Posts in Guest Writers
Are You Trying to Be Someone Else?
Howiesgal and I frequent a nearby Starbucks at least once a month.  We have had some great heart-to-heart talks, and after nearly six years of friendship, we know each other’s faults and strengths pretty well. 

 One evening we were talking about the pressure new homeschoolers often feel when they begin to learn about the methods of other homeschooling families.  Caroline confessed that she had succumbed to such pressure when she began, and so I asked if she would be willing to write an entry for Preschoolers and Peace.  I  think she covered it beautifully:

My Last Name is Not Smith

Wow, I don’t think I can do this homeschooling thing.  The Smiths teach their kids Latin as part of their curriculum.  That means I have to teach my kids Latin.  Latin?!  Are you kidding me.  I don’t know Latin.  How am I supposed to teach it to my kids?  I will fail.  I will fall flat on my face and my poor kids will suffer because their mom can’t do all of this.

 The Smith’s house always looks so put together and clean.  How do I keep my house sparkling clean?  The Smiths take their kids to do volunteer work every week.  How will all the laundry get done while I am doing volunteer work with the kids?  Did you see Mrs. Smith’s detailed schedule she had hanging on her refrigerator?  How can I stick to this schedule that I spent hours coming up with?  How will ever do it all just like the Smiths do?  Oh wait- my last name is not Smith.  My last name is Howard.  So why I am I trying to do everything just like they are?

This is how I used to think.  I thought that my house and my school had to look just like everyone else’s did or I was failing.  I thought I had to live my day by one of those calendars that had everything all scheduled out so nicely.  I even really did think I had to teach my kids Latin.  I had myself so worked up for failure that I had a nervous breakdown.  I went to my husband and told him all that I was feeling and how I just couldn’t do this homeschooling thing and we should put our kids into the system.  Do you know what his response was?  He laughed!  Yep, he laughed.  He told me that he never expected me to teach our kids Latin.  That was not how the Howards were going to do it.  Yes, it is fine and dandy for others to that because that is how they want to do it.  But that did not mean that we had to do it that way. 

I can’t even begin to tell you what a huge burden I felt come off my shoulders when he told me this.  Then, of course, I had to laugh at myself.  Why was I trying to be like everyone else?  God did not make me like everyone else.  He made me different with my own unique traits.   He did not make me to be a scheduled person.  I hate schedules.  They drag me down and I end up getting less done when I try to stay on one so I threw all my schedules out.  I had wasted so much time making all those schedules.  That was precious time I threw away trying to be someone I was not. 

We spend so much time looking at how everyone else is doing it and thinking that we want to be just like they are that we miss out on what God really wants us to be like.  I had a friend say that she wished she did more fun and crazy things with her kids just like so and so did.  But that’s not her.  That’s not me either.  And you know what?  That’s OK.  It doesn’t mean you are a bad mom because you don’t take your kids to the ice cream parlor on a whim.  They will not think any of less you.  Trust me.  We all have our own unique traits.  A specialness that God put in us just for us to use.  We need to focus on that and not on all of the things that He did not give us.  Because when we focus on that we are really telling God that we think He messed up because he did not make us like he made Mrs. Smith.  Oh and yes, she does make great pies, but who cares!  My point here is that you will never be content with your life if you are always trying to keep up with the Smiths (I know some people with the last name Jones, so that is why I went with Smith here).  Your main focus should be “what does God see fit for the_______ (insert your last name) family?”  Once you figure that out you will find peace in your days and contentment in your life. 

So, no I will not be teaching my kids Latin and I will not be running our day by a schedule and my house will not be cleaned on a regular basis and no I don’t have a specified laundry day, but I am Howard and that is how we do it at the Howard house.

 

Read More
Guest WritersKendraComment
Interruptions, Delays, Inconveniences

Do you receive Elisabeth Elliot's devotional in your inbox?  It is one of the things I look forward most to receiving each day.  This one in particular seems to speak loudly to us mothers of preschoolers:

 

