures we all remember more than the successes. The niceties and pleasant days are too easily forgotten and the contempt, condescension, sarcasm, and other childishness is always remembered and comes back to haunt us in every argument.

I’m sure the devil loves these little phenomena. He’s laughing his horns off that we Christians struggle as much or more in our marriages and parenting than non-Christians. Why is that? The world makes it so easy to get caught up in unimportant activities and events that hinder our testimony. We may attend church and do all the “right” things, but where is our heart? We struggle with resentments and human frailties. But we are so, so blessed.

Don’t push each other away in your pain. Lean closer and accept the love.

Corrie ten Boom understood this so well:

Do you know what hurts so very much? It’s love. Love is the strongest force in the world, and when it is blocked that means pain. There are two things we can do when this happens. We can kill that love so that it stops hurting. But then, of course, part of us dies, too. Or we can ask God to open up another route for that love to travel.

People lash out when they’re hurting.

Love Hurts

I don’t want to lash out at my children.

They deserve better.

The director of Christian education at our church recently approached me to ask if Aaron and I would teach an adult Sunday school class on marriage and parenting. She also mentioned to me that most of the kids who attend our church regularly never pray or see a Bible except during our Sunday school classes.  That tells me so much about our “Christian” families. She then told me that she “knows we’re doing it right” since the girls tell her all about the Bible study we do. Way to put on the pressure! I’ll tell ya: it’s often a struggle to fit it all in. Isn’t it as important or even more so than math, science, grammar? Bible study with the kids every morning, quiet time on my own (almost) every night, devotionals with my eldest daughter once a week, reviewing her Bible history studies…they’re starting to really get it now, though, at ages 5, 6, 11…they see Christ in so much! It is humbling to me.

So, having all this responsibility just makes it so worse when I snap at my kids or husband. Shouldn’t I do better? Shouldn’t I have it more under control than that poor woman with her four boys? Shouldn’t I be a better example? I fail and I fail and I fail at that which I long to do better. Just like Paul.

I recently taught the kids about anger when I realized Katie needed some coping strategies, but I think we all benefited. We’re working through it together. Hopefully, they will grow up having learned sooner rather than later.

Do you struggle with anger issues?

Here are some sites that may help:

Mommy Anger Management Series from Meet Penny

Parenting and Anger Series  from Creative with Kids, which is a safe haven community to discuss anger issues.

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Filed Under: Health Tagged With: anger, depression, mental health, parenting

Discussing the Bible

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December 23, 2011 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

My daughter may have a future as a lawyer.

real life christian

We were on the way to Elizabeth’s music lessons. She takes piano and voice lessons from a local college student. We live in Utah, so we are the minority that we’re not LDS. Elizabeth and I have often expressed confusion over the LDS practice of drinking hot chocolate while eschewing coffee, tea, and soda. We thought out loud about the fact three are hot drinks, all often have caffeine, three originate from tropical climates, all could be sweet or flavored. So, why is chocolate or cocoa ok?

What do the LDS have against coffee or tea? God gave the Hebrews their dietary laws in the Old Testament. Those laws are pretty straightforward. Muslims have their Qadaahul Haajah, Hindus have theirs. (Thank God I’m a Christian for the eating habits alone!)

I’ve researched LDS teachings and all their doctrine states: “hot drinks are not for the body or belly” Doctrine and Covenants. I’ve found that their leaders teach that “hot drinks” only refer to coffee and tea. So, coffee and tea are not permissible whether hot, cold, or lukewarm, while hot cocoa and hot apple cider are ok…but they’re…HOT. Maybe the words should be updated to be more clear? And no one who is LDS can explain this satisfactorily.

So, after her lessons, 11-year-old Elizabeth asked her 20-year-old music teacher about the hot chocolate thing. The teacher told my daughter she didn’t really know; they should ask her mother. (Lessons are held in the teacher’s parents’ house because her mother also gives piano lessons and they share a studio.) Said parents both started conversing with Elizabeth about the hot chocolate issue…it was never really explained to satisfaction. This family has lived all over the States and are very kind and open to questions. Some LDS are not so friendly to interrogation.

Not to lose an opportunity, Elizabeth asked them how do they know that the Book of Mormon is true? They said the Holy Spirit reveals it as truth to LDS believers. They countered with how do we know the Bible is true? Elizabeth said that the Bible is inspired by God (this led to a later explanation by me of the First Council of Nicea). She asked them what exactly they believe about sin and Jesus? Then they start asking Elizabeth questions about her faith. Elizabeth realized discrepancies and showed them the Roman road to salvation. Then they discussed the verses in James 2 about works. They came to a stalemate about then.

I hope she gave them some things to think about this week!

An hour later, as I was starting to worry wonder why Elizabeth wasn’t coming out of their house…she bounded down their porch steps all aglow and told me this whole witnessing story. I am a proud mama!

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