Daily devotions for 11-02-2006: Title: Interruptions, Delays, Inconveniences Author: Elisabeth Elliot Devotion: Elisabeth Elliot Book: Keep A Quiet Heart Do you enjoy this devotional? Send it on to a friend! ____________________________________________________________ Title: Interruptions, Delays, Inconveniences Emily, wife of America's first foreign missionary, Adoniram Judson, wrote home from Moulmein, Burma, in January 1847: "This taking care of teething babies, and teaching natives to darn stockings and talking English back end foremost . . . in order to get an eatable dinner, is really a very odd sort of business for Fanny Forester [her pen name--she was a well-known New England writer before marrying Judson].... But I begin to get reconciled to my minute cares." She was ambitious for "higher and better things," but was enabled to learn that "the person who would do great things well must practice daily on little ones; and she who would have the assistance of the Almighty in important acts, must be daily and hourly accustomed to consult His will in the minor affairs of life." About eighty years ago, when James 0. Fraser was working as a solitary missionary in Tengyueh, southwest China, his situation was, "in every sense, 'against the grain.'" He did not enjoy housekeeping and looking after premises. He found the houseboy irritable and touchy, constantly quarreling with the cook. Endless small items of business cluttered up the time he wanted for language study, and he was having to learn to be "perpetually inconvenienced" for the sake of the gospel. He wrote after some weeks alone: "I am finding out that it is a mistake to plan to get through a certain amount of work in a certain time. It ends in disappointment, besides not being the right way to go about it, in my judgment. It makes one impatient of interruptions and delay. Just as you are nearly finishing--somebody comes along to sit with you and have a chat! You might hardly think it possible to be impatient and put out where there is such an opportunity for presenting the Gospel--but it is. It may be just on mealtime, or you are writing a letter to catch the mail, or you were just going out for needed exercise before tea. But the visitor has to be welcomed, and I think it is well to cultivate an attitude of mind which will enable one to welcome him from the heart and at any time. 'No admittance except on business' scarcely shows a true missionary spirit." There is nothing like the biographies of great Christians to give us perspective and help us to keep spiritual balance. These two are well worth reading. It was J.O. Fraser who so inspired my husband Jim Elliot with missionary vision that Jim planned to name his first son after him. One more quotation--this from an out-of-print book, The Life and Letters of Janet Erskine Stuart. Says one who was her assistant for some years, "She delighted in seeing her plan upset by unexpected events, saying that it gave her great comfort, and that she looked on such things as an assurance that God was watching over her stewardship, was securing the accomplishment of His will, and working out His own designs. Whether she traced the secondary causes to the prayer of a child, to the imperfection of an individual, to obstacles arising from misunderstandings, or to interference of outside agencies, she was joyfully and graciously ready to recognize the indication of God's ruling hand, and to allow herself to be guided by it." ____________________________________________________________ Did you enjoy this devotional?  Send it on for a friend to enjoy. To receive this e-mail regularly, just go to this page: http://www.backtothebible.org/media/email.htm

Read More
Finding Quiet Time- Dana Ernst
First, I will confess that I can tend to complicate things, mess with the nitty gritty when all a matter needs is a focus on the big picture. With this in mind, during the sleep deprived years of night time nursings and caring for busy toddlers and preschoolers, I have made a concentrated effort not to complicate the precious moments I set aside to focus solely on the Lord and what he has for me that day. This was a lesson I learned within the time of the birth of my first 2 children and I felt that I wasn't growing in my relationship - but really it was my idea of growth that was marred. Somehow I attributed a deep study of theology or biblical history to mean true growth in Jesus. The Lord forced his was through my busy thoughts and said, "Keep it simple." So I packed a bag with a chronological bible, a journal, note cards (to copy verses on and tuck in my pocket or place by the kitchen sink) and a pen. This was key for me in keeping it simple, to have it all together, to take wherever it was I was to meet with the Lord that day. When my second son, an early riser was around a year old, I taught him to come snuggle up beside me; I would have his juice already waiting with his bible, coloring tools and a notebook. He knew to sit quietly and do his ‘quiet study' while I finished mine. Now at 7, this has become habit for us, to meet together in the morning. In a way he has kept me disciplined because I feel bad if he wakes up alone. He has told me how special these times are to him. With busy, needy children and now home schooling, the verse in my pocket keeps his word in my head and orders my mind by meditating on his commands. During the day I will jot down thoughts or lessons on the cards and tuck them in my journal in the evening. There have been times of deeper study, but keeping it simple has allowed me to listen more for what the Lord is trying to teach me, which is the big picture. -Dana
Read More
Finding Quiet Time- Ann Voskamp

Always God: Nurturing Relationship with God in the midst of preschoolers

I live in a house with 1 baby, 2 preschoolers, 2 stretching children, 1 preteen, one gentle husband, and One Great and Glorious God. We live, and laugh, and love within these four walls…in the presence of Him Who knows no boundaries.

Practicing the Presence of God…

Children crawl up on couches, under blankets, unto laps for our Love-letter Time: each reading child reads their own volume of God’s love letter while I read aloud my day’s reading from the One Year Bible to the preschoolers. “David did what, Mama? “ “Jesus really loved us, didn’t he?” Together, we hear Him speak through His Word to our hearts. I scratch my reciprocating love notes in my prayer journal while littles copy down verses, coloring their remembrances of Love-Letter Time.

Children dig in the sandbox while I hang out my clothesline prayers: thank you for the legs that fill these pants, the arms that grace this shirt, the baby that sleeps in these pajamas.

I stir, children pour, I dice, children stir. We sing: “I love you, Lord. And I lift my voice, to worship You….”

We gather legos and blocks and order tractors and trains. Ora et Labora. This work is our prayer to You, Lord, our reasonable act of service, our worship and gift to the Giver of all.

I ring the dinner bell and children clamor around the table and steaming plates. We recite memory verses between bitefulls. Dear husband closes each of our three meals with Scripture reading, inviting one of the children to conclude with a prayer to the God of all. As we rise to clatter off the dishes and clean the kitchen counters, together we join our voices in a hymn of the faith, the song of praise we are learning that week.

Always Glory, Always Praise

In the midst of preschoolers, we do not package up the Prince of Peace, only to take Him down in fleeting moments of quiet… but we invite Him to be the center of our milieu, the axis of our days, the Son around which we all—babies, preschoolers, Mamas, and Papas, children and teens—revolve. His word is not confined only to a quiet time for “they are not just idle words for you—they are your life.”( Deuteronomy 32:47) In the midst of diapers and dishes, crayons and construction paper, life is our liturgy, life is our communing time with the Lover of our Souls.

As Eugene Peterson paraphrases Romans 11:36:

Everything comes from him; Everything happens through him; Everything ends up in him. Always glory! Always praise! Yes. Yes. Yes.”

Did you enjoy Ann's beautiful writing?  You can find more of her wonderful, meandering thoughts on her blog.

Read More
Finding Quiet Time- Heidi Kemp
Heidi's words are encouraging, too, and if you are not a morning person (that's not me, either) you will appreciate her honesty.When I first read the question I thought How Do I find the Time?  When I first started down this road of motherhood I struggled with the universal thought that you should get up early and have your 30 mins to 1 hour devotions and prayer time with the Lord.  I have really struggled with this my whole Christian life.  You see I am not a morning person.  No matter how hard I have tried I know now that I am fighting a losing battle.  The problem is that everyone else that seemed so spiritual got up at dawn to have their time with the Lord.  The Lord has shown me though that the time of day is not important but the TIME is important. I now have my time with the Lord at really what might seem like the oddest times to some.  My longest period of time is probably no more than 30 mins (if I am lucky).  This is in the morning with my second cup of coffee (by morning I mean after 9am).  My girls 8 and 7 are busy with handwriting and phonics workbooks.  My boys 2 and 3 are usually outside playing.  This is when I do my Bible reading.  Understand I do not really have any serious prayer time then.  I found it is both frustrating and dangerous to try to do this with the kids playing (ask me how I know this!!!)  I find other times to have wonderful prayer time.  My favorites are while washing dishes,  while driving, and the bathroom(the only place I really get to by myself, well most of the time).  In a life full of so many things to do and people to do them for I have to keep focused on what really counts.  If a subject gets pushed aside for my time with the Lord it is ok.  If someone is sick singing praises to Him while rocking the child is a blessed time with my Lord.  I protect my time even though I don't have an allotted time in my schedule.  I know I am nothing with out Him.  I will never be the wife, mother and teacher I know He wants me to be if I neglect my time with Him. Just a note,  the days I do forget or neglect are by far the worst for me and everyone around me.  Just a little warning.  So be of good courage and be strong in the Lord.  He will help you through, all you have to do is ask. In and Through Him Heidi Kemp
Read More
Finding Quiet Time- Andrea

Several of you sent me really wonderful answers for the contest on finding quiet time amidst homeschooling with preschoolers.  Over the next few days, I'll be posting them one-by-one.  You have excellent things to share!

Unfortunately, my technique is not very creative but it is just about making the time. I wake up an hour before the kids to have my quiet time with the Lord. During school weeks my 3 older kids wake up too to have their quiet time and start their math. They know that this is not their time with me. I usually read a 10 minute devotion from One hundred and One Devotions for Homeschool Moms then use the Scripture reference from that to springboard myself into an in-depth reflection of the verse in the Bible. I have also just listened to Marcia Somerville's Toolbox Approach to quiet time and I am starting to use her written charts to maintain my focus on the Lord during my prayer time. The bottom line is just doing it. I used to think of my QT as a small rock rather than a big rock. Sometimes happened and sometimes it did not. Thinking of the rock analogy when you put all your little rocks in your jar (your day) first your big ones can't all fit in as well. But if you put your big ones in first the little ones all fall between the gaps created by the big ones. So now I do my big rocks first and if there is time I work my little rocks in after. Viewing my QT with the Lord as a big rock helps me to give up that extra sleep in the morning and make it a priority. It just doesn't happen later in my day as my house is never quiet once the troops are in full force! -Andrea
Read More